Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Christmas is over ... NOW WHAT?!?

As December winds down, you can hear it all across the fruited plain. A big sigh of relief. December is almost over.

What is supposed to be the month when we celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ has become a month filled with stress and an endless stream of parties, programs and family gatherings.

It's nice to get together with friends and family, but it would seem that the stress to buy gifts, to meet schedules and beat the deadlines in December is bringing us to the breaking point. Someday, we'll tip that scale, and all our over-scheduling for the holidays will come crashing down.

Here's a suggestion: make plans today to build some margin into your schedule next December. You have eleven months to prepare your "can't make that event" speech.

Monday, December 27, 2010

Monday Ten

1. Christmas is over. I'm both glad and sad.

2. This was one of the best Christmas seasons ever for my wife and kids. We just had a good time all month long.

3. This Christmas season also had some sad moments. One of Rebekah's aunt's passed away earlier this year. The woman's husband dropped by for a visit a couple of weeks ago. You could see the pain in his eyes.

4. Christmas seems to get busier each year. I think we're at a tipping point in society. It's time to start scaling things back. Fewer presents. Less debt. Fewer parties. Lighter schedules. Too many people are stressed to the breaking point during December. Jesus didn't come to this planet to serve as the founder of the most stressful time of the year.

5. My family and I went to see the new Narnia movie on Christmas Day. "Voyage of the Dawn Treader" was very good, but having read the book, I noticed areas where the filmmakers left out parts of the book, combined others, and added stuff that wasn't in the novel. Even still, it was a good, exciting movie.

6. I hope they keep making the Narnia movies. There are still four books to go. I especially want to see movies for "The Silver Chair" and "The Last Battle."

7. With Christmas behind us, we've now returned to our normal playlist at KWFC. The change of pace is nice each December.

8. Christmas was almost ruined by ice this year. At 8 a.m. Christmas morning, the KWFC transmitter went off because of ice build up. We were fine by noon, though.

9. This week is a number crunching week at KWFC. Each year, I tabulate the top songs for our year-end countdown New Year's Eve night.

10. Next week's TEN will contain a list of goals I have for 2011. Goals are good to have. We should all take time to plan out our futures as best we can.

Monday, December 13, 2010

Monday Ten

1. Today is my baby's birthday. He is growing up so fast.

2. What a fantastic weekend, albeit tiring, in our household. Our two oldest boys were part of a children's choir that sang "Christmas Time Is Here" in all six services at North Point Church. It was a great experience.

3. During the Christmas season, North Point goes to great lengths to get people into the church, so they can experience the love and message of Jesus. More on this in a moment.

4. We began the weekend with North Point's 2nd Saturday event. We hosted over 1,500 people (parents and their kids) who came through the church to receive food for Christmas dinner, toys for the kids, medical checkups, haircuts and photos with Santa, all for free.

5. My wife, my oldest son and I served as "hosts" for the 2nd Saturday families that had registered for the event. This was my wife's first 2nd Saturday she has been able to attend. She loved it.

6. After finishing up, we took some of the leftover food and gave it away in our neighborhood. That was fun, too.

7. Rebekah's uncle came from three hours away to visit in between 2nd Saturday and the evening church services. It was good to see him. We sent him on his way with some homemade cookies.

8. Christmas is in full swing everywhere we turn. I am very excited about this time of year. At KWFC, we have made the switch to all-Christmas music until December 26 (outside of our preaching/teaching programming).

9. Referencing #3, I know some folks who have been in church a long time may not care for the high entertainment value our church places in the services at Christmas. Our goal is to draw people into a church service and tell them the exciting news of Jesus' birth.

10. Last thought on this for now, Perry Noble of NewSpring Church in Anderson, South Carolina, is fond of saying that Jesus didn't come to this earth to hang from a cross and rise three days later so we could have boring church services. I'm glad North Point puts life, energy and fun into church. By the way, to date, our Christmas Unplugged series (three weeks worth) has seen over 200 people commit their lives to Jesus. That is AWESOME!

