Tomorrow is December 1, 2013 - the First Sunday of Advent.
Here are the songs of worship planned for tomorrow:
We gather near the altar for a time of communion and we celebrate the assurance of the First Advent and the promise of the Second Advent.
As we present our offerings to the Lord we acknowledge the faithfulness of our God
- Immanuel – God is with us! -- the worship team will lead us in:
Now the teaching from God's Word:
This is a trustworthy saying that deserves full acceptance (and for this we labor and strive) that we have put our hope in the living God who is the Savior of all, and especially of those who believe. 1 Timothy 3:9-10
Saturday, November 30, 2013
Friday, November 29, 2013
Family pictures from Thanksgiving Day
Yesterday was Thanksgiving Day! Sharron and were so blessed to have our immediate family join us for this day. It was a day with laughter and a delicious meal. Sharron went beyond the call of duty by preparing home made rolls along with the family favorites with the turkey. We had a few moments for some pictures:
First - Sharron and I with our grandchildren:
First - Sharron and I with our grandchildren:
Next a picture with of our children - with their children:
Our older grandchildren pose for their Thanksgiving pictures:
Thursday, November 28, 2013
Thanksgiving Day 2013 - Be glad!
On this Thanksgiving morning I am so blest to have my family around me.
Here is a favorite group from the past singing Thanksgiving.
Here is a favorite group from the past singing Thanksgiving.
GLAD is one of the pioneers of Christian pop/rock and a cappella music, having formed as a progressive rock group in 1972 and discovered a large audience for their a cappella music in 1988. Today, with over 1.5 million albums sold, they continue to perform concerts and release occasional recordings. As Contemporary Christian Music (CCM Magazine) described it, "GLAD's elegant vocals helped set them apart from other pioneers of Contemporary Christian music.
Here is one of my favorite GLAD clips.... enjoy!
Here is one of my favorite GLAD clips.... enjoy!
Wednesday, November 27, 2013
A time of prayer for Thanksgiving
We are not gathering for prayer this evening at NRN in order to spend time with loved ones for Thanksgiving Day. We have been praying for any request given for this week. Here is a short time
of prayer for Thanksgiving:
of prayer for Thanksgiving:
Tuesday, November 26, 2013
Riding the Ministry Roller Coaster
Leadership and ministry can feel like a roller coaster.
You go at break-neck speed through lots of twists and turns, and as hard as you
try, you can’t see what is ahead. One situation goes exactly as you predict;
the next one plunges into something else entirely. You face emotional ups and
downs—walking with friends through personal tragedies, grieving with some and
celebrating with others. This is the roller coaster of ministry, and there is
no way around it.
However, we often experience more exaggerated highs and
lows because of the pressure to lead a more “spectacular” ministry. We ride
high as church attendance, decisions and giving rise, and we plunge low when
they don’t. Sometimes we read about incredible ministries and rather than feel
energized, we feel frustrated. Suddenly everything we are doing looks ... less.
We may feel drained and defeated. We thought things were going okay until we
saw how well they were going everywhere else! The pressure for a spectacular ministry
can lead us into unnecessary emotional ups and downs and steal our joy. This is
a reality for all kinds of ministry leaders and for churches of all sizes and
styles. So I want to share some practices that can help on the roller coaster
of ministry.
Focus on Faithfulness
When Paul talks about having a spectacular ministry, he
notes how much more important it is to have a faithful heart. Some attack his
ministry and character, so he seeks to give his friends the ability to respond
to his haters. He writes, “God knows we are sincere, and I hope you know this,
too. Are we commending ourselves to you again? No, we are giving you a reason
to be proud of us, so you can answer those who brag about having a spectacular
ministry rather than having a sincere heart” (2 Cor. 5:11-12, NLT).
Paul makes a distinction between a “spectacular ministry”
and a “sincere heart.” He simply and powerfully reminds us that what is most
important is not our fruitfulness but our faithfulness. In fact, our
responsibility before God is not a spectacular ministry but a faithful and
sincere heart.
