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Monthly Archive for May, 2008

Graduation 2008

Graduation this year was held at South Delta Baptist Church. It was a beautiful day for a graduation and the celebration was memorable. Our graduation speaker was our own president, Dr. Larry Perkins. He summarized his address this way:

The theme ACTS has adopted this year is “Come together, Go Further.” By living consciously as part of the body of Christ, we maximize our ministry and together can do great things for God. The metaphor of the great spiritual house God is constructing (1 Peter 2:5,9) illustrates this reality. As God enables us to “come together,” we discover our priesthood and our service. Spiritual formation can only be fully accomplished within the community of Jesus - it is not a solo effort. We cannot mentor ourselves or be a family of one or be a nation of one. Only as we come together can we fulfill the mission God has given to us. As we live and work together “under God’s mighty hand,” He will enable us to do great things to advance the Kingdom. This is why ACTS came into being.

Here are a few photos from the day’s celebration:

Are there hip replacements for limping leaders?

Leading With A LimpDan Allender has provided a provocative look at several serious aspects of ministry leadership in his book “Leading with a Limp.” He writes primarily out of his experience as the founder of Mars Hill Graduate School located near Seattle. His thesis is clear: “to the degree you face and name and deal with your failures as a leader, to that same extent you will create an environment conducive to growing and retaining productive and committed colleagues” (p.2). He then proceeds to discuss common, unhealthy responses to the challenges of leadership and urges ministry leaders to replace them with more effective responses — courage, depth, gratitude, openness and hope. The leadership challenges he identifies are crisis, complexity, betrayal, loneliness and weariness. The phrase “reluctant leader” seems to capture for him essential aspects of a healthy leadership perspective. Any ministry leader would gain considerable benefit from reading and reflecting on Allender’s ideas.

Allender helps us map the interior contours of Christian leadership, a kind of psychology of leadership, incorporating a realism about a leader’s limitations and dependence. Depravity works wondrously well even in the world of Christian leaders. The story of Jacob’s midnight wrestling match with God and his resulting disability — his limp — provides the overarching metaphor for Allender’s presentation. What struck me, however, was the silence regarding the role of the Holy Spirit in restoring, enabling, and guiding Christian leaders to walk with their limp in God-honouring ways. The result is a rather dark view of Christian leadership, lived in a hostile, dangerous and debilitating context. Periods of joy, satisfaction, thankfulness and redemptive accomplishment seem very rare or extremely intermittent. Allender is right to urge leaders to name their failures and walk with humility, but there is another side to this picture. We do lead as Christians in partnership with the Holy Spirit. Surely this awesome reality makes a difference. Does God ever provide “a hip replacement” and enable us to walk “normally”?

Allender rightly points to examples in Scripture of reluctant leaders — Moses, Jeremiah, etc. Yet, there are also many examples of people–Joseph, Joshua, Samuel, Nehemiah, Daniel, Mary, Paul– who embrace God’s calling, fearfully but willingly. . God’s entry into their lives is surprising and filled with change, but I am not sure from the information Scripture gives us that these people were reluctant leaders. We seem to have various responses to the leadership challenge in Scripture. I wonder how Peter’s encouragement for ministry leaders (1 Peter 5:1-4) fits into this idea of “reluctant leader”?

I found it hard to locate the faith community in the picture of ministry leadership that Allender presents. The community seems to be primarily a hostile place, the place where leaders are undone rather than the Kingdom context where God’s power and love triumphs. Undoubtedly Allender writes out of personal experience and many Christian leaders, unfortunately, would have to agree that churches often fail to live up to God’s ideal for his people. Yet, for every bad leadership experience, one could probably name a good church leadership experience. What Allender does help us realize is that naivete is not helpful. Faith communities can be places of devastating animosity for leaders, but they can also be contexts of wonderful support, love and encouragement. To lead with suspicion may not be the best stance. If Christ “loved the church and gave himself for it”, then some of this perspective must also guide our embrace of ministry leadership. Leadership is fundamentally relational. Ministry leaders are given a trust by the people of God to live and lead within the faith community. How does 1 Corinthians 13:4-6 get lived out in Allender’s perception of ministry leadership?

