This May I had the opportunity to go to Catalyst Dallas, a
conference of innovation and challenge for ministers. One of the books I chose
from the selected giveaways was one called The Catalyst Leader by Brad Lomenick.
This book has 8 essentials for becoming a
change maker. This book provides
insight into Lomenick’s accession to the leader of Catalyst. Each of the 8
essentials are described in detail, and matched with stories from how the
lessons were learned and implemented. For me, I am glad I picked this book out
and happy that I made the time to read it. This is a good book that I would
gladly recommend.
Sunday, August 11, 2013
Sunday, July 28, 2013
Chloe's Baptism
Chloe received Jesus as her savior on June 21, 2013 (Christy & my 10th Anniversary). On July 28th (my birthday), I had the incredible privilege of baptizing her at First Baptist Jenks, where I serve as the Executive Pastor. It was so great to experience this, and have GiGi & Pappa, Grammy & Grandad, MawMaw & Bubba, Micheal & Anne with Josh, Sam, Drew, Caleb, and Angelina there to celebrate with our family as well. This was a great day!
Monday, July 15, 2013
Freedom in Following
Freedom is typically seen as the ability to not have to
answer for anything or to anyone. In this message (Freedom in Following) preached on July 14, the
Scripture teaches that freedom is found in following Christ. In fact, the best
way to live our best life to its best potential is to follow, which can be
understood as making ourselves slaves to Christ and others. Included in this
message from Galatians 5 are 5 steps to following Jesus in a way that will
indeed set us free. Listen to the message here.
Saturday, July 6, 2013
Book Review: Death by Living by N. D. Wilson.
Instead of
writing a typical book review, I am just going to share the thoughts on this
book while reading, Death by Living by N. D. Wilson. Here we go:
Random stories. No connection or link. Random thoughts. Feel
like I'm reading an ADHD writer. Page 62, God falls short? Chapter 11 had a
clear thought process; it was strange for this book. Why is this author
insinuating curse words, then giving me the greatest commandment and the next?
What is this dude talking about... and why did I waste my time reading this
book!
In short, this is either the worst book I have ever wasted
my time reading or the second worst book I have ever wasted my time reading (see The Gospel According to Lost by Chris Seay for the competition to this book).
Monday, June 24, 2013
Barriers to Following Jesus
Sunday, June 23, I had the opportunity to preach a sermon based on Luke 9:57-62 called, Barriers to Following Jesus. As is the sermon, this message is based off Kevin Idleman's book, Not a Fan. Basically, this message focused on the barriers of poverty, priorities, and pursuits. To follow Jesus we must be willing to let go of our comfort, conditions and control, and deny, abandon, and refuse ourselves. Here is a link to the sermon: Barriers to Following Jesus.
Saturday, June 22, 2013
Dealing The The Pressure Cooker Reality of Ministry
I read an article by Carey Nieuwhof and wanted to share it online.
It details the biggest mistake/struggle a longtime minister has made. He
described it as “knowing how to handle the pressure of ministry.” Here are some
exceprts and major points from his post:
Ministry
brings pressure that seems to be unique to the calling. I love ministry and am so thankful to
have been called into it, but with it comes pressures that is well, just
different. Here’s my theory as to why ministry
is such a pressure cooker for many. Ministry combines three areas of life
that are intensely personal:
- Your faith
- Your work
- Your community
Because of that, it gets
confusing.
- What you do is what you believe.
- What you believe is what you do.
- Your friends are also the people you serve and lead.
Throw your family into the mix (because
they believe what you believe and are friends with the people you/they lead and
serve) and bam — it’s even more confusing. Due to this, things that normally
happen "at work" very seldom stay "at work." The pressure can
lead to problems that impact your home, your life, and even your faith.
Here are six habits that have helped me
learn to handle the pressure of ministry well:
1.
Understand the perfect storm of
work/faith/community: Church
world is the only place I know of where what you believe is what you do and the
people you serve are also your friends. You need to understand this.
Understanding why something is emotionally confusing is the first step toward
untangling the confusion.
2.
Find friends who aren’t in your church
or organization: Be
friends with the people you live with and serve, but find some friends you can
talk to about anything.
3.
Don’t base tomorrow’s decisions on
today’s emotions.
4.
Seek a Christian counselor.
5.
