Pray

Prayer is critical to the Mission

Below are some thoughts on how you might pray today.


1. Praying with thanksgiving

Psalm 100:4‑5
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.

Prayer of thanksgiving takes the focus off of us and places it on God an His goodness. When we do this it is amazing how God begins to lift us up.

2. Praying with Confession

Psalm 139:23‑24 (David)
Search me, O God, and know my heart; test me and know my anxious thoughts. See if there is any offensive way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.

Is there anything offensive in my life? Search me! Make me whole and clean. I give these things over to you.

3. Praying with listening
Psalm 37:7A
Be still before the LORD and wait patiently for him

Take a moment to be still before the Lord

4. Praying with requests

I John 5:14
This is the confidence we have in approaching God: that if we ask anything according to his will, he hears us.

God loves us to ask for his help! It shows that we believe that He is the answer.

5. Praying with declaration

Hebrews 10:23
Let us hold unswervingly to the hope we profess, for he who promised is faithful.

Hold on to the promises God has given you. Do not let go!

Solomon understood this prayer

2 Chronicles 6:14‑20
He said: "O LORD, God of Israel, there is no God like you in heaven or on earth‑‑ you who keep your covenant of love with your servants who continue wholeheartedly in your way. You have kept your promise to your servant David my father; with your mouth you have promised and with your hand you have fulfilled it‑‑ as it is today. "Now LORD, God of Israel, keep for your servant David my father the promises you made to him when you said, 'You shall never fail to have a man to sit before me on the throne of Israel, if only your sons are careful in all they do to walk before me according to my law, as you have done.' And now, O LORD, God of Israel, let your word that you promised your servant David come true. "But will God really dwell on earth with men? The heavens, even the highest heavens, cannot contain you. How much less this temple I have built! Yet give attention to your servant's prayer and his plea for mercy, O LORD my God. Hear the cry and the prayer that your servant is praying in your presence. May your eyes be open toward this temple day and night, this place of which you said you would put your Name there. May you hear the prayer your servant prays toward this place.


6. Praying in the Spirit

Ephesians 6:18
And pray in the Spirit on all occasions with all kinds of prayers and requests. With this in mind, be alert and always keep on praying for all the saints.

When we do not know what to pray or how to pray...Let the inner most part of your heart cry to the inner depth of God. "As deep cries to deep" you will find strength, courage and power to walk through your day. Pray in the Spirit today.

Mission: Back to Basics

I coached for a number of years at the Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs. And for more than a decade now I have been a part of the U.S.A. National Wrestling Coaching Staff. At the Olympic level, we spend most of our time going over the basics of the sport. It is the fundamentals that win matches.

The importance of this point was "pounded" (literally) into me early on in my career. My first major overseas tournament at the Olympic level drilled this point home. A wrestler does not reach his peak until about the age of thirty. I was a young college wrestler with a promising future. I was invited to wrestle in the prestigious Padoubny Tournament even though I was just twenty years old, a sophomore in college.

This tournament is touted as the toughest Greco Roman wrestling tournament in the world. Many see this tournament as more intense than the Olympics itself. They call this tournament the Unofficial Championships of the world. It is an unofficial world tournament because the Olympics and World Championships each country can only bring one wrestler from each weight class.

The Russians are the best in Greco Roman wrestling. Often times a number 6th ranked Russian wrestler could win the Olympics if his other five team mates were not there. So unlike the Olympics and World Championships, the Padoubny tournament had everybody. Most of the athletes there are in their prime.

The Padoubny tournament, the whole world was invited to compete, and there was no limit to the amount of athletes a country could bring. This tournament is held in Russia each year. The Russians and Eastern block countries bring more than full teams. Every Russian wrestler with any kind of credential is there ready to compete.

The weight classes are loaded. In fact, there had only been one American to ever win the Padoubny tournament in the history of this event. I was just a sophomore in college competing with the very best. I had no other international experience at this level. My very first match I drew the Olympic Champion. He was from the Soviet Union. He came from Mongolian descent. I was sure he was a direct descendant of Genghis Khan himself. With my lack of experience, you can only begin to imagine the thoughts going through my head.