Monday, December 6, 2010

Monday Ten

1. It's the MOST WONDERFUL TIME OF THE YEAR. Just had to get that off my chest. I'm lovin' the Christmas season right now.

2. Mizzou will play Iowa in the Insight Bowl. It's the football rivalry that could've been ... had the Big Ten offered expansion to Missouri. Instead, for Tiger fans it will be the "hey, at least this ain't the Holiday Bowl" bowl.

3. My fantasy football team will finish the regular season as the #3 team. Sadly, my team is currently playing like #2.

4. My wife and I have the majority of our Christmas shopping completed. Now, it's time for the wrapping.

5. I have three vacation days remaining in the year. So, I'm going to turn the next two weekends into extended ones.

6. One of the best things about this time of the year is what we do at our church. We go ALL OUT to make our Christmas services extra special and a lot of fun.

7. This year's Christmas Unplugged series (through two weeks) at North Point Church has already had 169 people declare their faith in Jesus. Christmas will be extra special for those folks this year.

8. I love my church, and really enjoy the people I get to volunteer with in the kids area and ushering.

9. This coming weekend will be awesome, again. The services at NPC will have our kids singing, and lasers lighting up the auditorium. Plus, 2nd Saturday is the annual Christmas extravaganza. We'll be giving out stuff to help needy families.

10. If you ever wandered if your church could tackle the problems in your community, the answer is "YES!" You should come check out some of NPC's community outreach activities, and see if you can make them your own.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Wednesday Ten

1. I took a couple of extra days off from work, and today am just getting back to the blog.

2. I got to spend some extra time with my bride. That was awesome!

3. Had a great Thanksgiving visiting my folks and the in-laws.

4. Our church kicked off the Christmas season this past weekend. Over 4,800 people came out on the holiday weekend to hear the first message.

5. Our church makes a huge deal out of Christmas. It's like a month-long celebration with great things each weekend.

6. I know some folks, especially those who grew up in church, would take issue with some of the special bits that our church does, but people come out to see what we do, and they hear great preaching at the same time.

7. 49 people gave their lives to Jesus. That makes the extra effort worth it.

8. Today is World AIDS Day.

9. HIV/AIDS is destroying many countries, especially those in the third world. It is also on the verge of destroying population on the African continent.

10. The Church can help fix this problem.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Green Week

I see where the network television channels owned by NBC Universal are once again in "Green Week" status. Essentially, this is NBC corporate's somewhat annual push to encourage people to buy environmentally friendly products in an effort to save energy...and save the world.

All week long, you will see television shows, and news stories about the importance of salvaging the environment from those who would destroy it.

There's only one problem. Only one tiny, little problem. The NBC network chain is owned by a company that directly benefits from your buying "green" products -- namely, General Electric.

NBC ran into trouble the last time they pulled out this campaign, because they sold out any news credibility they had, so they could push pro-green stories. The catch-22 really backfired on them, but since the dollar is mighter than any criticism, we get blasted all week long with how we need to buy GE products.

Convenient, too, is when NBC Universal/GE chose to run this "green" campaign. It's no mere chance that this propoganda campaign hits televisions the week leading to Black Friday.

GE and NBC Universal are repulsive. They have no shame. Selling their integrity so they can coax people into going "green" right a the time of year when consumers will be spending a lot of money.

There isn't anything necessarily wrong with cleaning up our communities, but promoting environmentalism just so you can make a buck is wrong. Shame on you GE.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Monday Ten

1. Another great week and weekend. It all began with prize winning chili.

2. Our church held an event Friday night to try to get people into connect groups. As part of the fun, each group had to bring a pot of chili for judging. My wife brewed our pot, and came out a winner.

