Thursday, May 30, 2013
Returning a church to biblical sanity
The Church Doctor site offers an excellent perspective on how and why churches get off track and their vitality dribbles away. Read the whole thing, but the heart is his 10-step program:
Ten Ways to Return Church to a Biblical Form of Sanity
- Take inventory annually. Have a rummage sale of programs/activities. Offload 10%-20% per year.
- Clearly articulate your purpose: look closely at the New Testament. Ask, "According to God, what is the primary purpose of the church?" Make sure all staff and leadership are on the same page.
- Having defined your purpose, look at everything through the lens of focus. (1) What contributes to the objectives of purpose? (2) What supports objectives that contribute to the focus of purpose? (3) What does not contribute to the objectives of focus? (4) Which issues of category three need repair, redesign, or strengthening? (5) Which issues of category three should be discarded?
- Reflect on how intentional you are. Take inventory, using a trusted and brutally honest accountability partner. Equip your accountability partner to ask you, regularly, "What have you said 'no' to recently?"
- If you add a program or activity to your church routine, ask the hard question: "Is this the time to drop another program or activity?"
- Ask your accountability partner to challenge your level of proactivity, as opposed to reactivity. You can't avoid being reactive all the time in ministry. Shoot for 80% proactive, 20% reactive.
- Continually run the operation of church through the grid of light-weight/low-maintenance. Develop a culture of asking, "Is this the simplest way to do this? Or is it too complicated? Too cluttered? Too slow and inefficient?"
- As a leader, what is the one thing you must do every week, no matter what else is going on in the church? If you answered by describing some ministry you do (prepare a sermon, attend a meeting, teach a class), repent! If you answered by describing a way you will multiply yourself (equipping and empowering others - as in making disciples), rejoice!
- Review your church government - your decision-making process - through the lens of low-control/high-accountability. How long, how much effort, does it take to come to conclusions and move to action?
- Consider intervention - an outside consultant - to help redesign your church government to a biblical form of low-control/high-accountability.
The best German restaurant in Epcot
Well, it's the only one:
I ripped this shot off my son's FB page. He took it last night.
Many years ago when my family and I visited Epcot we had lunch here. Having lived in Germany from 1983-1986, my wife and I enjoy German cuisine.
The restaurant was a buffet. After we sat at our table an attractive, blonde young fraulein approached to ask what we wanted to drink. As you may know, the workers at Epcot's national areas are all from their respective countries. They enter the US on a work visa, work a year and then go home. Our Serviererin was therefore German and looked the part, German-style dress and all.
As she was bringing our beverages I still remembered enough German to tell her that my wife and I had lived in her country from '83-'86. Her response was polite but perfunctory; she had doubtless heard hundreds of times from guests who told her they had visited Germany or had lived there.
"Where did you live?" she replied in English.
"We lived in a small farming town not far from Giessen called Dorf-Guell."
Her mouth dropped open and her eyes grew wide as saucers. "My brother plays soccer for Dorf-Guell!" she exclaimed.
Before long she was sitting down with us and we had a kind of "old home week" and we swapped reminiscences of the very small town and the local area. Finally, she had to get back to work, so we said goodbye as she rose from the table.
"I am so glad to have met you!" she gushed. "It was so good to talk with someone from home!"
Of course, we were not from her home, but I knew what she meant and thought so, too.
What are the odds?
I ripped this shot off my son's FB page. He took it last night.
Many years ago when my family and I visited Epcot we had lunch here. Having lived in Germany from 1983-1986, my wife and I enjoy German cuisine.
The restaurant was a buffet. After we sat at our table an attractive, blonde young fraulein approached to ask what we wanted to drink. As you may know, the workers at Epcot's national areas are all from their respective countries. They enter the US on a work visa, work a year and then go home. Our Serviererin was therefore German and looked the part, German-style dress and all.
As she was bringing our beverages I still remembered enough German to tell her that my wife and I had lived in her country from '83-'86. Her response was polite but perfunctory; she had doubtless heard hundreds of times from guests who told her they had visited Germany or had lived there.
"Where did you live?" she replied in English.
"We lived in a small farming town not far from Giessen called Dorf-Guell."
Her mouth dropped open and her eyes grew wide as saucers. "My brother plays soccer for Dorf-Guell!" she exclaimed.
Before long she was sitting down with us and we had a kind of "old home week" and we swapped reminiscences of the very small town and the local area. Finally, she had to get back to work, so we said goodbye as she rose from the table.
"I am so glad to have met you!" she gushed. "It was so good to talk with someone from home!"
Of course, we were not from her home, but I knew what she meant and thought so, too.
What are the odds?