My preparation for this match showed my youth. All I thought about was throwing this great champion. “Maybe I will get lucky,” I thought. In Greco Roman Wrestling the higher and harder you throw someone the more points you get. I dreamed, “Maybe I will throw him and catch him on his back and pin him.” You see I did not go out to wrestle him. I was looking for the easy way out. I was hoping for a whole lot of luck and not counting on skill and toughness. This was a huge mistake. I not only lost, but I was utterly destroyed. I found my feet flying over my head as I crashed onto the mat with my opponent landing on top of me. As I got back up on my feet, I would try to lock up with him again thinking maybe I will throw him this time. I would find myself once again being catapulted through the air. Luck does not win matches, especially when you are wrestling the Olympic Champion.

The truth is, I know I could have competed with him, but on that particular day, I looked for the easy way. Since that day, I have wrestled many World Class athletes and I have found myself with my hand being raised more times than not. Those wins came from not being afraid to enter into the heat of the battle. I stayed focused. I knew my objective and I worked hard. I did not look for the easy way out. I was not looking for a lucky throw. I would work to score as each point presented itself. It took patience and discipline. In 1995, I became the second wrestler in U.S. history to win this tournament.

The key to winning a wrestling match is one point at a time. It is staying focused. It is having a game plan. If an opening to throw your opponent occurs you take advantage of that. Your job is to stay tough and keep focused following the game plan you have practiced thousands of hours in your preparation for this moment.

There is an attractive lure; We want to see big numbers coming to our church. We begin to look for all kinds of ways to draw a crowd. Big events, big programs, and big promotion do not make an effective ministry. The truth is God wants a crowd in Heaven. And we will see a crowd in Heaven as we commit to touching one life at a time. Ministry is not a crowd-focused endeavor. So when you find yourself in a crowd, look for the one that you can touch with the Hand of Jesus.

If we look to the event, program or promotion to build a strong ministry, you will fall down as I did wrestling the Russian. Events, programs and promotion have their place in ministry, just as there is a time to throw in a wrestling match. But if you are looking for the big throw to win you will miss the battle. Large attendance does not automatically equate to an effective ministry. I am not saying to forget the numbers. All healthy living things grow. If your ministry is healthy it will produce new life. It will grow. Hopefully, it will be a glimpse of the crowds we will see in Heaven. However, those numbers must be connected to a face with a name. You must have a strategy to care for these individuals. Healthy, long lasting ministries grow one person at a time.

Who are the people that the Lord has placed in your life?

Love them. Care for them. Eat with them. Pray with them. Share life with them and watch the Lord multiply your ministry. This is our mission.

Psalm 107 "God's Promise for the Mission"

Psalm 107:1
Give thanks to the LORD, for he is good; his love endures forever.

He is good
He loves you forever
He will redeem you from the hand of your foe
He will gather you
He will deliver you from distress
He will lead you by a straight path
He will settle you
He will satisfy your thirst
He will fill your hunger
He has good things
He will bring you out of darkness
He will deliver you from the deepest gloom
He will break the chains
He will break down gates of bronze
He will cut through bars of iron
He will send you his word
He will heal you
He will rescue you from the grave
He will show you his works
He will still the storm
He will hush the waves
He will guide you to a safe haven
He will turn the desert into pools of water
He will turn parched ground into living springs
He will bring you a fruitful harvest
He will increase your numbers
He will lift you out of your needy affliction
He will increase your family
He will bless you
His love is unfailing
His deeds are wonderful

Ps 107:43
Whoever is wise, let him heed these things and consider the great love of the LORD.

A Funny Thing Happened On The Way to Mission

I set out to understand missions - to dive in and get a grip on the purpose and function of missions.

A divine discontent constrained and drove me.

I felt that something was not right with the American/Western missionary machine.

I found that our acts of compassion were gigantic, commendable, and well known if not well funded. We were painting more churches than we were planting. We were feeding more mouths than souls. We were hugging more orphans than we were adopting sons into the Kingdom of God. Our practical service was amazing, but real spiritual fruit, measured in terms of new disciples and new congregations and the growth of the Church, was on that same scale spotty and paltry.

