Home Blog Page 484

Sermons4Kids: Top 10 Children’s Sermons to Share With Kids

Sermons4Kids
Adobestock #289848520

Sermons4Kids offers a one-stop resource for oodles of children’s messages. No matter what Bible lesson or topic you’re teaching, you’ll find what you need—at no cost. Materials are geared toward preschool and elementary-aged children. So choose what works best for your young audience.

All the key Old Testament and New Testament stories are represented in the Sermons4Kids online database. Bonus: Most are available in Spanish as well!

What to expand the impact of your Sunday school and children’s church lessons? Sermons4Kids also provides game ideas, craft ideas, coloring pages, and much more.

To give you a sneak peek of what Sermons4Kids.com offers, here’s a top 10 list of kids messages. With so many options, it’s tough to narrow them down. So check out the lessons yourself, and let us know your favorites!

10 Kids Messages We Love at Sermons4Kids

First, here are five children’s sermons from the Old Testament:

1. Joseph Forgives His Brothers

This children’s sermon, based on Genesis 45:1-15, shows the impact of forgiveness. Kids will hear how Joseph offered “sweet” forgiveness to his brothers instead of holding a bitter grudge.

2. Elijah Is Fed by Ravens

Share with young listeners how the prophet Elijah trusted in God—and how God provided for him. The sermon uses 1 Kings 17:4 as its text and birdseed for an object lesson.

3. Who Do You Trust?

Check out this kid-friendly lesson about Psalm 23. Children will discover that God is our good Shepherd, and we can trust him in every situation.

4. The Potter & the Clay

Use this Old Testament object lesson (Isaiah 64:8) to explain how God works on us like clay. Why? So we can be more like Jesus!

5. God’s Prayer Warrior: Daniel

In this children’s sermons, kids will discover how Daniel prayed faithfully. God rescued Daniel from hungry lions, and God rescues us too! (Daniel 6:16)

Abuse Survivor ‘Crying Tears of Thankfulness’ After Department of Justice Initiates Investigation Into SBC Entities

SBC SATF
(L) Photo via Pexels.com @EKATERINA BOLOVTSOVA (R) Photo courtesy of Baptist Press

Rumors, first circulated by The Baptist Blogger on Twitter, that federal investigators have requested unredacted copies of the Southern Baptist Convention’s (SBC) Sexual Abuse Task Force (SATF) report on Friday afternoon turned out to be true.

In a statement issued mere hours after The Baptist Blogger broke the news, the SBC Executive Committee said that it “recently became aware that the Department of Justice has initiated an investigation into the Southern Baptist Convention, and that the investigation will include multiple SBC entities.”

“Individually and collectively each SBC entity is resolved to fully and completely cooperate with the investigation,” the statement said. “While we continue to grieve and lament past mistakes related to sexual abuse, current leaders across the SBC have demonstrated a firm conviction to address those issues of the past and are implementing measures to ensure they are never repeated in the future. The fact that the SBC Executive Committee recently completed a fully transparent investigation is evidence of this commitment.”

The SBC recognized that their reform efforts aren’t finished but mentioned that the newly announced Abuse Reform Implementation Task Force has already started working. Additionally, “each entity has strengthened its efforts to protect against abuse.” The SBC reiterated that their “commitment to cooperate with the Department of Justice is born from our demonstrated commitment to transparently address the scourge of sexual abuse.”

The statement, which was signed by every SBC entity head, concluded, “While so many things in the world are uncertain, we can be certain that we serve a mighty God. Nothing, including this investigation, takes Him by surprise. We take comfort in that and humbly ask you be in prayer in the days and weeks ahead. Specifically, we ask God to grant wisdom and discernment to each person dealing with the investigation.”

Guidepost Solutions was selected by the SATF last year to conduct an investigation into the SBC Executive Committee’s handling of sexual abuse allegations over the course of two decades.

The 288-page Guidepost Solutions report was released in May and confirmed that SBC leadership had ignored, silenced, and ostracized victims of sexual abuse, as far back as the year 2000.

RELATED: Hiding Behind Issues of Polity, SBC Leaders Ignored, Silenced, Ostracized Sexual Abuse Victims for Years, Report Says

The SBC has apologized to abuse survivors and passed a resolution titled, “On Lament and Repentance for Sexual Abuse,” wherein it specifically named Christa Brown, Susan Codone, Megan Lively, Jennifer Lyell, Anne Marie Mille, David Pittman, Tiffany Thigpen, Debbie Vasquez, Hannah-Kate Williams, and Jules Woodson.

In response to the news of the investigation, abuse survivor and advocate Hannah-Kate Williams posted, “I am 100% crying tears of thankfulness that the FBI is FINALLY investigating the SBC and it’s agents. That it would happen 3 years to the week that I first escaped the abuse and filed is everything. May justice roll down like a river 😭.”

Beth Moore’s Tweet About Having ‘A Crush’ on Jesus Causes Another Twitter Meltdown

beth moore
Screenshots from Twitter / @BethMooreLPM and YouTube / @ChurchLeaders

A July 29 tweet from author and Bible teacher Beth Moore has caused a belated kerfuffle on Twitter. Some are calling Moore blasphemous and irreverent, while others are defending her and are perplexed that her tweet was even controversial. 

“I’m growing grapes for reals,” said Moore, posting a picture of grapes in her two-week old tweet. “It’s like a miracle. In fifty jillion degree weather. If Jesus is trying to get me to have a crush on him, it’s working.”

Beth Moore’s Tweet Sparks Strong Reactions

Quite a few people reacted to the tweet with disgust, accusing Moore of blasphemy or at least of speaking about God in a way that is irreverent and disrespectful. “This is an abominable statement!” said one user named Elizabeth, whose response got retweeted several times. “Such a disrespect for God in trying to be ‘cool.’ Shameful!”

RELATED: Andy Stanley: Criticizing Strangers by Name on Social Media Shows ‘Extraordinary Immaturity’

Polemic website Protestia tweeted, “A man would never talk about Jesus in this way. This is exclusively how unlearned women and gay men talk about him.” 

Dr. Josh Buice, founder and president of G3 Ministries, retweeted Moore, saying, “In 2016, I wrote an article titled, ‘Why Your Pastor Should Say No More to Beth Moore.’ I later penned an article in 2019 titled, ‘Why the SBC Should Say No More to Beth Moore.’ Both articles resulted in waves of vicious hate mail. I stand by those articles for obvious reasons.” 

