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How to Make Time for Your Private Life

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I overly focus on my ministry and personal goals, which means I don’t focus enough time on my private life. In other words, my priorities tend to always be jacked up. I just keep going, going, going, going and going…without stopping to rest or refuel. I wrote about how I am trying to find a slowmo life here.

I love ministry.

I love the adrenaline.

I love loving on people.

So it is very easy for me to get sucked into the ministry vortex without reconnecting with Jesus, my family and myself.

My guess is that most busy youth ministry leaders struggle with finding and scheduling “time” to have a fun, recharging private life. This “DO ministry” and “GO, GO, GO” mentality is just reality for most youth pastors. No need to feel ashamed, embarrassed, guilty or convicted. It is just normal. Most youth pastors prefer the active ministry life over the reflective and slow-paced private life.

I have had philosophers (Aristotle, Seneca, Epictetus), Christian leaders (Henri Nowuen, Thomas Merton, Richard Foster, Craig Groeschel and Dallas Willard), mentors and youth ministry professors tell me over and over to be intentional in making time for my private life. It is one thing to know it, but it is an entirely different thing to keep doing it.

So the intent behind this post is to give you a reminder (or a swift kick in the buttox) on how to renovate the heart, soul and mind.

So here are a few reminders on how to have a great private life:

Spouse/Family

Your spouse and family are your primary ministry, they need you. Time belongs to you! You are responsible for your time—you always have a choice. You always have the option to leave or say no. No one will ever make you do anything. If your paycheck or the need to please others or a need to be needed controls you—that is adolescent behavior. Work hard and keep your priority and boundaries. Your marriage needs other married people in your life. Remember ministry is your job. Life is a gift, it is adventure! Life is awesome! Make sure you stop and smell the roses! Life is supposed to be fun!

If you are  a single youth pastor—you will be the most taken of advantage person in the church. Draw boundaries. And don’t let others guilt you into the notion that you have a lot of time to give to the ministry since you aren’t married and don’t have kids. That is a lie.

Fellowship

Community (koine) is getting a small group of trusted people around you to speak truth into your life. In order to be a person of integrity, you need others calling you out when you are lying and pretending. Everyone pretends, everyone hides. You have to find relationships where you can be brutally honest. You need a place where you can share your dirt and really be you.

Plus you need to learn how to be the people of God before you do the work of God. You’ve got to figure out how to combine friendship and ministry. You need a friend that you can laugh with and just be silly with, or else your ministry job will rob you of your joy and laughter. Give your life to the FEW people you trust.

Mentoring

You at least need one person that speaks truth in your life and someone you are speaking truth into their life. Mentorship doesn’t have to be this professional or official thing. Sometimes we over-dramatize the mentorship role. You simply get a mentor by grabbing a cup of coffee and asking questions about their life. You look for mentors by looking for people who you want to be like. Find mentors who have a great private life and have great boundaries. These people are the people you want to surround yourself with Bottom line: You need someone ahead of you.

Counseling

There will be a time where you need to get counseling—especially if you are in your 20s, people have wronged you in ministry, or you are getting married or your marriage needs a refine tuning. Do not be afraid of counseling. Counseling doesn’t mean you hit rock bottom. I spent five years in counseling and it was the best and hardest five years of my life. Counseling not only keeps you humble and honest, it makes you extremely self-aware. If you can…get a Christian licensed therapist. If not, find a licensed professional. Many times when you hit crisis in your personal or ministry life, it is important to see someone who understands pastoral issues and dynamics.

Spiritual Life

Never confuse personal worship with ministry preparation. It is not a spiritual discipline when you write and prepare talks. Hebrews 3:1 and 12:2 remind ministers to fix their thoughts and eyes on Jesus. Get to know Jesus. Ministry flows out of our relationship with Jesus. God has given His chosen leaders to lead with His power (Acts 1.9). Youth pastors need to intentionally carve time out so they can spend a lot of time with Jesus so He can empower us to do the work of the ministry. Take quarterly retreats just to be. Jesus is your senior pastor.

The spiritual life is first of all a life. It is not merely something to be known and studied, it is to be lived.

?Thomas MertonThoughts in Solitude

Solitude well practiced will break the power of busyness, haste, isolation and loneliness. You will see that the world is not on your shoulders after all. You will find yourself, and God will find you in new ways. Silence also brings Sabbath to you. It completes solitude, for without it you cannot be alone. Far from being a mere absence, silence allows the reality of God to stand in the midst of your life. God does not ordinarily compete for our attention. In silence we come to attend.

Dallas WillardThe Great Omission: Reclaiming Jesus’s Essential Teachings on Discipleship

Personal growth and fulfillment

Be a student! Read and learn. Find a hobby. Set a time once a week for your personal time. If you don’t schedule it, you won’t do it.

Design a private life that is full of family and friendship, simplicity, solitude, and of course enjoy great food and movies.

How have you designed your private life as a busy, anxiety-driven and super stressed youth pastor?

Jury Convicts Saddleback Youth Mentor of Molesting Boys at Church

Saddleback Church
Screengrab Youtube @KCAL News

On the heels of an article favorably comparing Saddleback Church to Willow Creek comes news that a former youth mentor at Rick Warren’s church in Lake Forest, California, was convicted by a jury Wednesday of molesting twin teenage boys.

Thirty-three-year-old Ruven (Ruben) Meulenberg was convicted of two counts of lewd acts with a minor younger than 14 and three counts of lewd acts on children 14 or 15 in an Orange county court, according to the City News Service.

The molestations occurred between May 2016 and May 2017 against twin boys that he mentored at Saddleback Church Youth Center. The actions took place off church property.

According to news reports, Deputy District Attorney Courtney Thom described for jurors an incident that happened when Meulenberg took the twin brothers to a movie theater. The youth mentor is said to have encouraged one of the boys to sit on his lap and proceeded to kiss the 14-year-old boy on the head, cheek and mouth.

Jurors were told Meulenberg asked the boy to switch seats with his brother after the boy said that he didn’t feel comfortable kissing Meulenberg. Meulenberg proceeded to molest the other boy in a similar fashion.

“This occurred in isolation in the back row of a darkened movie theater,” Thom said. “This is not saying hello or goodbye. This is the defendant manipulating his position of trust and confusing these young boys to see how far he could go.”

On the way home from the theater, Meulenberg had one of the boys sit between his legs in the backseat of a car, according to Thom.

Once the boys got home, they told their mother what had occurred. The mother contacted a church official, who called sheriff’s deputies.

In May of 2017, Saddleback issued a statement claiming Meulenberg was a volunteer and explaining the church goes to great lengths to investigate potential workers.

“To be considered for volunteering with kids or students, we require fingerprinting, professional background checks and personal interviews,” the statement reads. “We also use services that report any illegal activity to us immediately. In this case, the accused volunteer had no record of arrest or criminal charges. Also, our church requires volunteers who work with students or children to complete an annual training regarding appropriate conduct. Our system of safeguards has safely served over 40,000 students and children for 38 years.”

