Posts Tagged ‘ pastor ’

For Church Leaders


Today’s post is a great reminder for me as a church leader that while the things I do are important, the things others do are important too! Sometimes, i admit, I forget that and get frustrated that everyone doesn’t think the way I do and feel like what’s important to me is really that important at all. I have to remind myself that my job is to minister to people and help empower them, not get them to minister to me or for me.

As I do what I am called to do, there is certainly an element of reciprocation that occurs, to be sure. I’ve seen it in every church I’ve served at, where people feel valued, loved and supported they jump in and help. So, today’s post from Jay Mitchell is a great reminder to constantly refocus myself on what is important…people. God didn’t send His Son to die for ministries, He came to die for people.

Cheers,

DK

(Original post from:
http://www.vanderbloemen.com/insights/3-things-church-leaders-should-know-about-the-person-in-the-pew?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_content=176978

3 Things Church Leaders Should Know about the Person in the Pew

By Jay Mitchell

I have served on the staffs of several large churches throughout my ministry career, but some of the most valuable things I learned about pastoring happened after I left full-time ministry and was just another person sitting in the pew.

Here are a few things that I wished I had recognized when I was a pastor about the people attending my church each week:

1. The people in the pew are really busy and have lots other really healthy priorities in their lives beyond what we are tying to accomplish as a church.

I recall conversations among staff members complaining about how hard it was to recruit volunteers and how some families only attended worship a few times a month. In those conversations, we were subtly conveying the message that attending church or serving as a volunteer was a measure of spiritual commitment, though we’d never say that out loud.

After leaving staff and starting work in a succession of start-ups where the very real demands of my daily life of work (including a lot of travel), family, and managing my daily life, I realized that while ministry was a busy 7-day-a-week-job, when I was a pastor, I actually had much more free or flexible time than most of the people in my congregation. I could leave work early to pick up my kids or watch a game or go exercise. Going out to lunch or even a golf outing with a church member was “ministry time.” I remember one pastor talking about taking a week of spiritual retreat or going on “study leave” and thinking that if I tried to do that at my start-up, I’d end up in the unemployment line. I know I wasn’t alone.

The truth I wished I had fully grasped is that the folks who don’t come every week or aren’t able to commit to regular volunteer opportunities is this: They aren’t lazy. They aren’t uncommitted. They are just tired and very, very busy. We may work sixty hours a week in ministry, but they are working fifty-sixty hours at work, and we are asking them to commit time above and beyond that to serve.

2. Most of the people in my church were more experienced and smarter about leadership and growing healthy organizations than I was. 

It’s true that many of us in pastoral ministry have advanced degrees and we often have an intuitive grasp of the unique complexities of leading and serving in a church, but in my congregation, I had some of the world’s most impressive leaders in business, education, technology, government, and social science. I rarely took advantage of that incredible resource. I could have taken some of them to lunch or coffee and gleaned from their extensive experience. For the most part, they would have been more than willing to share their time with me. I know that I was thrilled when the pastor of the church plant I had been attending in Richmond, VA asked to meet with me just to run ideas by me and get my thoughts. It wasn’t a burden. It was a gift. It was an honor to be asked, and it was often the best part of my week.

3. Most of the people in the pew had a better understanding of their need for grace than I ever knew.

I was going through some really rough days when I first left staff at my church. While I was excited about my new career opportunity, I was also struggling in my personal life and feeling very much like a failure and very far from God. I hungered for grace in ways I had never hungered for it before. I remember sitting in church and hearing a message about God’s grace. The words were all true. I had preached the same message myself many times before, but it was clear to me that the person preaching really hadn’t experienced my same level of felt need for grace. They just sounded like words to me. Sadly, I realized that I had done the same thing. I had preached that message having no idea that there were people in the pews who felt so far from God that mere words would never cut through the pain and hurt – people like me in that moment who understood in their souls that they needed a love that only the God of the universe could give and needed to hear about it from someone who really understood the depth of their spiritual loneliness.