Now, please don’t misread me. I’m all for results. I want
to do everything I can to remove barriers that keep others from knowing Jesus
and his life-giving salvation. I believe in counting most everything in our
ministry so we can measure our effectiveness. I love to see progress and
welcome accountability. However, in the end, a significant portion of ministry
can’t be reduced to simple attendance and growth numbers. As I focus on being
faithful first, it has a way of leveling me out from all the unnecessary ups
and downs. I also think it allows our ministry to be more fruitful over the
long haul.
Stay
Compelled by Jesus’ Love
Every ministry and church will go through up and down
seasons. Paul shares the secret of how he kept going in the face of those who
questioned his motives and even his sanity. He writes, “Either way, Christ’s
love controls us,” (2 Cor. 5:14, NLT). You can do the work of God for a lot of
reasons—the praise of people, public recognition, loyalty to others, etc.—but
the only thing that keeps you going through the ups and downs is the love of
Christ. Because of Jesus’ love, every person matters, every size church
matters, every number matters and every heart matters.
Let’s commit our hearts to be faithful and sincere before
God, compelled by Christ’s love, and we’ll find ourselves enjoying the journey
again while celebrating every victory in God’s kingdom.
Jud Wilhite is The
New York Times bestselling
author of Pursued: God’s Divine Obsession With You (FaithWords) and senior pastor of
Central Christian Church, a 2013 Outreach 100 Church, No. 68 Fastest-Growing;
No. 9 Largest.
Monday, November 25, 2013
How Christian Are You?
Often times we view Christianity like it's a sliding scale. Billy Graham and Mother Teresa are near the top, some of those Pharisees and doubting Apostles are near the bottom, and then there's us somewhere in between. We minimize our relationship with Jesus into knowing the right vocabulary, being better out-loud prayers, and having a top-notch testimony. In this fun video from our Creative team, we show the problems that occur when we turn our faith into a test of knowledge, putting ourselves on scale that we can never measure up to.
Sunday, November 24, 2013
Reflection of my message today at NRN
Today at NRN was awesome as we offered our testimonies of thanks to the Lord.
Here is a reflection of my message today:
My warning: A failure to express our thanks to God and to one another will limit the quality of your life and the power of your influence.
Here is the clip I used today in my message:
Worship the LORD with
gladness; come
before him with joyful
songs. Know that the LORD is God. It is he who made us, and we
are his; we
are his people, the sheep of his
pasture. Enter
his gates with thanksgiving
and his
courts with praise; give thanks to him and praise his name. For the LORD is good and his love endures forever; his faithfulness continues through all generations. Psalm
100:2-5
We
Thank God for What He DOES,
We
Praise God for Who HE IS!
One of them, when he saw he was healed, came
back, praising
God in a loud voice. He threw himself at Jesus' feet and thanked him. Luke 17:15-16a
In his book Daring To Draw Near, Dr. John White writes that several years earlier God had made it possible for him to acquire a lovely home with many luxuries. His feelings about the house fluctuated dramatically.
When he reminded himself that it was a gracious gift from God, he felt joy and thanksgiving. But when he would begin to compare it with those of his friends, he would feel proud because he had such a fine house and his joy would evaporate. His home would actually become a burden. All he could see were the many hedges and trees to care for and the endless odd jobs to do. White said, “While vanity clouds my eyes and burdens my heart, gratitude clears my vision and lightens my load.”
The writer of Ecclesiastes saw God at every turn in the enjoyment of material things. The power to eat the fruits of our labors and even the strength to receive and rejoice in them is from Him (5:18-19).
From beginning to end, all of life is a continuous gift-giving by God. We deserve nothing. He owes us nothing. Yet He gives us everything. If we remember this, we need not feel selfish or guilty. Whatever material blessings we have are a gift from our gracious God.