Meulenberg’s status with the church is being questioned by Lighthouse Trails, a Christian publishing company. In a blog post last summer, Lighthouse pointed to a 2014 article written by A. Larry Ross Communications, which handles public relations for Saddleback and Warren. Meulenberg and his twin brother, Efraim, were described as “being on staff” at the church in a September 2014 article about their video game endeavors.

Manafort Verdict Deepens Evangelical Divide

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On Tuesday, a jury found former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort guilty on eight of the 18 counts of tax and bank-fraud charges.

While Donald Trump received 70 percent of the evangelical vote in 2016, many evangelical leaders have been vocal in their opposition to his lifestyle, character and even his fitness to be president.

While not many evangelicals commented on the Manafort conviction and its implications for Trump’s presidency, those that did ignited a firestorm of comments from Christians both for and against Trump on Twitter.

Ed Stetzer, an outspoken critic of Trump and those who voted for him, tweeted shortly after the verdict was read in U.S. District Court in Alexandria, Virginia. Stetzer is the Executive Director of the Billy Graham Center at Wheaton College.

While not defending Manafort or Trump, many took exception to Stetzer’s tweet. One was Phil McCutchen, Pastor of Bethany Community Church in Mendon, MA.

Another tweet that garnered quite a bit of reaction came from the other side of the political divide. Jerry Falwell Jr., president of Liberty University and an ardent supporter of Trump, suggested in his tweet that the verdict amounted to nothing.

Bryan Ayers, a software engineer from San Diego, echoed the sentiment of many.

Social media indicates evangelicals remain divided, and sadly it appears to be politics that is separating them.

United Methodists Are Not Very United These Days

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Fault lines are developing in the United Methodist Church following a recommendation by the Council of Bishops in May to adopt the One Church Plan at a special General Conference to be held in February in St. Louis.

The conference was called by bishops to help the denomination stay as unified as possible despite decades-old division over how accepting to be of homosexuality. But it looks like the lofty goal may be unraveling.

The One Church Plan will effectively give individual churches the right to decide whether they will perform same-sex marriages and ordain LGBT people as clergy. It would remove the denomination-wide position against homosexual acts and gay marriage.

Earlier this week the United Methodist Church’s Latino-Hispanic caucus (MARCHA) endorsed the plan at its annual assembly. Any pastor, lay leader, member, youth or staff from the United Methodist Church or the Puerto Rican Methodist Church can be a member of MARCHA.

The Reverend Eunice Vega, one of the two delegates to sponsor the resolution, argued that the One Church Plan was the best option because it allowed for “the coexistence of different theological positions.”

She also maintained that not accepting same-sex marriage and homosexual acts would mean stances against racism, exclusion, inequality, sexism and other expressions of injustices within the church “would probably disappear with the adoption of any of the other two models.”

The Rev. Rosita Mayorga spoke against the resolution, arguing that if the One Church Plan were passed, the result would lead to many theologically conservative churches leaving the denomination.

Many of those departing churches could come from Africa. Also this month, speakers at a gathering of the Africa Initiative offered support for the Traditional Plan.

United Methodist Church Also Considering Traditional Plan

The Traditional Plan calls for retaining the church ban on ordination of “self-avowed practicing homosexuals,” as well as the prohibitions on clergy officiating same-sex weddings or churches hosting them. It would retain the church’s official position that the practice of homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching.

In addition, the Traditional Plan would call for greater enforcement of those restrictions including pushing out congregations and conferences into their own Methodist affiliations outside of the UMC if they won’t pledge to abide by church rules on homosexuality.

The Rev. Keith Boyette, president of the Wesleyan Covenant Association, was among the speakers.

“If The United Methodist Church decides not to follow Jesus Christ by adopting any plan other than the Traditional Plan, we the members of the Wesleyan Covenant Association will follow Jesus Christ,” Boyette told the Africa Initiative gathering.

Filipino Methodists discussed the options at a meeting in late July.

One of the Most Overlooked Ways to Get Your Church Solving Community Problems

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The call to shepherd a church is a call to shepherd the community. When God led me to West Bradenton, He not only gave me a responsibility for pastoring a church but also a responsibility to serve our community. Churches are not islands in the community, set up to isolate believers from the ails of society. The walls of the church are not protective barriers to community problems. Quite the opposite—the church should be the vehicle by which people are sent into the hardest, darkest parts of the neighborhood.

But how? Most will agree the church should be part of the solution, at least in theory. You can get a lot of head nods and amens when you preach about solving community problems. Many churches have good intentions but do not know where to start. The hard part is putting the sermon to action. How does a church become part of the solution to improve a community?

The list of ideas is long. While each community will have neighborhood-specific problems, one issue stands out as a neglected nationwide solution most churches are not considering. Fostering is one of the most overlooked ways to get your church solving community problems.

Fostering connects you to the heart of community problems. Do you want to jump into the thick of evil? Whatever issues are producing foster children are often the core of a community’s sins. Take a foster child into your home, and you are immediately connected to some of the most difficult issues in your community. In Bradenton where I live, drug addiction, specifically heroin, is ravaging the city. We are the top county in child removal rates in all of Florida, due mainly to heroin addiction of parents.

Fostering is a way for pastors to lead by example. The foster movement at our church began with a couple of families and our student pastor. Now several families are fostering, including some of our staff. Do you want to practice what you preach? Then foster. You will live several sermons a week.

Fostering gets churches taking care of the most vulnerable. Fostering is one way to be both pro-life and pro-justice. A pro-life ethic and a pro-justice ethic are not diametrically opposed. When James wrote of widows and orphans, both life and justice are present in the text. When you foster a child, you are championing both ethics.

Fostering creates a culture of sacrifice. Foster parents lose privacy, money, security and a whole lot of sleep. Sacrifice is required from the moment you start going through the certification process. Get enough people fostering in your church, and a culture of sacrifice will form.

Fostering supports the biblical notion of church as family. While rules vary by state, many of the adults in your church will qualify to foster. You can be single and foster. You don’t have to have biological children to foster. Other options, like providing respite care, are also available if you don’t want to take on the full responsibility of fostering. Frankly, you will need the support of your church to foster. When a church has several foster children, the idea of a church being family becomes quite real.

Fostering gets people off the church island. Do you want to free your people from the concept of the church offering protective isolation? Start a movement of fostering. The church is not a fallout shelter from a radioactive world. You can’t be salt and light hunkered down in isolation.

My family forever changed when we started fostering. Our foster son brings joy, frustration, confusion and contentment—sometimes all emotions at once. It’s not easy, but I’m thankful.

This article originally appeared here.

How to Make Faith in God a Family Affair

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With your responsibility to minister to children and families, have you ever wondered how to make faith in God a family affair?

There’s nothing like God’s Word.

What other sacred text can be described as alive and active (as in Hebrews 4:12)? How incredible is it that ancient words are relevant in our modern age? And what a gift that a book with such depth is also simple enough for kids!