Working in a church and among Christians can shelter us from the very real brokenness of our world and the people we serve. It’s far more lost than we realize – so broken that it took the death of the Son of God to repair. I wish I had understood that while I was in full-time ministry.

So with all that in mind, here are a few suggestions of how we might connect more deeply with the people in the pew.

1. In addition to your regular ministry role, volunteer in a ministry for which you have no direct responsibility. We may work fifty-sixty hours a week, but so do the people we serve. We expect them to volunteer. Serve in the children’s ministry or lead a small group for your student ministry. Go on a mission trip and instead of calling it ministry, use a week of your vacation and pay for it yourself. It’s what we ask of the person in the pew.

2. Be intentional about learning from the people in your church. Invite a few business leaders to lunch and ask them about leadership or the challenges of growing a business. Meet with teachers and learn how to teach more effectively. Ask them about their marriages or how they stay spiritually sharp amidst the challenges they face each week. You’ll be surprised and enriched by what you learn.

3. Connect with your own brokenness, and be vulnerable about it when you teach. Broken people can read us from a mile away when we try to cover it up and pretend we’ve got it all together. Be real with the person in the pew so that they can feel grace from you as well as hear about it.

4. Connect with people who hurt and feel far from God. Don’t go with the agenda to “share Jesus” with them or fix them. Just listen. Hear their stories. Let them be real with you. Let your heart connect with theirs. It will change the way you preach, teach and lead.

some things you may find interesting


Good leaders are always looking at what others are saying and doing. In an effort to be one myself, I spend time reading and following others through books, Twitter, Facebook, and on blogs. I’ve recently discovered Challies Dot Com (www.challies.com) and found it to be a wonderful source of devotional material to ponder. Today, i am re-posting some articles that had been listed there which led to many though-provoking ideas.

I hope you enjoy!
DK

(originally posted on 1/15 on challies.com)

Tim Tebow’s Life Is a Tragedy – This is an interesting take on Tebow. “Everyone’s life is a story, especially the lives of celebrities. But the way our stories get told is often what distinguishes us common folk from celebrities, mostly because celebrities have the media following them around creating a narrative, or drama, that always takes a predictable path.” He argues that Tebow’s life is a tragedy, fabricated by the media.

Adam and Eve and Pinch Me – Carl Trueman looks at the difference between Al Mohler and Tim Keller when it comes to evolution and wonders aloud why it is that many of the leaders of the new Calvinism are making complementarianism a major issue and evolution a minor one. It makes for a good and thought-provoking read.

The Plain Preaching of the GospelJustin Taylor shares a great quote from Charles Spurgeon as he argued that the plain preaching of the gospel was (and still is!) sufficient to grow the church.

Why Conservatives Should End the Debt Ceiling Debate - Dr. Mohler’s article on the debt ceiling is worth reading even if you read only long enough to see what he says about it being a “pseudo-event.”

Why We Need Plumbers—and Pastors – You can probably identify with this: “Growing up I knew I could serve God in whatever profession I chose. Providing, of course, I chose to be either a missionary or a pastor. … Sure, a wealthy executive or doctor who lived faithfully for Christ might achieve a modicum of respect in church circles. But spiritually speaking, they were ‘walking wallets,’ useful for funding ministry—the real work of the Lord.”

Getting on the right seat in the bus


Well, after a loooong and still ongoing process, Elizabeth, Titus and I have arrived in Michigan at Life Christian Church. Elizabeth is still on maternity leave and is busy both attending to the baby and getting things set up at our new apartment, which is considerably smaller than the home we lived in back in Kansas. While she is organizing and cleaning, I am at the Troy Campus of Life Christian working on learning their systems and procedures. I am also getting integrated into the life of the church.

So far, we’ve both met lots of wonderful and friendly people. I;’m getting to know the staff here at the church, and learning how to use a Mac. Actually, it isn’t all that different than a PC, so I now am wondering why I didn’t switch earlier!