Why Methodism?
Christian Perfection: The Reason for Methodism
Wesley argued for and preached on entire sanctification, full sanctification, or Christian perfection (these are all synonyms) throughout his ministry. In the essay “The Principles of a Methodist Farther Explained”, which was published in 1746, Wesley argued that “holiness… is religion itself” (Works, 9:227). Forty years later in “Thoughts upon Methodism”, he described Methodism as follows, “Methodism… is only plain scriptural religion, guarded by a few prudential regulations. The essence of it is holiness of heart and life” (Works, 9:529).Read the whole thing.
Wesley defined Christian perfection in “A Plain Account of Christian Perfection” (1777) as follows:
In one view, it is purity of intention, dedicating all the life to God. It is the giving God all our heart; it is one desire and design ruling all our tempers. It is the devoting, not a part, but all our soul, body, and substance to God. In another view, it is all the mind which was in Christ, enabling us to walk as Christ walked. It is the circumcision of the heart from all filthiness, all inward as well as outward pollution. It is a renewal of the heart in the whole image of God, the full likeness of Him that created it. In yet another, it is the loving God with all our heart, and our neighbour as ourselves (Works, Jackson, 11:444).
Friday, May 24, 2013
Bart Ehrman Creates Stir in Atheist Community
Bart Ehrman Creates Stir in Atheist Community Over The Existence of Jesus
Bart Ehrman is one of the world's leading scholars on the history of ancient Judea during the time of Jesus, with a focus on the development of the early Christian community. He is by his own account not a Christian. Yet is his refutation of persons who contend that the Christian proclamation is fictional or analogical to other ancient myths is just devastating.
For example, the charge that Jesus is himself a fictional figure:
Bart Ehrman is one of the world's leading scholars on the history of ancient Judea during the time of Jesus, with a focus on the development of the early Christian community. He is by his own account not a Christian. Yet is his refutation of persons who contend that the Christian proclamation is fictional or analogical to other ancient myths is just devastating.
For example, the charge that Jesus is himself a fictional figure:
“Few of these mythicists are actually scholars trained in ancient history, religion, biblical studies or any cognate field, let alone in the ancient languages generally thought to matter for those who want to say something with any degree of authority about a Jewish teacher who (allegedly) lived in first-century Palestine. There are a couple of exceptions: of the hundreds — thousands? — of mythicists, two (to my knowledge) actually have Ph.D. credentials in relevant fields of study. But even taking these into account, there is not a single mythicist who teaches New Testament or Early Christianity or even Classics at any accredited institution of higher learning in the Western world. And it is no wonder why. These views are so extreme and so unconvincing to 99.99 percent of the real experts that anyone holding them is as likely to get a teaching job in an established department of religion as a six-day creationist is likely to land on in a bona fide department of biology.”Read the whole thing.
Thursday, May 23, 2013
Are we ready to reach unchurched people?
As we start considering what planning we need to do for our future, one thing we will need to face fully an a real, instrospective questions. One of them is, "Are we, as a congregation (including the pastor!) really ready to reach out to unchurched people and receive them into our wider church life?"
A definition is called for. People who write about evangelism generally refer to "unchurched" people as those who are not part of a Christian fellowship and never really were except perhaps very temporarily. As for people who were longer-term participants in a church but who do not presently attend, I have usually seen them referred to as dischurched. These are awkward constructions, of course, and places labels on people that they may not agree with or like. Nonetheless, I think the distinction is important.
Here are three articles that are relevant to this topic:
15 characteristics of today's unchurched person
How to reach unchurched people who think they don't need God.
9 signs your church is ready to reach unchurched people
A definition is called for. People who write about evangelism generally refer to "unchurched" people as those who are not part of a Christian fellowship and never really were except perhaps very temporarily. As for people who were longer-term participants in a church but who do not presently attend, I have usually seen them referred to as dischurched. These are awkward constructions, of course, and places labels on people that they may not agree with or like. Nonetheless, I think the distinction is important.
Here are three articles that are relevant to this topic:
15 characteristics of today's unchurched person
How to reach unchurched people who think they don't need God.
9 signs your church is ready to reach unchurched people
Wednesday, May 22, 2013
Donate to UMC Tornado Response
The United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR) is one of the only relief organizations that guarantees that 100 percent of your donation goes directly and exclusively to relief, none to expenses or overhead.
Thursday, May 16, 2013
Yeah, that's how it works
My uncle, Prof. Rob Foy in Minnesota, died recently and a memorial was printed for him by his university, found online at "Please Remember Dr. Robert (Rob) C. Foy II in Your Prayers."