“I’m not sure which is worse: The fact that Beth Moore believes Jesus is trying to get her to have a crush on him or the fact that people are defending what she says,” said a user named Anastasia

User emma grace responded, “I’m not sure which is worse: The fact that a woman sharing her adoration for her Lord is being met with such hostility or the fact that people really are angry enough about it to make her trend on twitter. Great witness to the world.” Emma grace also observed, “I think it’s bold to call language like this blasphemous when Christians have been leaning into the romantic implications of the Christ/Church, Groom/Bride relationship for centuries.”

A number of people see the anger over Moore’s tweet as an overreaction. “Seriously? This is what’s causing all the kerfluffle?” asked one. “And evangelicals and conservatives mock others for being ‘triggered?’”

Others have joined emma grace in pointing to scriptural teachings and passages that frame God’s relationship with his people in terms of romance. “Looks like this @BethMooreLPM tweet with grapes and a line about ‘having a crush’ on Jesus is causing a dust up,” said Bob Smietana, national religion writer for Religion News Service. “Which is fascinating given the evangelical emphasis of a personal relationship with Jesus.” He added, “And the language of the church as the Bride of Christ.”

Saying ‘Yes’ to God Allows Raiders QB Derek Carr to Preach and Play

Derek carr
Las Vegas Raiders quarterback, Derek Carr, playing against the Washington Football Team at Allegiant Stadium on December 5, 2021. All-Pro Reels, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

By saying “yes” to God and being willing to shelve his football career before it began, Derek Carr has been able to combine his passions of ministry and football. On a recent episode of “The High Note” podcast, the Las Vegas Raiders quarterback opens up about the blessings that come from hearing and obeying God. The 31-year-old All-Pro athlete also tells host Tauren Wells, a Christian musician, about the challenges and blessings of living for Jesus in high-profile secular setting.

As Church Leaders has reported, Carr is an outspoken Christian known for sharing the gospel with strangers—including at a Chipotle restaurant in San Francisco. He also once shared a message that helped prevent three suicides.

Derek Carr: Off-Field Victories Matter Most

In the podcast episode, titled “Derek Carr on Faith, Family, and Football,” Tauren Wells introduces Carr as a “phenomenal preacher of the Gospel.” In response to a question about where his “authentic” faith originates, Carr describes a strong family legacy of faith—including parents who prioritized Sunday worship over youth football games. “We were raised to know what was the most important thing,” he says.

It wasn’t until college when Carr made his faith his own, he admits, saying he was “not a good dude” for a while. When he first met Heather, now his wife of 10 years, “she was dragging me to church,” he says. Thanks to her persistence, Carr became determined to change and to “prove it to [her] that I’m different.”

The QB also credits longtime mentor Mattie Montgomery with helping him learn submission to authority and truly believe that Jesus acts in response to prayer.

As a recent example of listening to God and then seeing results, Carr describes an incident at a celebrity golf tournament last month. While eating breakfast in a hospitality tent, he noticed a photographer limping by and “felt the Lord telling me, ‘I want you to pray for that lady.’”

Carr adds, “I knew she was going to have to walk all day…so I shared a story about how my mom was recently healed” and asked, “Can I just pray for you?” The photographer agreed, and the next day she returned to thank him, saying, “All the pain left.” Of all his experiences that weekend, Carr shares, “that was the victory.”

Derek Carr: God Knew My Heart Was His

Carr often references listening to God, noting that one message from above nearly upended his NFL career. He describes feeling “the tug of the Lord on my chest” to retire—just before his rookie year. After initially fighting the idea, he eventually talked to his coach and family. They all agreed “there’ll be a day” for preaching but that he should go play for now.

“It was in that moment,” Carr says, “where I think the Lord knew that my heart was his. And I’ve been able to minister to thousands of people.” Through speaking appearances and conferences, he is “preaching the Gospel and watching thousands of people get saved. I’ve seen healings take place. I’ve seen people set free. I’ve seen marriages reunite. I’ve seen kids come back home. All while playing football.”

Self-Proclaimed Prophet, Former Global Fire Ministries’ Leader Jeff Jansen Unexpectedly Dead at 60

Screengrab via Instagram @jeffjansen

Former co-leader of Global Fire Ministries Jeff Jansen, who described himself as a prophet, evangelist, revivalist, and conference speaker, died unexpectedly on Tuesday (August 8) at the age of 60.

“It is with great sadness, we announce that Jeff Jansen passed away unexpectedly,” a statement from Global Fire Ministries read. ”Over the years, Jeff has left an indelible mark on those who knew him. Please pray for his family as they remember him and grieve this tremendous loss.”

Jansen’s seven children posted a message on their father’s Instagram page, saying, “It is with heavy hearts that we announce that our Dad, Jeff Jansen, has gone home to be with The Lord. Our Dad’s legacy will be remembered as one of passion for the Gospel, for God’s people, and for the Nations of the World.”

“While we are devastated with the loss, it has been truly uplifting to witness first hand how many lives Dad has impacted over the years,” the statement continued.

RELATED: Pastor Jeff Jansen: Trump Will Be Reinstated Whether ‘People Like It or Not’

“We have decided to have a public Celebration of Life to accommodate the masses who have expressed a desire to pay their respects,” Jansen’s children shared with his 43,600 followers. “We believe that this is what Dad would have wanted, and we have secured a space that will hold up to 500 people. All are welcome!”

The service will be live-streamed for those unable to attend in-person.

As the children don’t have control of their father’s estate, they shared that Jansen’s funeral expenses won’t be fully covered and asked for electronic donations to help with costs.

In the spring of 2021, Jansen was asked to step down from the ministry he co-founded with his wife due to “unscriptural and unbiblical behavior.” The board stated that Jansen was disqualified from leadership because of “a pattern of making poor moral choices, and bad coping mechanisms [and] character flaws.”

One of those choices was leaving his wife, Jan Jansen, after 26 years of marriage. Jan is currently listed as Global Fire Ministries’ senior leader.

According to Global Fire Ministries, at the time, Jansen had not made an attempt at reconciliation, showing no remorse or repentance for his actions.

Former Hillsong Employee Alleges Church Misled Donors, Evaded Taxes

Natalie Moses Hillsong
Screengrab via Facebook

Natalie Moses, former fundraising and governance coordinator for Hillsong Church, is alleging in a lawsuit that the church has misled donors, misappropriated funds, and evaded taxes, according to ABC News Investigates

The Australian Charities and Not-for-Profits Commission (ACNC) launched an investigation into Hillsong Church in March to examine its compliance with regulations as a registered charity. The investigation came to light this week when it was revealed in the court documents of Moses’ Fair Work lawsuit against the church. Moses is claiming the church mistreated her for bringing up concerns regarding its financial dealings.