Today was our first staff meeting of the year, and it was great. Fast, efficient, to the point, and with Pizza! Meetings don’t get better than that! Afterwards I sat in on a meeting with the current Campus Pastors of the place Elizabeth and I will be going later this year. for now, I am transitioning in slowly to the culture of Life and just learning how things work and operate by spending a lot of time with Pastor Dino, the Sr. Pastor.
We also started a 21 day fasting and worship season which kicked off last night. The worship was so refreshing and the prayer time was amazing. I haven’t been surrounded by people who prayed like that since I was back in Bible School. Not that I haven’t been around some people who knew how to connect with God, cause I have, but it was obvious that it was part of the entire church culture here, and not just a select group of people in the church.

Over the next few weeks I’ll be spending time shadowing the other pastors, doing some class work for the Bible Institute the church has, sitting in on lots of meetings, and just attempting to be a big sponge to soak it all in!

Needless to say, I am very excited. I’ve loved the ministry I have been a part of in different places over the past 9 years. I’ve meet great people, worked in great churches, and been a part of some awesome ministry teams, all while seeing God move, kids get saved, and people empowered for ministry. This is different, however. When I got into children’s ministry it wasn’t because I wanted to. In fact, I DIDN’T want to! I told my pastor in Illinois ‘no’ initially when he asked me to take over the small midweek program. I was already doing so much and had ‘my plans’. God, however, had other plans for my training and development. So for the past decade ( it will be 10 years in May!) I’ve traveled around, recruiting workers, growing ministries, and setting things on fire as I taught kids about Jesus. While I know this was indeed God’s plan, I also knew it wasn’t His ultimate purpose for me. There were times I didn’t like what He was doing and times I didn’t understand what He was doing:

-I didn’t like it when I wasn’t picked to come on staff at my home church after our associate pastor left, but God moving me to Nashville through children’s ministry was how I met my wonderful wife, Elizabeth!

-I didn’t understand it when things didn’t go ‘right’ in Jackson and I was not able to break through spiritually there. My wife was unhappy, I wasn’t seeing the fruit I expected, we were building relationships but not many, and then things just fell apart. Yet through it all God taught Elizabeth and I how to trust His provision (we had 1 job with a rent and condo payment, and 3 car payments, for the first several months). He also taught us how to relate to each other and not lean on others. We both know that without that experience we wouldn’t have the marriage we have now.

-I really didn’t understand it when it was made clear to me my time was up in Kansas. I was working hard, we had seen many salvations and new workers, and ministry was going good.

In all three of these places God used us to do some things and refined us in different ways. We gained knowledge, experience, insight, friendships, connections and more. We saw many victories along with a few defeats. And while in each place it was the right place for the moment so God could do what He wanted to do, I always sensed that it wasn’t the ‘place’ He had for me. The place for me right then, yes. But not the sweet spot in life, where you can just sit back and know that you are in the will of God and that, though you still have challenges, you are where you should be and doing what you should be doing.

I’m there now.

All these other places were like different seats on a bus, which gave me different perspectives and experiences. But now, God is moving me to the ‘right seat.’ He’s placing me where I can take all of this experience and, along with His wisdom and through the power of His Spirit, apply what I’ve gained to accomplish my ultimate purpose.

It’s such a refreshing place to be, and I am so thankful. It also is exciting, because while I know I won’t experience flowery beds of easy, that the fruit that will be produced in the future will be sweeter than any I’ve ever seen before.

Oh, what an awesome God I serve!

DK

What I Was Thinking


So, by now lots of people know that I am no longer a part of the pastoral staff of Crosspoints Church, where I’ve served as Children’s Pastor for the last three years. Given the state of the economy and the fact that Elizabeth and I are expecting Titus right around the beginning of December, some have asked me what exactly I was thinking and why I would make such a change now? Also, why would I leave gainful employment without having a job locked in somewhere else.

Good questions. Let me speak into them and, hopefully, you’ll hear my heart in what God is doing.

I’ve loved being at Crosspoints. What a great staff, group of volunteers, and people who I’ve been able to work with in my time there. From a strictly natural standpoint I am sad to go and, honestly, torn about leaving. My ‘logical’ side didn’t really want to, if I’m being honest. But from the time I entered ministry after graduating Bible School I’ve always know that God has some pretty specific things for me to do in ministry. However, as a young man with good training but no experience, I wasn’t ready to step into some of the areas that the Lord ultimately has for me in ministry. I needed to learn…a lot! (I still do, really). So, God took me on a journey that involved coaching high school basketball, working in retail, coming on staff at a mega church, moving my new bride away from her home and job right after marriage, and eventually landing here.