FAITH IN GOD IS MEANT TO BE A FAMILY AFFAIR

The Israelites in Deuteronomy were instructed to diligently teach their children the ways of the Lord, and that stands true today. Jesus blessed children and taught that faith like a child was necessary to enter the kingdom of heaven. So we encourage and equip one another to grow together in faith as a family.

But, the thing is, kids and adults learn differently. What exactly does it mean to have childlike faith?

We can look to Jesus as our teacher, as He used stories and experiences to help His followers understand the kingdom of God.

We all love a good story, and the Bible is full of true tales of creation, adventure, love, intrigue, danger and battles. Christ used parables to explain difficult concepts.

Our kids need stories. They need to understand what is historical and what is symbolic, such as parables or prophecy. Kids also need guidance to navigate pages of Scripture at an age-appropriate pace. See? Faith in God is meant to be a family affair.

Parents are a tour guide through the complex Word of God, building a foundation of understanding, beginning with the cornerstone that is Christ. Begin by telling the stories. The narrative of the gospel is captivating, and stories were made to settle into our memory and remain in our hearts at every age.

Kids also need experiences to help them grasp challenging concepts and to boost memory. Adults benefit from this learning style, too! Jesus not only demonstrated healing, but He involved the disciples in miracles, too. The bread and wine of the last supper became an object lesson to prepare for the crucifixion and resurrection. Not only would the disciple carry with them the memory of that night in the upper room, but the taste of wine and smell of bread likely brought them right back to those sacred moments. Our senses are powerfully connected to our minds by God’s design. And hands-on activity will reinforce a lesson much stronger than hours of lecture and note-taking. Of course, kids are hard-wired for activity, so it’s incredibly necessary to adapt to—and take advantage of—their natural energy and reach their hearts with the love of God.

So what might this look like?

Every family is different, so of course we all approach the word of God in our unique, fearfully and wonderfully made ways. But here are a couple of ideas for family devotional time.

Are You a People-Pleasing Pastor? Take This Assessment to Find Out

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Are you a people pleasing pastor? I based my third book, People-Pleasing Pastors: Avoiding the Pitfalls of Approval Motivated Leadership, on significant research around people pleasing. As a scripturally based book, it incorporated fascinating insight about how our brain influences our leadership and our tendencies to appease and please others in unhealthy ways. To discover how pervasive people-pleasing is in the ministry I gathered research from two sources. I contracted Lifeway Research to survey over 1,000 pastors about people pleasing and I added to this research the results of a similar online survey of 1,200 pastors I did for a total of over 2,200 pastoral responses. In this post I’ve created a simple self-evaluation for pastors to determine how much people pleasing affects them.

My research revealed that 70 percent of pastors agreed that people pleasing affects their lives and ministries at some level. In the online survey, I included an option for pastors to anonymously tell their people pleasing stories. I got 100 pages of heart wrenching stories, single-spaced!

Here’s one pastor’s sad story.

In a church that I pastored, there was a major power struggle with several members who remained very close friends with the previous pastor who actively worked to wield control through these members. I often felt unable to measure up, always trying to ‘minister’ to these folks in hopes that I could win them over, and yet being angry that I couldn’t. After two years I left the church and left the ministry. And I felt like a failure as a pastor and as a husband/father.

Is being a people pleasing pastor affecting your ministry?

How many did you check? If you checked…

  • 1-3: People-pleasing could become a growing issue in your leadership unless you do something soon.
    • Keep this issue in prayer and stay vigilant of your tendency in the area(s) you checked.
  • 4-6: People pleasing is most likely hindering your leadership and may get worse.
    • Find a safe, wise leader in your church or a local pastor with whom you can confidentially share your struggle. Become accountable to him so you can stop unhealthy people pleasing before it gets out of hand. See my blog here on what to look for in a safe person.
  • 7-10: You’re probably angry, anxious and fearful most of the time and people pleasing is clearly hurting your leadership.
    • Consider seeing a good counselor who can help you ferret out the cause and help you lead less from an approval motivation.

As you deal with your pleaser tendencies, consider this verse.

The fear of human opinion disables… (Prov 29.25, The Message)

How have you seen people-pleasing tendencies affect your or others’ ministries?

You can learn more about the book here and view a cool animated video trailer of the book.


“People pleasing in the ministry: I just took an interesting assessment on people pleasing.” (tweet this quote by clicking here)

This article originally appeared here.

Pastors, Are You Willing to Pay the Price Needed for Your Vision to Become Reality?

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Let’s get real about the construction of new buildings at your church and what is needed to see them constructed and paid for.

Every pastor I have ever met wants to stand on a freshly-constructed, larger stage and preach to more people. They want to look out at this larger audience and see countless stories of life change. Pastors want to look at this growing audience and hear the testimonies of marriages being put back together, addictions being broken, hungry people being fed, greedy people becoming generous and people being set free from what previously enslaved them.

Every pastor I have ever met wants to see more people reached for Jesus Christ. They want to see more people becoming disciples.

Every pastor I know wants that moment, that moment when they stand in their new pulpit for the very first time. It is as if all Heaven is cheering them on. They dream of that moment when vision actually becomes reality. These are the perks of leadership. But there is also a price to leadership.

The question is, are you willing to pay the price of leadership for a season of your life to see that vision take place?

Are you willing to step outside your comfort zone? Are you willing to add a number of meetings (some at night) to your schedule for several weeks? Are you willing to ask your staff and top volunteers to carry a short-term, heavier load? Are you willing to appropriately (not high pressure) engage your financial leaders in conversations? Are you possible willing to take on some responsible, short-term debt?

And now for the BIG question. Are you willing to personally sacrifice your time, talent and treasure to stand on that platform and see your vision become reality?

The pastors who answer “YES” will reap the temporary and eternal rewards for this seasonal sacrifice. They are the ones who will stand on that platform. They are ones who will preach to more people. They are the ones who will hear the stories of life-change. And I firmly believe God will honor their sacrifice and redeem their time and energy.

The pastors who shrink from this leadership challenge will live lives of comfort. But with comfort comes the regret of what might have been.

I have attempted to provide some positive motivation because of the perks which come with paying the leadership price. But motivation aside, there is a responsibility which comes with leadership.

As a leader, it is your job to press into these moments. To not shrink from them. There are seasons of sacrifice that come in every growing ministry. Leading during these times is part of the job of a pastor. This is in the fine print on the job description.

At some point in all of our lives, we want Easter without Good Friday. We want gain without the pain. Men especially are susceptible to this type of thinking. We have struggled with passivity and shrinking from challenges since the Garden. I get it. We all get it. But vision-fulfillment does not work that way.

Pastors, I want you to have that moment. I want you to be able to walk on the platform and preach to hordes of new people. I want you to get soaking wet baptizing dozens and dozens of people. Do not shrink from the challenge of new construction and capital campaigns.

You can do this! God has prepared you for this moment in time. Don’t run from this season. Get a good team around you and press into it. The people in your city who have yet to meet Jesus are counting on you!

