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  • Sound Words: A Mess May Mean Success! « My Two Cents

    Posted on January 27th, 2010 PastorWill No comments

    Chris Anderson has some great words to share in this post about messy churches:  Sound Words: A Mess May Mean Success! « My Two Cents.

    Excerpts:

    First, our churches must aim to reach the lost where they are.
    I’ve been prone in the past to judge the effectiveness of a church by the condition of its attendees. If the people seemed to “have it all together” (e.g. they dressed up, had high standards, knew the Scriptures, etc.), I assumed the church was strong and effective. On the other hand, if the people had “issues” (e.g. they dressed immodestly or informally, were biblically illiterate, smelled of smoke, etc.), I assumed that the church was weak and ineffective.

    The truth is, my means of measuring a church’s effectiveness was simplistic, and perhaps downright backwards! If, for example, a church is filled only with people who “fit in” and have no problems (wink, wink), it may mean that they haven’t seen any conversions for many years! And if a church has down-and-outers, it may mean that they’re reaching their community for Christ—and they’re reaching lost people, not just families looking for strong churches! So a “mess” may mean “success”!

    Think of it this way: a house that is perfectly clean is probably a house in which no babies reside. And a house strewn with toys and smelling of soiled diapers—as uncomfortable as it may be—is probably a house where there is new life! And that’s great! To put it the way Proverbs 14:4 does, “Where there are no oxen, the manger is clean, but abundant crops come by the strength of the ox.” Cleanliness and productivity are often incompatible. Ministry is messy!

    And…

    We mustn’t be more “righteous” than Christ (I speak as a fool). Jesus came not to call the (apparently) righteous, but sinners to repentance (Luke 5:32). So He ate with publicans. So He ministered to prostitutes and adulteresses. So He—to His eternal praise and our eternal salvation!—“received sinners” (Luke 15:2). Mere improvement of morals is worse than useless; it’s harmful!

    Bottom line: Don’t help damn people through your efforts to improve them! They don’t need to be more respectable in their sinful condition—though such respectability may keep Christians from feeling squeamish. They need the gospel. They need to be born again. They need heart change that results in habit change, as do those of us who have been saved for decades.

  • Why Many (Most?) Great Ideas Never Get Off the Ground : What’s Best Next

    Posted on January 7th, 2010 PastorWill No comments

    This article by Scott Berkun is a good reminder for preachers.  Some excerpts:

    Just about anyone in the professional world is, in effect, a professional speaker. Every single idea in the history of the business world had to be explained to at least one other person before it got approved, funded or purchased by anyone else. Call it what you like–sales, marketing, pitching or presenting–but I know the history. Despite dreams of a world in which the best ideas win simply because they should, we live in a world where the fate of ideas hinges on how well you talk about what you’ve made, or what you want to make.

    ….

    From my studies of innovation history (which led to my best-seller, The Myths of Innovation), I know that the difference between relatively uncommon names like Tesla, Grey and Englebart, and household ones like Edison, Bell and Jobs, has more to do with their ability to persuade, convince and inspire than their ability to invent, create or innovate.

    One potent thread in the fabric of reasons why some ideas take off and others don’t is the ability entrepreneurs have to explain to others why they should care. The bigger the idea, the more explaining the world demands. Yet these skills are constantly trivialized in many organizations, leading to dozens of great ideas being rejected, and their creators wondering why lesser rivals with weaker concepts are able to capture people’s imaginations and pocketbooks.

    ….

    I see too many inventors and executives who see speaking about their work as the least important thing they do. And it shows. To the detriment of the quality of their ideas, their presentations are the spotty lens through which those ideas will be seen. Without dedicated effort, those lenses distort and betray what it is they truly have to offer.

    HT: Matt Perman – Why Many (Most?) Great Ideas Never Get Off the Ground : What’s Best Next.

  • Hunting Tiger Woods by CJ Mahaney

    Posted on December 3rd, 2009 PastorWill No comments

    Awesome post by C.J. about our response to Tiger Woods: Hunting Tiger Woods.

    Excerpt below:

    As expected, the allegations of adultery involving a public figure are attracting a media pile-on. This is a big story with a big audience and it’s a story that will not disappear soon. Tiger Woods is being hunted by the media.

    But let us make sure we do not join the hunt. A Christian’s response to this story should be distinctly different. We should not be entertained by the news. We should not have a morbid interest in all the details. We should be saddened and sobered. We should pray for this man and even more for his wife.

    And we can be sure that in the coming days we will be in conversations with friends and family where this topic will emerge. And when it does, we can avoid simply listening to the latest details and speculations, and avoid speaking self-righteously, but instead we can humbly draw attention to the grace of God in the gospel.

  • The One Skill Necessary for Thriving in a World of Excess Access : What’s Best Next

    Posted on December 1st, 2009 PastorWill No comments

    The One Skill Necessary for Thriving in a World of Excess Access : What’s Best Next.

    A great post on the necessity of strategic imbalance or FOCUS.

  • Morality, Hollywood Style – AlbertMohler.com

    Posted on October 6th, 2009 PastorWill No comments

    We all struggle with hypocrisy in various ways.  This is a good illustration of that.  And also a great warning about Hollywood morality vs. biblical morality.  Don’t be deceived!

    Morality, Hollywood Style – AlbertMohler.com.

    A quick excerpt:

    Give Katha Pollitt credit, the feminist left-winger supreme was quick to denounce both Polanski and his Hollywood enablers:

    The widespread support for Polanski shows the liberal cultural elite at its preening, fatuous worst. They may make great movies, write great books, and design beautiful things, they may have lots of noble humanitarian ideas and care, in the abstract, about all the right principles: equality under the law, for example. But in this case, they’re just the white culture-class counterpart of hip-hop fans who stood by R. Kelly and Chris Brown and of sports fans who automatically support their favorite athletes when they’re accused of beating their wives and raping hotel workers.

    No wonder Middle America hates them.

    Yet remember:

    Hypocrisy is found in ample supply among both conservatives and liberals. The conservative variant seems most evident when political or religious leaders are found guilty of transgressing the very principles they preach. The hypocrisy spreads in both extent and significance when those who claim to be conservatives attempting to conserve moral wisdom excuse those who flaunt their personal disregard for that wisdom.

  • Growing in Contentment

    Posted on September 29th, 2009 PastorWill No comments

    In our quest for more, contentment is absolutely necessary.  Listen in!

    Also I was conversing with someone in our church who’s been struggling recently and they pointed this out from  “Calm My Anxious Heart” by Linda Dillow:  “There is an unholy habit of discontent and a holy habit of contentment.”  There are five “nevers” that she recommends:

    1.  Never allow yourself to complain about anything – not even the weather!

    2.  Never picture yourself in any other circumstances or someplace else.

    3.  Never compare your lot with others.

    4.  Never allow yourself to wish this or that had been otherwise.

    5.  Never dwell on yesterday or on tomorrow – remember that tomorrow is Gods, not ours.

    Great thoughts!