Ten thousand thousand precious gifts
My daily thanks employ;
Nor is the least a cheerful heart,
That tastes those gifts with joy. —Addison
God, who has given so much to us, gives one more thing—a grateful heart. —Herbert
Saturday, November 23, 2013
Preparing for worship at NRN - Do you have a testimony to share?
As we prepare for worship tomorrow at NRN I am very excited about the message God has placed upon my heart. I expect a moving of the Holy Spirit as we express our thanks unto God. We will offer a time of testimonies to the Lord.
Here is the prepared worship set:
Now on his way to Jerusalem, Jesus traveled along
the border between Samaria and Galilee. As he was going into a village, ten men
who had leprosy met him. They stood at a distance and called out in a loud
voice, "Jesus, Master, have pity on us!" When he saw them, he said,
"Go, show yourselves to the priests." And as they went, they were
cleansed.
One of them, when he saw he was healed, came back, praising
God in a loud voice. He threw himself at Jesus' feet and thanked him--and he was
a Samaritan. Jesus asked, "Were not all ten cleansed? Where are the other
nine? Was no one found to return and give praise to God except this
foreigner?" Then he said to him, "Rise and go; your faith has made you
well."
Luke 17:11-19Friday, November 22, 2013
Our needs will never exhaust God’s supply - A prayer of faith...
Last evening there was an important meeting of the finance team of NRN. As a church we are facing serious decisions, as many churches today are also facing. We trust God for His provisions but struggle with the needed cash flow to meet obligations. We have a deep desire to be good stewards but know that the current reality is that our giving is below our expectation and actually below the what a church our size should be investing in the Kingdom of God. I am praying for an awesome offering this Sunday to meet a huge outstanding need for our ministry. My heart is filled with trust and gratitude. I felt the need to post a second time today on my blog.
Here is a thought from a devotional I read last month:
Outside my office window, the squirrels are in a race against winter to bury their acorns in a safe, accessible place. Their commotion amuses me. An entire herd of deer can go through our back yard and not make a sound, but one squirrel sounds like an invasion.
The two creatures are different in another way as well. Deer do not prepare for winter. When the snow comes they eat whatever they can find along the way (including ornamental shrubs in our yard). But squirrels would starve if they followed that example. They would be unable to find suitable food.
The deer and the squirrel represent ways that God cares for us. He enables us to work and save for the future, and He meets our need when resources are scarce.
As the wisdom literature teaches, God gives us seasons of plenty so that we can prepare for seasons of need (Prov. 12:11). And as Psalm 23 says, the Lord leads us through perilous places to pleasant pastures.
Another way that God provides is by instructing those with plenty to share with those in need (Deut. 24:19). So when it comes to provision, the message of the Bible is this: Work while we can, save what we can, share what we can, and trust God to meet our needs.
Thank You, Lord, for the promise that You will
meet our needs. Help us not to fear or doubt.
We’re grateful that You’re watching over us
and that our cries for help reach Your ear.
meet our needs. Help us not to fear or doubt.
We’re grateful that You’re watching over us
and that our cries for help reach Your ear.
Our needs will never exhaust God’s supply.
This weekend at NRN - The Prayer Path
On Friday evening and Saturday - November 22-23 Pastor Jordan and the Youth Group at North Raleigh Church of the Nazarene are providing a meaningful spiritual experience for all who attend.
Using
the Worship Center which has removable chairs as the prayer path location,
Pastor Jordan and the youth group will lay out a prayer path with masking tape
and placed the different stations along the path.
Personally, I look forward to the annual Prayer Path at NRN. As I spent time alone with God and stop at each of the stations along the path, there is a renewal in my spiritual walk. I highly recommend this to all believers to draw near to the Lord as we approach Thanksgiving and the Advent Season.
Even if you did not sign up for a time period - come and join us for this meaningful experience.
Thursday, November 21, 2013
WHAT HAPPENS IN HEAVEN WHEN WE PRAY?