If I can help you in this area, simply email me at briand@injoystewardship.com and let’s talk.

This article originally appeared here.

It’s Time to Reinstate the Spiritual Discipline of Confession

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In our church, whoever preaches has an opportunity to write up a devotional for some follow up reflection and study. Here is my last sermon and devotion.

ENCOUNTER:  Read James 4:7-10

This has been a challenging week, much more than I was expecting. You see, growing up, it was normative to be reflective about your own sin. Confession was a regular part of the spiritual diet. But something has happened, something has changed.

In our culture, nobody confesses. In fact, we are to celebrate who we are and the way God made us with hostility toward anyone who might suggest that we are not beautiful just the way we are. This sounds great and makes for nice songs, but this is totally at odds with the life in Christ that we are invited toward.

The only way we can move toward Christ is by repenting, turning away from the sin, the life, the attitudes, the beliefs, the actions of our flesh, of our worldly selves, and then moving toward Christ. We can’t go one way while our feet are faced another.

This passage of scripture actually invites us into an even deeper level of reflection and spiritual work. We are invited to not just identify our sin, but to grieve, mourn and wail! Let’s be honest, this version of sin does not sell!

Most of us are not reflective enough or open enough to really examine the destruction and pain our sin causes on those around us. If you can, think back to a time you really did hurt someone you care about and remember the grief you felt and the humility, contrition, that it produced in your life. And for most people who genuinely care about the person they just crushed, that contrition actually changed how we live and how we behaved.

We love that Jesus wants to be in relationship with us and we soak up his love and grace. But we often forget that the back side of this relationship is a person that we can bless and hurt. Our sin impacts Jesus, it squelches the Holy Spirit.

It is an interesting spiritual discipline to not simply confess your sin, but to reflect on it, the pain and distance it causes to others and to God. To grieve and mourn and to pause before we celebrate our forgiveness. This sort of discipline can be used by God to actually transform us and change our tastes and desires.

BE REFLECTIVE: Write out your transgressions. Write out your sins. Then reflect on the ways that your sin and rebellion have caused distance and pain to the people in your life and in your walk with God. Now for the hard part, sit in it for just a minute. Grieve, mourn and wail. Apologize, be contrite, and let the weight of it only add to the gift of Grace that God offers through Jesus.

BE A BLESSING: As humans, it is totally normal and natural to crush each other with our sin. What isn’t normal and natural is to go back to those we have wronged and ask for their forgiveness. Would you be willing to go to the people you have wronged and ask for their forgiveness? What a blessing that will be!

BE TOGETHER: Sin, contriteness, forgiveness and reconciliation is the rhythm of life in Christ. We live this rhythm with God and with one another. Will you lean into reconciliation this week? Will you begin with your side of the street?

This article originally appeared here.

8 Ways to Get Your Students to Share the Gospel

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Getting your teenagers to share the gospel can be a challenge. These ideas will help spark them to action.

1.  Get them to start praying for their unreached peers. When teenagers pray for their lost friends).

2.  Take them on fishing trips. In other words, take them out to actually share the Gospel once a month or so. Jesus did that with his mostly teenaged followers, and we can do the same (Matthew 4:19). Of course we want them to learn to have Gospel conversations and not just make evangelistic presentations.

3. Train them how to bring the Gospel up in a natural way. Jesus used the subject of a drink of water to share the Gospel with the Samaritan woman (John 4:4-10). You can train them using the Ask-Admire-Admit strategy developed by Dare 2 Share to help you do this well.

4.  Immerse them in Gospel fluency. Just like the Apostle Paul equipped the Corinthians with a Gospel creed he himself had put to memory (1 Corinthians 15:3,4), we must equip our teenagers to clearly articulate the Gospel message in a clear and simple way.

5.  Have your teenagers role-play various faith sharing scenarios. You can do this during youth group or small group. Use these different worldviews to create Gospel sharing scenarios with your teenagers.

6.  Program story sharing time into your weekly youth group meetings. One of the reason we love the book of Acts is that it is full of Gospel advancing stories. Faith sharing stories bring the theoretical into reality and make God’s truth come alive in the form of changed lives.

7.  Have teenagers write down the names of teenagers who don’t know Jesus. Use this to help them begin to pray for these friends with passion, pursue them with love and persuade them with the truth of the Gospel. At Dare 2 Share we use THE Cause Circle to help your teens visualize and actualize this process.

8.  Talk about the urgency of hell). The urgency that erupts from its flames can melt even the coldest hearts to evangelistic action.

What are some other ways to get your teenagers sharing their faith right away?

Russia and Iran Use Facebook to Attack Israel

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An investigation by FireEye, a cybersecurity firm, revealed that Russia and Iran have been spreading fake news on Facebook and Instagram.

The identified narratives included anti-Israel and pro-Palestinian themes, as well as support for specific U.S. policies favorable to Iran, such as the U.S.-Iran nuclear deal (JCPOA).

In response to the investigation Facebook and Instagram removed more pages, groups and accounts for coordinated inauthentic behavior this week.

The probe concluded the activity originated in Iran and Russia and was aimed at audiences in the U.S., U.K., Latin America and the Middle East.

In an online press release FireEye claimed:

“This operation is leveraging a network of inauthentic news sites and clusters of associated accounts across multiple social media platforms to promote political narratives in line with Iranian interests… The activity we have uncovered is significant, and demonstrates that actors beyond Russia continue to engage in and experiment with online, social media-driven influence operations to shape political discourse.”

Facebook says it removed 652 pages, groups and accounts across multiple Internet services in the Middle East, Latin America, U.K. and U.S.

According to Facebook, the bad actor on these sites is Liberty Front Press.

“We are able to link this network to Iranian state media through publicly available website registration information, as well as the use of related IP addresses and Facebook Pages sharing the same admins. For example, one part of the network, “Quest 4 Truth,” claims to be an independent Iranian media organization, but is in fact linked to Press TV, an English-language news network affiliated with Iranian state media. The first “Liberty Front Press” accounts we’ve found were created in 2013. Some of them attempted to conceal their location, and they primarily posted political content focused on the Middle East, as well as the UK, US, and Latin America. Beginning in 2017, they increased their focus on the UK and US. Accounts and Pages linked to “Liberty Front Press” typically posed as news and civil society organizations sharing information in multiple countries without revealing their true identity.”

Liberty Front Press and its network operated 74 Pages, 70 accounts, and 3 groups on Facebook, as well as 76 accounts on Instagram.  The sites had about 155,000 Facebook followers and 48,000 accounts were tracking Instagram posts.

These are some examples of the Liberty Front Press Posts.

Some of the Liberty Front Press accounts were created as early at 2011, but Facebook says it wasn’t aware of them until last year.

Chad Greene, Director of Security for Facebook, said the company struggles over when to shut down sites exhibiting inauthentic behavior. “Do we immediately shut down a campaign in order to prevent harm? Or do we spend time investigating the extent of the attack and who’s behind it so we can prevent them from doing bad things again in the future?” he wrote on Facebook’s Newsroom page.