3. As a result of the win, my group gets a free meal at Red Robin in the near future. My wife will, too.

4. Our pastor was in India this week. Our church's new video campus pastor spoke in his place, and did a great job.

5. NASCAR's season came to a close yesterday. Fortunately, only three months until Daytona.

6. I guess it goes without saying that it's also only three months before baseball players report for spring training.

7. And, just under three months before the Superbowl.

8. Oh, and if you haven't figured it out yet, Thanksgiving is Thursday.

9. I'm thankful for a wonderful wife. Our home would not function well without her.

10. I'm also thankful for my three, healthy, yet rowdy boys. Life would be duller without them.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Who Will Your Decision Impact

One of the mistakes new leaders can make is assuming they have the inside track on all the knowledge of their position. It is easy, especially when you are inexperienced and full of energy, to convinced yourself that you know all there is to know about leading people.

I used to be such a leader. My first real leadership gig was heading up the Sunday School program at the church we attended at the time. I was into reading all the books on how to grow ministries and leading people.

I had a lot of head knowledge. But, I lacked any real-world experience.

One of the first lessons I learned was that a leader needs to be careful to include in the decision making process, the very people his decision will impact.

I made the mistake of announcing changes to the program without first consulting the teachers it would impact. The ideas fell flat, partly because the teachers and their classes weren't ready for them, and also because no one likes to be blind-sided with big changes.

To do it over again, I would have first sat down with all my class leaders and asked for ideas and discussion on how to improve and expand the program. Allowing their input would have brought probably success to the changes that needed to be made.

So, if you are new in leadership, be sure to include those people your decisions are going to impact most.

Monday, November 15, 2010

Monday Ten

Today's Ten involve meetings.

1. Staff meetings have their pros and cons.

2. They are great for communicating what is happening, and coming up in an organization.

3. They are great for breaking down what worked and didn't work in past events.

4. They are great allowing people to collaborate and share ideas on projects.

5. They are great for getting your staff to feel more like a community.

6. They are bad, because they must stay on agenda to be productive.

7. They are bad, because it is too easy to chase rabbits.

8. They are bad, because they tend to not respect people's time.

9. They are bad, because they eat into productivity.

10. They are necessary for any organization to function properly, but have to be managed well to prevent them from becoming a waste of time.

Friday, November 12, 2010

Care for the Orphans

My wife sent me a message earlier this week that said, "Isn't this a crazy thought ...
If only 7% of Christians would say 'yes' to adoption there would be no more orphans- worldwide!"

November is the national focus month on orphans and adoption. According to the Cry of the Orphan organization:

  • Over 140 million orphans and waiting children under the age of 18 have lost one or both parents.
  • Sub-Saharan Africa, with 48.3 million orphans, has the highest proportion of children who are orphans at 12%.
  • Over 15 million children have lost a parent due to AIDS, and that number is expected to rise to over 20 million by 2010.
  • Without AIDS, the total number of double orphans in sub-Saharan Africa would have declined between 1990 and 2010. AIDS, however, will push the number of double orphans in the region from 9 million to more than 10 million by 2010.

The Church can cure this problem. I'll say it again, THE CHURCH CAN CURE THIS PROBLEM.

The fact that the Church has not stepped up en masse speaks to a heart issue. We aren't fully living the commands of Jesus. It's one thing to recognize a problem. But, recognition alone won't fix it. The Bible requires that we do something to fix it. Jesus requires that we do something about it.

So, here's a suggestion: visit the Cry of the Orphan website, and get your church involved in finding homes for orphans. I know this is a crazy notion, but why not give money to members of your congregation so they can pay the adoption fees, and give these children a Christ-centered home.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

How He Loves

Our church praise team began performing John Mark McMillin's "How He Loves" recently. It is becoming one of my favorites. This performance is from this past weekend's Parade of Changed Lives at North Point Church.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Starting Adult Life as a Financial Slave

Financial advice guru Dave Ramsey is fond of the phrase, "Debt is Dumb." Now, while Dave likes to grab a person's attention with what he says, the truth is that debt is not just dumb, it's crippling.

Earlier this week, I saw a national report that said Missouri's 2009 college graduates left with degrees and an average debt load of $21,360. Own that number for a moment. That means that by the time these young adults set out to begin their careers, they're doing so with both feet, their knees and their hips in the ground.

