On Leadership, Church Health, and the hope that God will change the way we do Church in America.
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
HELP Wanted!! Apply within
Most of what I post there will also be posted here, though not everything I post here will be able to carry over. That said, however, I would like to copy over a few of my "best" posts as I get going on this new format.
That is where you, my wonderful readers, come in. Please leave a comment or two with blogs that you have found particularly helpful or though provoking over the months. I am especially looking for those that deal with leadership or church development, but feel free to mention any that you want.
Thank you for the help!
Monday, July 27, 2009
Do you have a Culture of Service?
That is one reason today was so refreshing. Last weekend we had the wonderful experience of getting a flat tire while in the "fast lane" on Hwy 183. At first my wife pulled off to the side of the road... the left side.
It only took me a few seconds to realize that attempting to change a tire with my back sticking out into the highway was not a great idea. I do know that much about car repair.
Next we got to go from zero to 60 and cross three lanes of traffic to get to the other median... that was fun! Oh, and my two kids were in the backseat this whole time, thankfully oblivious to the true nature of what was going on and the fact that an unobservant driver could smash into the back of us at any time.
I did manage to get the tire changed without any serious bodily injury. I say serious because there was some minor injury when I attempted to lift the car so that my wife could place the jack onto the prescribed spot on the car's frame... but that is another story.
In light of our recent experience I figured it was not a good idea to leave the tire flat, so I set off to get it fixed. I saw a large hole in the tread and figured that was a good thing; at least it was not in the sidewall. After doing a bit of research I set off for Discount Tire to get a quick tire fix.
As I pulled into the store this morning the first thing I noticed was that they were slammed. The parking lot was packed and there were sales people and customers everywhere, even in the parking lot.
The next thing I noticed was David walking over to me to see if he could help. With a handshake he asked my name and offered to assist. I showed him the tire and he lifted it out of my trunk and said he would fix it if he could... for Free. Sadly that was not to be for this tire. Apparently driving at 60 across three lanes of traffic on a flat tire does bad things to it, and there were many more splits than I had seen; this tire was dead.
You might be thinking, "Of course David was helpful; he wanted to sell you something." I agree that David's vision includes selling tires. But, the fact is he was willing to serve me today for no charge at all, not knowing if I would join in with his vision in the future or not.
During our time together he was able to tell me more about his vision of tires, how he wanted to offer the best tire at the best price with the best service. He told me that if this had been one of his tires that he would have replaced it for $15 instead of the $150 I was about to pay. I won't say I was happy to buy a new tire today, but I did not feel like I was getting robbed and tossed, bleeding, onto the side of the highway either.
I walked out today thinking of how it would be to have guys like David permeating the culture of our church. What would it be like if we freely served the world, and un-apologetically shared God's vision with them during the process; not ashamed to tell them of the cost because we are so convinced that the reward is greater by far.
Friday, July 24, 2009
Passion and Integrity
Passion. This occurs when I communicate not just what you could know, but what you should know. In fact true passion is unleashed when I am convinced that in order to live in God's will this is something that you must know. This also applies to things that you should do or be. Regardless of the purpose of the message, the key is to relate it in such a way that the audience is convinced that I believe this is absolutely required for the Christian life. I am to the point now where I do not have time for "good sermons." I want to hear what is urgent, what is necessary, what is required for life and fulfillment. The passage and points may not change, but the delivery will.
Integrity. Lest you think I am just looking for a good showman who can drum up the necessary delivery to make an exciting sermon, let us now look at Integrity. Quite simply, integrity is displayed when you show me that you do believe as much as you are telling my I need to believe. Integrity occurs when God has already been teaching you what you are attempting to teach me. It is highlighted by personal testimony, not just catchy quotes and cute stories. Integrity brings the spirited power that will cause transformation to pass from you into me. Some speakers are gifted enough to fake passion, but you cannot fake integrity; at least not for long. God is never fooled, and no worship time will accomplish His full work while the messengers are lying. And, that is exactly what we do when we demand passion from others that we have not already lived out ourselves.
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
What will bring us together?
The shift from Campus-Centered thinking to City-Centered thinking may be small as it affects the actions and planning of individual churches. But, it will be huge in how it affects our prayer and partnership.
The question then becomes, "How do we work towards a City-Centered view of church?" I am convinced that until we measure together we will not work together. It is said that you cannot manage what you do not measure, and if that is true then church unity will never be a practical reality until numerical unity is achieved.