Develop a devotional life that has
little to do with work: One
of the casualties of serving in the church is your devotional life. You get too
busy or you "cheat" and make your sermon or lesson prep your
devotional time as well. Don’t. God loves you for who you are, not for what you
do.
6.
Develop a hobby or interest outside of
work.
Friday, June 21, 2013
Chloe Asked Jesus to Save Her!
June 21, 2013 was Christy & my 10th Anniversary. It was a Friday, the Friday of VBS at our church. All week long Chloe had been asking about Jesus, something she had actually been doing for a couple of years (but I kept thinking she was too young for the talk). Anyway, on this Friday morning, Christy and I made a point to sit down with Chloe and talk about Jesus together. We asked her why she wanted to ask Jesus into her heart, why she thought she needed it, and why should would not do it.
With boldness and confidence our sweet Chloe girls calmly explained her need for Jesus. She told us she knew she was a sinner and need Jesus to wash away her sins. She told us she knew that Jesus needed to the boss of her life. She expressed a genuine child-like faith in God and His Son Jesus... then she asked Jesus to save her and her eternity will never be the same! (The picture was taken by Christy while we were praying, I love it!)
This was one anniversary and moment Chloe, Christy & I will never forget!!!
Monday, June 17, 2013
The Old Reader
Google is killing my favorite website, Google Reader. All I have been able to discover on the rationale is that the service simply is not popular enough to justify continuing the free service (anyone else amused by my irritation the free service is going away). The funny thing is that there seems to be a bunch of people hacked off by Google's decision, which has not mattered to them (and why should it, will people actually go back to aol).
Personally, I have drug my feet on making a change until this morning's reminder from Google told me the service would be dead July 1. After reading through some blogs (tons of people hacked off at Google), I found the perfect answer to my problems: THE OLD READER!
The Old Reader is just like Google Reader, except it is not being killed off July 1. My favorite part of the website is the irony of the people who created it... they are running the website on Google's Sites. Hey Google, Good call to Kill Reader... Said No One Ever.
Labels:
AOL,
Blogging,
Blogs,
Dead,
Google,
Google Reader,
RSS,
Sites,
The Old Reader
Friday, May 17, 2013
Book Review: Communicating for a Change by Andy Stanley
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This is a fantastic book for anyone who wants to become a
better communicator. Although I have not read other reviews on this book, my
guess is that there are some pious people who dislike Andy and thus discredit his
in your face reality about preaching and dismiss this book as nonspiritual.
Regardless of naysayers might communicate about this book, it is indeed a great
read for preachers who want to be more effective in their communication skills.
Through a story and then detailed explanation, Stanley provide 7 Imperatives of
Communications. This is worth the read for any preacher, especially ones who would like to improve!
Monday, April 29, 2013
Overcoming the Hurdle of Pride
Sunday, April 28, 2013 I had the opportunity to share a message about Overcoming the Hurdle of Pride in our series on Hurdles. Philippians 2:1-11 was the focal passage, concentrating on verses 3-4, "Do nothing out of selfish
ambition or vain conceit. Rather, in humility value others above yourselves,
not looking to you own interests but the interests of others." The central idea of the message was to Kill the I in me and live for He who died for We. You can listen to the message here.
Sunday, April 28, 2013
TOP 10 SIGNS YOU MIGHT HAVE PRIDE
10.When you
the subject of pride, you immediately think of others who have a problem
9.
You feel slighted when other people are praised
8.
You
hear others share a story and follow it up with, “oh that’s nothing, let me tell you what
happened to me”
7.
You think “Lowly tasks
and responsibilities” are below you: like answering the phones, grunt work, and helping in general
6.
You gladly share your success, accomplishments, and abilities with
others
5.
You
think you are the perfect person to address pride with others
4.
You know more than everyone else: includes rejection of
suggestions, inclusion in decision making, dismissal of others, isolation
3.
You take a lot of pride in your humility
2.
You cannot believe people struggle with sin
1. Your list would have been much better than this
list!
Thursday, April 4, 2013
Friday, March 8, 2013
My Role As Executive Pastor
Recently, I read a blog and saw a leadership video on the role of Executive Pastors. Being in that role of I have often been asked, “What
does the executive pastor do?” According to Dr. David Fletcher, there are three
different kinds of Executive Pastors: Overseer of operations, Ministry Strategist,
and the Second-in-Command.