He said Facebook sometimes takes down sites quickly and sometimes they wait. There doesn’t appear to be a hard policy that directs those decisions.

Facebook says some of the bad actors in this action were also removed for cybersecurity attacks before the 2016 U.S. election.

Jackie Hill Perry: God Is Not Calling Gay People to Be Straight

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Jackie Hill Perry is a writer, speaker, and artist whose work has been featured on The Washington Times, The 700 Club, Desiring God, The Gospel Coalition and other publications. Since coming to know Christ at the age of 19 , Jackie has been compelled to share the light of gospel truth through teaching, writing, poetry, and music as authentically as she can. She is signed to Humble Beast Records and released her debut album “The Art of Joy” in 2014 and her latest album ‘crescendo’ in 2018. At home, she is known as wife to Preston and mommy to Eden and Autumn.

Key Questions for Jackie Hill Perry:

– How did you wrestle with being true to yourself regarding your sexuality?

– How can pastors better minister to people who experience same-sex attraction?

Key Quotes from Jackie Hill Perry:

“Me being an image bearer is my primary identity…all things were made through and for Christ.”

“Your identity is not how you feel…if that’s the case then all of our temptations will define us.”

“What does God’s word say about who I am and how do I live in light of that reality.”

“We were never intended to put more emphasis on how we feel instead of what God says.”

“Is your feeling flesh? is your feeling true? Is your feeling the Bible?”

“My most authentic me is sinful. My freeist self is my godly self.”

“I thought about my sin and I realized I deserved death because of my sin…if that’s the case then none of this stuff is worth it.”

“I really didn’t know that what I was doing was repentance and faith but that’s what my conversion was.”

“God changes you, you don’t act like everybody else you don’t talk like everybody else, you don’t think like everybody else when you actually know God.”

“Homosexuality is a really loud sin. You can be a liar and nobody would know. They’re not proud of it. They don’t have parades for it.”

“Living according to the flesh only brings you death. Faith says even though it feels good, I live according to the Scriptures.”

Links Mentioned by Jackie Hill Perry in the Show:

Jackie Hill-Perry Testimony: My Journey Out of Lesbianism

What Can Church Leaders Do to Help People Who Struggle With Same-Sex Attraction?

jackiehillperry.com

Jackie Hill Perry on ChurchLeaders:

Jackie Hill-Perry Testimony: My Journey Out of Lesbianism

5 Ways Analysis Paralysis Might Be Killing Your Church

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Are you spending too much time making decisions? Are you and your leaders digging deeper into the reasons why you should or should not do something without actually making a decision? Analysis paralysis is what happens to leaders when we spend too much time thinking and not enough time acting.

Analysis paralysis can impact any organization, and churches are particularly prone to this sort of non-action because the stakes are so high. Unlike a business where monetary profit is on the line, we feel the pressure of the eternal consequences that are at stake if we don’t take action and fail to lead people to a growing relationship with Jesus. While we need to be careful and work through our decision making in a deliberate, informed manner, you’ll find more churches plagued with inaction than churches making wild, reckless decisions that cause damage.

I’m convinced that analysis paralysis is a widespread epidemic in the local church, and I want to warn you against this harmful approach to leadership. Here are five ways that analysis paralysis might be impacting your church today.

Vision statement over wordsmithing

Have you ever read vision statements from churches? When you look at how churches talk about what they’re called to do, their mission statements all boil down to reaching more people with the message of Jesus and seeing them grow in a relationship with him. Here are a few examples from a quick search around the Internet:

  • “To love the people of Cincinnati into relationship with Jesus Christ and give away to the world what God has given us.”
  • “We exist to welcome people to faith; equip people with a faith that works in real life; and send us in service into the world in Jesus’ name.”
  • “We are called to make disciples for Jesus Christ.”
  • “Helping Others Experience the JOY of Jesus Christ”
  • “Transforming individuals into empowered disciples of Christ.”
  • “To worship God, to make disciples of Jesus, and to serve the world.”
  • “To make more and better disciples of Jesus Christ.”

At the end of the day, we all follow the Great Commission; Matthew 28 lays out what our churches are supposed to do. Going into the world and proclaiming the message of Christ and then going on to disciple, teach or mentor the people who have responded to that message is at the core of every church.

However, it is amazing to watch some churches go on an extended quest for clarity that leads down a rabbit hole of self-examination and navel gazing. While it’s important to have a clear vision and mission statement that drive the activity of the church, how you carry out that mission and vision through strategy is even more important. Your organization’s statement of purpose needs to translate into actions that make a difference on the ground. If your mission statement isn’t moving people to action, then maybe it’s time to review or change it.

For many, however, the underlying issue is that the church isn’t applying effort to move a large portion of the community to take action in living out the vision. Your vision statement is simply a starting point. If your community doesn’t take action on it, then your church’s work to date can be a waste.

Model study and over examination

Sometimes church leaders find themselves caught up in trying to understand the models or strategies of local churches. It can be easy to slip into comparing different approaches of how churches function to the point of confusion. I’ve seen church leaders try to mix such a wide variety of approaches together that they spend most of their time studying the model rather than applying the lessons.

There is no perfect model.

Applying a B- model with A+ execution will end up making the largest difference in your community. Simply “tweaking the process” isn’t going to be the magic formula that creates a bigger impact. Instead, take time to apply those lessons to your community.

Team members over hiring

As your church grows and begins to acquire staff, the hiring, training and motivating of that team becomes one of the greatest responsibilities of the church’s leaders. However, analysis paralysis can set in when there are unclear expectations and goals for the area that you’re hiring. Whether it’s crafting the perfect job description, comparing candidates against one another, selecting personality tests, or interviewing the same candidate again for the 12th time, these approaches are fraught with the danger of spending too much time focusing on the wrong things.

Some churches spend so much time on the hiring process that they don’t have any sense of an on-boarding process to help new team members make a difference in their church. Rather than looking for the perfect candidate or crafting the ideal approach to find such a candidate, ask yourself this: How are you building a process to ensure that the staff members you acquire are being trained and released for the greatest impact?

The Kids Are Not All Right: How to Help Teens Who Are Anxious and Depressed

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Safety is a prevailing concern for American parents. My generation baby-proofed our homes, obsessed over the safest car seats and boycotted sleepovers. But as hard as we’ve tried, we can’t avoid suffering. An example of this is found in an eye-opening article for the November 7 issue of Time, where Susanna Schrobsdorff tells us the pre-teens and teenagers we’ve raised are more anxious, overwhelmed and depressed than the generation before.

Over six million teens in the U.S. have been diagnosed with an anxiety disorder, which is 25 percent of the teen population. After several years of stability, depression among high school kids is rising. According to the Department of Health and Human Services, 12.5 percent of adolescents, ages 12 to 17, had at least one major depressive episode in 2015. That’s up from 4.6 percent in 2006.