Having used student loans a couple of times during my time in college, I know it is way too easy for a student to get a loan. Sure, students need a way to pay for college, but it is too easy to just sign on the dotted line, and get your check for tuition, books, supplies, etc. When you are a young adult, you don't fully understand that you are essentially signing away several years of your life trying to pay that loan back.

What this number also tells me is that there are too many parents out there that either cannot provide for their children's higher learning, or didn't plan ahead by saving for those expensive years.

Pulling a page from the Dave Ramsey book, college students should avoid debt at all costs. Work your way through college, even if it means that it will take you longer to graduate. It's far better to stay an extra year or two in school, and leave with no debt and a bright future.

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Parade of Changed Lives

North Point Church in Springfield is all about changed lives. Each week, the staff and volunteers aspire to reach people by putting together a God-honoring, unforgettable experience. This past weekend was the most unforgettable one on record...at least in my opinion.

We were wrapping up our ImpACT series, and at the end, when Pastor Tommy put out the plea for people to pledge financial gifts toward ImpACT, a parade of people went to the stage. Their lives have all been changed through the work of North Point Church.

Never before have I seen such emotion, such celebration, such a standing ovation (in all six services). A definate "YEA GOD" moment. That's one of the reason's I love this church.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Monday Ten

So, my wife says to me this morning, "You need to blog." And, she's right. So, here is today's Ten

1. I write a lot about the Church, and Christianity on this blog. That's because I have a passion for the Church, and for people.

2. There are a lot of great churches in our world. Some have a lot of people who attend, and some have very few.

3. The size of a church isn't important. The strength of a church is best defined in how well they live out Jesus' teachings.

4. In my opinion, the greatest plague affecting the American church is "club-itis." This is a condition where the people inside the church focus more on their own well-being, and neglect the people outside the walls.

5. My current pastor once told me that every church, new and old, fight this. The natural tendency of any church is to start out with an outward focus. But, as the organization ages and matures, it tends to switch to an inward focus. It's at this point that growth and effectiveness plateau. Death is on the horizon.

6. One of the best ways my church, North Point Church, maintains that outward focus is through our ImpACT program.

7. ImpACT is designed to battle four giants in our world: Spiritual Emptiness, Disease, Poverty and Illiteracy. North Point is all about changing lives, and ImpACT is a huge tool we use to achieve that goal.

8. For the past three weekends, our church has been focused on this program, now two years old.

9. This year's main ImpACT thrust is to expand the outreach of North Point by opening our first video campus on East Sunshine Street in Springfield this coming January.

10. Our ImpACT campaign culminated this weekend with the most moving and wonderful moment in the church's history. As the congregation was being challenged to make a financial committment toward ImpACT, a group of people who have been impacted by the church walked on stage in a Parade of Changed Lives. Extremely moving. Every church should celebrate the victories of people, once dead in sin, and now alive in Jesus.

Monday, October 25, 2010

Monday Ten

1. I am so excited right now, I'm about to burst.

2. This weekend was one of the best ever at North Point Church.

3. Over the Fourth of July weekend, we baptized 440 people as part of the Freedom Splash celebration. This past weekend was the first ever Fall Splash, and 228 were baptized inside our Family Theatre.

4. Add those two figures with the 34 from earlier in the year, and NPC has baptized 702 people to date this year. That's FREAKIN' AWESOME!

5. My family and I caught one of the baptismal times Saturday night, and I saw another Sunday after volunteering.

6. There is something super-special about large baptismal services.

7. We saw kids, adults, and entire families all go public with their faith in Jesus this weekend.

8. It was really cool to see people come out of the water celebrating how Jesus changed their lives.

9. Pastor Tommy wrote about Fall Splash on his blog today.

10. I snapped several photos with my camera phone. While they're not the greatest photos, I caught one that captures the spirit of Fall Splash. This is my favorite.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

The Hard Stuff

In his September 1962 address at Rice University, President Kennedy announced the ramping up of the nation's space program with plans to put a man on the moon. The most memorable phrase from that 17+ minute address noted that we choose to go to the moon and do other difficult tasks, "not only because they are easy, but because they are hard."