I became critical.

We had delegated the husbandry of our spiritual "farms" primarily to a Gentry Class - a Few Paid Professionals whom we called our Full Time Missionaries. Meanwhile, our own congregants, churches full of disciples, were ill equipped and weakly motivated to obey their own personal Calling to the Great Commission.

Then, a funny thing happened on the way to my understanding of missions. (I am still not there.)

I began to hang out with missional disciples - with long term missionaries and stateside ministers who had borne real fruit at home and in the field... fruit that remained and multiplied and grew and bore yet even more fruit.

I committed to learn, became willing to challenge all prior assumptions.

I became less critical.

I learned to drop the trailing 's' from "missions", and call it Mission.

To replace, "What is missions?" with "What is the Mission of Christ and His Church?"

If Mission is about the expansion of the Church (it is), then I could not study the Mission of the Church without learning more about the Church itself.

So I began to study the Church.

And I found I could not study the Church without learning more about the One who passionately loves the Church.

I began to see the DNA of Christ's Body - this DNA is a Redemptive Dynamic - as the gathering force of the Church and the sending force of it's Mission. This gathering/sending dynamic is the Power over which the Gates of Hell cannot prevail.

A funny thing happened on my quest to understand missions.

I began to fall in love again.

My own ember of discipleship - my daily, face-to-face relationship with Christ, deep in my own heart - was reignited.

I followed my Calling all the way back to the One Who Calls, followed missions all the way back to The Mission. And in return, my love and appreciation deepened for Jesus, His work in my heart, His loving Mission to the world, and His Church as the actual presence of His Life on earth.

This life of love and grace must be shared, and we are the vehicle Christ has chosen. We are the Church He loves. That Call to expand - to cross the line between churched and unchurched in order to share this Life and make new disciples - is our Mission.

I could die for that.

Bitter or Better

Dealing with Bitter Thoughts

We have struggled with bitter thoughts at one time or another. Bitter thoughts are a cancer. They slowly eat away at you. One girl I was counseling wrote this poem and she gave me permission to share it. She was faced with the reality of sin in her life. This poem is a great picture of the bitter thoughts I too have battled.

Orphaned

What do You want from me?
I'm kind of busy here being free.
You say You miss me.
Well then why did You leave?
I needed You and You weren't there.
I thought You always said that You cared.
I lived for You ever since I was young.
Well, I've decided that part of my life is done.
I tried to find You for four years.
Did You ever see any of my tears?
I needed You. I thought You knew.
I'm having a hard time believing Your promises are true.
You let me down when it counted the most.
Where were the Father, Son and the Holy Ghost?
It wasn't right for You to turn my world upside down
And then when I went to look, You were nowhere to be found.
I used to go to church and sing the songs,
But I haven't heard from You in so long.
Do I have to be bad to get noticed?
If so, then religion is hopeless.
You're supposed to be there for mankind.
Then why are You so hard to find?
"I never took the time to stop and realize
That death takes many forms, even while alive..."

We all find ourselves in this place eventually. “Lord, where are you?! Where did you go?!” We are frustrated and discouraged. We feel worn out, beaten and abandoned. The cost of sin is high. “That death takes many forms, even while alive…” This is the plan of the enemy: to kill, steal and destroy. There are people dying all over the world: secretly dying on the inside. They have lost the fight battling in their own mind. Bitter thoughts and toxic tears throttle their thoughts and life.
The question is Bitter or Better?

When the world crashes down around you, you have a choice. Do you want to choose to be bitter or better? I have found a lot of people when presented with the option actually choose bitter. They say, “Well, you just don’t understand. I do not have it as good as you have it.”

It is not about me. Again I ask...Do you want to get bitter or better? The truth is...we will all have difficult times in our lives. No one can escape that. What we can control is the way we deal with these painful moments.

Bitter thoughts are easy to swallow, but they are toxic to the soul. How do we move from bitter thoughts to better thoughts? I often meet with people for counseling. I spend the first session listening to the horrible things that have happened to them. These people will recall things from their childhood. These things are as fresh in their mind today as they were when the incident happened. They have been caught in the trap of bitterness. They have never found their way clear.