I recently read
this on Facebook:
I dreamt that I
went to Heaven and an angel was showing me around. We walked side-by-side
inside a large workroom filled with angels. My angel guide stopped in front of
the first section and said, "This is the Receiving Section. Here, all
petitions to God said in prayer are received."
I looked around in
this area, and it was terribly busy with so many angels sorting out petitions
written on voluminous paper sheets and scraps from people all over the world.
Then we moved on
down a long corridor until we reached the second section.
The angel then said to me, "This is the Packaging
and Delivery Section. Here, the graces and blessings the people asked for are
processed and delivered to the living persons who asked for them." I
noticed again how busy it was there. There were many angels working hard at
that station, since so many blessings had been requested and were being
packaged for delivery to Earth.
Finally at the
farthest end of the long corridor we stopped at the door of a very small
station. To my great surprise, only one angel was seated there, idly doing
nothing. "This is the Acknowledgment Section," my angel friend
quietly admitted to me. He seemed embarrassed.
"How is it that
there is no work going on here?" I asked.
"So
sad," the angel sighed. "After people receive the blessings that they
asked for, very few send back acknowledgments."
"How does one
acknowledge God's blessings?" I asked.
"Simple," the angel answered. Just
say, "Thank you, Lord."
"What
blessings should they acknowledge?" I asked.
"If you have
food in the refrigerator, clothes on your back, a roof overhead and a place to
sleep you are richer than 75% of this world.
If you have money
in the bank, in your wallet, and spare change in a dish, you are among the top
8% of the world's wealthy, and if you get this on your own computer, you are
part of the 1% in the world who has that opportunity."
"If you woke
up this morning with more health than illness.. You are more blessed than the
many who will not even survive this day."
"If you have
never experienced the fear in battle, the loneliness of imprisonment, the agony
of torture, or the pangs of starvation... You are ahead of 700 million people
in the world."
"If you can
attend a church without the fear of harassment, arrest, torture or death you
are envied by, and more blessed than, three billion people in the world."
"If your
parents are still alive and still married.... you are very rare."
"If you can
hold your head up and smile, you are not the norm, you're unique to all those
in doubt and despair......."
"Ok," I
said. "What now? How can I start?"
The Angel said,
"If you can read this message, you just received a double blessing in that
someone was thinking of you as very special and you are more blessed than over
two billion people in the world who cannot read at all."
Have a good day,
count your blessings, and if you care to, pass this along to remind everyone
else how blessed we all are..........
ATTN: Acknowledgment Dept.
"Thank you
Lord, for giving me the ability to share this message and for giving me so many
wonderful people with whom to share it."
Wednesday, November 20, 2013
Just keep praying...
No one should tell
another how long he should pray. But most of us, I would guess, would say
that when we pray we don’t pray long enough. The best thing I can say on
this is that when I pray longer than usual I feel more blessed and more
refreshed.
Since we are all
different, and since each of us is at different stages of spiritual growth, the
length of prayer will be varied for each individual. Here are seven
guidelines that will help you to know how long you ought to
pray:
1. Know that
prayer is mostly listening. Solomon tells us, from Ecclesiastics 5:1-2, that when we
go to prayer we should not be hasty in word or impulsive in thought to bring up
a matter, but rather we should let our words be few. Instead of being
quick to tell Him our requests, and rattle on and on about them, we should
first listen to Him and try to understand what His will is. It seems from
this passage that there is a principle or a rule of prayer—that prayer ought to
be mostly listening.
2.
Pray not to impress others, but pray according to the will of God. I
think especially in public prayers we must always be careful that we not pray
to impress people (Mk.12: 40), but instead we should pray with a humble heart
confessing our sins to each other. I can think of not many other things
that turn me off more than a believer who is obviously trying to show how well
he knows the Bible and how good and how long he is able to pray. In
public or group praying you must aim at shortness. Also, in your prayers,
you should try to blend them with the others in the group so that it is as one
prayer being offered up to God, not several individual prayers. Sometimes
it even seems that there is competition in prayer—one trying to pray better and
longer than the other. This, I think, is especially nauseating to God.
