An electronic newsletter written for leadership in the Church of God in Virginia. Resources, Recommendations, and Reminders...
JUNE 2014

 

The Pastor's Three-Part Job Description

In his book, The Blessed Church, Pastor Robert Morris gives us insight into the pastor’s job description from the life of Moses.  This insight is from Moses’s father-in-law Jethro and is recorded in Exodus 18.
  1.  Pray: “Stand before God for the people…” (v.19).
Representing the people to God is simply another way of expressing what we know as intercession. 

Jethro explained that the purpose for this is, “so that you may bring the people's difficulties to God.” Spending time in the presence of God is the first and most important function of a pastor’s job description. 
  1. Teach the Word: “And you shall teach them the statutes and the laws…” (v.20).
A pastor has to give priority to sermon preparation.  This is vital if our ministry is going to be fruitful.

Jethro encouraged Moses to teach the people and “show them the way they must walk and the work they must do.”  There are two emphases: 1. the way they must walk – character, and 2. the work they must do – ministry.

Simply stated we must equip every member for ministry!
  1. Raise Up Leaders:  “Moreover you shall select from all the people able men…” (v.21).
To paraphrase Jethro, the pastor must raise up leaders.  The key to pastors consistently devoting themselves to the first two parts of the pastor’s job description is the third part: identifying, training, and empowering leaders.

God does not want us to rust out or burn out; He wants us to finish!  And He has given us an Old Testament example from the life of Moses that reveals a ministry approach/strategy that is applicable in the 21st century.

Thanks for your partnership.  Together we are building the Kingdom of God in Virginia!

Blessings,
Bishop Corder

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EVANGELIZING

5 Essentials of Evangelism by Ed Stetzer

Article Excerpt:

Many say it’s been a tough decade for us evangelical Christians. The media say that Christianity is in great decline. We hear that most young adults dropped out of evangelical churches and that everyone hates us.

The actual numbers tell a different story. The American Religious Identification Survey pointed to an overall decline of self-identified Christians. But although those numbers show a steep decline among mainline Christians, they also show a growth pattern for evangelicals.

Even so, these are challenging times that call for reassessment.

Here are five things we need to face the next 10 years:

  1. A clear understanding of the Gospel. The Gospel is not you do, it’s Jesus did. People don’t need to be taught to turn over a new leaf—they need to receive and live out a new life. That new life is from Jesus’ death on the cross, for our sin and in our place. Don’t build a message that would still be true if Jesus had not died on the cross.
  2. A stronger focus on discipleship. God grows us as we are in a position to receive that growth. This can only happen through intentional awareness and leadership on the part of both leaders and church members. In LifeWay Research’s Transformational Discipleship project, the largest statistical study of its kind, we found that discipleship was both lacking and simple—we just needed to remind people to live out who God has made us in Christ.
  3. A greater passion for mission. We need to stand up against the clergification in the modern-day church—the tendency to look at those who are professional ministers and say that they are the ones who are called to the mission, while the people in the pews are merely consumers of religious goods and services. We need to see all of God’s people engaged in God’s mission, from their respective neighborhoods all the way to the nations.
  4. Evangelism in the age of the “nones.” Churches that once focused their energies and efforts toward targeting seekers are finding it more difficult to appeal to a constituency with little to no religious memory. Churches will have to find new ways to lead their people to reach out to their neighbors—not just attractional evangelism, but incarnational evangelism—being, doing and telling good news where we live and work.
  5. New thinking in developing best practices. God often uses tools for his ends. Think of bus ministry in the ‘70s or radio ministry in the ‘50s. That’s still true today. As believers, we can and must be good stewards of our ministry and utilize tools wisely—like multi-site churches, viral church planting and finding new ways to serve those who are hurting and in need.

As the church continues to navigate an increasingly post-Christian culture, we have to ask ourselves if we are willing to face some truths and change some behaviors to reach the world with the message of the Gospel. I’ve read the end of the Book, and I know what you know: Jesus wins. I just want to be a part of what His team is doing before He returns.

Source: outreachmagazine.com


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EQUIPPING

 


Source:  ministrybestpractices.com

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ENCOURAGING

10 Things to Learn from This Year's Best Graduation Speech by Bill Murphy, Jr.

There have been some interesting graduation speaker choices this year: President Obama at the University of California, Irvine; actor Ed Helms at Cornell University, former New York Times editor Jill Abramson at Wake Forest University.
 