I coached for a number of years at the Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs, Colorado. At the Olympic Training Center the best athletes in the world surrounded you. I loved to sit and talk and hear their stories. Almost every one of them could tell you how they overcame incredible odds to become the best in their sport. I coached the United States National Wrestling Team. One of the athletes I coached was named Brian. He was consistently in the top six in the nation at the heavy weight category.

Brian was given up for adoption at the age of two. His parents thought that he was mentally retarded. They came to the conclusion that raising a child with this disability would too difficult for them. One year later, doctors found out that he was deaf. Brian wasn’t retarded at all. The doctors did some corrective surgery and Brian could hear just fine. At four, a family adopted him. They adopted him because when they heard his story they felt sorry for him. Over the next seven years he was told on a regular basis that they were now sorry they ever adopted him. They told him that they did not love him. He was verbally and physically abused. One day, eleven year old Brian, was called in to the principal’s office. The principal informed him that he would not be going home to his adoptive family ever again. His dad had called the police that morning and told them if Brian came home he was going to kill Brian. His dad continued by saying then he would kill his wife, and then he would take his own life.

Brian was placed into foster care where he lived in 28 different foster homes, four adoptive to be homes and 2 group homes in five years. He bounced from home to home, school to school and was not given much of a chance to succeed. If any one could have bitter thoughts it was Brian. He could have swum in toxic tears and everyone would have understood. It wasn’t Brian’s fault. He was a victim from a very young age.

Brian graduated from high school and he was the state high school wrestling champion. He went on to graduate from Junior College as the National Junior College Champion. He went from there on scholarship to a University where he graduated in a degree in social work. He has heart to help kids that are going through what he went through.

I had worked with Brian for a couple years before I even heard about his story. He did not fill his days wading in toxic tears. I was shocked when he told me about his past. Brian said two things that are have really stuck with me. He said, “Dan, I had a terrible past that is true, but I would not change a thing about it. My past made me who I am today and I like me!” Then he said, “Yes it’s true I horrible things happen to me, but why would I dwell on the past when I have a great future!”

Brian had managed to move from the allure of bitter thoughts to the healing that comes from better thoughts. Where is your focus? What are the things you think about? What are the memories you have from the past? Do you dwell on the good things or the negative things? How do you feel about yourself? And most important, DO YOU want to find healing?

Before we can move on to healing we have to know from whom the healing comes. People do not usually come into counseling until they are at the end of their rope. Everything is falling down and apart. They walk into my office and they are ready to explode. At the end of the first session I conclude by asking them, tell me about where you are with God? I hear time and time again, “I believe there is a God.” Believing that there is a God and knowing God are two entirely different things. God’s desire is to intimately know you. God wants you to know where the healing you are receiving is coming from.

My prayer for people is that they might receive healing that is complete. Problems will come and go. We can begin to solve the issue that they may be struggling with and never deal with the eternal problem. Without dealing with the eternity that God has placed their heart they will never truly find the freedom they desire. They will bounce from one problem to another. This will get fixed and then something else will get broke. There is a desire in all of us that can only be met through placing our hope and trust in Jesus. I want to see people recognize who they are in relation to the Creator who died with a broken heart for their love. I want them to know the One that heals completely.

Have you put your hope and trust in Jesus?

When we receive Christ, we become His Bride, His Beloved. As His Bride, we can then draw close to Him. Jesus will never divorce Himself from us. His love is eternal. During one of our services one of our worship team members showed me some words that He felt the Lord wanted us to hear. This is God calling out to us to draw near to Him he titled it, “My Beloved.”

My Beloved

Come close to me, Beloved
Recline against my chest
Rest in your salvation
My joy has made you clean
Don’t worry about the next day
It will worry on it’s own
Every mystery, every unknown path
Will be revealed to you, my Beloved

Just wait and see, the best is yet to come
Just wait and see, my goodness will be added unto you

My strength is your strength
My hope is your hope
My joy is your joy
My faith is your faith
My peace is your peace
My love is your love

What the Father has given me, I give to you
My Spirit is your Spirit

Come close to me, Beloved
Come close to me.