Rob was the husband of my mom's sister, Nancy. Rob was a "formidable landscape gardener," at which he labored with Nancy (who died in 2002):
Rob was the husband of my mom's sister, Nancy. Rob was a "formidable landscape gardener," at which he labored with Nancy (who died in 2002):
The division of labor was simple: He did the work; his wife nodded her approval.Yeah, most of us married guys have that arrangement.
"Kids begging their parents . . ."
Kids begging their parents to go to church beats parents begging their kids to go to church. Invest in your family ministry environments. Chad Ward, UpStreet director at one of the North Point campuses shared this. So true. Get the kids, and you’ve got the parents.Read the whole thing.
To which I would add my own observation: out of 100 married couples, if the wives join a church about 20 of their husbands will join, too. But if the husbands join, at least 80 of the wives will.
Why does Church seem much more inherently attractive to men than women? It is not because men are somehow less religious than women - synagogues and mosques are full of men, who also occupy most to all the leadership roles.
Maybe there are so many "church widows" because for several decades most mainline Protestant denominations, through their seminaries, have presented Christianity as rather effete.
Monday, May 13, 2013
20 Hidden Ministry Killers
20 Hidden Ministry Killers
Probably more accurately, "Church killers." Read the whole thing, but here they are as a simple list:
Probably more accurately, "Church killers." Read the whole thing, but here they are as a simple list:
- Denial of portents of the future
- Comfort in the status quo
- Tradition for tradition's sake
- Mission focused inward, not outward
- Programs overemphasis
- Discipleship immaturity
- Relationships primarily within the church
- Shallow - avoiding hard dialog and tough questions
- Life - abusing a church because of our anger over our life issues.
- Tenure - thinking that length of time in the church equals increased authority
- Attractional - being focused on output (I confess that the author's explanation of this one seems a little opaque to me)
- Churched - not understanding or even being interested the unchurched
- Demographics - the congregation is dissimilar to the parish area
- Drift - losing sight of God's purposes in the present day
- Dull - failure to inspire and going through religious motions
- Leadership - same people doing the same things over and over
- Management - without a vision, using a management mind set
- Museum - confusing the Church with the church building, and mis-setting priorities accordingly
- Money - spending more on the facility than discipleship or evangelism
- Anxiety - facing change with fear rather than confidence in the Holy Spirit
The author concludes, "These types of hidden factors cause tens of thousands of congregations in North America to fail to transition, change and transform following their first generation of life."
Friday, May 10, 2013
Those Pre-Christian Deities Aren’t Much Like Jesus After All
And in many cases, are not pre-Christian at all. I touched on this in, "Reasons to disbelieve Jesus rose from the dead." Skeptics of Christian faith say that the story of Jesus is not much different from scores of pagan religious stories about savior figures.
However, experts in the field are not making this claim. Professor Norman Geisler of Loyola University explains, “No Greek or Roman myth spoke of a literal incarnation of a monotheistic God into human form by way of a literal virgin birth, followed by his death and physical resurrection.”
Furthermore, “Most of the evidence for the alleged similarities from the pagan myths date between the second to fourth centuries,” long after the New Testament had been written. If anything, most of those ancient myths are likely based on Jesus rather than the other way round.Comes now a detailed look at the Mithra myth and its relationship (if any) to Christianity. See Those Pre-Christian Deities Aren’t Much Like Jesus After All. Mithra, as it turns out, was likely based on Jesus rather than the other way round.
Thursday, May 9, 2013
Tuesday, May 7, 2013
Why we should stop being a "welcoming" church
We Will No Longer be a Welcoming Church
We’ve decided to quit being a welcoming church. No kidding. We’re giving it up. It won’t be easy, but we’re committed to it. We’ll have to do it in stages, easing our folks into it step by step. We’ll have to deal with the fear of something new, the challenge of venturing into the unknown. But we’ll do it. It will take motivation, leadership, and constant reminders. But most importantly, it will take total commitment in embracing a new focus.
Like so many churches, we’ve sunk an amazing amount of time and energy into becoming a welcoming church. We changed worship styles, we trained greeters and ushers, we wore name tags, we percolated coffee, we went to workshops on hospitality, we put our friendliest people in the most prominent places on Sunday mornings. But we’ve realized we’ve been misplacing our emphasis. So we’re no longer going to do it.
Here’s what we’re doing instead. We are becoming an Inviting Church. That’s different. You see, “welcoming” from a missional perspective is passive. It denotes waiting for visitors and guests to drop by. When they do, we attempt treat them very well and do everything possible to make them comfortable. We’ll be willing to change who we are. We’ll follow particular formats that have proven to be more welcoming to new people. We’ll do whatever it takes to have them come back the next Sunday, even if they shouldn’t. Welcoming is about us, not about them.