"What does that look like?", you may ask. In its simplest form it would be a monthly report sent to each church in a city that lists every church's average worship attendance and total baptisms for the month. The report would provide a total attendance and baptisms for the city. Over time it would allow several unifying factors, such as:
- Are we growing? When "we" is not just my campus but my city I am forced to look at the bigger picture. Things like "transfer growth" within a city are neatly done away with since it will have no impact on the bottom line. It would also allow a baseline to measure against things, like city population growth, to give a true measure for how the church is doing relative to larger demographic trends.
- Recognize the sick as well as the healthy. It is not that hard to make a list of the "5 fastest growing churches" in a city. It is much harder to come up with a list of the "5 churches in most need of help before they slide into decline". If churches would agree to let their numbers be seen (a big if I know) instead of inputting them anonymously then you could measure strength and growth over time. This leads to a huge opportunity for ministry; the type of ministry God calls us to when he says that when one part of the body suffers, all suffer with it. We have attempted to bypass that reality by ignoring those churches that are dying in our city. It is too easy to ignore sick and dying churches right now. That is not a Biblical response. Sick churches should either be healed or removed... never ignored.
- Hopefully City-Centered measurement will lead to City-Wide _________. The goal here is the God's Church in a city to get God's Heart for a city. Each church will operate in its own unique shape, but all for the same goal. Think of the possibilities if The Church in a city banded together and just adopted all of the orphans. Not a few churches offering courses on "how to adopt", but hundreds of churches just doing it in God's love.
God speaks to the church of the city in the New Testament. Some say that is because there was only one church in the city at the time. I believe it goes deeper then that; that cities have something like their own personality. God has a vision for our city, and for yours, and it goes far beyond any one church campus.
Monday, July 20, 2009
Partnership as a Tool for Transformation
It is true that churches need to be focused on a unique vision in order to be most effective within their community. It is also true that God uses the passions of the people He has planted in churches to reveal that vision. I often told those same people, "This is the first I have heard about your passion. You know we are always looking for more ways to serve our community, let us join together in prayer to see how God may take your passion and connect it to our vision." If that did not work, I always had a list of vision-directed churches in the area that perhaps would provide a better fit.
This very principle is one of the things that I was pressed on with my recent call to work in church health. I felt God calling me to move out of the church we were at (and even the state we were in), but not because I believe partnering with a local church is against my vision. Quite the opposite I hope to build a network of churches that I can partner with in the Austin area that will embrace a vision of church health as a mission activity. My goal is not to start a new church that is focused on creating and spreading church health... though sometimes it seems that it might be an easier road. I think that is sometimes why people are drawn to beginning a new work; it is easier than transforming the existing work. It seems easier to find a church that already has the ministry you feel called to than to work with the leadership of a current body towards transformation. Most people find that "new" and "easy" don't often go together as well as they expected. But, even if new was easy, I am not sure easier would be better in this case.
If God has a new vision He is revealing, then He most likely wants to use it to transform His church, not just a part of a single body. That is really the heart of my issue. Regardless of how we express ourselves, God still expects us to operate as a unified body; and it just is not happening. I don't care if there are 15,000 churches in a local area, none of them larger than 10-20 people. They key is Unity and Partnership, and that is a Biblical mandate just as much as any other.
I don't think we take God seriously when He speaks of His church being united. We act like unity involves verbal assent such as, "God bless you guys, hope He uses you in your calling!" God refers to us as His body. If that does not refer to an entire city full of churches, then it certainly refers at least to a community. How are we supposed to be a functioning body if each individual piece is focused on its own vision and direction? Again, I am a big proponent of local church bodies finding and fulfilling their unique purpose, but not to the extent that they fail to communicate and coordinate with one another. Some things will be unique from church to church. But, things like serving the community, caring for orphans, and reaching the lost are not unique to any one Church; and neither are the strategies used to accomplish them. We must find a way towards true unity if we want to experience the full power of God's transformation.
Friday, July 17, 2009
Before you Plant
- If your church is not passionate about church planting, then join one that is and spend a year there. Church planting DNA is unique. Healthy church planting DNA is extremely rare. If you can find a church with healthy church planting DNA it would be worth year to go and soak in as much as you can; even if they don't pay you. You are going to be raising support anyway, and they year you spend investing in yourself will pay decades of dividends down the road. (Look at Hill Country Bible Church if you need a good example.)