God is calling out to us. We read His words in Psalm 38:4. God says, “Taste and see that I am good!” Jesus died on the cross shedding His blood, so that we could once again taste and see that God is good. Only Jesus satisfies.

Bitter thoughts often clog our ears to hear God calling out to us. Breaking the cycle of bitter thoughts takes time and training. I have found two things that worked well for me. When the enemy tries to get me thinking wrong thoughts, I stop and say to myself, “God has healed me of this! I am healed.” If the thoughts keep persisting I say an alphabet prayer. I start with the letter A. I think of all the things that begin with the letter A that describe God. I pray, “Lord you are Awesome, Amazing, Absolute, Able…” Then I move on to the letter B…“Lord you are…Beautiful, Blessed …” I continue through the alphabet. As I begin to lift up the name of the Lord, I begin to be lifted up. In stead of letting bitter thoughts enter my mind, I focus on the Lord and His goodness. I turn a time of depression into worship. This does not come naturally. I have to discipline myself to do this. Most times I do not feel like worship. I feel angry. I feel mad. I feel depressed. I feel hurt. This is a disciplined exercise. Lord I feel horrible, but I am not going to fix my eyes on my hurt. I am going to fix my eyes on you. No matter how I feel, “You are worthy of my worship.” By the time I am done, I begin to feel better. And my ears are open to receive what God wants to speak to me.

God is good from A to Z.

Cave Dwellers

1 Samuel 22:1-2.

“David departed from there and escaped to the cave of Adullam; and when his brothers and all his father's house heard it, they went down there to him. And every one who was in distress, and every one who was in debt, and every one, who was discontented, gathered to him; and he became captain over them. And there were with him about four hundred men.”

These 400 cave dwellers became the mightiest men in Israel’s history. While at first they joined David in the cave wounded, hurt, abandoned and rejected, they left with a whole new perspective. David and his mighty men found training and discipline inside. The process was difficult, and often lonely. But God raised them up to unite the whole nation of Israel, and to become a world power in military and trade. Only God can take a place that is cold, dark and damp and turn it into a sanctuary, a cave of healing. Only God can take a wounded soul and make it beautiful.

Several years ago, God told me He was going to restore my innocence. He also said that I was going to grow in my relationship and intimacy with Him. But in order for that to happen, I needed to step inside the cave. This is the training for those that want to step into the cave of healing. It is for those that have experienced hurt. It is for those that have been abandoned, rejected and abused. God has an awesome plan for you. He wants to heal you. I believe that He is good and faithful and will do what He says.
Dynamic Tension in the “Faith Factor”

It is important before we jump in to remember WHO does the healing. God heals. It is HIS heart. It is HIS plan. You simply need to believe and receive His Word. But you may be saying to yourself, “I want to believe, but I am struggling here! I have tried so many times before and I have continued to fail. God, where are you?” In my personal experience, I have found that the harder I try to overcome, the harder I seem to fall. This has caused me to feel more ashamed and discouraged. When I try, I fail. It makes me want to throw my hands up and scream, “I give up!” The truth is, it’s okay to be in that place. It’s a good starting point. For me, it’s the realization that I need to place my faith in something or someone greater than myself. That someone is GOD. God is calling you into the darkness of your cave with a solution. He confidently declares, “I AM the way, the truth, and the life. You can trust me. There is no other way to be healed. Come to me. Place your faith in me.”

I call this the “Faith Factor”. As you walk through this process, keep bringing yourself back to a place of faith. Say this to yourself right now…

“On my own, I have never been able to overcome.
God is the Overcomer! I am not!
But with Him, I will overcome!”

I asked a group of leaders an important question, “Where does God place His faith?” Someone immediately answered, “In us?” That belief can have a devastating effect on us. It can also devastate God. I alone would have driven Him to a faithless state. But God places His faith in the same place He wants us to place ours; in Himself. He alone is trustworthy. Everyone and everything else will let you down.