According to Moses, who was employed by the church in March 2020 to oversee compliance of global Hillsong entities with Australian non-profit tax laws, claimed that the church repeatedly breached those laws, particularly when it came to transferring Australian funds overseas for various projects. 

Moses also alleged that Hillsong has engaged in questionable practices when it comes to expenditures for church leaders, including conflicts of interest. According to Moses, Hillsong artists were classified as “pastors,” receiving half of their salaries tax-free while still earning millions in royalties for record sales and other residuals related to Hillsong music.  

Moses further claims that Hillsong leaders misappropriated tax-free money as “large cash gifts” for Hillsong founder and former global senior pastor Brian Houston. 

Houston resigned in disgrace from Hillsong Church in March 2022 following scandals involving drug and alcohol use, as well as sexual impropriety. It was the very same month that the ACNC began its investigation into Hillsong’s financial practices. 

Moses said that she had repeatedly raised concerns about the ethics and legality of Hillsong’s financial dealings with the church’s chief financial officer, Peter Ridley, but was consistently rebuffed. 

One such conflict came in earlier in March 2022, when Moses claimed to have raised concerns about the way the church allegedly used donations made to its charity entity, aimed at bringing justice to vulnerable groups, to pay financial deficits for the church entity. 

Moses also reportedly objected to Hillsong asking for charitable donations to renovate “Festival Hall” in Melbourne, Australia, a facility purchased by a Hillsong-related entity in 2020. By claiming that donations were tax deductible, which Moses believed were not, Moses contended that the church was committing tax fraud. 

Moses said that Ridley was dismissive of her objections and grew frustrated with her. 

RELATED: ‘Hillsong: A Megachurch Exposed’ Paints Brian Houston as a Man Bent on World Domination

Following the launch of the ACNC investigation, which began mere weeks after these conflicts between Moses and Ridley, Ridley allegedly told employees in the financial department that Hillsong would be exonerated by the investigation, because “God protects the righteous and Hillsong is the righteous.”

Church ESL Camp Preps Hispanic Elementary Students for School Year

Charmaine Traffanstedt, seated at the teacher’s desk, with Laura Aponte, standing left, designed and taught a Gospel-centered ESL camp for kindergarteners through fifth graders at Cross Community Church in Houston. Photo courtesy of Baptist Press.

HOUSTON (BP) – Fanny Baltanado planned to spend just six months visiting her new granddaughter in Texas when the unanticipated COVID-19 pandemic thwarted her return to Nicaragua. She would need to find a church home near Humble, Texas.

An adult English as a second language class attracted Baltanado in March to Cross Community Church, where she became a regular attendee and in August, helped the church teach ESL to local Hispanic elementary students in a back-to-school camp.

“For me, this was an amazing experience because we are able to bring the love of Jesus Christ to the people, especially kids,” Baltanado said. “I think they are the base of the society, and we need to help them to be more comfortable, to be more confident with themselves, because they are (in) difficult times.”

ESL classes ranked as a top community need when Del Traffanstedt and his wife Charmaine planted Cross Community Church in the majority Spanish-speaking Eastex-Jensen area of northeast Houston in September 2021. The couple learned of the need for the ESL camp for children after launching their first adult class in March, said Charmaine Traffanstedt, who directs the church’s ESL ministry.

RELATED: Churches Can Be ‘Personalized Ministry Partner’ for Local Schools

“In talking with some of our students, they were relating to me that their children were coming into the school district for the first time this year,” Traffanstedt said, “and knew very little English.

“We came up with the idea to do a three-day English as a second language class just for kids, kindergarteners through fifth grade,” she said of herself and fellow teacher Laura Aponte, “and we focused on doing the basic English language that would help them just kind of function in school.”

Traffanstedt and Aponte wove in Bible stories, creation, the fall of man and the salvation found in Jesus, incorporating Spanish and English oral Bible storying and singing.

On the last day of the camp that attracted 40 students and eight mothers Aug. 3-5, Senior Pastor Del Traffanstedt presented the Gospel.

“No one professed faith, but it did generate many questions that night about the church and our faith, and we had visitors (and) family units from the camp at our church the next Sunday,” the pastor said.

RELATED: ‘You Just Pray’: Mother Reports Son Planning a High School Killing Spree, Pleads With Parents

Traffanstedt describes Cross Community as majority Latino with half of the members speaking both Spanish and English or primarily Spanish alone. Attendance averages 85 at the church plant, with Northeast Houston Baptist Church in Humble as the sending church. In the church’s immediate community of nearly 29,000 people, 68 percent of homes are primarily Spanish speaking, with 31 percent primarily speaking English, according to 2019 U.S. Census figures.

For Pastor Traffanstedt, the ESL classes are an act of true love.

Seeds of Rural Ministry Thrive With Prayer and Patience, South Dakota Pastors Say

Bethany Baptist Church in Waubay, S.D. saw 35-40 children arrive each night for vacation Bible school. Photo courtesy of Baptist Press.

HURON, S.D. (BP) – A recent sermon at Huron Baptist Church included a concept held in high regard by pastor Ian Harp and his peers. It’s a concept that applies both to the life of a minister as well as to the farmers who populate his church, town and surrounding area.

Prayer and patience. They come in handy when crops go in the ground, but also when pastors are working to break through the hard soil of evangelism. That work takes place through their churches but also their secular jobs and other ways they serve the community.

“Ministry here? It’s the hardest place I’ve ever been,” Harp said.

The challenges of rural ministry – such as loneliness and lack of resources – aren’t specific to South Dakota. But even as a second or third job may be necessary for financial stability, so is the need to be around others whether as a pastor, employee or volunteer.

RELATED: Small, Rural Church Embraces SBC Sex Abuse Prevention Journey

More than likely, others see you as all of the above.

Last month Harp helped smoke 300 pounds of pork tenderloin as a community outreach. Three people were saved at that event. Not long after arriving in June 2019, he cooked a full pig for others to enjoy.

Pastoral work is full-time, but he supplements his part-time pay by driving a garbage truck for the city.

That role also connects him with others outside of the church to hopefully build relationships and introduce them to Christ. Being a “garbage man,” as Harp says it, isn’t very glamorous. But his place as a pastor takes precedence, as his youngest daughter reminded him.

“You have to be patient,” said Harp, who left 21 years of driving a semi to become a pastor. “If we’re going to get where God wants us to be, we have to be patient and faithful.”