It's been almost 50 years since that speech, and our culture has changed to the point that we would rather cast off the hard things in favor of the easy. We especially see this in young adults who want today what it took their parents 30 years to gain.

The byproduct is huge consumer debt, an entitlement culture and an aversion to the difficult things in life.

Sadly, this has also impacted the Christian church in America. Too often we will turn a blind eye to the needs of our communities and our world, because we recognize the challenge is hard...to hard for one person.

Helen Keller once said, "I’m only one, but still, I am one. I can not do everything, but I can do something. Because I can not do everything, I will not refuse to do that something that I can do.”

In my life, I am realizing that constantly fixing the easy problems is only temporarily fulfilling. It is the hard challenges that shape my character. It is the hard things that are truly rewarding.

Recently, I have made a personal decision to not just settle for the "easy." Instead, I can really impact my world if I am willing to tackle the hard stuff -- the stuff no one else wants to touch.

How about you? What is the one or two challenges God is presenting to you? What is it that the Almighty has determined is your cause to fight -- your challenge to conquer?

Monday, October 18, 2010

Monday Ten

1. I just realized that I hadn't posted anything new since September. That's because October has been super-busy. Sometimes, you have to develop some margin in your life. This blog was it.

2. Things are starting to slow down, so I'll hopefully be back with more postings.

3. My wife celebrated her ...-something birthday this past week. (Her age is for her to disclose.) We had a blast going to a dinner theatre show and boat cruise.

4. Saturday night church was very good, although my KidPoint class was chaotic. It must have been something in the air, because the guy who taught the class after me said his group was a bit unruly too.

5. Sunday was very productive. I had a wiring project that I've been planning for some time. I was able to get it done Sunday afternoon. It required an extended stay under my house. But, in the end, it was all good.

6. North Point Church had another connect.me event, and I gained five men for my mid-week men's group. That's a stark contrast to my first connect.me when I only gained one.

7. This week will be exciting. My wife and I have been invited to tour our church's new video campus, and hear from our pastor about the vision for the church.

8. For the past week, I have been listening to and digesting the messages from NewSpring Church's leadership conference. Check out the podcasts here.

9. At that conference, Francis Chan re-told something his wife had realized. It is our human nature to try and plan out our future with three, five or ten year plans. But, when you read the Bible, it seems perfectly normal that the people in the Bible didn't know what would happen next.

10. I'm planning on blogging this later in the week, but one of the things God is showing me right now is that working the hard things results in some of the best things.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

I'm Back...Sort of

October has turned out to be one of the busiest months this year, and the need for a little margin has left me blogless for several days.

But, the lack of entries could manifest itself for a couple more weeks while the business of busyness takes care of itself.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Influence Conference Recap

A couple of weeks ago, I had the opportunity to take in the Influence Conference, hosted by the Assemblies of God. The one day event featured the likes of Anne Jackson, Tony Morgan and Jon Acuff. What follows is a summary of the day's speakers.

The conference was designed to help attendees discover different ways of influence. Each speaker had a little Q&A after their speech. The guy who got the best response was Robert Patterson, who co-wrote Leading From the Second Chair. He talked about trying to lead when your boss is a spear-thrower (see: David and King Saul).

His encouragement for people who are having spears thrown at them was to not quit, but to try and find some areas of contentment, and to do their best, commit the issue to God, and try to stick it out. But, ultimately, it may come to you needing to depart the organization.

Acuff is a funny guy. The crowd loved him. And, reminescent of the Catylist fiasco a couple of years ago where Acuff rented a conference room for all of his blog followers to gather but no one showed up, the Influence Conference people assigned him an assistant to help with crowd control during his book signing time. Another lady and I were the only ones there.