- Find a church in the area you feel called to and join their staff for 6-12 months. Again, you are already looking to raise support, so they should welcome a free addition to their staff. Partner with a local work, again trying to look for a healthy one, but even if not realize that you can learn from people who have been on the field... even the unhealthy ones. There are many practical benefits as well, such as a potential "office" area with all of the perks you don't have at home. Things like printers, faxes, quiet places to make phone calls, etc. are handy to have. And, you may even be able to forge a relationship with a local church that will partner with you into the future. That should be part of your long-term goal anyway, so why not get started from the beginning?
We need to be better team players in The Church. I also think it would behoove us to develop a mentality that honors and strengthens current works as well as new ones. Sometimes it will not be possible to partner with others because no other church will exist in your area or people group; or no other church will willingly partner with you. If so, then you can plant knowing that as far as it depends on you, you have walked in honor and unity.
Thursday, July 16, 2009
Church Plant or Church Splinter?
Can we really call all of these new works "church plants" if the bodies that are created do not connect to each other and all of the previous works in their community and city? It seems that church planters will often join together while they are training or preparing to launch. But, once they have launched they get consumed with their own work and we successfully create yet another splinter in the Body.
I struggle with seeing four to five churches within 10-15 miles of each other trying to reach the same demographic and psychographic group. It might be a workable strategy if these churches actually worked together. I have not witnessed that very often, though, and I believe it is symptomatic of a large problem. That problem is a diseased church. Try as we might we are not ridding ourselves of the "old" disease simply by creating "new" works.
So let me ask my question another way (please feel free to respond), "What distinguishes a church plant from a church splinter?"
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
It is just not Sexy enough
It is not that I am against church planting; for it is clearly a Biblical mandate. I am against the prevailing idea that planting more churches will make The Church in America more healthy. If all of the church plants over the last 10 years exhibited a dramatic shift in vision and effectiveness than their predecessors then I might agree that given enough time and enough new churches the disease in the American church will work itself out. But, there is no such evidence. And, if the number one factor in a healthy church is healthy pastors and staff, then we have to look at what we are doing differently today in calling, training, and supporting our pastors than we were 10 years ago. I think it might be a good idea to take a step back and cure the disease that ails us before we keep spreading it to a new generation of churches.
As I look around the country, the most successful church planting movements are being led by healthy churches; not by conventions or institutions. That leads me to believe that if we can find a way to cure our existing churches then the issue of church planting may very well fix itself.
Monday, July 13, 2009
Paul, the first Church Health Consultant?
My own bride was the first one who reminded me that in many ways Paul was the first church health consultant. We talk often about Paul as a missionary because of his church planting efforts, but in reality he spent more time as a church consultant than he did as a church planter. An overview of Paul's life reveals that his heart was not just focused on starting new works, but on keeping past works healthy. There are several things I am learning from his example, each of them likely to pop up as individual posts later.
- Healthy people, not just More people. Paul's letter to the churches and the visits we read about in Acts deal with issues of health, not just admonitions to reach more people. Certainly Paul is concerned with evangelism; it is his stated life's purpose. He also knows that sickness within a church will kill any evangelistic work they may attempt. Healthy parents produce healthy children; sick parents produce sick children, and sick children are likely to die prematurely.
- Do not Burden the hurting churches. Most churches who need consulting cannot afford the consultant. I believe the worker is worth his wages. I also believe this is an area where those who have resources can minister to those who do not. Just as the church as a whole ministered to Jerusalem during its physical famine, it may be time for the church as a whole to minister to hurting members during our spiritual famine.
- Don't plant on top of someone else's work. Paul planted new works where other work did not exist. If a previous work did exist he was likely to move on to another area or strengthen the existing work. I think this sheds some interesting light on our modern church planting strategy. It seems that church planting is best done among unreached people groups... and that is not the way the American model seems to be unfolding at the moment.
- Bring others along in the process. Paul generally travelled with a group. That was for very practical reasons during his time period. It also allowed leadership development to happen on a level that is impossible to replicate through lecture and letter.
I have been reading many books during this transition in my calling. Most of them have to do with church health and revitalization. They offer a call to return to mission and vision; to focus on people outside of your own walls with a heart for evangelism. I agree with those calls, and yet it strikes me as odd that none of these books mention church health ministry as an evangelistic or missional activity. Our first and best example of a missionary was heavily involved in church health consulting.
