Marty’s got a new Examiner article up focusing on Pastor Appreciation Month (October is it, by the way).
Good article with an excellent representation of a hard working pastor and his family:
For great info, you can follow the twitter feeds of: Marty Duren, Micah Fries, Trevin Wax and me.
For blogs of the full content, be sure to check out Trevin Wax and Steve Weaver.
I mentioned Friday that I was traveling to Jackson, TN for this conference and as you read this, I am on the road.
I mentioned that I would be blogging and twittering from there during the conference. given that, you might want to check out my twitter feed: twitter.com/artrogers, or the missioscapes twitter feed: twitter.com/missioscapes, or even these guys, who will also be there: twitter.com/martyduren & twitter.com/micahfries.
My plan is to twitter live, either through my own feed or through the MissioScapes feed, or both. Then I’ll recap thoughts in a blog post later.
Here is a schedule published by Union University that you might consider if you are looking to follow live tweets on particular issues:
*There is one caveat. I am also dealing with a great many things personal and professional while on this trip. I am not guaranteeing that I will be at every session to tweet/blog. I fully intend to be at the ones I perceive as most relevant. This is not to discount any of the speakers or their topics, but to simply let everyone know that other things may take precedence for me.

Next week, Union University will be hosting a conference entitled Southern Baptists, Evangelicals and the future of denominationalism.
I’m excited to be attending for several reasons, not the least of which is that the topic fascinates me. I am anxious to hear the thoughts of those being brought in to speak to the issue.
Further, the SBC finds itself in the moment of re-creating itself via the Great Commission Task Force and its impending report in Orlando next year at the Annual Meeting.
I’ll be blogging and twittering from the meeting, but as a primer for that time, I thought that you might be interested in these videos from the B21 Panel at last year’s annual meeting, where the hot topics of the Southern Baptist Convention were discussed by some of the leading voices.
The first video says it’s 80 minutes, but it is only about 40. Total of both videos is about an hour and 20 minutes.
B21 Panel From 2009 SBC Annual Meeting from Sojourn Community Church on Vimeo.
B21 Panel from SBC Annual Meeting Part 2 from Southeastern Seminary on Vimeo.
Did I actually just say that? Yup. I’m pretty sure I did. I might clarify by saying that I don’t think you grow a HEALTHY church that way.
The thought process has gone, for decades, that if you have a great Children’s program and then a great Youth program, you will draw the kids and then get the parents.
It appears that when it works two things happen, and neither of them are healthy. 1) Families transfer from a smaller, dying church to a bigger church with better programs, and/or 2) reclamation of church dropouts.
While the reclamation of dropouts sounds like a good thing, my observation has been that they only reconnected when their kids got to the age where church programs became a part of an already overcrowded schedule of their kids’ activities. Because their reconnection was just part of the general “busy-ness” in which they enrolled their kids, they typically pursued a nominal Christianity as a tangential part of our congregation. That is to say, they attended sporadically, they rarely gave and they never served.
Neither transfer growth nor nominal reconnection produce a healthy church.
In a recent study published in USA Today, it was revealed that 70% of people aged 18-30 had dropped out of church by the time they were 23 years old.
The survey addressed a small group of these dropouts who return, but the question was not related to the role of children in their return to church:
The news was not all bad: 35% of dropouts said they had resumed attending church regularly by age 30. An additional 30% attended sporadically. Twenty-eight percent said “God was calling me to return to the church.”
The survey found that those who stayed with or returned to church grew up with both parents committed to the church, pastors whose sermons were relevant and engaging, and church members who invested in their spiritual development.
That last statement is paramount.
To grow a healthy church, we are going to have to 1) grow healthy families, where 2) discipleship is a process that takes place within community and happens over a timeline from cradle to grave and 3) the worship is going to have to be relevant.
That sounds to me like a church with family based small groups (parents discipling their kids in an engaged community) and relevant worship.
Conversely, that would include a scaling back of programs. Churches aren’t programmed to grow. They are programmed to die.
The mashup of my observations and the survey is that even if you grow by transfer or by nominal reclamation, the program model is going to produce 3 out of 10 real disciples, and of the 7 out of 10 who wander off, you might see a fraction return in a positive way.
Program driven churches have been withering in America for decades. To depend solely on those programs is to follow that well worn path to the death of our churches.
We need a more organic, healthy, family inclusive and holistic mindset and structure. We need to re-shape the church.
Most, not all, evangelicals I know are Republicans (I typically vote that way) and as such are duty bound to despise the welfare system. Whatever good it may do could never outweigh the horrific and crippling results of people becoming dependent on handouts… or so the line goes.
Failure to work for oneself corrupts character and that internal collapse becomes the context and culture for generations, spreading like yeast through the dough… again, so the line goes.
Yet the same evangepublicans will consistently expect a centralized process for all things related to church. Preschool Program, Children’s Progam, Youth Program, College Program, Music Program, Evangelism Program, Missions Program, Singles Program, Senior Adult Program, Benevolence Program… etc. If it happens in the Christian life, the staff of the church should work it and drum up volunteers.