Everything God does, He does for a reason. Sometimes we don’t understand that reason. Sometimes we may not agree with or like what He’s doing. But one thing about God that I know beyond any doubt, when we trust Him He doesn’t fail us.

  • He didn’t fail me when I was a volunteer pastor with no ministry income.
  • He didn’t fail me when I and one other pastor encountered a teen girl who was demoniacal possessed and reacting violently.
  • He didn’t fail me when Elizabeth and I moved to Jackson with just my job and income, and it took her months to be able to find a job, then only an entry-level position.
  • He didn’t fail me when I went to India and literally was stuck on my way back in Germany with no visa, no phone, no money, and no plane to take me home
  • He didn’t fail me when someone ran a stop sign and t-boned my car, leaving it a total loss.

I could go on…but the point is God is faithful. So when He began speaking to me at the beginning of this year about change coming in my ministry, I knew He had a plan. I didn’t know what He meant or what the plan was… and I didn’t try to force anything. You see, at the church we were in the middle of transitioning to a new Senior Pastor. My focus was on doing everything I could to provide support and leadership to our members. When the new Senior Pastor came on in early summer, he and I talked about his vision and goals and about my vision and goals.

I knew that I could stay and continue doing what I was doing, but that it would not be as effective because God was starting to demand some new things of me. On top of that, learning that I was going to become a first time father put a new passion in my heart to move to the next level in my ministry.

So, when the Senior Pastor approached me about making a change, I knew it was right-for the church and for my family and I. See, leading with a divided focus is never a good long-term idea. Our new pastor recognized the calling of God on my life outside of what I was doing, and based on where the church was there wasn’t the opportunity for me to do some of those things there. I knew that as a new leader, he needed people around him who were 100% focused on going forward in the direction and with the vision he was bringing in. I wasn’t. So, together, we decided that the best thing was for me to step down and begin to pursue some of these new things, and to allow the church and children’s ministry to fully take the shape he desired.

It wasn’t a situation where I was running away, or even where he didn’t feel I could contribute. It was one of those rare times you hear about in ministry where people actually put off their own personal immediate interests and decide to do what is in best long-term interests of the church and individuals involved. Far too often people do things out of selfishness or vanity and they call it ‘the will of God’ when really it’s not. That’s not at all what happened as we talked and developed a plan.

Instead, I got excited about what would come next and I began preparing to hand over the reigns to someone new. Sure, there is some intimidation and natural anxiety that arises as I look for new ministry opportunities knowing that I don’t currently have a full-time job. But anxiety is quickly replaced by peace, because I know that God’s timing is perfect, His provision is more than adequate, and His leading is always to the right thing. What makes it even better is that my wife feels the same way. Sure, she was a bit shocked when I told her ‘I’m stepping down’ but within minutes she expressed that she had the same peace I had.

Now, just a month after, we’ve already transitioned in a new Children’s Pastor, whom I’ve met with and fully support. I’ve sent out resumes literally all over the country, because God’s said there is something new, but He hasn’t yet identified exactly what it is. I’m able to help get everything ready for the arrival of Titus, who’s only a few weeks away from being born. I have time to work on my Masters coursework, which is always good. And, I get to follow God’s leading in the formation of this new ministry endeavor, Kroner Ministries.

This is something God put in my heart back when I was 16 years old. Now, step by step, He is leading me forward in  the formation of the plan and purpose of this ministry, which won’t take me way from the local church but will allow me to do things such as training and support for ministries that aren’t as doable simply as a staff pastor.

Where will it all end up? I don’t really know the answer to that. However, I sure am excited as God is opening doors and possibilities, giving me ideas and connections, and showing Himself faithful yet again.

So stay tuned friends…because I know the best is yet to come!

DK

 

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