Acuff's main theme was getting participants to use humor when they teach, because people typically will gauge a message on the first couple of minutes. If they decide they've heard it before, or know what the speaker will say, they go ahead and mentally "shelve" it. But, humor has a way of keeping people on their toes, and helps prevent tune out.

Tony Morgan talked a lot about being intentional in how we construct our churches. Our vision and mission needs to be clearly defined and easily understandible. We also need to avoid doing a bunch of stuff that takes us away from our mission. He pointed out that a lot of churches like to fill up their time and resources on a bunch of ministries. Those ministries are all valid on their own, but they also drain resources from the vision/mission. His suggestion was to evaluate ministries, and keep those doing well, eliminate those that stink, and look for ways to reorganize those that are marginal. On the marginal ones, he said that sometimes we have to rethink how we do those ministries, because there might be a better way to do them.

He also pointed out that churches who have a lot to offer will tend to not have many takers, but those who limit their offerings will have more "buyers."

Anne Jackson spoke a lot about how we can influence people by being open and honest. Too often we, in church, gloss over our junk, label it as FINE, and try to make it go away. We put on the phony happy face, and pretend all is good. But, when we do that, we eliminate opportunities to "be real" and interactive with non-christians. She said that the broken world needs to hear about our brokenness. Otherwise, they can't relate to what we've found in Jesus. Another memorable quote from her, "We think about the consequences of our actions, but rarely the consequences of concealment."

Scott Wilson from the Oaks church in Texas talked about "what is normal" in the context of the church. Too often, we have equated normalcy in the church to be a lifeless, almost Christless Christianity. He used scripture to illustrate that "normal" for the church is quite abnormal compared to the world.

He said that "normal" is always being amazed, but never surprised (at God's work). We should have higher expectations than just coming together in the church. He defined normal for the church as compassion, evangelism, struggles & miracles. And, he added that our people (in the church) won't know what is normal unless (leaders) tell them & demonstrate it.

At that point, he addressed the struggles we face, and said that God uses those to shape our character. (By the way, Patterson also went down this trail and pointed out that David had to have King Saul go after him in order for David's on version of the tyrant to be destroyed within himself.) Wilson said that the struggles are normal, especially for believers that desire to be filled with the Spirit and power (reference Luke 4-Jesus temptation).

He wrapped it up by talking about church service, and how most times churches will hold community events or service projects where we work in the community, but we ignore the stuff that the community is doing on its own. Their town mayor confronted him on that, and afterward the church developed a plan where they partner with the community. An easy example that he cited might be a fall festival. He said the church fall festival would attract a few thousand people, but the community's festival on the same day would only get a couple hundred people. Now, the church has ditched it's festival, and has provided the city's event with volunteers and resources.

His side-organization, actnormal.org, has developed a program and applications for churches to be able to track their congregational involvement in the community. So, you could go volunteer down at the local homeless shelter on your own, then log your time in the system, and the church gets data on how their people are working with the community.

Monday, September 27, 2010

Monday Ten

1. OK, so last week passed and I didn't get those posts up about the Influence Conference. Life happens. I will effort to get those up this week.

2. I had one of the best Zone 45 classes ever at church this past Saturday night. Two boys asked Jesus into their lives. That totally rocked!!! Way to go God!!!

3. Last week, I felt God prompting me to offer an invitation during my class. I was so pumped going into my class that it was actually hard focusing on the lesson.

4. Last week, I also felt burdened that a lot of the kids in my class didn't know their Bibles very well. I was concerned, too, that some may not even have Bibles. As a result, we gave four new Bibles to kids who needed them. And, we will soon be starting a program to teach the children the books of the Bible, and how to find stuff in them.

5. I volunteer with some of the best people you could find to work with in church.

6. A lot of people are intimidated at the thought of working with kids. I have taught adults and elementary kids. My experience is that the kids are easier to teach. Adults come into classes with a life full of junk. Kids are just kids.