3. Pray
according to how long you can keep focused and according to the desire God
gives you. In
contrast to the struggle we so often have in group-prayer, with trying to keep
our prayers short, I think there is an even greater struggle in praying
alone. For the person who prays alone, the struggle is in keeping awake
and in keeping focused; and then, as the struggle continues, the temptation is
to quit before God wants us to.
But how long should we
keep struggling in prayer if we can’t keep focused? Let me say that if
you don’t enjoy prayer, that it is absolutely nothing but a struggle for you,
then don’t continue trying to grind it out. I would instead urge you to
spend most of your time in the Word, and as you read and study that you
intently listen to what God is saying to you. Then just say a few words
of thanks and praise to Him. Let the Word be your guide as to how much
you should pray. Soon, as you become familiar with the voice of God, as
He speaks to you through the Word, you will find that you have a growing desire
to pray. Don’t let that desire pass you by. Pray! That desire
to pray, however small, is God calling you to join Him in the great work of
intercession.
If you will go to prayer
in those times of prayer desire, then your prayer times will be sweet.
Continue in prayer as long as you have the desire. And don’t let anything
distract you. Focus your full attention on God. In your prayer
time, He may draw you to a passage of scripture. Reflect on it and thank
Him for it. Meditate on that passage for a while, allowing God to say to
you all that He wants to say; but don’t get sidetracked and go into an in-depth
study. Keep focused on prayer. In your time of prayer, God may draw
you to pray for a certain person. Continue in prayer for that person
until the burden is lift
4. Pray according to how Satan keeps
resisting. If you are
praying and you sense that Satan is resisting you, then you must continue in
prayer for as long as Satan keeps resisting. For this resisting of Satan is
an indication that what you are praying for is of great value.
In Daniel 10:2-14, we
see that Daniel prayed and fasted for three entire weeks, struggling against
the enemy. It wasn’t until the end of his prayer time that he learned
(presumably, by an angel) that all during that three weeks his answer was being
delayed by evil forces, which finally, at the end, were conquered by this
presumed angel with the help of another angel—Michael, who was one of the chief
princes (v. 13). But what if Daniel had only prayed for two weeks and
quit? He, no doubt, would have been left without an answer. The
application for us is clear: if we feel continually distracted and feel like
quitting, pray instead with an even greater fervor, following ever closely the
inner desire of the Holy Spirit. For it is the Spirit of Christ calling
you to be His prayer partner—to join in warfare against the demons and all the
evil powers that have come to resist you.
5. Pray until the answer comes. Jesus instruction is clear—we ought to continue in
prayer at all times and not to lose heart (Lu. 18:1). That is to say, if
God has given you a desire to pray for something, you ought to continue praying
until the answer comes. Though there may be many distractions and temptations
to quit, we must keep praying, because that is what Jesus is doing. Yes,
if God has given you a desire to pray for a thing, you can be sure that Jesus
is praying for that thing. So let us join Him. Sometimes the answer
will come soon, but sometimes it will take days, and weeks, and months, and
even years. Now obviously you can’t continue nonstop in prayer for years
without doing anything else, but the idea is that when ever you go to prayer
you must pray for the same thing over and over until the answer comes.
“There are times
[says Torrey] when it is not made clear the first time, nor the second time,
nor the third time, that the thing we ask is according to His will and that
therefore the prayer is heard and the thing granted; and in such a case we ought
to pray on and on and on.”
Torrey continues:
There are those,
and there are many of them, who, when they pray for a thing once or twice and
do not get it, stop praying; and they call it ‘submission to the will of
God’…and they say, ‘Well, perhaps it is not God’s will.’…But as a rule this is
not submission to the will of God: it is spiritual laziness and lack of
determination…I am glad that God does not always give us, the first time we
ask, the things that we seek from Him. There is no more blessed training
in prayer than that which comes through being compelled to ask again and again
and again, even through a long period of years, before one obtains that which
he seeks from God. Then when it does come what a sense we have that God
really is, and that God really answers prayer.