The signature symptom

While not universal among kids with depression and anxiety, Schrobsdorff observes that nonsuicidal self-harm “[appears] to be the signature symptom of this generation’s mental health difficulties.” We know that family financial stress can exacerbate anxiety. Studies also show that girls are more at risk for depression than boys. But it’s harder to quantify how many teens are cutting, because they are deliberately secretive.

Schrobsodorff tells the story of Faith-Ann, an eighth grader who first cut herself in the middle of the night while her parents slept. She sat on the edge of the tub at her home and sliced into her ribs with the metal clip from a pen: “There was blood and a sense of deep relief.”

These sobering statistics and stories like Faith-Ann’s raise questions for parents. What caused this rise in anxiety among teenagers? What can I do to prevent my child from hiding depression? What should I do if I discover my child is cutting?

The link between mental health and technology

Schrobsdorff focuses on potential causes. She’s particularly interested in links between teenage mental health and their use of technology: “Conventional wisdom says kids today are over supervised… But even though teens may be in the same room with their parents, they might also, thanks to their phones, be immersed in a painful emotional tangle with dozens of their classmates.”

Getting your first smartphone is a rite of passage in our culture. Kids have them at earlier and earlier ages. Experts warn against the addictive distraction from schoolwork and the danger of exposing kids to online bullies, child predators and sexting. Such realities call for the same vigilance with Internet safety we’ve demonstrated in baby-proofing. Parents should know how to set up a phone’s restrictions and find a plan that allows for monitoring text messages. And parents must teach skills for navigating the world of social media by first limiting access, then giving increasing freedom as their children demonstrate growing responsibility.

But even with these precautions, a more subtle danger in children having smartphones is exposing kids to a deep experience of their own feelings before they have the skills to process them. Teenagers are wired for stimulation. The emotional reactions of a teenage brain can feel urgent and overwhelming. With a rise in hyper-connectedness, even rural youth are increasingly exposed to what Schrobsdorff describes as “a national thicket of Internet drama.” She writes, “Being a teenager today is a draining full-time job that includes doing schoolwork, managing a social-media identity and fretting about career, climate change, sexism, racism—you name it.”

Helping teens work through their feelings

It shouldn’t surprise us when kids who are more socially connected gain a greater awareness of the world’s brokenness and feel deeply about it. Dr. Brent Bounds, a clinical psychologist who served as director of Family Ministries at Redeemer Presbyterian Church in New York, says it’s important to create a culture where it’s safe to talk about these emotions when they come. Parents can’t force vulnerability, but we can model it. And we can let kids know that it is not wrong to feel deeply.

Our goal shouldn’t be to change how they feel but simply recognize our kids’ emotions and affirm our love. Bounds told me, “Sometimes parents feel that they have to have all the answers to make their child feel safe. But one of the most freeing answers a parent can give their child is, ‘I don’t know. But I love you and I want to support and help you any way I can.’”

When conversation is open with a teen, parents can simply reflect back what their child may be feeling—“You seem really angry right now. I wonder if you’re angry with me and don’t know how to talk about it?” or, “Wow, that’s a really hard situation. I can imagine you feel overwhelmed.” Using this same reflecting technique, a parent can help build a child’s emotional vocabulary from an early age. This will prepare kids to face more complex feelings when they enter the teen years.

Helping our children grow in self-awareness about their emotions is a pathway to helping them grow in self-care as well. A teen must identify that social media triggers his anxiety before he’ll understand his need to manage that anxiety in a healthy way—perhaps by putting down his phone and going for a jog.

What if my child has hurt himself?

When a child does report he’s hurt himself, parents or pastors should first acknowledge the risk the teen has taken to be vulnerable. Acknowledge the teen’s courage and then listen. It’s hard to do. Bounds observes, “Most parents are understandably concerned when they find out a child is cutting, but they tend to react in ways that don’t draw out the teen but instead shut them down.”

Know that it’s not out of the norm for a teen to cut themselves at some point. The important questions to ask are: Where did they cut? (Alarming areas are inside wrists, forearms and the inner thigh.) What did they use to cut themselves? And how much/often has this happened? While we want to respect our child’s privacy, if you have knowledge that a child has been harming himself, take it seriously and press in.

Sometimes self-harm comes from a sense of helplessness and desire for control. Teens like Faith-Ann say self-harm relives internal pain by “letting the feelings out.” The desire may come from a child’s deep belief that she’s not big enough to contain the feelings she is experiencing. The desire to cut may even be a deep emotional witness to the truth that growing social awareness or social advocacy will not atone for the world’s sins. Our brokenness is only healed with the shedding of blood (Heb. 9:22); but it’s the Savior’s, not our own.

As Dr. Scott James, a pediatric physician/researcher and an elder at The Church at Brook Hills in Birmingham, Ala., cautioned me, it’s not absolutely necessary for us to come to a full explanation of why this is happening:

I’ve learned as a doctor that when it comes to mental health, I need to disabuse myself of the notion that I will always be able to pop the hood and get to the bottom of what a patient is feeling/doing. Empathy is important, but it’s hubris to think we should always be able to correctly identify and address the exact motives of each person.

Instead, we can confess, “I don’t understand where my child is coming from or why she is viewing life the way she does. But I’ll be here for her regardless.” That’s a position of compassionate engagement that puts aside trying to be the hero and savior. From that place of humility, we can point to Christ, the true comforter and healer. Jesus understands. “For we do not have a high priest who is unable to empathize with our weaknesses, but we have one who has been tempted in every way, just as we are—yet he did not sin. Let us then approach God’s throne of grace with confidence, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need” (Heb. 4:15-16).

Why Pastors Should Consider Teaching Preschool Before Preaching in the Pulpit…Seriously!

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Often one of the hardest things for a novice preacher to do is find opportunities to use their burgeoning gifts for effective ministry. One place they may want to consider: children’s ministry.

Seriously.

Not a lot of men seem to enjoy preschool ministry, especially those who have a desire to preach. Though never voiced, some see it as somehow being beneath them…which it’s not. It just lacks the perception of glamour that comes with preaching in the wider service. But children’s ministry has a great deal to teach us about pulpit ministry, and make us more effective as a result.

For the last few years, I’ve been teaching in our children’s worship service, usually once a month (sometimes more, sometimes less). I started out teaching the kids between 5 and 8 years old, but now primarily focus on the older kids (ages 9-10-ish). My experience with both age groups has been extremely helpful. Here are three things I’ve been reminded through it:

1. Teaching children requires you to focus.

Whenever you’re teaching kids, it’s important to remember one thing: You have almost no time to get your message across. Teachers in our program are allotted around 20 minutes.

I aim for 10. And sometimes, I even hit it (I average between 10-15 minutes).

This is not a lot of time, and because kids often have short attention spans, it means I really have to focus. I need to make sure the message is easy to follow, the points are clear, and the application is super-concrete.

