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Archive for the ‘Leadership’ Category

I have already mentioned that I had the opportunity to speak to the college students at On Campus last week.  It was a wonderful time and I always love the chance to pour my life into theirs.  One of the things I challenged them to do was to think about their life and the difference they could make in the world – an impact for Christ.

I gave them an assignment and I thought I would give it to you today.

I am asking you to take some time today and give this some thought.  Spend a few minutes thinking about what you would like to see in your obituary.  When someone stands up at your funeral someday, what would you want them to say?

Make a list, a few bullet points, of qualities and accomplishments you would like to read in the paper after your death.

Some of mine include:

  • amazing husband and father
  • passionate Jesus follower
  • visionary
  • honest
  • compassionate

You get the point.  So make your list.

Now look at the list.

Go live that list today.

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Last night I had the blessings of speaking to college students at their weekly worship service On Campus.  My topic was a challenge for them to take the reigns of their generation and rise up to make a difference for Jesus in the world.  I used 1 Timothy 4:1-12 as the text.  In this passage of scripture, Paul addresses Timothy, a young follower, and tells him, “don’t let anyone look down on you because you are young.”  He goes on to tell Timothy to live by example.  As I went through this passage with the students, I was reminded that what Paul was telling Timothy was not only good insight for a young person, but it is a challenge for all ages.

In verse 7, Paul says we should train ourselves to be godly.  And then in verse 12 he says this: “set an example for the believers in speech, in life, in love, in faith and in purity.”

If we are to live godly lives, we must do it by example and our godliness should be visible in everything we do – specifically in the way we talk, not only the words we use but how we use them and the attitude behind them.  Our lives should be an example of godliness – the way we live, our priorities and our passions.  The way we love is a reflection of our godliness as well.  Do you love others as Jesus does, or is your love geared more towards what you can get out of the relationship?  Godliness is obvious in where we put our faith.  We can tell people all day long that we are followers of Jesus, but if we put more faith in our money or our own abilities than in Jesus then who are we fooling?  Purity also reflects our godliness.  Are your intentions pure in your dealings with others?  How honest are you as a person?

If we are truly to impact this world with the hope and love that following Jesus has to offer, then we must lead godly lives and our godliness (or lack there of) will be reflected in the way we live.

Live godly today!

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In my reading this morning, I read about Jesus sending his disciples out into the communities to minister and share the good news of hope.  It is remarkable to think that the birth of a movement began in a little known country by a handful of common folks.

What is remarkable about the Christian movement is that it is still dependent on common folks to spread the good news of hope in a world that desperately needs it.

In the midst of my meditation on these thoughts this morning, this verse – Luke 10:16 – stuck out to me and continues to convict me.  I realize that Jesus meant to encourage his followers with what he said – and it does.  But let the weight of the verse fall on you for just a minute – “He who listens to you, listens to me.”

I have to ask myself, “In my daily journey through this life, are the things I say a good reflection on Jesus, or do they hinder more than they help?”

There is great encouragement in Jesus’ words, but don’t miss the implication of great responsibility as well.

As we go through the day today, may this be our prayer: “May the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be pleasing in your sight, O LORD, my Rock and my Redeemer.”  (Psalm 19:14)

Be a blessing today!

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Stand Up For Your Faith

Today is a cool day!  All over the country, students are meeting around the flag pole at their schools to pray for their teachers, their schools, their communities and one another.  What makes this event even more special is that it is completely student lead.  In other words, this is all their effort.

As a pastor, I never know what to expect each year as to how many students will make the effort and when they are there, how many will take it seriously.  But today, at both our middle school and high school, there were great groups – singing and praying and standing up for their faith.  It was an amazing sight.

I am proud of our kids!  But just as importantly, I am challenged by them.  How am I going to stand up for my faith today?

I’ll ask you the same question – how will you stand up for your faith today?

Be blessed!