6. Remember who you are praying to – your Father
and your friend. There are
times when God wants us to pray for hours at a time as to a friend. Have
you ever talked to a friend on the phone for an hour and not even realize how long
it’s been. Well, personally I don’t care to talk on the phone that long,
but I have had long conversations with friends while walking, or over a meal,
etc. It is in our nature to periodically have long conversations with
friends, so it is also quite natural and healthy to periodically have long
prayer times. God desires it and in our spirit we also desire it.
7. Observe the example of others and pray for
the desire to pray long as they do. There are several examples in scripture of those who have refused to
quit praying, but instead were doggedly persistent until the answer came.
Such was Jacob, who after all night in prayer, wrestling with God, went out
unafraid to meet his brother Esau (Gen. 28). And then there was Moses who
kept his hands raised to God in prayer until Amelek was totally defeated (Ex.
17:13). Or how about Elijah, who went up to the top of Mount Carmel, and
there, with his face between his knees, prayed until God brought rain. I
don’t know how long he had to pray, but we know that while praying, and in
anticipation of the answer, he sent his servant out to look for rain clouds
seven times. And on the seventh time, finally, a small cloud was spotted,
and indeed the rain came, not a light rain but a heavy shower!
Jesus was the
greatest example of a man who spent much time in prayer. That was because
he did nothing of his own initiative; everything He did He consulted His Father
about. And though He was always busy doing His father’s work—teaching and
healing, etc.—He always seemed to find the time to pray. He was found in
prayer especially in the evenings and early mornings. Sometimes He would
pray all night. As E.M. Bounds has stated, “His campaigns were arranged
and His victories were gained in the struggles and communion of His all night
praying…He filled the day with working for God; He employed the night with
praying to God. The day-working made the night-praying a necessity. The
night-praying sanctified and made successful the day-working.”
I think, for Jesus,
prayer was considered to be just as important as any of His activities.
Indeed, He may have considered it to be His greatest work.
And He not only prayed
at night and in the morning, He continued in prayer all during the day; for His
teaching was that “men ought always to pray and not to faint.”
Let us take the example
of Jesus and all the great men and women of prayer who continued to pray long
until the answer came. Let us be motivated to continue in prayer
according to the ongoing desire He gives us—praying in faith with holy boldness
until the victory is ours. As R. A. Torrey has stated, “Our heavenly
Father delights in the holy boldness on our part that will not take ‘no’ for an
answer…nothing pleases God more than faith.”
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
How long should a Pastor stay? The Magic Year for Ministry Success
How Long Should You Stay?
The Magic Year for Ministry Success
by Charles Arn http://www.churchgrowth.net/
There is an undeniable relationship
between pastoral tenure and church growth.
Several years ago, a study by the
largest Protestant denomination in the country found a startling relationship
between the length of time pastors had been in their churches, and the growth
or decline of those churches.
Their finding? Approximately
three-fourths of their growing churches were being led by pastors who had been
in their churches more than four years, while two-thirds of their declining
churches were being led by pastors who had been in their churches less than
four years. Their conclusion (with which I agree):
Long-term pastorates do not guarantee
that a church will grow. But short-term pastorates essentially guarantee that a
church will not grow.
So, why do pastors leave their
churches? Here are the results of one study where pastors were asked that
question …
There is an undeniable relationship
between pastoral tenure and church growth.
While most growing churches have
long-term pastorates, and some non-growing churches have long-term pastorates,
it is almost unheard of to find a growing church with many short-term
pastorates. Frequent change of pastors seems to negate all the other
complicated ingredients that go into a church’s growth mix.
What
To Do About It
If you are a pastor, personally and
publicly commit to staying in your church for least seven years. (The average
pastoral tenure is less than four years.) You may get an itch to leave sooner.
