Archive for category Spiritual Insights

Are you killing the cogs?

I’ve often heard (and perhaps said) “I’ll take any warm body!” when it comes to staffing volunteer positions in a church plant. I’m joking, of course (kinda), because as a former volunteer director I know the danger in viewing people as cogs in your church machine. In fact, it can lead to the situation described by a potential volunteer:

Please tell (her) she is welcome to sign me up to help, just know I am not un-enthusiast as much as I may look!!…I love to serve in the greatest need areas, but I have been so misused and mistreated within the kids ministry realm over the last (few) years, i.e. being called at a moments notice, working 3 to 4 Sundays a month, and even when I was on the prayer team for a Sunday having to leave that post to go serve in the children’s ministry because others would rather serve somewhere else. So, my motivation lacks luster!  :)

You need to make sure you’re monitoring the spiritual and emotional health of your volunteers as closely, if not more so, than their proficiency of the task at hand. Even if we’re a non-profit legally, we’re not spiritually. Don’t tell people to “suck it up and get it done” if the reason they’re fried is because you’re a bad leader. Care for the people fulfilling the vision more than you care for the vision, because people should be your vision!

Pastors and minister who’ve never worked a 9-5 job are more susceptible to this because even though you might be as hard of a worker than non-ministry types, it’s a whole different rhythm to understand and take into account. If that you be sure to ask trusted volunteers their opinions on what you’re asking/requiring of them. Sure, there will be times you need to push everyone past their comfort level, but you’ll be better informed to what that level actually is.

When’s the last time you asked your volunteer leaders about their spiritual health? Are they asking each other? Are you encouraging “one another daily, as long as it is called Today, so that none of you may be hardened by sin’s deceitfulness?”

How do you and/or your church prevent volunteer burnout?

What makes a good sermon?

What makes a good sermon? A great one?

Lots of things make a sermon “good” or “great”- timing, jokes, illustrations, articulation, purity, holiness and truthfulness just to name a few.

But there’s one thing, in my opinion, that can make any sermon, no matter how much it has of the above, a bad sermon.

How to make a sermon bad: Don’t make Jesus the hero of the sermon.

You may have an entertaining, powerful, funny, enjoyable sermon without Jesus as the hero, but it won’t be a good one.

Jesus, and only Jesus, is the hero. He’s not a supporting cast member. He’s the man.

That is all.

What we can learn from The Suits

Sometimes both Christians and pastors of my generation think they can’t learn much from a man in a suit. This video, a sermon excerpt from Mark Beeson of Granger Community Church, shows just how much we can learn and be inspired by those who’ve gone before us. Please please please take the 6 minutes to watch it.

Here’s a link to Mark’s breakdown of the video.

The Early Church from Granger Community on Vimeo.

A Million Miles in a Thousand Years

Yesterday I plowed through Donald Miller‘s latest book, A Million Miles in a Thousand Years. I love the subtitle- “What I learned when editing my life.” We all would like a chance to back and make edits, improvements, change characters and scenes in our life, wouldn’t we?

While we can’t go back and change past experiences, we can live with greater intentionality and focus for the rest of our lives, which is the path Miller travels in this book. In the process of editing a previous book into a movie screenplay he learns what a great story is, realizes his life isn’t one, and determines to start living a great Story.

However, a succinct summary of the book doesn’t do it justice. Miller’s writing style, very stream-of-consciousness, drifts without getting lost, is funny and lighthearted right before it pierces you with depth and insight. He seems just like the kind of guy you’d want to grab a drink with, be it carbonated or fermented. If  you’re not the kind to pick up such a book, it’s the very reason you should. You need to be stretched to dream, wonder, reflect and imagine what you life is and what it could be.

I do want to add on caution to the book. As with Blue Like Jazz, Miller’s writing seem to strike their deepest chord with long-time or disaffected Christians. Since I’m neither, I never resonate as deeply with his writing, though I’ve seen it’s impact on others and appreciate the healing it’s brought them. However, I would be wary of a non-Christian reading this book, as they may come away thinking the way to a better story with God is to “try harder,” one of the most dangerous and horrifically wrong things a non-Christian can think about God. Someone who understands sin and redemption, but never quite found their groove or purpose in Christ (Ephesians 2:10) will find a sympathetic and challenging voice in Miller. Had I read this 12 months ago, before I started planting Trinity New Life, this would have been a great encouragement to take the steps to do so, and I hope it plays the same role in the lives of other Christians.

