Joey Tolbert

Check out the release of my friend, Joey Tolbert’s, new album, Parables.  My favorite songs thus far are Knowing Grace and Hallelujah.

I love Dayton!

You probably think I am talking about:

But Christina doesn’t agree with me and I don’t get that!  Still it is foolish for me to argue about it, and it is foolish of me to expect her to love it the way I do, she doesn’t have my shared history with the place.  I guess there are things in our lives that we may love and be intensely passionate about that other folk just won’t see the same way…so I guess it would be good for me and for all of us to accept that about each other and not fight or become upset with people when they see stuff and places different than we do. 

 

 

Memorize Scripture: Exodus 20:15

“Thou shalt not steal!” –Exodus 20:15

Bob Deffinbaugh wrote about stealing on the site Bible.org.  I would encourage you to go and read his entire article, but here is just a little snippet that was profound and convicting to me about a major source of theft in our society:

“Stealing is a subject well worth our attention for several reasons. First, stealing has become a national problem of epidemic proportions. For example, consider the impact of “time theft” on our economy:

The Robert Half Personnel Agencies has calculated that time-theft will cost the American economy as much as $70 billion a year. Time-theft is defined as those deliberate employee actions which result in the massive, growing misuse and waste of time. Estimated time-theft are: arriving to work late, leaving early, taking unjustified ‘sick’ days, extensive socializing with co-workers, turning the water cooler into a conversation pit, inattention to the job at hand, reading novels and magazines on the job, operating a business on the side during working hours, eating lunch at the desk and then going out for the ‘lunch hour,’ excessive personal phone calls, on-the-job daydreaming and fanticizing, long, frequent coffee and snack breaks, etc.

Are you involved in “time theft” ?

400

Is 400 a number you ever think about? I do!In fact 400 has been on my mind quite a ‘bit lately!  It is the latest barrier in our church.  What do I mean by that?  It is what is referred to in Church Growth textbooks as a “Growth Barrier.”  And our most recent growth barrier is 400, that means we are having a hard time passing that number in attendance and then sustaining that growth.

Recently I went back to a book I read a couple years ago written by Carl George, “How to Break Growth Barriers.” Here are a few of the insights I gathered from George on breaking through the 400 barrier:

  1. Space! 
  2. Changing the role of the church governing board. “Planning and administration must become a staff function, not a board responsibility.” George, states that this transition, “needs to be in motion to break the 400 barrier.” He then states, “The team that must drive the program, provide the vision, do the planning, and create the budgets is the church staff, not the board.” (George considers “staff” people in management roles, whether they are paid or unpaid, so in our church this would include Elders, Sabbath School leaders, etc.). 
  3. The boards one function or primary function should be policy.  If a church is to become bigger, the staff must commission ministry and take policy direction from boards. The staff is “not driven by a volunteer-controlled board…Too many details arise that cannot wait until the board convenes each month.  No matter how efficient the board tries to be, it can regularly bottleneck the staff’s efforts to build growth momentum.”
  4. Ministry positions come through appointment, rather than election.
  5. “The church board becomes smaller–ideally a single-digit size.”
  6. Senior pastor must move from being a “manager” to being a “leader.” The senior leader gives direction through casting the vision and calling it to come into reality. Then another individual, the manager, sees to it that the vision gets accomplished through others.
  7. “Staff members ought to be able to produce fifty new lay leaders (people who lead others) within a three year period.”  I really like this one! 
  8. All key leaders must become gifted DELEGATORS! 
  9. Senior leader must “Stop doing things other people could do. Focus your energies on those things that only you can do.  Pass the rest of the work to your team.”

I believe we are having some success in areas 2, 3, & 4. We’ll have to continue working and praying on the others.

Below are the things I would add to George’s list, that I believe are essential, and even with the above items perfectly in place without these next items Growth won’t occur:

  1. An abundance of prayer!  Prayer warriors must operate in every level of your church. I believe it must be the church’s culture!
  2. Teaching of the Word of God!  The Bible, all of it, must be taught in order to grow!
  3. Love! Without love we are just clanging cymbals.
  4. Unity! Especially amongst leadership.  If there are folk in leadership positions that are not 100% committed to the vision of the church, the teachings of the church, and the team they are a part of and they know it then they should step aside so the church can grow.  Unity is a must!

 

Cultural Adventism is a Waste of Your Life!

Are you a cultural Adventist?  Or we could ask are you a cultural Christian? Either way let me share this with you: if you are, then you are wasting your life!

A “cultural Adventist,” is someone who, by his/her own admission, is an Adventist solely because he/she was raised and educated in the church.  Let me tell you, if this is your position you’re wasting your life and time!  I personally believe to be “cultural” anything is a waste, but my wife says I am intense in all areas, so maybe that is a little extreme.  It is not extreme though to say that “cultural” Christianity or because of my belief system Adventism is leading you no where but eternal separation from God.  How and why do I say that?

Revelation 3:15 & 16–

“‘I know your works: you are neither cold nor hot. Would that you were either cold or hot! So, because you are lukewarm, and neither hot nor cold, I will spit you out of my mouth.”

This text is a description of “cultural” living.  “Cultural” living is living with no passion, simply going through the motions for the sake of going through the motions.  That is what was happening with the church at Laodicea. The Laodicean church was simply going through the motions, no passion, doing Christianity just for the sake of doing Christianity, not because they were truly following Christ.  And Jesus said, “Because you have no passion I will spit you out!” It sounds to me like being spit out is pretty much the description of a wasted life. 

So are you a “Cultural Adventist Christian” ?  Would you die for Jesus?  Would you die for what you believe in?  Is your greatest passion Jesus and your second greatest passion the mission of Jesus, seeking and saving the lost? As you learn things from the Bible do you ask how can I live more like Jesus? Who can I share this with?

Folks don’t be anything just cause it is the culture, especially Christianity!  Be passionate for Jesus and the truths you believe or be nothing, but don’t be cultural, it will just get you spit out! 

 

Ben Carson

Parents you need to hear the first few minutes of this video if nothing else! 

<p>Backstage Interview – Ben Carson from GiANT Impact on Vimeo.</p>

 

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