I must have received a dozen offers to plant a new church in numerous places around the US and Canada these last twelve months. It seems that there is no shortage of funds available for those willing to pick up, move, and begin a new work for God. That is a good thing. I wonder, though, why we are not being just as enthusiastic about training and sending a new generation of missionaries who help correct and strengthen the local churches that already exist. Paul seemed to think church health was a worthy endeavor, and the fact that God led him to record that work for us to read and remember makes me think God believes it is worthwhile as well.
Friday, July 10, 2009
Support
Much like calling and training, I believe that they way we support pastors in the field needs to be more personal. Our current method of support involves seminars, retreats, books, and many other impersonal, generic solutions. They are not bad things, they are just insufficient. They are solutions that could work well in partnership with a one-on-one discipleship and mentoring relationship. Most people explain our current support methods with words like "efficiency" and "stewardship". It is just too costly, some will say, to minister to each church or pastor individually. The problem is... that is just not true. And, even if it were true it would still not be a good enough reason to continue spending our resources on a broken strategy. If the current strategy was producing marked results, then we could argue that it is a good use of resources. Evidence suggest that the current method does not produce such results.
Contrast that with the work that the Healthy Church Group is doing in California. In the last 5 years they have done individual consultations for over 400 of the 2,000+ California Baptist churches. Of those over 40% have seen a marked increase in Sunday worship attendance, baptisms, and giving. Imagine if 40% of SBC churches began seeing growth in these three areas in the next 5 years. It would be incredible! The truly amazing thing is that the main reason the other 60% do not see the same improvement is that they do not choose to follow the recommendations of the consult. The HCG is currently making more changes to include long term 1-on-1 coaching to increase the personal and relational impact of their consults with hopes that it will increase the number of pastors and churches who follow through with change.
Even with such evidence that a personal, relational solution can provide great results, some will still argue that it is not cost-effective... that it just requires too many people to be practical. The fact is that the current SBC structure would allow this kind of individual support for every church in the convention without the need to add any additional staff. Merely using the current State and Association level staff members they could offer an individual consult for each church every 5 years or so. I personally believe this is the direction conventions will move if they want to survive in the coming decade.
The Church in America is much like a house built on a foundation of sand. The way we have been calling, training, and supporting our pastors over the last few decades has left a crumbling foundation. Our current methods are as effective as a man trying to hold up that sandy foundation. As soon as he moves to support one corner another begins to fall. He may grow efficient at moving and supporting and be able to artificially keep the thing standing for a while. But, eventually it is going to come crashing down unless the foundation is changed. In this analogy, the foundation of The Church is local body, led by the local pastor. We must change the way we build that foundation in order to reach future generations and redeem the current generation.
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
Training
The benefits to this system as I see it are:
- Lower barrier to entry. As it stands seminary is a rather large barrier to entry due to the cost and time involved. The value that it offers is at odds with the cost it requires. Basically, if you have the time and money to invest, you can get your paper. If you don't... then many churches will not consider working with you.
- More personalized training. Much like a doctoral internship, ministers could experience several different res of ministry within a church before deciding upon their focus. And, the host church could provide feedback based on real-time observations of actual experience.
- Development by doing. Christian love is best lived out in the context of a community of believers interacting with a lost world. It takes all of ten to fifteen hours to read a great book on leadership or evangelism. But it can take months or years of practice to really learn the application of those systems.
- DNA transfer. Church is an organism. Healthy churches have a certain DNA or Culture. You cannot teach those things in classroom, they must be fused into a person through time and effort.
- De-centralization and Exponential Growth. Limited supply and Increasing demand is a bad thing in the pastor training economy. It is true that online availability can help with some of this, but that only provides an online version of the current system... which gives even less personal feedback based off of observed practices. Assuming my system works it will lead to more healthy churches by spreading the DNA from healthy churches across the nation. That will open the door for more and more training centers.
It is easy at times to look at our failing churches and blame pastors and people for being lacking. They lack vision, they lack passion, they lack surrender and spirituality. Perhaps all of those things are true. Yet, I wonder... who ever taught them how to cast vision, how to live with passion, how to practice surrender and develop a strong spiritual relationship with God? Were those things built into them in their three years (and countless thousands of dollars) spent on seminary? If pastors are the leaders of the church, then who are the leaders of the pastors? In our current system it is the seminaries, and those people who run them. And, if our system is getting the results it was designed for (which all systems do) then we need to change the way we train people. And, I think it requires something deeper than simply looking at our curriculum choices and teaching practices.