Eighty miles northeast, Billy Keeble preaches on grace and forgiveness at Bethany Baptist Church in Waubay. His passion comes not only from seeing this in Scripture, but knowing it through how he was delivered from alcoholism. It’s the story he tells others in his work during the week at a rehab and treatment center.

RELATED: Bart Barber Wants the Southern Baptist Convention to Regain Its Rural Soul

His mother’s death in 2014 sent him into depression and drinking. Addiction was not something new to him.

“My family has a lot of addiction in it, and I had trouble staying sober,” he said. “But God moved in my life and those chains are now broken. I can’t explain it, but I felt I wanted to give back. I’ve found my purpose in giving hope to others.”

Redfield, S.D., is known as the Pheasant Capital of the World, with its high school sporting that mascot. It’s baseball team of high school students, however, is the Redfield Area Muskrats, taking that name as an independent club since the state doesn’t sanction the sport.

Ted Price has been a part of providing video work at Redfield High since he was a student there in the early 1980s. As pastor of Redfield Baptist Church, he’s active in numerous roles within the community such as a board member for several groups and as chaplain for the sheriff’s office.

He’s also become valuable with local radio stations not only for his technical know-how but also for announcing athletic events, including Muskrat baseball.

“Anything a pastor does in public provides inroads to others,” he said. “People begin to recognize you. It definitely opens doors.”

RELATED: Gospel Emphasis, Community Connections Lead in Rural Church’s Growth

Doors open often for Keeble, whether through his work at the treatment center or in the pulpit of Bethany Baptist. Today, his past only comes up in helping others work through their own challenges.

“I tell them there is life on the other side it,” said Keeble, who works with many fellow members of the Sisseton Wahpeton tribe.

He understands Harp’s sentiment behind the concepts of prayer and patience.

Reckoning With Their History, Lutherans Issue Declaration To Indigenous Peoples

Indigenous Lutherans lead a worship service during the ELCA Churchwide Assembly, Aug. 10, 2022, in Columbus, Ohio. RNS photo by Emily McFarlan Miller

COLUMBUS, Ohio (RNS) — There was a time when Lutherans were recognized as the advocates for Indigenous peoples, according to Vance Blackfox, director for Indigenous ministries and tribal relations for the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, the United States’ largest Lutheran denomination.

In the 1960s and 1970s, Lutherans vocally supported the American Indian Movement, said Blackfox, a citizen of the Cherokee Nation and the first to hold his position in the ELCA. They set an example for how Christians can engage in justice work for and with Indigenous peoples.

Blackfox said it’s time for Lutherans to lead again.

“We have a history, we have a heritage of doing the right thing, and we will continue to do that. I truly believe it,” he said.

RELATED: Why the Largest US Lutheran Denomination Apologized to a Latino Congregation

Blackfox’s remarks came as the denomination — meeting for its triennial Churchwide Assembly in Columbus, Ohio, this week — shared its Declaration of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America to American Indian and Alaska Native People for the first time in person. Adopted by the ELCA Church Council in September, the five-page document includes confessions to Indigenous peoples inside and outside of the denomination, as well as a confession to non-Indigenous members of the ELCA.

“We confess that we are complicit in the annihilation of Native peoples and your cultures, languages, and religions, and that we have refused to truly recognize the harm that we have caused our Native siblings,” the declaration reads.

The assembly also heard an address from National Congress of American Indians President Fawn Sharp, who is vice president of the Quinault Indian Nation in Taholah, Washington. Sharp, who thanked the denomination on behalf of the 574 tribal nations across the United States, said the work ahead of the denomination is “humanly impossible,” but that together they can overcome those barriers.

RELATED: First Trans ELCA Bishop Suspended by Lutheran LGBTQ Advocacy Group for ‘Racist Words and Actions’

“Our ancestors long foretold a day of reckoning when this world and this life was not consistent with our values. At some point, there would be a day of reckoning — a moment of truth, healing and reconciliation. Those predictions from so long ago were for our generation,” she said.

“We are that generation.”

Sharp’s address was followed by a worship service designed and led by Indigenous Lutherans that included drumming, smudging, prayers to the four directions, a time of repentance and an offering collected for the denomination’s partnership with the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota.

Later in the day, voting members of the Churchwide Assembly introduced a resolution (approved on Thursday) encouraging ELCA entities to consider returning land to Indigenous groups.  At the urging of the American Indian and Alaska Native Lutheran Association, many in the convention hall wore red to bring attention to missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls.

All of these steps are a result of the denomination’s repudiation of the Doctrine of Discovery at its 2016 Churchwide Assembly, which created the task force that wrote the declaration presented this week.

How (and Why) to Put Your Worst Foot Forward

depression
Adobestock #508367532

One day in my mid-twenties while studying at Covenant Seminary to become a pastor, I came across a suicide note published in the local newspaper…written by a pastor:

God forgive me for not being any stronger than I am. But when a minister becomes clinically depressed, there are very few places where he can turn to for help…it feels as if I’m sinking farther and farther into a downward spiral of depression. I feel like a drowning man, trying frantically to lift up my head to take just one more breath. But one way or another, I know I am going down.

The writer was the promising young pastor of a large, thriving Presbyterian church in Saint Louis. Having secretly battled depression for a long time – and having sought help through prayer, therapy, and medication – his will to claw through yet another day was gone. In his darkest hour, the young promising pastor decided he would rather join the angels than continue facing demons for years to come. The sign-off to his note, “Yours in the Name of Our Blessed Lord, Our Only Hope in Life and Death” brought a strange comfort, because grace covers all types sins, including self-harm and suicide. Yet grief and confusion remained.

The confusion escalated when another pastor, also from Saint Louis, asphyxiated himself to death because a similar, secret depression.

The news of these two pastor suicides rocked my world. How could these men – both gifted pastors who believed in Jesus, preached grace, and comforted others with gospel hope – end up losing hope for themselves?

Since that time, two more pastor friends of mine have taken their own lives – one of them also from St. Louis, and the other from Nashville.

For as long as I had been a Christian, I had also heard a teaching – which I came to understand as unbiblical and very destructive – that being a Christian and being depressed and suicidal aren’t supposed to go together. “Light always drives out darkness,” these teachers would say. “When you’re believing the right things, peace and joy will necessarily follow.” Based on these ideas, a worship song was released that became very popular among evangelical Christians. The lyrics included the confident declaration that “In His presence, our problems disappear.”