Allender begins by acknowledging that leadership is something for all of God’s people — every disciple is a leader. However, his focus quickly shifts to what he terms “formal leadership”, by which he means a specific leadership role in terms of organizational leadership in church, seminary, non-profit business, etc. Does the leadership model he presents then apply to all followers of Jesus? I think he probably would agree to this, but this is not his focus. But what difference does it make for a ministry leader to see himself as a “limping leader” serving in the midst of a host of “limping leaders”? One of his recurrent emphases is Paul’s confession that he is “the chief of sinners” and the importance for leaders to own this reality for themselves. Again, there is no argument against this reality. But here again the leader operates in a context where all, as disciples of Christ, are leaders and “chief sinners”. This is not a category exclusive to the formal leader. It is the reality in which all disciples live. Perhaps the challenge for the formal leader is to understand how to exercise Kingdom leadership as a “suffering servant” among a group of “chief sinners”.

Every believer is a flawed person. Scripture makes this clear and this is part of our daily confession. However, in Christ we also are “new creations”. This too is an exciting reality. Paul in Galatians urges Christians to “walk/live in the realm of the Spirit” and as we do this “we shall not let the fleshly nature achieve its goals” (Galatians 5:15-16) (my translations). How does this reality fit into the context of Kingdom leadership? We will never lead perfectly and there obviously are times for confession, repentance and restoration in every ministry leader’s experience. But should this be the overwhelming perspective? If a ministry leader is living in submission to the Holy Spirit daily, will the fleshly temptations towards narcissism, fear and addiction gain control? If a ministry leader repeatedly expresses sinful behaviour, does that person have the spiritual maturity to be in a formal leadership role? How do the characteristics and behaviours Paul identifies in 1 Timothy 3 for formal leadership match the paradigm of leadership that Allender proposes? I wonder whether Allender gives too much room for excusing sinful behaviours and fails to give sufficient challenge to pursue the way of the Spriit, the ways of the Kingdom — and the great potential we have to live it.

Best Practices for Church Boards: Basic Edition - Langley

Saturday, November 1, 2008
12:00 pm

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD REGISTRATION FORM

The Fellowship of Evangelical Baptist Churches in British Columbia and Yukon
The Ministry Centre
The Church Development Commission
The Northwest Baptist Seminary
Invite you to REGISTER TODAY for our…

One-Day Workshop:
BEST PRACTICES FOR CHURCH BOARDS: Basic Workshop
…The Spiritual Ministry of Board Governance…

 

This Workshop will encourage you to make Church Board leadership a core, spiritual ministry experience.

Lower Mainland: Langley, British Columbia
November 1, 2008
9:00 am – 4:30 pm
Fosmark Centre
Trinity Western University
Langley, British Columbia

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD REGISTRATION FORM

BEST PRACTICES FOR CHURCH BOARDS: BASIC EDITION

The focus of the Best Practices for Church Boards: Basic Edition workshop is on three elements: giving clarity as to the function of a church board; offering practical ideas about ways to help a church board to function effectively; providing an opportunity to spend concentrated time on seeking solutions to key issues critical to the continued health and development of your church and its governing board. All of this is done with the assistance of a facilitator.

There will be two plenary sessions to present the key principles that guide the practice of board governance. NOTE: New updated material will be presented to help congregations deal with current issues and concerns. Church Boards who have attended previous Basic Edition workshops will find this a wonderful opportunity to orient new Board members, refresh their understanding of governance practice, and address new issues facing church governance together!

What Church Leaders have to say about the Best Practices for Church Boards: Basic Edition:

“We have certainly benefited from the worship… At the first board meeting after the workshop we spent fifteen to twenty minutes in prayer at the start of the session and it made a world of difference… We found things just came together and all were in agreement that it made sense… Subsequent meetings have also given us opportunity to put what we learned to the test…” Emmanuel Fellowship Baptist Church, Vernon

“We have just had our second Church Board Meeting since attending the Best Practices Workshop… I want to thank you personally for the huge impact that this has already had on our Board.  We had a 43 page package to consider and we were finished in 1.25 hours and then had 1.5 hours to talk about the important issues that we usually never got around to discussing… All of a sudden our Board is interested in planning and vision! What a blessing!… Thank you, thank you, thank you…” Central Baptist Church, Victoria

            The workshop begins at 9am sharp and conclude by 4:30pm. Lunch is provided along with two beverage breaks.
            Each participant receives a binder of materials covering the essential ideas taught in the plenary sessions, the results of a survey completed by your church board and senior pastor, and other resources that are pertinent to the issue you want to discuss.

            The cost for a church board and senior pastor to be registered for the workshop is $375. Please note that your registration is not official until we receive the funds for registration.  Also, there will be no refund if your church board must withdraw within two weeks of the workshop. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact Dr. Lyle Schrag.