My pastor, Rick Frie, explains my job as, “being responsible
for everything that happens outside of the worship service (except for building
and grounds).” With that being said, the overseer of operations (writing
checks, maintenance of facilities, dealing with insurance) is outside of my job description and I
rarely have to do anything with that. The closest responsibility I have to that
role would be my involvement as an ad hoc member of the finance team, but my
role is for ministry and budget oversight responsibilities.
For my is a combination of the
Ministry Strategist and the Second-in-Command. I work with the pastor to
clarify and fulfill the vision God has given him for our church. My duties
include goal setting and constant evaluations, while overseeing ministry and
church functions to free the pastor to shepherd the church. Oversight of our
spiritual development, ensuring that we have a process and measurement system
in place. When the Senior Pastor is out, I am the one held accountable for the
daily operations of the church, staff oversight, filling the pulpit, etc.
Additionally, I oversee our spiritual development, small groups, missions,
evangelism, discipleship, and assimilation of lives into our church family… and
other tasks assigned by the pastor. For example, I have been responsible for
three capital stewardship campaigns in my time at First Baptist Jenks, with a fourth campaign looming as we are preparing to expand our children ministry
facility.
I am not sure that there is an ideal job description for all
executive pastors, but I do believe the key is to make sure the person in that
role understands his job. Equally important is for the Senior Pastor to provide
his executive pastor with the authority to fulfill the responsibilities he has
been given and will be accountable for. Another key component is for everyone
on staff to understand what that job entails and the how that affects working
together as a team.
For me, I find great joy in being able to preach (about 8-12
times a year on Sunday mornings) and weekly on Wednesday nights. I love the
leadership development aspect of my job. God has given me an outlet for my
passion of missions, being able to oversee that area of the church. I
thoroughly enjoy being able to critically think about our ministry strategy and
evaluate how we are doing.
While there are times where the executive pastor role can
stretch you, it is in those moments where I find my effectiveness increase as I
naturally depend more on God. And be sure about it, God is the source for
anything good that comes from my job performance. He provides the ideas,
strength for execution, and a heart to fulfill His mission in my ministry
setting!
Monday, February 18, 2013
Agents of Blessing
February 17, 2013 I had the privilege of preaching a message called Agents of Blessing from John 9. The central theme is based largely off of Bruce Wilkinson's "You Were Born for This." As Christians, we must understand God wants to use us for his glory, to work the works of Him who sends us! This was a fun message that is applicable to Christians in all ages and stages of life! Here is a link to Agents of Blessing.
Wednesday, January 23, 2013
Walking with God
Saturday, January 19, 2013 I received a phone call around 9:00PM from my pastor asking me to fill in for him the following day, Sunday, January 20, 2013. The funny thing is that I had been contemplating calling him at that exact time to call in sick as well. Instead, I did what was necessary and put together a message from my heart on Walking with God. The whole message is an act of God, from how it fit together to even being able to deliver it at all. Although 2 Corinthians 12:19 had nothing to do with this sermon, God proved His grace is sufficient for me for His power is made perfect in weakness. Here is the sermon based off of Genesis 5:21-24 and Hebrews 11:5-6: Walking with God.
Monday, December 31, 2012
2012 in Review
1.
Dr. Hedgecock – Finally! I obtained my Doctor of
Ministry degree in May. So grateful it is finished, for the sacrifice of
Christy and my children, and the support of my friends who encouraged me along
the way: Kyle and Jamie, and so many more.
4.
Coleman dominated in Soccer, football, and school - I am really happy about sports and his early educational development.
5.
Clays
has one favorite in the world, and so far it is me!
2.
Mexico
– Christy & I went on a cruise stopping in Prgoresso (swimming in cenotes
and snorkeling & dunbuggying in Cozumel
3.
Chloe
is Reading and her team Repeated as champions in her basketball league
6.
KC
mission trip – The family went to KC and participated in the mission trip
together. It was great to share in God's commission as a family. This was a great memory!
7. Father/Son and Father/Daughter Campouts - I am not much of a camper, but I had a great time taking Coleman for an overnight campout in the Spring, and Chloe for an overnight campout in the Fall!
8. Interim Student Pastor – I was our interim youth pastor from January until May.
9. Great Wall Visit – The great wall visit was great, and it is great to be a man officially according to Chinese proverb/folklore... the funny thing is that this is nowhere near the best part of my trip to China, this just represents why this trip made the list!