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It’s early Thursday morning and I am out on the back deck with a fire in the chimnea – lots on my mind I suppose.  As I sit watching the fire, I watch the flame build and die down.  As I add wood to the fire, the flame builds back up again.  But underneath the flame is where the real fire is – a bed of coals that keeps the fire going.  As I watch the fire I am reminded of a story I heard recently of an Oklahoma pastor named Otto Goins.  You can read his story here.

He is 100 years old.  He preached his first sermon in the summer of 1930.  Now, 80 years later, he is still preaching – and now, right back in the same building he helped build in 1940.  He now lives in a retirement home, but every week his neighbor drives him to church so he can preach.

It is burning coals like Otto that keep the flame going.  Yes, God keeps adding new fuel to the fire in the way of new ministers and leaders, but we must never forget those who have gone before who have kept the fire burning in our churches.

This story also reminds me that even though we may age and reach a point that we retire from our careers, we never retire from serving God.  As a minister, I have heard countless people tell me, “I have served in this capacity for plenty of years, it is time for the younger folks to step up and pull their weight.”  While this is often true, it should never be an excuse for retiring from being a committed believer.  Look at Otto, he is still preaching after 80 years of ministry.

We need the coals to keep the fire going!

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This week, Thursday and Friday, I will have the distinct privilege of attending the Leadership Summit with a group of folks from our church and community.  I have read and heard most of the speakers who will be speaking on leadership at this event and I am really looking forward to hearing them again.

But more importantly than that, I am looking forward to sharing this time with the folks who are attending the event from our community.  I have learned that leaders never lead alone.  We all need others to learn from, lean on and with whom we can experience mutual accountability.  So the relational side of this event will be just as important as the actual speaking.  (P.S. – We still have one spot available if you are interested let me know)

All of us are leaders in some capacity.  At the core of our commitment to the Way is an element of leadership.  When you committed to follow Jesus, you committed to stop following the world.  It takes a real sense of courage and willingness to stand alone to step out of the norm and be different.  So as a believer, you are a leader.

The question for you to consider today is this – who are the folks around you who you can learn from, lean on and with whom you can experience mutual accountability?  I challenge you today to not only think on this in passing, but actually make a list of the folks who fit this profile for you.

Lead out today!

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Why is it that we can hear something and agree that it is true, but yet not internalize it or do anything with it?  Last night I had the opportunity to share with all the participants of the college mission trip in El Paso.  The primary point of the talk was this:  It is not about you, but it is personal.

Several years ago, I was certified in CPR and one of the things I remember is that once the situation has been assessed, the first thing you do is point to a person specifically and tell them to call 911.  Why is it important to do that you might wonder?  Because if you simply shout out, “Someone call 911!” it will eventually happen, but the indecision of the crowd will cost time and in an emergency, time is the one thing you do not have.  In other words, the natural response of those standing near will be to look around and see if someone else is going to do it.

Is it because no one wants to help?  No.  Is it because they don’t want to get involved?  Most likely not that either.  It is simply natural to hesitate and let someone else do it.

Our Christian walk is often just like that.  We know what we should do but it is just easier to wait and see if someone else will step up and take the lead or get involved.

What we have to remember is that it is not about us – but it has to be personal! We must serve others as if we do not matter, but we must live with the passion as if everything depended on us.

Take the lead and get involved today!

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The last couple of days, I have been thinking about clarity – clarity of thoughts, of direction, of calling.  I notice that the busier I get, the more convoluted my thinking can easily become.  I often have a tendency to be pulled into the urgent of the moment.  The constant battle is to keep my eyes on the goal.

I try to make it a practice to begin with the end in mind.  In other words, before I undertake anything, I try and visualize the outcome (at least in general terms).  By beginning with the end in mind, I find it easier to maintain direction and focus along the way.

As a leader, we must keep our focus.  1 Corinthians 14:8 says, “if the trumpet does not sound a clear call, who will get ready for battle?”  As the trumpeters, if we are not clear in our direction – in our own calling as followers of the Way – or if we fail to give a clear calling to those who follow us, then how will anyone be able to follow.

Spend some time today doing a little soul-searching and personal evaluation.  Where are you headed?  How does God figure into that picture?