“Inviting,” however, is different. That means we leave the comfort of our congregational home-court advantage. The main activity doesn’t happen in our worship space when people drop in, but in the neighborhood when we go out. It isn’t so much welcoming them into our place, but going out into their place and meeting them there.
Monday, May 6, 2013
Why do more women than men flock to the Church?
Why do more women flock to the Church? - Telegraph:
Good question with no answers that will make anyone comfortable.
Good question with no answers that will make anyone comfortable.
Is There A God or was it all just chance?
Is There A God? (What is the chance that our world is the result of chance?)
So compelling, in fact, has become the case for the universe as the product of a conscious creator that astrophysicist Hugh Ross, a former post-doctoral fellow at the California Institute of Technology observes (in his book The Creator and the Cosmos: How the Greatest Scientific Discoveries of the Century Reveal God) that:“Astronomers who do not draw theistic or deistic conclusions are becoming rare, and even the few dissenters hint that the tide is against them. Geoffrey Burbidge, of the University of California at San Diego, complains that his fellow astronomers are rushing off to join ‘The First Church of Christ of the Big Bang.’”For those not familiar with “the Big Bang,” this cosmological event, now almost unanimously regarded as fact in the scientific community, constituted the beginning of the universe about 14 or 15 billion years ago, and bears eerie similarity to the biblical account of the universe’s creation. As Arno Penzias, the 1978 Nobel Prize recipient in physics, stated to the New York Times on March 12, 1978:“The best data we have (concerning the Big Bang) are exactly what I would have predicted, had I nothing to go on but the five books of Moses, the Psalms, the Bible as a whole.”
Thursday, May 2, 2013
What not to say to an atheist
Advice for Christians who discuss their faith with atheists… from an atheist:
This is a short video, less than three minutes.
This is a short video, less than three minutes.
Wednesday, May 1, 2013
Reaching out: The difference between critics, seekers and doubters
Why The Church Needs Apologetics: A Look at Critics, Seekers, and Doubters
Even though apologetics is seen throughout the Bible, we are sometimes seen as exalting reason to a place that was never intended or we assume apologetics is the sole catalyst as someone’s conversion. I bring this all up because I am presently enjoying reading Introducing Apologetics: Cultivating Christian Commitment by James Taylor. Taylor lists three kinds of people who we will encounter when doing evangelism. If anything, if we do evangelism and encounter people in these categories, we should see why we need apologetics in the Church. Taylor says when dealing with people, many people may fall into various categories such as:1. Critics: those with criticisms of the Christian faith who are not open to the possibility of its truth. Critics need to be answered to neutralize the effects of their criticisms on seekers and doubters.
2. Seekers: people who are open to our faith but are prevented from making a commitment primarily because of honest questions about the Christian claims.
3. Doubters: are Christians who find it difficult to believe one or more tenants of the Christian faith with complete confidence. Doubters need to be restored to full Christian conviction by giving them the tools to remove their doubts.In own experience, I run into a lot of #1′s.
The Problem with the Christian Explanation
Earlier this month I explained the reasons to disbelieve Jesus rose from the dead. A week before that I explained the five historical facts that must be accounted for to reject that Jesus was raised.
Comes now retired detective J. Warner Wallace, who says,
Read the whole thing at The Problem with the Christian Explanation | Cold Case Christianity.
Comes now retired detective J. Warner Wallace, who says,
As a detective, I’ve come to recognize that any explanation of an event in the past has its own set of virtues and liabilities. Even in my own cases, when I’ve gathered the evidence, reconstructed and articulated an account of criminal events, and successfully prosecuted a defendant in a case, I’ve always been aware of the liabilities and evidential deficiencies in my explanation of events. No case is perfect. All cases have unanswered questions. All cases have strengths and weaknesses. Juries are able to make decisions in spite of this reality because they reach a point of evidential sufficiency and conclude that the liabilities are outweighed by the strengths of the case. They also come to accept one explanation as superior to the rest.
So as I examine the Christian explanation for the Resurrection, I am quick to recognize its strengths and weaknesses. On the one hand, it accounts for the minimal evidences thoroughly (and it also accounts for a much larger set of evidences related to the Resurrection as described by Gary Habermas and Michael Licona in The Case for the Resurrection of Jesus). On the other hand it suffers from what some would say is an insurmountable liability:
A supernatural event (like the resurrection) must be possible in order for the disciples to be correct about their observations related to the death and resurrection of Jesus.
Read the whole thing at The Problem with the Christian Explanation | Cold Case Christianity.
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