Oh, and if you want a review of the book covering more of the actual content, check out Ross Middleton’s review.

Have you read it? What did you think?

Debt even Dave Ramsey would love

“Let no debt remain outstanding, except the continuing debt to love one another, for he who loves his fellowman has fulfilled the law.”

- Romans 13:8

Let’s make sure we’re putting something down on this debt today!

How white pastors can honor MLK Day

Today we remember the life and passion of the great Martin Luther King, Jr., who for a brief and all-too-short period of time was the mouthpiece of God to breakdown sinful and wretched beliefs, mindsets and practices along racial lines.

As a white pastor, I would like to take a moment to encourage other white pastors to honor MLK’s legacy and dream with more than self reflection and social media compliments. I’m far from a race expert(though one of my best friends is black [and he's so well-spoken!]), but since I believe it’s not just the responsibility of black pastors to talk about race, here’s my entry into the fray-

  • Watch the speech. If you’ve never done that, PLEASE do so. It’s not about black and white, it’s about all of creation coming together. There can be no doubt this man was a prophet from God in this area.
  • Read Ephesians 2:14-17
  • Speak about race in your church. From the pulpit. Call it Sin. Because it is. It’s not just “kinda wrong,” or “just the way some people were raised.” It’s sin. It’s sin in white people, it’s sin in black people. It’s sin in Asians, Latinos, and New Yorkers. Racism is a Sin, and it must be called so, and called to be repented from. If you can speak on sensitive topics like sex and money, why leave race out?
  • Have a pastor of another race come and speak in your church, one of your friends. You are friends with more than just white pastors, right? Doesn’t have to be on MLK, doesn’t even have to be on race. But be intentional about exposing your congregation to people and cultures they never would come across in their daily lives.

That’s my list. Anything you want to add? Anything you want to disagree with?

These go to 11!

This doesn’t quite qualify as a goal for 2010; it’s really more of lifestyle change my wife and I are committed to making.

Kelly and I’ve been at the same base level of giving (with various offerings on top of it) for years now, but we’re upping our baseline monthly giving by 1% in 2010. I think we’ve exhausted the amount of growth and faith we can have at our old level, and need to step forward in trusting God for greater things in our lives. We’re not doing this hoping for a greater financial return, or really to GET anything. We’re doing it to trust God and be a blessing.

Now isn’t the best time to make this change, financially. While we’re not talking about hundreds, or even one hundred dollars more a month going to the church, every dollar is crucial for us right now. But my God gives seed to the sower, not the one who waits until the perfect time to give.

Because there never is one.

How about you? Are you consistant in your giving? Have you increased your consistant giving recently, or have a plan to do so?

How to end your career

If you didn’t see the way Colt McCoy ended his career last night after injuring his shoulder and missing the national championship game, it’s worth your time. What class, what faith!

Colt McCoy after the loss on ESPN.com

If “Church” is online…

How do you do communion?

How do you do baptism?

How do you do evangelism? If you see someone won to God, do you tell them to come to your house and sit with you, or do you have them sit at their own house and watch?

How do you make disciples?

How do you execute church discipline?

I’m not against streaming service online for those unable to make it, or creating an experience online which allows people to check out your church before they come, or if you’re in a remote part of the world with no English-speaking church…

But when we say that “church” is totally online (not just services but being the church), how do we accomplish these, which in my opinion (and others smarter than me) are defining qualities of a church body?

I know we’re just beginning to explore what it means to do “church” online, so I’m honestly asking if there are answers, or if these issues are being considered by those attending and creating the experiences.

Enlighten me…

Looking for a few good people!

To help make me a better communicator.

As we start Trinity New Life Church, I would like to do all that I can to steward the responsibility of speaking each week. I want to get better, I want to be clearer, I want to honor God and make Jesus the hero of every message. Would you help me?

I’m looking for a small team who will listen to my messages and provide me with feedback along the lines of my theology, delivery, tone, pacing, clarity and Jesus-centeredness. I’d like it to be a diverse team, not just a couple of white dudes. No, offense, Donny, Ross and Adam.

Interested?