What kind of a trail are you blazing and do those who follow you truly understand where you are leading?

Just food for thought.

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Several years ago, back when we still used dial-up internet service and thought that was amazing, we decided to upgrade at the office and move to a blazing 768 mbps service.  It was a new technology for our area and operated via an antenna on top of the building that connected by radio signal to a tower 1/4 mile away.  As we met with the sales person in setting up the installation, I asked  the simple question, “How will the antenna be mounted to our building?”

You see, before entering ministry, I spent a considerable amount of my working life in the roofing industry (and oh, the stories I can tell about those days), and as such, I did not want a monstrosity affixed to our building that was going to be the cause for roof leaks and head aches down the road.  I was assured that the antenna was a simple mast with a small box on top of the pole.  I asked my follow-up question, “How will it be fastened down?”

Here was the answer I received: We use non-penetrating roof anchors.” I thought to myself, “non-penetrating roof anchors huh?  Never heard of it!  Must be new.”

Finally, the day arrived for the installation – we were finally going to move into the world that allowed more than one person to be on the web at a time (that sounds comical when I read that statement).  The installers arrived and I escorted them to the roof.  A few hours later I went to check on them and also to see for myself what a non-penetrating roof anchor looked like.  I wish I could say that what I saw was an amazing piece of scientific engineering.  But alas, it was as I expected.  The mast was a shiny, galvanized 1″ pipe about 8 feet tall.  At the top of the mast was a small rectangular, tan box – the receiver.  At the bottom of the mast were three legs and at the base of each leg was a . . .  you guessed it – a brick.  The non-penetrating roof anchors were concrete block bricks – what an amazing piece of technology!

I tell this story to make a point, we can spin anything we want to be anything we want.  We have become masters of accentuating the positive and diminishing the negative – ok that was an example of the very thing I am talking about.  In reality, what I meant to say was we have a way of blowing the positive out of proportion and sweeping the negative under the rug.  It all depends on what we are trying to accomplish.

The non-penetrating roof anchors did hold the antenna in place – but they were still just bricks.  The next time I needed something from my sales person, I took what they told me with a grain of salt.

As leaders, all we really have to stand on is our word.  Without the trust of the people we lead, we will not make it very far.  So tell the truth.  Don’t spin the facts to paint a different picture.  Find an honest way to motivate people and they will follow you – every time!

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Today is Maundy Thursday – a big day in the last week of Jesus’ life here on Earth.  Thursday was the day when Jesus gave one of his last lessons on sacrifice and service.  The setting was a small but adequate room.  The furnishings were most likely very basic – a table or two – but everything Jesus needed to help his disciples experience service in a powerful way.

His lesson came in an unexpected way – Jesus had a knack for taking everyday life and turning it on it’s ear to teach a lesson.  The custom, upon entering a home, was to take off one’s sandals.  Most of the roads of the day were not paved and so feet got dirty in simply walking down the street.  So, as a matter of courtesy and simple hygiene, it  was customary to wash one’s feet before proceeding into the house.  It was also an act of hospitality for the host to provide a servant to do the washing.  By this time in history, the washing of feet had become the work of servants.

That night, Jesus did the unthinkable.  He went disciple to disciple and washed their feet.  You may recall that Peter had a problem with this.  He refused to let Jesus wash his feet until Jesus told him he must wash his feet or Peter would have no part in Jesus’ life – at that point, Peter offered for Jesus to wash his entire body.  The point I am making here is that, based on Peter’s reaction, this act that Jesus was doing was culturally beneath him and the disciples knew it.

Here was the King of all kings, the chosen Messiah – the very Son of God – washing their feet.  How could that be?

Jesus showed the disciples by action what he had been saying for three years – if one is to impact the lives of others for the Kingdom of God, then he or she must become the servant of all.  One leads by serving.

Jesus’ sacrifice and service did not stop there that night and that will be the subject for tomorrow.  But think about this today – who is God calling you to serve in the next 30 minutes – not 3 weeks from now, but right now?

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