But if you stay into the sixth or seventh year, you will likely begin to
experience unsurpassed effectiveness and fruitfulness.
Once you get past year seven,
there’s a good chance you’ll want to stay much longer. I agree with Roger
Parrot, who says: “Lead as if you’ll be there forever! Imagine that the
organization and position you are in right now is what God wants you to do for
the rest of your professional life.”
I was curious about pastoral longevity
in the Wesleyan Church. A more comprehensive and correlational study should be
done, but last week I called the 25 largest churches in our denomination to
find out:
1) When the church was founded.
2) How long the present senior/lead
pastor has been at the church.
3) How long the previous senior/lead
pastor had been at the church.
What’s your guess?
Senior pastors in the 25 largest
Wesleyan churches have been serving in their position for an average of 17.8
years!
The previous pastors of these same
churches had been there an average of 15.2 years. And four of the churches are
being led by their founding pastors, who have been there an average of 18.2
years.
Of course, it may be demotivating to
imagine being in a church where you see no likelihood of a growing ministry or
influence. But why not have faith that there is sufficient opportunity where
God has placed you in that church and community … and your task is to tap into
it?
Don’t fall for the myth that greater
ministry is somewhere else! When you plan to stay where you are for the next 20
years, you will approach your ministry with a commitment that will be unshaken
by the winds of change, challenge and time.
But …
If you’re thinking, “Well, that’s
good advice for most pastors, but … ” don’t let these excuses masquerade as
reasons to move:
- More money. Human nature is always dissatisfied,
however much we make.
- Conflict. Another characteristic of human nature:
Conflict is anywhere there are people.
- You’re getting stale. Commit to being a life-time
learner. It will keep you and your church in touch with today’s issues.
- Greener pastures. See Philippians 4:12.
- Boredom. To quote Rick Warren, “It’s not about you.”
- Burn-out. Whether you have reached that point or not,
take time to retreat and renew.
- An exploratory call. We all like to be liked. But just
because a church is calling doesn’t mean God is.
- You’re out of sermons. If that’s your reason for
moving, I suggest you shouldn’t be in the ministry.
- Too much pressure. So your next church will be without
pressure? If your motivation to move is to avoid pressure, see the
response above.
If you are a lay church leader, the
next time you look for a new pastor, make intended longevity a criteria. If you
are a denominational leader, encourage pastors to remain faithful rather than
abandon their church in difficult times.
I believe there is a relationship
between the three following statistics:
1.
A pastor’s most productive time usually begins in years five, six and seven;
2.
The average pastoral tenure in Protestant churches is less than four years;
3.
Nearly 85 percent of today’s churches are not growing.
It’s sad that the vast majority of
pastors miss their most potentially fruitful — and enjoyable — years of
ministry.
Remember the Apostle Paul’s wise
counsel: “So let’s not allow ourselves to get fatigued doing good. At the right
time we will harvest a good crop if we don’t give up, or quit. Right now,
therefore, every time we get the chance, let us work for the benefit of all,
starting with the people closest to us in the community of faith” (Gal.
6:9-10 The Message)
Monday, November 18, 2013
When I am discouraged - Just believe
When I face times of discouragement in ministry I try to encourage myself by drawing near to God. I spend time in the Word of God, sing songs of worship and listening to pastors I trust. Here is an example of a recent 10 min message which encouraged me and I hope will encourage you today:
Sunday, November 17, 2013
A reflection of my message today at NRN GRAVITY
Today at NRN we celebrated Southern Gospel Sunday. As I prayed about the worship I sensed a leading from the Lord that there should be a time of preaching the Word of God. On Saturday evening I sensed clarity about my message. Here is a reflection of the message I have prepared for today:
In the film, Gravity, Sandra Bullock portrays character Dr. Ryan Stone: A medical engineer and Mission Specialist on her first mission in space. Her character, Ryan Stone, finds herself in a desperate situation, stranded all alone in outer space. She is almost certainly about to die. She knows she needs help beyond herself. But she doesn't know how to ask for it. Stone, has been emotionally adrift since her 4-year-old daughter died in an accidental fall. This is a turning point in the film:
She says, "No one will mourn for me. No one will pray for my soul... I’ve never prayed... Nobody has taught me how..."