Monday, July 6, 2009
The Call
To borrow terminology from Triperspectival Leadership models we are currently calling too few Prophets and Kings. For those tempted to say, "God determines who gets called, not us!", I counsel caution. That line of thinking leads to a place where God does not give us systems to accomplish His will. you might as well say that it does not matter how we disciple because God will bring growth to whom He wants. It does not mater how we evangelize, God will save who He wants. It does not matter how we serve, God will meet the needs He wants met. The fact is God accomplishes all of these things through His body and that is us. So, one of the tasks God has for us is to train up the next generation in such way that they see his call to ministry life.
At first I was going to say that we have too many Priests in lead-pastor positions, but that is not accurate. We don't have too many priests, we just have too few Prophets and Kings. It seems that we have been somewhat reactionary in the way we call pastors. By "we" I mean the churches who pay them and follow them. Forty years ago your premier pastors were mostly Prophets. They were the model that most pastors attempted to imitate, and most congregations wanted a "strong" pastor to "preach the Word!". These pastors spoke the Word with power and led in the confidence that God was directing their steps. They were extremely confident but not very personable. Perhaps that led to our current wave of Priests as lead pastors. These pastors are meeting a very real need in their people; to connect with their spiritual leader on a personal, meaningful level.
What we are discovering is that many Priests often struggle with things like Values, Mission, and Vision. So, the call has come out for Kings to join in leadership once more! Strategy will be the salvation of The Church if you listen to some voices. This is crucial time for The Church, because purely reactionary thinking could be devastating. Prophets bring God's Word, Priests bring God's heart, and Kings bring God's plans. The danger we face is that we focus so much on the plans God reveals that we lose our dependence on His Word for our power and His Heart for our direction.
We must become proactive in our thinking about what church would look like with the right mix of Prophets, Priests, and Kings all using their gifts and talents for His glory and to build up His bride. Right now most of our Kings have landed in the secular world, a place that values their input. For many years Kings have been seen as "less spiritual" because they dare to talk about things like systems and structures and measurable goals. The fact is there are many people who are completely committed to God spiritually who also have great strategic minds. God gave them those minds, and we need them in the church today. We also need a resurgence of the Prophets; men who will speak God's Word to God's people clearly and pointedly regardless of the reception or response. We need them to talk to The Church, not necessarily to the culture.
The solution to this issue is both simple and difficult. It is simple because in truth God is the one who calls His pastors. It is difficult for at least two reasons.
- Our secular culture pays kings handsomely, making it hard for them to hear God's call.
- Our church culture does not include kings, adding to the barriers they face hearing God's call. Kings are seen as those "outside business people" that you bring in for special needs, like capital campaigns or master site plans.
We must work to remove the barriers that keep people from hearing God's call. That will require a church-wide call to simplicity and a surrender of the "American Dream" which is so grounded in the physical and temporal. It will also mean that we encourage our thinkers to invest themselves into God's work. When thinkers get involved change often occurs. That may yet be another reason why thinkers have been kept at arms length for so long, because current leadership rarely likes continuous change, knowing that it might mean a loss of influence and comfort.
Friday, July 3, 2009
More Churches... Healthier Churches
The fact still remains that we also need healthier churches, and that statement applies to many of our recent church plants as well as the 100-year-old church down the street. From my experience it takes a church plant about 5-8 years to begin to look strikingly similar to older, stagnant churches. Even if the numbers are still moving up or looking more healthy than the older church, the systems within the church begin to look more and more similar to its predecessors.
This is true in natural relationships and it is true in churches. Children grow up to act like their parents... even if they swear that they never will. Without serious work and submission to God we all become our parents; it is the way God designed it after all. In fact he promises us many times in Scripture that actions and decisions last for generations.
So, if we want to be planting healthy new churches then it only makes sense that we should be focusing at least as much energy making healthy parents as we are birthing new churches. Otherwise we are just creating more work for ourselves in the future as we will be coming back to these church plants in 10-15 years and dealing with the same issues that currently face their parents.
There is much evidence that when healthy churches are involved in the planting of a new church, that church has a very high probability for success both in the short and long term. So, how do we work to build health into our churches? Better yet, how do we build health into The Church? The fact is this is not an issue that affects single churches here and there; it is something that affects the vast majority of churches across the country.
I believe a good first step is to take a clear look at the way we Call, Train, and Support pastors in America. Next Monday I will start discussing those steps, which are crucial to the System, Structure, Organization, or Organism that we call The Church in America.