Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Standing In

It's been a while since I have posted some new stuff to the blog. I have been in 'preach' mode over the past week...we had an awesome service last Wednesday night with students and then I had an incredible opportunity to stand in for Clay and preach the weekend services here at Barefoot Church. If you missed the services this past weekend, you can catch them here, God moved and there was tension in the room.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Their Groove

Okay, so yesterday's blog was all about you and I finding our groove as leaders. Leading from our core competencies. How about us helping the people we lead (staff, volunteers, etc.) find their sweet spot? Well, here are some questions to throw at them, I actually typed these questions out and gave them to my assistant (my wife) yesterday and asked her to take some time in answering them...so here they are:

1.) What do you want to do?
2.) How can I help you find greater satisfaction within this ministry and the job that you do?
3.) Where are your skills not being put to good use?
4.) How can I help you focus more of your time and energy on the thing(s) that tap your core competencies as well as add value to this ministry?

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

My Groove

I have been taking some time to journal some leadership thoughts from an awesome book I am currently reading, "Next Generation Leader" by Andy Stanley. One of the things that keeps jumping off the pages is that we as leaders tend to associate productivity with business, when there really is no correlation between how busy I am and how productive I am. Me being busy isn't necessarily the same as being productive. The primary reason I do too much is because I don't take the time to discover the portion of what I do that makes the biggest difference. Here are some questions that I am asking myself in this season:

1.) What do I do that is most effortless from my perspective but seems like a daunting task to others?
2.) In what arenas do people see me as the "go to" person?
3.) What do I enjoy about my current position of leadership?
4.) What do I wish I could delegate?
5.) What environments do I look forward to working in?
6.) What environments do I tend to avoid?
7.) If I could focus more of my time and attention on 1 or 2 aspects of my ministry, what would they be?


Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Vibe

Found myself reading through first time guest surveys today which has really got me thinking about our VIBE (the feeling students get when they walk-in and hang out in our space.) From the moment students walk into our space we want them to be engaged, excited, comfortable, anxious...maybe. And most importantly we want them to experience God. Now what happens when a student isn't engaged, excited, and comfortable...it makes our roles a lot more difficult, and the students are probably not going to: a.) Come back. b.) Tell their friends. c.) Be very excited about church. One of the comments I read today really hit home, "It wasn't what I expected." Let's be intentional about evaluating our "vibe," is it something that students enjoy, is it relevant?

A Tragedy In the Making

"You may not be sure that you want your life to make a difference. Maybe you don't care very much whether you make a lasting difference for the sake of something great. You just want people to like you. If people would just like being around you, you'd be satisfied. Or if you could just have a good job with a good wife, or husband, and a couple of good kids and a nice car and long weekends and a few good friends, a fun retirement, and a quick and easy death, and no hell---if you could have all that (even without God)---you would be satisified. That is a tragedy in the making. A wasted life."

---excerpt from "Don't Waste Your Life"
John Piper

Monday, May 11, 2009

What Seems Good

In 2 Samuel 10 the Amalekites shamed the messengers of Israel and made themselves detestable in the sight of David. To protect themselves they had hired the Syrians to fight with them against the Israelites. Joab, the commander of Israel's forces, found himself surrounded with Amalekites on one side and Syrians on the other. So he divided his troops, put his brother Abishai in charge of one troop of fighters, and led the other himself. In verse 11 they pledged to help each other. Then comes this great word in verse 12: Be of good courage, and let us be courageous for our people, and for the cities of our God, and may the LORD do what seems good to him." What does that mean? "May the LORD do what seems good to him"? It means that Joab had made a strategic decision for the cities of God, and he did not know how it would turn out. He had no special revelation from God on this issue. He had to make a decision on the basis of wisdom. He had to risk or run. He did not know how it would turn out. So he made his decision, and he handed the results over to God. And this was right.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

BIG

Each one of us will have a different expression of God's dream. Your dream will be different from everyone else's and that is great. But, we mus all aim at something BIG! And the world is a pretty big thing to aim at. If our purpose is smaller than reaching the world, then the students in our ministry will find a bigger purpose that will demand more of them. If we don't give them something huge to be a part of, then they will find it elsewhere. If you and I don't share God's big purpose with them, to reach the world, they will find something bigger than our churches, in other words, they will find their identity in the counterfeit things of the world rather than the authentic things of God. When we set a God-sized big vision for our ministries, our students can be a part of something significant, something that requires their all.

People think that teenagers are self-centered and lazy, but that's mainly due to them not having a vision to rally behind. Teenagers today wil spend hours a day working hard for a sports team or drama practice. They'll do the same if the church gives them something important to work for. I feel God is calling me now more than ever before to set up a vision for our ministry that is an expression of God's dream for the world. I belive when we challenge the students in our ministries to change the world for Christ, they will identify with a purpose that is bigger and more compelling than any school, ball team, or club.