When I watched this clip I wondered: "How many people could say the same thing?" More and more people in our world are like Ryan Stone. There are more people who, when asked "What religion are you?" always check "none of the above."
Y – yield. Submit yourself and commit yourself to do the will of God for your life. Put Christ in the driver's seat of your life. Make Him Lord all.
Commit yourself to pray this way and you will be approaching God in dependence and humility. And if you are ever all alone and stranded in outer space (or somewhere on this planet), you can effectively access God.
In the film, Gravity, Sandra Bullock portrays character Dr. Ryan Stone: A medical engineer and Mission Specialist on her first mission in space. Her character, Ryan Stone, finds herself in a desperate situation, stranded all alone in outer space. She is almost certainly about to die. She knows she needs help beyond herself. But she doesn't know how to ask for it. Stone, has been emotionally adrift since her 4-year-old daughter died in an accidental fall. This is a turning point in the film:
She says, "No one will mourn for me. No one will pray for my soul... I’ve never prayed... Nobody has taught me how..."
When I watched this clip I wondered: "How many people could say the same thing?" More and more people in our world are like Ryan Stone. There are more people who, when asked "What religion are you?" always check "none of the above."
A 2008 Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life report found
that about half the unaffiliated surveyed said they believed in some kind of
life after death — including 18 percent of the atheists and 35 percent of
agnostics. About 40 percent of the unaffiliated believe in heaven — including
12 percent of the atheists and 18 percent of agnostics. And on the BIG
question, 30 percent of the unaffiliated said they were pretty sure there was
no God.
Too many people don't have a strategy - a plan, a pathway - for prayer.
Just in case no one ever taught you how to pray, here's a simple method. If you can remember P.R.A.Y. then you can learn how to pray.
P – praise. Praise Christ for something good that happened in your life today.
Too many people don't have a strategy - a plan, a pathway - for prayer.
Just in case no one ever taught you how to pray, here's a simple method. If you can remember P.R.A.Y. then you can learn how to pray.
P – praise. Praise Christ for something good that happened in your life today.
I will proclaim the name of the LORD. Oh, praise the
greatness of our God! Deut. 32:3
I call to the
LORD, who is worthy of praise…
2 Samuel 22:4
Praise be to the God and Father of our LORD Jesus Christ!
In his great mercy he has given us new birth into a living hope through the resurrection
of Jesus Christ from the dead.
1 Peter 1:3
R – repent. Repent of something
wrong that you did today. Tell Jesus you're sorry for your sin and that you
will seek His help not to live that way anymore.
Repent, then, and turn to God, so that your sins may be
wiped out, that times of refreshing may come from the Lord. Acts 3:19
A – ask. Ask the Lord for something good and godly that you desire.
A – ask. Ask the Lord for something good and godly that you desire.
”Ask, and it will be given to you seek, and you will
find; knock, and it will be opened to you.
Matthew 7:7
And whatever you ask in prayer, you will
receive, if you have faith.”
Matthew
21:22
Therefore I tell you, whatever you ask in
prayer, believe that you have received it, and it will be yours. Mark
11:24
Whatever you ask in my name, this I will do,
that the Father may be glorified in the Son. If you ask me anything in my name,
I will do it. John 14:13-14
Y – yield. Submit yourself and commit yourself to do the will of God for your life. Put Christ in the driver's seat of your life. Make Him Lord all.
If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to
forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. 1 John 1:9
For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift
of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Romans 6:23Commit yourself to pray this way and you will be approaching God in dependence and humility. And if you are ever all alone and stranded in outer space (or somewhere on this planet), you can effectively access God.
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