However, I've had several people from very different backgrounds recommend one speaker's remarks in particular, especially when it comes to learning leadership: Admiral William McRaven, a Navy SEAL who commanded the operation to get Osama bin Laden.
 
McRaven was the speaker at the University of Texas at Austin, and he focused on the 10 most important lessons that stuck with him as a result of getting through the notoriously difficult SEAL training program. Here are the key takeaways from his remarks.

  1. Start the day by making your bed.
Is it surprising that a four-star admiral known as the world's deadliest man begins by telling you the same thing that your mom probably got after you to do as a little kid?
 
Start every day making your bed, McRaven advised, which was the first task of the day at SEAL training. If you do so, it will mean that the first thing you do in the morning is to accomplish something, which sets the tone for the day, encourages you to accomplish more, and reinforces that little things in life matter.
 
"And, if by chance you have a miserable day, you will come home to a bed that is made--that you made," McRaven said, "and a made bed gives you encouragement that tomorrow will be better."

  2. Find the right people to help you.
Each day at SEAL training, the volunteers had to paddle several miles down the San Diego coast in heavy surf, using small rubber boats. Everyone had to paddle together, he said--on a synchronized count and with similar strength--otherwise the boats would "turn against the wave and be unceremoniously tossed back on the beach."
 
That metaphor carries over into life, McRaven said.
 
"For the boat to make it to its destination, everyone must paddle. You can't change the world alone--you will need some help-- and to truly get from your starting point to your destination takes friends, colleagues, the good will of strangers and a strong coxswain to guide them."

  3.  Attitude and heart can outweigh other advantages.
One of the toughest groups of guys at SEAL training was a boat crew of six men, none of whom was more than five feet five inches tall, McRaven said. The bigger students referred to them as "the munchkin crew."
 
Simply enduring the training was proof of toughness--the munchkin crew was among just 35 men in the original class of 150 who stuck around--but McRaven said these smaller guys "out paddled, out-ran, and out swam all the other boat crews."
 
The lesson? "SEAL training was a great equalizer. Nothing mattered but your will to succeed. Not your color, not your ethnic background, not your education and not your social status. ... If you want to change the world, measure a person by the size of their heart, not the size of their flippers.

  4. Keep moving forward.
Some of the most uncomfortable moments during SEAL training came when the students were punished for small infractions--having a smudge on a belt buckle during uniform inspections, for example.
 
"For failing the uniform inspection, the student had to run, fully clothed into the surf zone and then, wet from head to toe, roll around on the beach until every part of your body was covered with sand," McRaven recalled. "The effect was known as a 'sugar cookie.' You stayed in that uniform the rest of the day--cold, wet and sandy."
 
Many students couldn't endure the pain, but the key to succeeding was to accept that sometimes, life just sucks. But you have to move forward.

  5. Don't be afraid of the circuses.
The "circuses" during SEAL training referred to remedial physical training--an extra two hours of calisthenics for failing to meet a standard during the day. Circuses were "designed to wear you down, to break your spirit, to force you to quit."
 
Nobody wanted to fail at anything; nobody wanted to have to go to the circus at the end of the day, when they were already exhausted from training. As painful as it was, however, McRaven said the extra two hours of working out started to pay off. The students who were "constantly on the list ... got stronger and stronger."
 
Pain builds strength and resiliency, McRaven said, both in training and the real world. Don't be afraid of it.

  6. Be resourceful and innovative.
It probably won't surprise you to learn that SEAL training included an obstacle course. One of the obstacles was called the "slide for life," and consisted of a 200-foot rope stretched between a 30-foot high tower and a 10-foot high tower.
 
The record for completing the obstacle course had stood for years by the time McRaven went through. He recalled that another student in his class shattered the record, in part by racing down the slide for life head-first, instead of the slower, safer method that everyone else used.
 
Taking risks and being innovative often pays off.

  7.  Don't back down from the sharks.
I have to admit that the idea of volunteering for something like SEAL training never would have appealed to me, and by this point in McRaven's description of the course, I'm confident that I made the right life choice. The next training exercise he described in his speech is the "night swim," in which students have to swim through shark-infested waters.
 