But when the real world hits, such teachings and songs hurt a lot more than they help. We are talking about flawed but faithful pastors, who prayed and read their Bibles every day, who served their churches and cities and counseled people and preached grace, ended their own lives…because in His presence, their problems did not disappear.

Affliction, God’s Kindness, and Me

I, too, have from time to time faced the demons of affliction, especially in the form of anxiety and depression. Most of the time, thankfully, this struggle has been more low-grade than intense. On one occasion, though, it flattened me physically, emotionally, and spiritually.

How bad was it? I could not fall asleep for two weeks straight. Even sleeping pills couldn’t calm the adrenaline and knock me out, which only made things worse. In the evenings I feared the quiet, knowing I was in for another all-night battle with insomnia that I was likely to lose. The sunrise also scared me as an unwelcome reminder that another day of impossible struggle was ahead. I lost fifteen percent of my body weight in two months. I could not concentrate in conversations. I found no comfort in God’s promises from Scripture. I couldn’t bring myself to pray anything but “Please help me” and “Please end this.”

According to a study conducted by Thom Rainer, circumstance-triggered melancholy hits ministers at a disproportionally higher rate than the general populace. Due to the unique pressures associated with spiritual warfare, unrealistic expectations from congregants and oneself, growing platforms for unaccountable criticism and gossip toward and about ministers (especially in the digital age), failure to take time off for rest and replenishment, marriage difficulties, financial strains, and the problem of comparison with other ministers and ministries, Rainer concludes that ministers are set up as prime candidates for descent into an emotional abyss.

7 Secrets to Being a High Achiever

thank you notes for children’s ministry volunteers

I get asked frequently how I am able to be a high achiever and get so much done while still taking care of myself and my family.

I pastor a large church. I maintain a separate nonprofit ministry, where I speak at various conferences and events. I have an active online presence. I mentor about a dozen pastors—some in groups and some as individuals—plus I mentor four young leaders in our church. And, I try to stay active in the community—serving on a number of nonprofit boards. But, mostly, I strive to be the person, husband and father my congregation could seek to follow.

OK, typing out a list of my activities does remind me I’m busy. Productive would be subject to interpretation, but certainly I have adequate (and more than adequate) activity in my life.

Honestly, I never feel I’ve accomplished as much as I would like, but after receiving the question so many times, perhaps I should attempt to answer.

As I’ve reflected on what helps me accomplish so much, I came up with some thoughts as to how I’m able to maintain productivity while being a high achiever.

Here are seven secrets to being a high achiever:

I’m extremely intentional

This is probably number one. I strive to live my life for a purpose, which carries over into everything I do. (Notice there are even seven steps in this answer. This was intentional.) If you could name one word to describe who I am as a pastor, leader, husband, father, friend and child of God, it would be intentional. (By the way, I’m intentional about resting too.) I even put the last sentence about rest in here intentionally, because I knew someone would wonder.

I don’t sit still long without a purpose

Being still is a discipline for me. Some seasons I’m better at it than others. I realize some people have no trouble with this, but I do. As I said about being intentional, I have to make myself rest. My mind is constantly in motion. If I’m watching a television program, which isn’t often, I’m doing attempting to do something productive while I watch—otherwise I feel I’ve “wasted” time. I wish I could say I’m always doing the “best” things, but certainly more activity leads to the potential for more productivity. Doesn’t always work this way, which is why some of the other points I’m listing are far more valuable than this one. But, I try to be productive even with down time—and, although it’s taken years to understand this, resting is a productive time.

I strive to maintain my health

I’d love to say I always watch what I eat, and I do to a certain extent, but mostly I exercise to stay fit. I’ve learned the more out of shape I am the less effective I am in all I attempt to do. It impacts me physically, emotionally and spiritually when I skip my time exercising. I’m more productive when I’m most physically fit. I’ve recently learned too my body needs to be adequately hydrated to feel at my best.

I work from a plan

Whether it’s long-term or short-term planning, I try to have one. I begin most every Monday morning (or sometimes Sunday nights) planning the week ahead. I find I’m more successful in my week if I’ve put some plans on paper prior to beginning any activity. Daily I begin by reviewing my plans for the day. I begin each day with five minutes spent on making a checklist of what I have to get done. At the beginning of a year, I plan the year. I periodically look over larger time spans of my life and plan or review where I’m going. Now, the further I get from the date, the more difficult it is to solidify my plans—life disrupts—but without a plan I find I’m spinning my wheels more than making progress.

I take advantage of opportunities

Did you catch that? It is not complicated, but it is a powerful principle for being a high achiever. Networking. Delegation. Time-management. Learning something new. Cultivating dead times. I am intentional (there’s that word again) at looking for opportunities as they present themselves. If I’m waiting at the doctor’s office, I’m probably writing a blog post or replying to emails. Small opportunities lead to huge opportunities. I seek those moments. (By the way, I always have something with me where I can make notes. When ideas come I want to be ready. Intentionally ready.)

Carlos Whitaker: Emotion in the Church – Manipulation or God’s Gift?

emotion in the church
Adobestock #293389801

Carlos Whitaker once wrote his take about emotion in the church:

“I just can’t go to that church. It’s so full of emotional manipulation.”

I hear this all the time. I want to look them square in the eye and say that it’s no worse that their church’s intellectual manipulation.

And I also believe that the word “manipulation” is thrown around too loosely.
Here’s the deal.

God CREATED emotions. He CREATED us as emotional creatures. Yes, there is abuse of any gift He has given. But what I have seen is the church turn their back on emotion because they are scared people will make an “emotional decision.”

News Flash: It Needs to Be an Emotional Decision

God gave us emotions to feel and a mind to think.

Emotions can be dangerous just like intellect can be dangerous. I think it is more important to take the BS out of Bible Study than it is to take emotions out of decisions.

And past scars definitely push people towards one or the other.

Don’t lose one of God’s greatest gifts to us, emotion, because you have seen emotion in the church abused before.

 

Carlos Whittaker is a speaker, worship leader, and self-professed “hope dealer” who appears at some of the largest churches in the country including Fresh Life Church, Embrace Church, and North Point Community Church, among others. In addition, he’s been on stage at the Orange Conference, Catalyst, MomCon, Experience Conference, and many other key events. A People’s Choice Award winner, Carlos is the author of Moment Maker and Kill the Spider. He hosts the podcast Fill In the Blank with Carlos Whittaker. He lives in Nashville with his wife, Heather, and their three children.