God places His faith in Himself. He demonstrated that faith, by becoming one of us. He became flesh through His Son, Jesus. The Bible says that Jesus could do nothing apart from God. Jesus placed His life completely in God’s Hands, even unto the point of death. Therefore, God’s faith was solely upon Himself. It is mind boggling to understand, but critical to grasp a hold of.

The Old Testament shows us what happens when people try to impress God with their own ability. Their attempts were always a complete failure. The same is true for us today. We will always fall short. But the New Testament gives us the complete picture of God’s plan. When God looks at us, He sees Jesus. It is through faith in His Son that His plan can be fulfilled in our lives. It is only through Jesus that we are healed.

Say this to yourself OUT LOUD!

My faith is placed where God places His faith.
You see, on my own I can’t do what is right!
On my own I can’t fix what is wrong!
On my own I can’t find what is missing!
I need to depend on God and God alone!
I place my faith in His Hands.
God places His faith in His own Hands.
What He has spoken – comes about.
It is His job, I allow Him to do what He says He will do.
I don’t work harder or try harder. I depend on Him!
When I am struggling – I depend on Him.
When I have messed up - I depend on Him.
My faith doesn’t measure up, but His faith in me moves mountains.
Amen, Amen and Amen!

Why Me?

Why Me?

“The Kingdom of God is forcefully advancing and forceful men lay hold of it!”

The last thing that Jesus Christ said when He left this earth was this:

“Therefore GO and MAKE disciples of all nations, BAPTIZING them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and TEACHING them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age."
-Matthew 28:19-20 (NIV)

What is the Mission?

To Prepare the Way of the Lord!
To go into all nations
To train up Passionate-Hearted Disciples.

Passionate-Hearted Disciples are those who will give their lives to see the Kingdom of God forcefully advance. This mission is not for the faint of heart. It will cost you everything. But remember, as you go into the world making disciples, baptizing them and teaching them, Christ’s promises He will always be with you.

There are three important questions you need to ask yourself. The answers to these three questions will help you on your journey to accomplishing your mission. When you can answer these three questions yourself, you will grow as a Pasionate-Hearted Disciple. Then you will catch the vision for the mission; raising up other Passionate-Hearted Disciples.

1. QUESTION OF EXISTENCE: WHY AM I ALIVE?

“Why was I born? Was it only to have trouble and sorrow, to end my life in disgrace?”
-Jeremiah 20:18 (TEV)

“The Lord has made everything for His own purpose.”
-Proverbs 16:4a (GW)

“Long before He laid down earth's foundations, He had us in mind, and settled on us as the focus of His love, to be made whole and holy by His love.” -Ephesians 1:4 (Msg)

“I WAS CREATED TO BE LOVED BY GOD!”

2. QUESTION OF SIGNIFICANCE: DOES MY LIFE MATTER?

“My work all seems so useless! I have spent my strength for nothing and for no purpose at all.”
-Isaiah 49:4a (NLT)

“I am your Creator. You were in my care even before you were born.”
-Isaiah 44:2 (CEV)

“You... scheduled each day of my life before I began to breathe. The very day was recorded in your book!”
-Psalm 139:16 (LB)

"His plans endure forever; his purposes last eternally."
-Psalm 33:11 (GN)

“MY LIFE MATTERS TO GOD!”

“When this tent we live in—our body here on earth—is torn down, God will have a house in heaven for us to live in, a home He himself has made, which will last forever.” -2 Corinthians 5:1 (TEV)

“Leave your impoverished confusion and live! Walk up the street to a life with meaning."
-Proverbs 9:6 (Msg)

God sent His only Son Jesus to lay down His life for you.
God clearly communicated your value through the sacrifice of Jesus His Son.

3. QUESTION OF INTENTION: WHAT IS MY PURPOSE?

“Why did you create us? For nothing?”
-Psalm 89:47 (NCV)

"Knowing God results in every other kind of understanding."
-Proverbs 9:10b (LB)

“I FIND MY PURPOSE IN GOD!”

