Archive for September, 2011

So today is Week 1 of NFL games. and I thought that it would never get here.  About 3 to 4 weeks ago, my brother-n-law kept harassing me day after day on joining in on his league of fantasy football. After much thought, I agreed to join, I had nothing to lose.   Once the words “yes” came out of my mind, I immediately started to panic. All these questions started fluttering my mind. What number am I in line? Who should I pick? Maybe I should do some homework and find out more about fantasy football? What did I get myself into?

As the day approached for live drafting, I did not know what to think. I had a list of all the player, positions and rankings. As the draft went live, my heart was racing, my palms sweating and my nerves a wreck. I had my wife next to me helping me with players, since we only had 90 seconds to pick our player, I’m yelling, my wife is yelling with excitement, we’re going back and forth as one team takes one of my players and now we’re trying to find another player to replace that one. What an exciting night.  I would never look at football the same.

Now the day has arrived and we are at week 1. How excited to know that on the first day one of my quarterbacks is playing. I want to say that I will be everyone on my league, which is about 10 teams, but don’t want to brag about it. lol

The league is something that I will continue to do and will look forward to fantasy football every year.  Thanks to my brother-n-law Mike for opening up my eyes to another world. Don’t want to exclude anyone out but thanks to my wife for the help and my brother Josh for giving me pointers.

3 ways to lead the Church

Posted: September 7, 2011 in Leadership

by Alan Danielson

3 Ways to Lead the Church

Last week I was reviewing some notes I’d taken back in 2001 at a church planter training event.  I didn’t note the name of the person speaking, but something this person said really stood out to me so I wrote it down:

There are only three ways to lead the church:
1. Risk Taker
2. Care Taker
3. Under Taker

• Risk takers put their faith in God and say, “Whatever it takes.”
• Care takers put their faith in opinions and say, “Whatever the people want.”
• Under takers talk about their faith in the past and reminisce saying, “Whatever went wrong?”

Seeing those points I’d noted so long ago really got me thinking. Every church has a preference for Risk Takers, Care Takers or Under Takers.  I’ve worked in vocational ministry since 1990 and I’ve served on staff in all three of these environments.

Today I’m inspired to tell you a parable about a church who lived under all three kinds of leadership:

There was once a church that was planted to reach people who did not know Jesus. They started the church under leaders who were Risk Takers. Reaching the lost was the highest goal and taking risks to reach that end was praiseworthy and exciting. The church grew and God was doing great things among the people.

15 years later, taking risks became harder. After all, the church had much more to risk. They had more people, buildings, money and materials than they had when they started 15 years prior. Now it seemed that risking money, facilities, things and people was somehow “irresponsible.” Eventually they shifted into Care Taker mode. Maintaining the status quo and satisfying the people became the most important goals.

20 years later the church was a beautiful picture of what had once been. The buildings were reminders of the great things God had done there. The members got together regularly to celebrate all their church had done. It was always such fun to reminisce about the history of the church. They loved recalling the days when hundreds of children roamed the halls, when the baptistery was used every week,  when people were coming to Christ every time the pastor spoke.

But those times had passed and the halls became considerably less busy. The kid’s rooms had mostly been converted into “adult educational space” and the average age of the parishioners had gone up considerably. Without being conscious of it, the church had slipped into Under Taker mode.  To keep the people happy, changes had all but disappeared. The church had frozen in time, but the members hadn’t. They continued to age…and eventually die…one…by…one. Where weddings were once a regular occurrence, now funerals dominated the scene.

The common denominator in ALL growing churches is this:  Leadership that is not afraid to believe God for the impossible! Those leaders consistently take risks believing that God will take care of the results.  The only way for a church to continually avoid Care Taker and Under Taker mode is to always change and always take risks for the sake of reaching the lost. Leaders must remember that anything else puts the church into a slow, steady decline and eventual death. Take risks. Stretch your faith. Without such things, the consequences are catastrophic.

So those now who live by faith are blessed along with Abraham, who lived by faith— this is no new doctrine! And that means that anyone who tries to live by his own effort, independent of God, is doomed to failure.
~Gal 3:9-10 (MSG) 

Crutches

Posted: September 7, 2011 in Leadership

What would happen if your pastor started the worship service by saying to everyone, “Are you ready to worship?” and the congregation promptly responded, “Yes!”
What if he replied, “You may begin.”
Would it become very quiet as the congregation looked back at him not knowing what to do?
“You may start now!” he might say. “Just do what you do at home.” Do we worship at home?
I can image someone saying, “Didn’t the team practice some songs? Why don’t they play them and we will clap and sing-a-long?”
True worshipers are able to worship without the aids and crutches of worship like, songs, lyrics, music, and liturgy. We are not worshipers unless we can worship at any time or any place. Spiritual worship flows from our hearts and spirit and fundamentally doesn’t need music or technology.
Let us press in past the crutches and really worship Him.

Stephan Key