 

 

UPDATE: Britney Spears Responds to Claim Catholic Church Did Not Deny Her a Wedding Venue

britney spears
Glenn Francis, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

UPDATED Aug. 11, 2022: Pop star Britney Spears has responded to claims that she never contacted the Catholic church she says denied her request to use its building for her wedding. Spears says she did reach out to the church through her wedding planner.

“It’s not a big deal, but I don’t like being called a liar when their church says I never asked !!!” said the pop star in an Instagram post earlier this week.

“There was a lot of backlash saying I never asked to get married at the church I pictured,” said Spears. “I’m writing this because the church said I never asked.” She explained, “I hired a wedding planner who has done Madonna’s wedding and plenty more … he was extremely expensive and yes my first request was to get married in that church pictured … it was the only picture I had and sent to him through my phone at my house … I was told 6 weeks later … I could not get married there !!!”

While quite a few people responded to Spears explaining the qualifications for getting married in a Catholic church, several expressed their support for the star. “Stop doubting Britney!” said one. “She’s under a pressure cooker of stress, navigating her freedom & trauma. Britney- we love you!!!”


ChurchLeaders original article written on Aug. 5, 2022, below:

Oops…Britney Spears actually didn’t inquire about her wedding, according to a Catholic parish. St. Monica Church in Santa Monica, California, is defending itself after the pop star claimed the church denied her request to get married there.

In a now-deleted Instagram post from late July, Spears shared a photo of the sanctuary and wrote: “This is where I originally wanted to get married during COVID. I wanted to go every Sunday. Then 2 years later when I wanted to get married there they said I had to be catholic and go through [a] TEST!!! Isn’t church supposed to be open to all???”

Spears, 40, married Sam Asghari in June at her Los Angeles home. The singer was raised Baptist and has studied Kabbalah, or Jewish mysticism. During a successful legal battle to end a lengthy conservatorship, Spears accused her father of using the Christian faith to control her. For example, the mother of two says she was denied the opportunity to try to have more children.

Spears and Asghari, who got engaged last September, announced a pregnancy in April but then a miscarriage one month later.

Britney Spears Has Never Been Here, Says Catholic Church

When asked about Britney Spears’ claim, a St. Monica’s representative says the church has no records of the singer requesting a wedding there. It also has no indication that Spears ever stepped foot inside the facility.

Pastor Greg Locke Calls the Political Left ‘Marxist Demon Possessed Mongrels’ While Giving Prophetic Warning

Screengrab via Facebook @Pastor Greg Locke

Global Vision Bible Church pastor Greg Locke unleashed on the American government earlier this week following the FBI’s raid on former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home on Monday.

Much like Franklin Graham, who posted about the incident on Tuesday, Locke believes Americans are losing their freedoms. However, Locke expressed his thoughts in a tone markedly different from Graham’s.

“I’m here to tell you it was an absolute criminal act,” Locke told his social media followers. “The government of the United States has been given the authority to come after us in ways that we could have never imagined. I’m telling you, what they did was not only an injustice, not only was it a criminal act…the FBI has now been weaponized! Weaponized! Against the American people.”

Locke is known for his “tell it like he sees it” leadership, which many Christians and non-Christians have labeled controversial—some going as far as to call him a false-teacher, but Locke has expressed that he doesn’t care what people call him so long as he believes he is speaking biblical truth.

RELATED: Greg Locke: ‘The Public Hatred for Our Church Continues to Rise’; Church Signs Stolen and Burned

The pastor from Mt. Juliet, Tennessee, believes that what happened to Trump is “indicative of a prophetic warning, not because it’s in the Bible, but because it’s in our very face…The Word of God is being fulfilled.”

“I’m telling you, they are coming against anyone that goes against the narrative. They’re coming against anyone that is conservative. They’re coming against anyone that supports or supported President Donald Trump. I’m telling you, they are coming against us. They’ve weaponized the FBI, the CIA. Now they’ve hired 87,000 more IRS and have armed them. I’m telling you, they’re coming for audits at an all time high. They’re coming for raids and arrests at an all time high,” Locke continued.

Locke called investigations into the January 6 capitol riot “garbage.”

“I was there,” he said. “It wasn’t an insurrection.” Locke’s video has been viewed over 471,000 times on Facebook.

Locke further said that people with conservative values better get their houses in order, because the American government is coming for churches and everyone who stands and speaks out against them.

RELATED: Greg Locke Removes Church’s Tax Exempt Status; Calls Steven Furtick, Kenneth Copeland, T.D. Jakes, Perry Stone False Prophets

The pastor believes Democrats stole the 2020 presidential election and are attempting to do the same in this year’s upcoming midterm elections.

It’s Time to End the ‘Insanity’ of Typical Youth Ministry and Start a Revolution

insanity
Lightstock #258576

Someone once said, “Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.“ This is true in life. This is true in youth ministry.

For the last 50 years youth ministry has pretty much stayed the same. We do the same kinds of meetings we’ve always done (midweek, Sunday morning, etc) and do the same kinds of things in those meetings (play games, sing songs, give announcements, teach a lesson, eat snacks, etc.) In addition to these same-old weekly meetings, we do the same kinds of annual events (winter retreats, summer camps and special events) where the same types of things happen.

We do the same thing over and over again, week after week, month after month, year after year…and expect different results.

But, for the most part, the results are the same…and extremely disheartening.

According to one massive research project (greatopportunity.org) we are losing one million Christian teenagers per year, and will continue to do so for the next 35 years, if something doesn’t drastically change. These teenagers aren’t just leaving their churches. They are leaving their faith completely.

To keep doing what we are doing is insanity. Something must radically change.

So what’s the solution? Is it to dump the whole concept of youth ministry? No! No! No! We will never reach the next generation if we stop focusing on reaching and discipling Gen Z.

It’s not time to stop doing youth ministry.

It’s time to stop doing it the WAY we are currently doing it. It’s time to do what Jesus did to reach, train and mobilize his mostly teenaged disciples.

  • He prayed with unparalleled wisdom on who to focus on (Mark 3:13)
  • He invested in the few and mobilized them for mission (Mark 3:14)
  • He trained them along the way (Luke 10:1-20Luke 11:1-13)
  • He offered salvation as a free gift to everyone but required 100% commitment to be a part of his leadership team (Luke 14:15-35)
  • He had a strategy of disciple multiplication that is as relevant now as ever (Matthew 28:18-20)

…and so much more!

What if we let the “youth ministry” philosophy of Jesus drive our youth ministry model? What if we focused on building a strong leadership team (aka “the disciples”) who were all in to lead the way for spiritual growth and Gospel Advancement for the other teens in our youth groups? What if we stopped catering to the apathetic kids to try to get them to like us and enjoy youth group and started really making and multiplying disciples?