“For everything, absolutely everything, above and below, visible and invisible…everything got started in him and finds its purpose in him.”
-Colossians 1:16 (Msg)

“It's in Christ that we find out who we are and what we are living for...part of the overall purpose he is working out in everything and everyone.”
-Ephesians 1:11 (Msg)

“It makes no difference who you are or where you're from—if you want God and are ready to do as he says, the door is open.”
-Acts 10:35 (Msg)

"You (God) created everything, and it is for your pleasure that they exist and were created."
-Revelation 4:11b (NLT)

“Love the Lord your God... This is the first and greatest commandment.”
-Matt. 22:37-38 (NIV)

You were created to bring honor to God!


Application


1. When did you first know God loved you? Explain:








2. What were the circumstances in your life before you knew His love?








3. Write down your experience of receiving God’s love:








4. What difference has His love made in your life?








5. What does Jesus Christ’s life and sacrifice mean to you? Explain:








6. What do you think God would say about your significance?






7. What is your purpose?






The Kingdom of God is forcefully advancing in you .... lay hold of it!

The Leadership Road Less Traveled



The Road Not Taken
Robert Frost

Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth.

Then took the other, as just as fair,
And having perhaps the better claim,
Because it was grassy and wanted wear;
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same.

And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh, I kept the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
I doubted if I should ever come back.

I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I--
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.



All leaders are faced with daily decisions - choices whose sum total determine the direction and effectiveness of our lives and ministries.

It seems most important ministry decisions have to do with control.

How, when, and where should we inject our power and influence?

Where do we give slack by granting trust, and where do we reign in and exercise our authority?

Who owns this ministry, this church, this mission?

You? Or Christ?

Frost's lighthearted but profound observations sound the depths of our personal styles of leadership.

As leaders within the Church, we are repeatedly forced to choose between building and strengthening and protecting a hierarchical institution, or building and strengthening and protecting a relational organism.

The hidden cost: with each choice, you are not only choosing your venue, you are choosing the long term fruit of your ministry.

Choose wisely.

The Heart of the Matter

Jesus has called us.

That is primary.

It is His Call that grants us the authority to minister in His Name, the Right to go.

There is no greater name under Heaven by which we are called.

The Call creates need and desperation.

The Call requires more of me than I have, and therefore it is not a Call to Do more, but a Call to Be more.

That Be-ing is realized only in a vibrant relationship with the Caller Himself.

That is why He came, why He died, and why He calls... to draw all men to Himself.

With the Call comes an offer of Himself, and we never move beyond that dependence.

At the center of the mission dynamic sits a white hot coal of personal discipleship in the heart of a believer who is deeply in love with Christ and what He has done in his life.

Fan that flame.

Missions Reorg

We have chosen to focus on relationships, rather than programs...

On development, rather than aid...

On calling, rather than herding...

On long term strategy, rather than short term projects...

So how do we begin to flesh out this vision?

When we read the Book of Acts, we see patterns and models for missions that are deeply and firmly rooted in a spirit-led community of missional disciples.

Our present structures reflect the influence of corporate hierarchy, more than this biblical pattern emphasizing community, and still we hope for - maybe even want or expect - fruit similar to that produced by the Acts model.

Here's where we've been, working with a hierarchical structure:



It's fascinating to do a word search in the Book of Acts for every reference to "send", "sent", "went", "gathered", and so on.

Here is one concept we find in Acts:


The Incubator is a spiritual greenhouse that dovetails perfectly with the church's discipleship efforts and worship focus. It's purpose is to create a community environment with optimal growing conditions for missional disciples. The disciples gathered regularly for encouragement, food (yeah!), to learn from each other, and to pray with each other.

The Training area focuses not on classroom lectures, but on sharing experiences and reflective learning. By meeting in small groups to draw out of each other what we have learned from our cross-cultural and ministry experiences, we naturally begin to relate to each another as Paul's, Barnabas', and Timothy's.

The Sending arena allows us to mitigate legal and financial risks to the church institution when the church itself authorizes and endorses missions travel. It is a dynamic mix of administrative details and personal coaching, and provides rich experiences which feed back into the Training and Incubating arenas.

This is not a static model - it is a dynamic, constantly revolving model in which members move freely from one circle to the next and around and around. This movement from Incubator to Training to Sending and back creates velocity and momentum within the organization, strengthening the group as a whole.