"They assure you ... that no student has ever been eaten by a shark--at least not recently," McRaven said. "But, you are also taught that if a shark begins to circle your position--stand your ground. Do not swim away. Do not act afraid. And if the shark, hungry for a midnight snack, darts towards you ... punch him in the snout and he will turn and swim away."
 
If you can face a shark alone in the Pacific Ocean, you can probably face most of life's other sharks. Don't be afraid of them.

  8. Be your very best in your darkest moments.
Among the many missions Navy SEALs tackle is to conduct underwater attacks against enemy shipping. This involves a pair of SEAL divers swimming two miles underwater, "using nothing but a depth gauge and a compass to get to their target."
 
Most of the way during the swim, at least some light can reach the depths at which the SEALs are swimming. Close to the target, however, the shadow of the ship itself blocks all the light, and the SEALs find themselves working in pitch dark, McRaven said.
 
"Every SEAL knows that under the keel, at the darkest moment of the mission--is the time when you must be calm, composed--when all your tactical skills, your physical power and all your inner strength must be brought to bear."

  9. Sing when you're up to your neck in mud.
"Hell Week" is the ninth week of SEAL training. It involves six days of almost no sleep and constant physical challenges. Part of this takes place at a swampy area between San Diego and Tijuana known as the Mud Flats.
 
At one point in McRaven's Hell Week, the instructors ordered the class into the freezing mud for hours, which "consumed each man till there was nothing visible but our heads. The instructors told us we could leave the mud if ... five men would quit."
 
Instead, one man in the group started singing. Another joined in, and then another. The instructors threatened them, but they kept singing--which made the whole exercise just bearable enough to finish.

  10. Never quit. (Never "ring the bell.")
In SEAL training, students can quit anytime--and many ultimately do. There is a brass bell at the center of the training compound, and if you decide you want out of the course, all you have to do is go up to it and ring it.
 
"Ring the bell, and you no longer have to wake up at 5 o'clock," McRaven said. "Ring the bell and you no longer have to do the freezing cold swims. Ring the bell and you no longer have to do the runs, the obstacle course, the PT--and you no longer have to endure the hardships of training. Just ring the bell."
 
The ultimate key to success, McRaven said, is never to ring the bell.

Source:  INC.com

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EMPOWERING

The Holy Spirit: BREATH of GOD by Gordon Robertson

“For in Him we live and move and have our being.”
Acts 17:28 NKJV

Back in Genesis, it describes how we were made. “And the LORD God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living being” (Genesis 2:6-7). It is from the breath of God that we actually get our life.
 
The same thing happens when we are born of the Spirit. When we are reborn, it is from the breath of God. In the Gospel of John, Jesus gives His disciples the Holy Spirit. Just as God breathed on Adam and gave him the breath of life, Jesus breathed on His disciples in John chapter 20: “‘Peace to you! As the Father has sent me, I also send you.’ And when He had said this, He breathed on them and said to them, ‘Receive the Holy Spirit’” (John 20:21-22).
 
Jesus didn’t just breathe on the disciples 2,000 years ago. Every time we are baptized in the Holy Spirit, it is God’s breath on us. Just imagine that. I think most Christians today believe the baptism in the Holy Spirit is only a one–time event. We see such an event in Acts chapter 2, but we fail to look forward to Acts chapter 4 where they get baptized in the Holy Spirit again. It says very clearly in Acts chapter 4 they were all filled with the Holy Spirit when they were in a prayer meeting. This means we can be filled with the Spirit continually.
 
We don’t have to walk around as if there are some moments when we are filled with the Spirit and other moments when we’re not. We can be continually filled with His presence. Imagine how that would transform your life! The baptism in the Holy Spirit is not a one–time event; it can be a continuous thing for all who believe.
 
Christians need to be filled with the Holy Spirit now, more than ever. We need to be filled with His authority and have the power of God working in our lives. We live in perilous times; this is not a time for us to take off the armor of God and go relax. We need to be fully armed and fully prepared with the Holy Spirit.

Source: empowered21.com

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Find many more resources for Pentecost Sunday, June 8, from the Empowered21.com website linked here.

MONTHLY MINISTRY RESOURCE
 
This month's resource is a free eBook: Unleashed! Finding Epic Adventure In Everyday Life by Bill Couchenour and Ed Bahler.

DOWNLOAD eBOOK/PDF HERE

**For best results highlight link and "right-click" in order to 'save as' or 'save link as' to download PDF.**

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