Sound unrealistic?

Tell that to Doug Henry, a full-time law enforcement officer in Missouri who doubles as a youth leader. He has built his youth ministry on these principles. God is using him and his on-fire-for-Christ teenagers to shake his town for Jesus.

Tell that to Jerrod Gunter, a youth leader in inner city Memphis, who has implemented these principles and kicked off a city-wide (and growing nationwide) ministry called Riotstarters, whose goal is to change the way youth ministry is done in the inner city and mobilize urban teens for what he calls “a Gospel solution” to the problems these teens uniquely face.

Mumford and Sons Frontman Processes Childhood Sexual Abuse, Discusses Life As a Pastor’s Kid

Marcus Mumford
Sachyn, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Marcus Mumford, known for his work as frontman of the neo-folk rock band Mumford and Sons, is set to release his first solo record, “Self-Titled,” next month. The album explores the preacher’s son’s childhood sexual abuse, what he describes as his addiction to shame, as well as grace and healing. 

In an interview with GQ, Mumford, who described Mumford and Sons as a band that would “take you to church” as well as “to the fair,” expressed that his Christian upbringing shaped his love for music and the sense of community it can create. 

Mumford was born in California to English parents who had come to America in the 1980s to work with Vineyard Church, a neo-charismatic evangelical church and later denomination, which originally formed as an offshoot of Calvary Chapel in Orange County, California. 

Later, his parents moved back to England to plant a Vineyard Church near London.

“Lots of people around all the time,” Mumford said of his childhood experiences in the church. “I was watching my folks at the center of attention and, I think, dealing with that really well. But it did provide some element of training for what I chose to do.”

Mumford, who has the word “grace” tattooed on his arm in biblical Greek, still considers himself a believer, calling his faith “a cornerstone” in his life. Nevertheless, he stopped attending church when he was a teenager sometime after his father encouraged him to become a member of a church other than Vineyard. 

“My dad said to me, ‘You shouldn’t come to this church anymore. You should go to a different place. You don’t want to be the pastors’ kid everywhere,’” Mumford said. 

Nevertheless, Mumford expressed that the blueprint for building a church community is what he used to create a community around his music, saying, “I like the social aspect of music, and how it brings people together. And the congregational aspect of it.”

Though Mumford and Sons grew to reach commercial success, Mumford found himself struggling increasingly with alcohol consumption and certain eating habits. Eventually, his bandmates encouraged him to get help, and he agreed to do so, eventually cutting out alcohol and developing a healthy diet. 

The turnaround in Mumford’s mental health is owing in part to the healing he found after revealing to his therapist that he was sexually abused when he was six years old. 

RELATED: Former Christian Rocker Details Why He Left the Faith, Cites ‘The State of Christian Culture in America’

“Not by family and not in the church, which might be some people’s assumption. But I hadn’t told anyone about it for 30 years,” Mumford said. 

Woman Sentenced to Life for Murder of Pastor Husband Who Sexually Abused Her

Screengrab via Twitter

Oklahoma woman Kristie Evans has been sentenced to life in prison for the first-degree murder of her husband. David Evans, pastor of Harmony Church in Ada, Oklahoma, had sexually abused Kristie for years, forcing her to have sex with between 50 to 100 men. 

The triggerman, who shot David Evans while he slept, was Kristie’s secret lover, 27-year-old Kahill Deamie Square, whom Kristie “begged” to shoot her husband so that she could escape the abusive relationship.

Square has also been charged with first-degree murder. His next court date is August 25. 

Evans had first met Square in January 2021, when her husband arranged for the three to meet at a motel for a sexual encounter. The three met more than once. At one such meet-up, Evans slipped Square her phone number, and the two began a secret relationship. 

RELATED: Pastor Murdered by Wife After Years of Forcing Her To Have Sex With 50 to 100 Men; Sentencing Underway

While David Evans was in Mexico for a missions trip in March 2021, Kristie and Square hatched a plan to murder him at Kristie’s behest. They carried out the murder on the evening of Sunday, March 21, 2021. 

Evans later turned herself into police, citing immense guilt and a desire to “get right with God,” and she pleaded guilty to first-degree murder. 

During the sentencing hearing, Evans’ daughter, Brittney Long, spoke on her mother’s behalf, saying, “I think my mom already has served her time. She spent 30 years living with my dad.” 

Long also recounted her mother telling her, “Even if I spend the rest of my life behind bars, I’ll be more free than I was with your dad.”

Evans’ attorney, Joi Miskel, had been seeking a split sentence consisting of four years of jail time followed by lifetime probation.

“She is not a danger to society,” Miskel said.

Miskel had cited Evans’ remorse for the murder to reporters, adding, “You have to understand that she has suffered for years and years this horrific abuse. You don’t just shake that off in a matter of days, months, weeks or even years. And you have to think she still has had no kind of counseling, any kind of therapy, to work through these issues of decades of abuse.”

Prosecutors, on the other hand, asked the judge to impose a life sentence without the possibility of parole, saying, “She had options. She chose the worst one.” 

In the end, Pontotoc County District Judge Steven Kessinger sided with prosecution, giving Evans a life sentence. 

“As you testified,” Kessinger told Evans at sentencing, “actions have consequences.”

Citing the sexually explicit letters Evans had written to Square while in jail, Kessinger expressed his belief that Evans’ remorse was “newly found.” 

At one point during the sentencing hearing, prosecutors told Evans that she was a very good liar. She replied, “Yes, I’ve lived a whole 30 years with a mask on my face.”

RELATED: ‘We Still Believe In Dad’s Innocence’—Ravi Zacharias’ Son Continues To Defend Father

Evans will be eligible for parole in 2060. She will be approximately 87 years old. 

Hoops in the Holy Land: Auburn Men’s BB Team Takes Trip of a Lifetime

auburn university
Screenshot from Twitter / @AuburnMBB

In basketball, “traveling” is usually a foul. But the Auburn University men’s team just completed a trip that’s likely to have positive impacts for years to come.

During a 10-day journey through Israel, the Tigers played three exhibition games and saw numerous sacred sites. Head coach Bruce Pearl, who’s Jewish, wanted players to “see their Judeo-Christian roots” and “experience firsthand God’s presence in the Holy Land.” Based on images and descriptions players have shared, those experiences were profound.