This model is also more inviting to leadership development than the traditional hierarchy. Experienced leaders who just show up in this community can be recognized for their prior experiences related to missions without having to climb a corporate-style ladder in order to gain influence. New leaders find their ideas gaining traction based on whether they fit with vision and actually work in the field.

There are two keys to success with this model:

1. Retain deep overlap among the three areas - any separation risks divergent efforts and loss of focus on the purpose and mission of the church.

2. Retain a deeply committed, experienced group of missions leaders at the core of this community, a team that is capable of keeping the missional flame white hot in each of these three areas.

The Wikichurch - Part One


Missions is concerned with expanding the Church to every tribe, tongue, and nation.


It's long been my conviction that this can only be accomplished by "non-professional" (read: unpaid) ministers, since there just aren't enough "professional" ministers to get the job done (do the math).

Most of us have heard of Wikipedia.org - the volunteer-driven, online encyclopedia whose content is entirely owned and developed by the general public.

It's an incredible concept, and it's success flies right in the face of our "don't trust the unwashed masses - leave ministry to the professionals" attitudes about church leadership.

(By the way - "Wiki" has absolutely no relationship to wicca - the occult practice - so relax, we are God-fearing, Jesus-loving evangelicals here... not witches.)

I'm reading a book called Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything, which has been widely praised as an accurate assessment of the cross-organizational public collaborations that are transforming high tech marketplaces around the world. This is more than just globalization or democratization - it's about giving the unwashed, unproven masses a serious chance to contribute. (Gasp!)

Here's an excerpt from the book's Introduction:

"Throughout history corporations have organized themselves according to strict hierarchical lines of authority. Everyone was a subordinate to someone else... There was always someone or some company in charge, controlling things, at the "top" of the food chain. While hierarchies are not vanishing, profound changes in the nature of technology, demographics, and the global economy are giving rise to powerful new models of production based on community, collaboration, and self-organization rather than on hierarchy and control."


Fascinating. Now, without getting too personal - does that sound like your local church?

Next, check this out:

"As each one has received a gift, minister it to one another, as good stewards of the manifold grace of God. If anyone speaks, let him speak as the oracles of God. If anyone ministers, let him do it as with the ability which God supplies, that in all things God may be glorified through Jesus Christ, to whom belong the glory and the dominion forever and ever. Amen."

Check out the pronouns: "each one", "one another", "anyone".

This instruction comes from Peter - who was First of All the Unwashed Ministers. Think about it... Who were the disciples? They were the religious refugees, the Border People on the outskirts of a Pharisaical order. Yet Jesus made Peter the rock on which His Church was founded. And He did it in three years.

Ministry skills can be taught and learned - and I believe it is the job of local church leaders to train and release the willing, without regard to their social, economic, or educational background.

Let me be clear: I am NOT advocating a democratic theology, nor a democratic church leadership; John 1 and Ephesians 4 leave no gaps. And I am not pointing fingers - WE are the Church, and we Westerners bear the stains of materialistic consumerism that keep us in our chairs.

But what I am ABSOLUTELY advocating is the abolition of the glass ceiling that keeps proven, mature believers within our church from sharing in the ministry of the Church, whether on the streets in the mission field, or in the pulpit at home.

The Western Church has focused for decades on gathering and nurturing the "unwashed masses". Our next challenge is to release these "unwashed masses" for whom Jesus died as redeemed ministers. It takes more time and true leadership skills to train and release ten "non-professional" ministry leaders, than to control and rein-in a thousand "nice people" as spectators.

I believe the administrative task before the Western Church remains one of refining our organizational structures to look less like Corporate America, and more like the forms and functions found in Scripture. Like Michelangelo said, when he was asked about his magnificent carving of David the Shepherd King, "The image is already in the marble, all I do is cut away everything that is not the image." We must love the Image of the Church within the cold stone our fathers have left us.

Over 100 years ago Dwight Moody said, "The world has yet to see what God can do in, and with, and through a man or woman who is totally dedicated to Him."

And if Jesus doesn't care whether they're on staff, or dress like us, or talk like us, then neither should we.