Which, by the way, is what we should be shooting for when preaching to adults, too. Adults need just as much clarity of thought and focus as children. There’s nothing worse than listening to (or preaching for that matter) a scattered, rambly sermon—one that has great content, but you can’t follow the flow or find the application. When we’re unfocused in our teaching, we lose our audience.

But if you can get a point across in 10 minutes, chances are you can do it in 40 if needed.

2. Teaching children requires you to be flexible.

Kids are awesome because they’re funny—but they’re also natural hecklers.

If you ask a question like, “Why did Jesus die on the cross,” you might get an answer that makes sense, or you might learn what they had for breakfast that morning. And if you’re not ready for it, you’re going to get flustered.

Teaching kids helps you to learn flexibility and forces you to rely not too much on your prepared notes and more on your preparation.

3. Teaching children requires you to be interesting—and passionate about teaching them.

One of the hardest things to do is keep a child’s attention, especially in a really wide age range.They’re the easiest audience to read in terms of whether they’re paying attention or not, and when they’re all in, you can tell. One of the best ways to keep a kid’s attention: be interesting. One of our teachers uses props pretty regularly (he often dresses up in costume). Me, I’m not a big prop guy, but I do my best to be fun and funny in a way that fits with how God’s wired me.

But it’s one thing to be interesting, it’s another thing to be passionate about teaching them. Just like in any other ministry setting, kids will forgive lame jokes or a lack of props if you actually care about them. If you’re willing to engage with them and not see them as a project, you’ll have them. So ask questions, do something silly, speak directly to them whenever you can…all of this helps you genuinely engage them.

There’s so much more to be said about the importance of children’s ministry, and this is heavily focused on one small aspect. But if you’re feeling called to preach, and you’re passionate about making disciples, consider preschool ministry before the pulpit. Serve in a place where God has already placed you and in a ministry area often sorely in need of volunteers. Do what God has called you to do because whether those benefiting from your teaching are big or small matters less than whether or not anyone’s benefiting at all.

This article originally appeared here.

Pastors Wouldn’t Have Affairs if They Did This

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This past Sunday, the pastor of the church where I came to know Christ resigned after admitting he’d been involved in an extramarital affair.

His wife and children suffer while the members of the church wonder how this could happen again.

That’s right, in the past 30 years, this church has had three ministry leaders resign because of marital and sexual infidelity.

This church is far from being alone. I can think of very few churches that have escaped such a trauma. Sometimes the affair creates a spectacular end to the pastor’s service, other times it’s quietly the cause of a resignation.

However it plays out, it leaves everyone involved hurt and wondering why it happened and how it could have been avoided.

Over the past 20 years, I’ve had the honor of coaching and serving alongside some strong and capable church leaders.

Here’s what I have learned from them about marriage:

1. Everyone is vulnerable.

From King David to Gordon MacDonald, even some of the best leaders stumble. This means that every single pastor is capable of having an affair.

An absolute, crucial element for avoiding an affair is to admit that it’s possible—even for you. Sometimes a leader can be so effective and so fruitful that he begins to believe he’s incapable of disastrous sin. But to believe such is to deny one’s sin nature and to withhold that area of your life from the power of the gospel.

Admitting vulnerability allows us to invite Christ to make amends for our shortcomings, to protect us from temptation, and to allow the power of the cross to shield our vulnerability.

2. Know your commitment.

An excellent leader and great friend of mine, Jonathan Bow, reminds his congregation often that a man should NOT be committed to his marriage, but should be committed to his wife (and vice versa for a wife to be committed to her husband).

While there is power in being committed to an institution and a promise, a pastor does even better when committed to the person he married. This reminds us that it is not MY marriage that is important, but the person we married who is important.

When we stop honoring and constantly committing to our marriage partner, we enter dangerous territory.

Stop Complaining About What You Don’t Have

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Many of us in church tech can get caught up in the temptation to complain about the things we don’t have or can’t afford.

This grumbling may seem justified by our limited (or non-existent) budget, a lack of appreciation, or apparent disrepair of certain system components.

A common refrain in the tech booth sounds something like: “Our sound/lighting/video could be so much better if only we had ____________”

Yes, a new digital mixing console sure would be nice. We could do so much with a few LED fixtures and moving heads. And an ultra-fine pixel pitch LED video wall would really make our visuals pop.

There’s nothing wrong with doing some thoughtful planning and budgeting for the things we need or want for enhancing the worship experience. But there is a problem with a habit of complaining about something that we won’t take the initiative to act on and work towards.

Next time you are tempted to bemoan the lack of tech gear you desire, consider leveraging that energy and turn it into a positive outcome with a few of these tips.

Too many outdated fixtures or components in your system?
Make a list of items that should be replaced and prioritize the importance of each item, then collaborate with your leadership team and have a candid discussion about the state of your gear and what that means for the worship experience.

Can’t seem to afford that new digital console or video mixer?
Research the various options and brands available, compile a rough estimate [of] cost, and brainstorm different ways to fit the cost into a tech budget over time.

Do lackluster volunteer turnouts have you down?
Implement some of these effective and insightful tips to boost volunteer participation and grow your tech team.

Does the audio/video/lighting quality of your worship service suffer from inconsistency week to week?
Work to establish a consistent training program to ensure new volunteers are methodically brought up to speed on the right processes and schedule periodic group training days or continuing education events for all team members.


Overcoming the temptation to complain with a response to engage the issue in a positive way will encourage a culture of appreciation, excellence, and productivity — and that’s something we can all put into practice a little more often.

The original article appeared here.

Craig Groeschel Shares His Content Creation Secrets

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Craig Groeschel produces a lot of content between the sermons he preaches, the podcasts he records, and the books he writes.

“Creating content is exhausting,” Groeschel says. It requires a high level of concentration and a lot of work to make something that is valuable and easy for someone to understand. A brief glance at his prolific work will tell you Groeschel is an expert at creating content. One of his listeners wrote to Groeschel to ask about his process for creating content. Anyone who’s asked how to write a sermon or something similar can glean a lot out of Groeschel’s advice.

Not everyone will teach or preach regularly, but everyone creates content to different extents on a daily basis. If you are in ministry especially, you might write a letter, cast vision, or inspire and instruct in meetings. These things are essentially creating content. Pastor’s have a weekly (sometimes bi-weekly) message they need to come up with. Groeschel’s tips are helpful whether you are preaching every weekend, leading a Bible study, or running a meeting of volunteers.

How to Decide What to Say

As leaders, whenever we speak we’re not just speaking, but leading, Groeschel reminds us. For this reason, he asks himself three questions whenever he is preparing content to share.

  1. What do I want the people to know? Groeschel says when he’s crafting a message for the weekend at his church, he aims to be able to capture the big idea of the message in one sentence. For his podcast, he likes to identify a “narrow topic” that he and his guest will discuss.
  2. What do I want them to feel? This is important because, as Groeschel says, “facts don’t move people to action.” Emotions do.
  3. What do I want them to do? What is the action you hope your communication compels people to do? The “do” should be refined down to “one big clear ask” instead of say nine asks. People are not likely to do more than one thing you ask them to do, but doing one thing is a lot more do-able.

