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Category: Ministry and Leadership

  • Rob Lister — 

    I loved my time in seminary. The seminary years were formative and growth-filled for me in many ways. I learned more about God in a concentrated period of time than ever before. My professors were scholar-pastors. I was blessed to be part of a healthy church. I made some of my best (and lifelong) friends during seminary. And God graciously started and grew our family during those years.

  • Joe Hellerman — 

    The following post outlines some of the nuts-and-bolts of leading a church as a plurality of pastors. It is an excerpt from a manuscript tentatively titled, When Pastors Were Servants: Recapturing Paul鈥檚 Cruciform Vision for Authentic Christian Leadership.

  • Dave Keehn — 

    One of the greatest compliments I ever received was from a student who rose to speak at a 鈥渢hank you鈥 celebration when I left my first church. I had been involved in youth ministry at this church for 14 years, the last ten as the youth pastor. I had begun to recognize the benefits of developing a comprehensive mentoring program for the youth ministry and invested many hours in the lives of a few young men. All five of these men are currently serving in full time ministry today, most as youth pastors. This particular student, James, was one of those five I poured myself into during the last few years at that church. As many people stood to say nice things to my family and I, this young man silenced the room when he simply said, 鈥淵ou are my Paul and I am your Timothy!鈥 And with that he sat down. The emotion I had been trying to control burst forth at that moment and I realized I was finished. I had completed the task God had called me to at that church. What a compliment that student paid me; on my worst days, I think about that moment and smile. Mentoring may be a 鈥渂uzz-word鈥 in the business world but the practice of developing another person for specific purposes of skill development or leadership (Smith, p. 95) has been around since the beginning of civilization, evident throughout Scripture 鈥 especially in the lives of Paul and Timothy.

  • Joe Hellerman — 

    I am presently at work on a book about the use of power and authority in Christian leadership. The provisional title is When Pastors Were Servants: Recapturing Paul鈥檚 Cruciform Vision for Authentic Christian Leadership. The primary biblical materials in play are Paul鈥檚 letter to the Philippians and the apostle鈥檚 ministry in Philippi, as related by Luke in Acts 16.

  • David Talley — 

    In addition to my faculty responsibilities at 911爆料网 University, I am a member of a pastoral team at a local church (www.graceevfree.org). We do not have a senior pastor. Our understanding of this is captured in two ministry values, namely 鈥淓lder Leadership鈥 and 鈥淪pirit-led Decision Making.鈥 It is my hope that the following summary of these ministry values might challenge you in your understanding of how the body of Christ is to function.

  • Joe Hellerman — 

    I have found it rather easy over the years to convince our Talbot students of the value of expository preaching. The challenge comes when our students leave the classroom and find themselves ministering to church folks who live in a sound-bite culture, and who have a strong affinity for topical sermons that 鈥渟cratch 鈥榚m where they itch.鈥

  • Dave Keehn — 

    The church I grew up in is no more. It was small when I was a child; my youth group was 5 teenagers 鈥 2 of which was my sister and I鈥 slim pickens for potential dates. And now the church is a shell of what it was 鈥 a few older people I knew from childhood, systematically opening the doors each Sunday for the 鈥渇aithful鈥 who still come. So what happened? Sinful revolt? Apathetic attendees? No, the community鈥檚 culture changed and the church failed to reach out to the new language speakers. So a church closes its doors because it can鈥檛 speak the language of the new culture.