As you consider attending, please note the following registration benchmarks:

  1. the entire church board (as many as possible) must agree to be involved;
  2. the senior pastor must agree to be involved [if either of the above benchmarks prove to be problematic, please don’t hesitate to contact the workshop organizers, the Northwest Centre for Leadership Development, to discuss arrangements.]
  3. others – former board members, or future board members – are encouraged to participate as well;
  4. all participants from your church must complete an online survey that will be available via email during the month of February, 2007;
  5. you will need to provide us the names, addresses and email addresses of your board members and senior pastor for full registration.

If you have any questions or concerns about the benchmarks, please don’t hestitate to contact Dr. Lyle Schrag (lyle.schrag@twu.ca) WE WANT YOU TO COME! We believe that this event can be a significant help for your church leadership team.

NOTE: For the first time, this event is available for Church Boards from Churches other than the Fellowship of Evangelical Baptist Churches of British Columbia and the Yukon. Registration for these churches will include the following:

  1. Church Boards would be allowed to register their leadership team for our scheduled workshops using our plenary presenters. Their registration would be $25.00 higher than FEBBC/Y churches [$400.00 per church rather than $375.00] and would require that they provide their own facilitator.
  2. This facilitator would, most likely, be selected from their denomination, and would be required to attend one session of training with us, and would have to agree to our expectations. It is suggested that these Churches consult with their Denominational leadership in finding a suitable facilitator. It is also expected that these Churches would arrange their own honorarium payment for their facilitator.

 

For Further Information and Registration:

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD REGISTRATION FORM

  1. PRINT OUT  THE FORM AND EITHER MAIL/FAX IT TO NORTHWEST BAPTIST SEMINARY
  2. Your Registration will be secured upon the receipt of payment.

 

Best Practices for Church Missions: Island

Saturday, February 28, 2009
12:00 pm

Best Practices for Church Missions: Langley

Saturday, February 21, 2009
12:00 pm

Code of Best Practices for Church Mission Mobilizers

 

Best Practices Workshop information

Pastors’ and Mentors’ Day

Friday, October 24, 2008
12:00 pm

Check back for details

Finishers Retreat

Friday, February 6, 2009 12:00 pmtoSunday, February 8, 2009 12:00 pm

Serious Missions:

“Reaching Ahead”

at Camp Qwanoes

Click Here for more information

For adults 50+ who want to make a difference

by being involved in God’s mission to the world


Taught by God (theodidaktoi - 1 Thessalonians 4:9)

The Psalmist declared “Since my youth, O God, you have taught me” (Psalm 71:17) and he desires that God continually would teach him to do his will (Psalm 143:10). His experience and expectation is that God does instruct him, with the result that he knows God and his ways. While this defines the Psalmist’s relationship with God, it was not true for all in Israel. The prophets yearned for the day when God would restore and rebuild Jerusalem. Sometimes the language borders on the fantastic as they consider how God, using all of his creative power and resources, will fashion Jerusalem from rubies and sapphires. Its walls and buildings will be “sparkling jewels” and “precious stones” (Isaiah 54:11-13). But even more wonderful is that those within its walls will be “taught by the Lord”.

Jeremiah takes this vision a step further. God enables him to foresee a day when God establishes a new covenant with Israel. But it is quite different from the covenant he made at Sinai. Israel did not keep that covenant (Jeremiah 31:31-34). When this new covenant is implemented “they will all know me, from the least of them to the greatest” (31:34) and no one will have to teach them this knowledge because God “writes it on their hearts” (31:33).

In a first century B.C. document called the Psalms of Solomon, a messianic figure is called “righteous king, taught by God (didaktos hÅ«po theou)” (17:32). Because of these wonderful characteristics this figure is able to restore Israel to the glory God intends. Jesus himself urged his followers to acknowledge only one instructor, the Messiah (Matthew 23:8).

It seems that Paul creates a new word in 1 Thessalonians 4:9 to celebrate the inauguration of God’s new covenant. He commends these new believers for their sincere love for one another. What is perhaps more astonishing is that he attributes this to the fact that “you yourselves are God-taught (theodidaktoi) to love one another” (4:9). There is no evidence that this word existed in Greek before Paul wrote this letter. He creates this word to mark the astonishing change that salvation in Jesus has brought to these people. It has changed fundamentally their ‘place’. When Paul visited Thessalonika, he proclaimed “the gospel of God” (2:8-9) and many in city received it as “the word of God” (2:13). The result is that these followers of Jesus now know “the will of God” because Paul and those with him gave them instructions. They know God, in contrast to “the nations” (4:5). But even more significantly God has “given his Holy Spirit to you” (4:8). All of these actions by God have generated their new status as people who are “God-taught” (theodidaktoi).

The rest of this article is published on Dr. Perkins’ Internet Moments with God’s Word blog site. View it there along with many other similar articles.




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