 

Set Yourself Up for Success

Since creating content requires so much concentration, Groeschel offers a few tips to help you create the best content you can.

You’ll need to identify the right time of the day when you’re most creative, the right tools, and the right elements to include in this environment that will move you toward creativity. Personally, Groeschel prefers to work in four-hour increments earlier in the morning. Additionally, he likes to have a drink and some snacks nearby and ambient music playing in the background. He asks people not to interrupt him during this time.

Develop a Good Process

Groeschel gives the example of preparing for a leadership podcast to let us in on the actual process of creating something. The process could very easily apply to sermon prepartion. He breaks his process up into six steps:

Research, absorb, and capture ideas – This includes googling information about the topic he’s identified, reading articles, listening to other podcasts, etc. He typically spends a couple hours in this phase.

Organizing – After the research phase, Groeschel starts to organize the information he’s gathered into a workable outline.

More Than 9,000 Respond to the Message From a Banned Book

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The Bible may have been banned from billboards advertising the Southern California Harvest but that didn’t stop more than 9,000 people from making decisions for Christ at the three- day event.

Over 100,000 people flocked to Angel Stadium in Anaheim for the evangelism crusade that included music, motocross riders and a healthy dose of content from that banned Bible.

Leading up to the event, Greg Laurie’s Harvest Ministries contracted with the Irvine Company to advertise the upcoming SoCal Harvest by way of billboards at a popular mall.

The billboard depicted Laurie with a microphone in one hand while holding a Bible over his head with the other.

Irvine Company claimed the religious imagery provoked multiple complaints, including a “serious threat,” and insisted the billboards be modified. Harvest complied with the request and resubmitted new artwork without the image of the Bible. But it wasn’t enough. The Irvine Company completely removed all the advertisements and billboards for the crusade.

Laurie referenced the controversy on opening night. He began his Friday night sermon by holding up his Bible to the crowd and proclaiming, “This is the book.”

“How many of you brought a Bible with you tonight? Grab your Bible. Hold your Bible up,” Laurie told the crowd. “We are not ashamed of the Word of God. This message has been sent to us from Heaven, given to us in a book and everything you need to know about God is right here in the Bible. No wonder people don’t want it displayed on a billboard or anywhere else.”

“But here is the bottom line,” the pastor of Harvest Christian Fellowship continued. “God has given us a message that we all need to hear tonight that we are going to get from this book.”

“Millions of people will attest to the fact that the Scripture has changed their lives. These words have brought hope to the hopeless, perspective to the hurting, comfort to the bereaved. These words found in the Bible have healed marriages, they have cured the addicted, but why are these words so powerful?”

The reason is because “these are the very words of God,” he said.

“Imagine if you got a text on your phone from God. Would you read it? Would you respond? I think so. A text from Jesus? Yeah, I would look at that. Listen, God has sent you a text and it is called the Bible. In fact, we even call it ‘the text.’ He’ll speak to you through this book. Nothing touches the Bible and maybe that is why it is the best-selling book of all time.”

SoCal Harvest Message in the L.A. Times

Laurie continued that message to an even larger audience. In an op ed piece in the Los Angeles Times Laurie asked, “Why is the Bible so offensive?”

“We believe the Bible is God’s love letter to humanity. It’s for people who do not want to be controlled by their passions; people who do not want so much pain in life; and people who want better relationships with others. The Bible is for people who want to know the purpose of this life and enter Heaven in the next one… It’s often said that a Bible that is falling apart is an indication of a life that isn’t. What’s offensive about that?”

This was the 29th year for the SoCal Harvest. Each night over those years Laurie offers an invitation to those who want to accept Christ in their lives to walk down to the field. This year, as many as 9,260 people made professions of faith during the weekend.

Following the event, Laurie tweeted on Monday, “It has been amazing to see God work so powerfully all these years, with over half a million people making professions of faith to follow Christ. This weekend was no exception either… To God be the Glory!”

Christians Jump to Rescue Flood Victims in Kerala

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Churches and Christian organizations in the Indian state of Kerala are helping flood victims while trying to keep their own operations going.

Kerala has seen some of its worst flooding in years, brought about by the annual monsoon season. More than 370 people have been killed, most of them in landslides, since the monsoon started in June. Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan said 725,000 people have taken refuge in the thousands of refugee camps around the state. About 22,000 people have been rescued from flood waters.

Sources say at least five churches and five Bridge of Hope centers have flooded.

Bridge of Hope is a child sponsorship ministry of Gospel for Asia (GFA). It provides 70,000 needy children a daily meal and regular medical checkups. The program also helps the children with their education so they can one day get a good job and afford sufficient food, decent clothing, medical supplies and other necessities of life for themselves and for their families. GFA’s work in India is critical in light of other Christian relief organizations, like Compassion International, being forced to withdraw from the country.

Daniel Punnose, Gospel for Asia vice president, told churchleaders.com that GFA-supported workers have been on the ground since the flooding began and relief teams have visited numerous camps, passing out food and water. They’ve also partnered with health authorities to provide medicines and epidemic-prevention aid. This weekend, they conducted medical camps to help care for as many as possible. Churches led by GFA-supported pastors all across Asia are supplying relief items, such as food, water and clothing, to those in need in Kerala.

Rescue Story From Kerala Flood

One of those helped by GFA is a college student who needed help rescuing his mother-in-law from rising flood waters.

“I tried all the contacts for rescue team numbers as well even driving myself if at all possible.

“But the flooded lakes and rivers were overflowing bridges, so I gave up and came back to college.

“So I gave a call to Believers Church and immediately they arranged a 10-member team and a tractor and jeep to collect all possible staff members or families in distress.

“We toiled eight hours in total, the vehicle got jammed…for almost two hours we were all in neck deep or chest deep flood waters trying to get back the tractor onto the main road opposite the flow…total chaos, people being pushed around in tubes, families confined to their…terraces.

“It became like Noah’s time when floods destroyed all.

“Then we reached the main road, by God’s grace crossed seven bridges with rivers overflowing, extracted mother and neighbor and a 9-year-old kid…God saved us all in these floods.”

Punnose said similar rescue efforts are underway daily:

“We have had teams going out each day to help rescue those stranded in their homes by using large fishing boats. We’ve also been able to help distribute large amounts of emergency relief supplies: rice, medicine, water, clothes, sleeping mats, toiletries, etc.”

He also said that while the entire state is in at a standstill, people are helping any way they can.

“Everything is on hold—airports and train stations have completely shut down. Schools have been closed for weeks—even my own niece and nephew have been out of school during exam time because of the floods. In light of that, it has been encouraging to see everyone coming together to help. Shops are giving away food, even a major cell network is giving out free texts and calls to their customers so that they can stay in touch with loved ones without worrying about being charged for going over their phone plan.”

While some services are now being restored, government officials say thousands are still marooned, trapped by flooded roads and bridges. 

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