Auburn University Team’s Holy Land Trip Includes Baptism in the Jordan River

On August 5, the team shared photos of some players getting baptized in the Jordan River. “Today, we shared a special moment with each other,” the caption read. Players also had the opportunity to pray at the Western Wall, ride a boat on the Sea of Galilee, and sing “Silent Night” together in Bethlehem.

In a post titled “Maccabi Madness,” Auburn University center Dylan Caldwell describes some highlights: “First, we went to see the Mount of Olives, which had the most amazing view. From there, we walked down the mountain and visited the beautiful Garden of Gethsemane, which has been preserved since the days Jesus walked the Earth. We even walked along the Via Dolorosa, which is the historic path Jesus walked before his crucifixion.”

Caldwell’s “personal favorite,” he writes, “was the Church of the Holy Sepulchre where Jesus was buried. It was an amazing sight to see.” He adds, “Walking through the Old City of Jerusalem was a huge blessing — just observing people’s way of life and how they differ to our livelihood back home in the U.S.”

Caldwell also was moved by the “unity” he felt when teams prayed together after games. “Spiritually, this is the closest I’ve ever been to God,” he says.

Auburn is just the fourth college basketball team to play pre-season games in Israel. “A lot of teams take trips that are great,” says ESPN analyst Jay Bilas, but “I think this has an opportunity to be the most significant trip that I’ve ever heard of.” He adds, “For a close program like Auburn to get even closer together and do it in a setting with a backdrop like Israel will have long-term benefits and ramifications that I think none of us can even fathom right now.”

Auburn BB Coach Bruce Pearl Strives for Peace

In previous interviews, Coach Pearl has described why he avoids advice about steering clear of religion and politics. “I’m particularly concerned about anti-Semitism around the world,” he said in 2015. “I just want us to be able to get along and respect each other and love each other and tolerate each other’s differences. And that’s been my life’s work.”

SBC President Bart Barber Says Implementation Task Force Strengthened by Different Perspectives, Backgrounds

Photo by Jesse T. Jackson

FARMERSVILLE, Texas (BP) ­– Diverse experiences and opinions related to the SBC and sexual abuse among members of the recently-named Abuse Reform Implementation Task Force (ARITF) will enhance that group’s ability to present recommendations at next year’s annual meeting, said SBC President Bart Barber in a video release.

Sexual abuse reform could very well be a constant point of discussion on the floor of SBC annual meetings for years to come. As such, Barber said the makeup of the ARITF needed to reflect those differences of opinion as seen each June.

“The investigation is over. And so, this group is going to be deciding how to make implementation of best practices for the Southern Baptist Convention and [for] our member churches to have all the tools that we need to be able to work to prevent and respond well to sexual abuse,” he said. “When we make decisions and … try to implement things, that’s something that our Southern Baptist churches do together.”

RELATED: SBC President Bart Barber Names Abuse Task Force Members

The task force is expected to bring a report to messengers at next year’s annual meeting in New Orleans, but periodic updates are also expected.

Barber said a “deliberate diversity” among the task force members came about due to the current polarized environment and “probably” means there is someone on the task force “to make you uncomfortable.”

And he believes that’s okay.

“The measure of this task force is not how many people on it I like or how much I like them or dislike them,” he said. “[It’s] whether they bring good recommendations to New Orleans …[and] whether those recommendations, when implemented, actually reduce and prevent sexual abuse in our churches and improve our responses within our churches to sexual abuse.”

In the video, Barber also addressed public complaints surrounding the appointment of Indiana pastor Todd Benkert and allegations by Texas pastor Tom Buck and his wife, Jennifer, that Benkert was involved in the mishandling of a story revealing Jennifer’s past abuse.

RELATED: Barber and Keahbone Discuss Resolution Dealing With Native Peoples

However, Barber went on to cite Benkert’s work related to supporting sexual abuse survivors and reform efforts. That included a booth at this year’s SBC Pastors’ Conference in Anaheim, a breakout session during the annual meeting on teaching trauma-informed ministry and consistently building relationships with abuse survivors. In addition, Benkert can provide his own perspective as someone who has survived a false accusation of abuse.

The task force “needs to have good ideas about preventing and responding to clergy sexual abuse,” said Barber. “Todd has demonstrated that he’s thinking about those ideas and he’s working to try and implement them.”

Barber had never experienced an in-person conversation with many of the task force members and needed to introduce himself on his initial phone call with several of them. Backgrounds range from serving at the national SBC level regarding sexual abuse, as is the case with Marshall Blalock and Mike Keahbone, as well as on the state level like Melissa Bowen, Brad Eubank and Jon Nelson.

Pastor’s Second-Grade Teacher’s Impact Drives His Educational Outreach

educational outreach
Neighborhood students and passersby participated in a back-to-school community outreach at The Favor Church in Decatur, Ga. (Submitted photo)

DECATUR, Ga. (BP) — Church planter and pastor Emory Berry Jr.’s passion for serving the educational community has its roots in his second-grade public school teacher of decades ago, Lillie Courtney, who also taught him Sunday School.

Berry, who holds a doctorate in theology, had begun the second grade at Palmetto Elementary School in Pinecrest, Fla., as the lowest ranking member of his class in reading comprehension.

“This teacher could have easily labeled me and put me in special classes, remedial classes, but she took a personal investment,” said Berry, founding pastor of The Favor Church. “I guess she saw the potential was there, but I did not have the skillset. And she worked with me and worked with me.

educational outreach
Emory Berry, founding pastor of The Favor Church in Decatur, Ga., buys supplies for a cookout the church hosted for the staff of Mary McLeod Bethune Middle School. (Submitted photo)

“By the time I finished the second grade, I was still in a reading group by myself, but now I was in the highest reading group. So, I experienced incredible gains with my literacy because this one teacher took an investment in me,” he said. “I know the power of educators. She helped give me a hunger or taste for achievement.”

Berry counts nearly 20 active and retired educators and school administrators among the 100 or so worshipers who attend The Favor Church, which Berry planted at Easter, including his wife Julie Ann Berry who is an assistant principal. The church sees the three local public schools in its community as a mission field.

855,266FansLike

New Articles

preschool praise and worship

Preschool Praise and Worship: Helping Little Hearts Worship in Big Ways

Preschool praise and worship experiences are bursting with joy. Learn how to nurture praise-filled preschoolers at Sunday school and church.

New Podcasts

Joby Martin

Joby Martin: What Happens When Pastors Finally Understand Grace

Joby Martin joins “The Stetzer ChurchLeaders Podcast” to discuss what happens when a church leader has truly been run over by the “grace train" and understands the profound love and grace of God.