And I tell you that many of the things that can be said of the welfare system can be said of the program driven church. The individuals of the church don’t have to do the work, so they don’t and they get used to it, come to expect it, pass those expectations on to their kids…
And the church in the West declines because the context and culture that we have bred is one of dependence. Laziness. Presumption.
And the best thing we can do for this church is to stop it. Stop doing everything for them and put them into a situation where the expectations placed on the body of Christ are that these individual members must do it or it won’t get done.
Because, regardless of whether the church is centralized and program driven or decentralized and personal engagement driven… it’s not getting done without them doing it.
You buy that?
“The Kingdom is to be in the midst of your enemies. And he who will not suffer this does not want to be of the Kingdom of Christ; he wants to be among friends, to sit among roses and lilies, not with the bad people but the devout people. O you blasphemers and betrayers of Christ! If Christ had done what you are doing who would ever have been spared?” [from Martin Luther, as read in Life Together by Dietrich Bonhoeffer]
Completely ripped off from: Joe Kennedy
I remember, over 20 years ago, reading Charles M Sheldon’s book, “In His Steps.” In that book, feeling himself challenged by a vagrant who is marginalized by the people of “First Church,” a pastor challenges his congregation to ask themselves the question prior to choosing a behavior, “What Would Jesus Do?”
The book was old when I read it, set, I believe, at the turn of the last century. Ancient by modern perspectives. Yet, it had proven powerful for many readers and was equally so for me while I muddled through making my faith my own during my college years.
I also remember the time when someone in Christian kitsch put the letters, “WWJD” on a fabric bracelet to symbolize the question, which might have been more appropriately translated, “What would Jesus have me do?” since I’m pretty sure Jesus was capable of more than any of us at any given moment. I think I wore a WWJD bracelet for all of a couple of months, but then realized that it had become the “in” thing among, well, everyone.
Last month, I caught a modern narrative. My wife loves all kinds of reality shows, from game shows to documentaries, the latter of which had her attention on this particular evening. The affair is called, “Intervention.” Aptly named, the series records families in turmoil being coached through confrontation between loved ones in the throes of addiction.
In this episode, two brothers were being challenged for their lifestyle of using and selling drugs, a pattern of life that had invited their parents’ home to be invaded and ransacked. As one of the two sat, head in hands, the camera focused on his fingers as they wove through his greasy hair only to have the letters, “WWJD” come into focus as they dangled from his wrist.
I looked down at my wrist.
Decades after I tossed WWJD in the drawer, a yellow rubber bracelet adorned my right arm, engraved with the letters, “LIVESTRONG.”
I don’t know what you know about Lance Armstrong. You probably know that he survived cancer and won the Tour de France.
You may not know that he won 7 times. In a row. That he is the most tested (for performance enhancing drugs) athlete ever. That he has never failed a drug test.
You may know that he has become a tremendous advocate for cancer research and treatment, setting up the Lance Armstrong Foundation and Livestrong.com.
You may not know that he curses like a sailor, when not on camera.
Not to belabor the point, Lance is not a representation of conservative evangelcalism. Not now. Not ever.
Yet, I wear a bracelet that represents values he promotes while discarding the representation of values promoted by Sheldon, et al.
Why?
Because conservative evangelicalism has come to present itself to the world as shallow, self righteous, disingenuous… meaningless… separatist… a kitsch based lifestyle that is show without substance in the world.
Meanwhile, when you first get diagnosed with cancer and call Livestrong, a counselor will talk to you about all things related to your disease, including treatment, side effects and what is going to happen to your family. They are raising money and last week at the World Cancer Summit, Lance spoke and elicited commitments from several nations to increase their investment in finding cures for this disease.
They are actually trying to make life better on the world and everyone can see it, no matter what they believe.
Bottom line: It seems to me that when asked “What would You do?” Jesus would most likely answer, “get involved with the healing of the sick, the comforting of the wounded and the betterment of the world, of course.”
And, no. I don’t think He would want us to stop without sharing the Gospel and calling these people to redemption, but I do think that they are more likely to actually hear that message from a person working alongside them to raise money for cancer research than from a person wearing WWJD apparel and sitting on the sidelines.
Yesterday I couldn’t get into my gmail account even though I knew there was mail that I needed to handle there. Now I know why:
Official Gmail Blog: More on today’s Gmail issue.
Here are some things google did right:
Capable and empowered staff on hand to deal with the issue immediately.
Flexible infrastructure that allowed them to correct the problem without having to create a plan, purchase hardware or put together an inadequate solution.
FULL DISCLOSURE. Not only did they handle everything, they told their patrons EVERYTHING that happened, why it happened, what they did and what they are doing. It creates trust among those who are invested to know that they are so on top of what is going on.
I can thing of a few organizations and, er… denominations… er… task forces… that could learn something from google here.
Just sayin’.
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