10. Bible in a year – Typically, I will read ahead and skip a day here or there. In 2012, I read the daily allotment every single day. It was a great thing!
8. Interim Student Pastor – I was our interim youth pastor from January until May.
9. Great Wall Visit – The great wall visit was great, and it is great to be a man officially according to Chinese proverb/folklore... the funny thing is that this is nowhere near the best part of my trip to China, this just represents why this trip made the list!
10. Bible in a year – Typically, I will read ahead and skip a day here or there. In 2012, I read the daily allotment every single day. It was a great thing!
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
My Friend Zig
God has blessed me greatly throughout the years. He has
placed tremendous people in my path to learn and glean from. No one has had
more of an impact than Zig Ziglar. As a junior high student, I took a
leadership class based upon his book See You
at the Top. During that class I had heard he taught a Sunday School class
at FBC Dallas and wanted to visit it, but never did. As a first year seminary
student at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, I became frustrated just
going to school after a week or two and applied for a job at Prestonwood
Baptist as an intern for the Open Division. I had no clue what that even meant,
but ended up getting the job after connecting with the minister of that adult
division, David Goza.
Unbeknownst to me, the Open Division was an adult department
centered around big personalities that drew more than a age range by appealing
to people of all ages and life-stages. The true center of this division was one
teacher who drew over 500 people each week, Zig Ziglar! After 18 months of
working in this division, my boss David Goza left to go pastor a church. Soon
thereafter I received a promotion to become the Pastor of the Encouragers Class
(Zig’s class) and the Open Division minister. A fellow adult division minister later
told me that I only got the job because Zig had lobbied for me to have that job
to Pastor Dr. Jack Graham, saying “I was his guy” (the other guy meant that as
an insult, but I still think that is one of the coolest compliments I have ever
received!).
For the next three years I got to work for and with Mr.
Ziglar. Soon after my promotion, Zig asked me to teach his home Bible study. I
vividly remember the first Bible study. We sat down, I had prepared, but
honestly thought it was going to be him teaching and me listening. As I stared
waiting on him to talk, he said, “Well young man, let’s hear what God has
placed upon your heart for us.” From that point on, he sat and listened as I
taught in his home over the next few years. He never dominated the conversation,
never corrected me, he just listened and encouraged me, offering communication
advice every so often.
Every Saturday morning during my time at Prestonwood he
would call and ask me some sort of Bible question as he was preparing. Yes, he
would ask me a Bible question! Yes, he studied for his lesson every week. Zig
was the real deal and never took his role of teaching for granted. He was
diligent to prepare, even if he had taught that lesson or a similar one before.
Zig also had a distinct desire to leverage his fame for the
glory of God. He would talk about how he wanted to use his speaking platform to
share Jesus with others. Marketplace Christianity became his theme and emphasis
during my days with him. If he had a conference in Dallas, he would invite
people to his Encouragers Bible Fellowship class that and every Sunday morning
at Prestonwood. He was faithful in church, rarely missing and always sitting
front and center in the worship center. He loved the Bible, loved to learn,
loved to share, loved to teach. He made the most of his days.
More than any of that, I know Zig & Jean loved me. While
at Prestonwood, Zig had a severe case of diverticulitis. He had three code
blues, reviving each time and spent several weeks in the hospital. During those
weeks, his whole family made me feel like I was one of them. Zig & Jean always
had kind things to say to me, encouraging me in all walks of life. They would
make it a point to take me out to lunch, give me a hug, and even call just to check
in on me. One of my last dinners with Zig & Jean was in Tulsa at his hotel
when he came to speak. They listened about our life, and Zig kept telling me I
ought to write a book about what God had and was doing in my life.
Over the past few weeks there have been reports on his life
and the impact he made on so many. A common theme has been that he was the same
man in private as he was from the stage, which is totally true. Just as his
impact reached around the globe, his impact also reached people around their
hearts. A man in my church told me that he had the opportunity to meet Zig once
and visit with him for about ten minutes. He said that ever since that time he
felt like Zig truly was one of his friends. For me, that speaks to the legacy
of a man that was my friend too. A man that loved His Savior, loved his wife,
loved his children, loved his church, loved his friends, and loved me too. May
we all be encouraged by the encourager!
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