7. I have seen several people volunteer to teach kids, but after a few weeks they give up, thinking that children are too hard to handle in class settings. The truth is that you have to spend time with them before they understand what you expect out of them. Sure, they have their rowdy moments, but that's where you have your bluff moments.

8. Saturday night was the first time I had any children accept Christ in class. I'm hoping this is the beginning of God doing some amazing things.

9. I almost talked myself out of giving an invitation Saturday night. Things weren't going as I had planned during the class, and I was running short on time. But, I knew God wanted the invitation to be offered, so I made time at the end of class. Now, Heaven will have two more occupants.

10. Finally, I heard about a girl who attended our church this past weekend. My understanding is that this was her first visit to any church. After attending her first-grade class, she summed it up by exclaiming, "I love this place!"

Monday, September 20, 2010

Monday Ten

Another great weekend is in the books. Let's review:

1. It's vacation time around the radio station. I'm actually on the job, but last week and this one finds us short on staff.

2. Everyone is needing a break before October. I think we have a big event scheduled for each week in October at the station: Pregnancy Care Center's Walk 4 Life, Mount Vernon's Apple Butter Makin' Days, KWFC Day at the Great Passion Play, and the annual Pastors' Appreciation Luncheon.

3. Over the weekend, I was asked to name one thing that most people don't know about me. I could have easily said that radio people don't make near the money that everyone thinks we do.

4. The one thing I listed is .... Sorry, it's a secret.

5. I don't like making decisions, because it seems lately that every decision I make is a big one. I made another big one at church this past week, but it'll be a good one.

6. I was faced with the option of staying with my kids class and moving to the ushering team. Fortunately, I was able to make a win-win decision. I am keeping my Saturday evening kids class, AND joining the Sunday morning ushering team.

7. I attended a great leadership conference last Thursday, and got to hear from speakers like Anne Jackson, Jon Acuff, Tony Morgan and more. There was plenty of good info pertaining to influence that came from that day.

8. This week, I'll be sharing some of the insights learned from the Influence Conference.

9. Last Wednesday morning, I launched a new men's Bible study group. I'm excited about that.

10. My wife has her birthday next month. She got very excited last week when I told her what we were doing for her special day. Sorry, it's a secret.

Friday, September 17, 2010

What's Your Contingency Plan

The Great Ice Storm of ....

Over the past three or four winters in our area, you can insert the year depending on where you lived when one of the ice storms hit and put people without power and heat for several days. I remember the one that hit my hometown in 2007. We were without electricity for 12 days. Some in our area were without power for three weeks.

Now, ice storms aren't that uncommon in our parts. There is typically the threat of at least one or two every winter. But, those are usually small accumulations. Rarely do we see more than an inch. In 2007, we did...and we weren't prepared.

What followed was a rush on area stores for food supplies, generators, fuel, etc. Quite a few people temporarily vacated their homes (like us) to stay with friends and family who had power.

Ultimately, few people had a backup plan in place. Most developed a plan on the fly.

Now, if another such ice storm hit, many people in our area would have a plan B. A lot of homeowners now own generators, and take ice storm chatter more seriously.

In life, many times we don't have a contingency plan when stuff, either good or bad, happens. Without proper planning, we miss out on the good stuff, because we don't know how to receive it. And, we get hit harder by the bad stuff, because there isn't a plan B.

I was reminded of this yesterday at a conference here in town. The event was just wrapping up when power was cut to the building by a car crash just down the road. The backup plan was made up on the fly.

Proverbs 13:16 talks about how wise people plan ahead. Proverbs 21:5 mentions that good work and proper planning have their advantages.

Plan ahead. Think out the future. Sure, some things cannot be fully prepared for. But, if you do your best to think ahead, you'll have a pretty good idea of what direction to take when disaster does strike.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

What We're Here For

I was reminded this week of why it is so important to create environments in the church that meet people on their different levels and in ways they can understand.

This reminder came in an email from the woman who leads North Point Church's elementary area, and dealt with the new environment for 4th and 5th graders.

The class for this group received a little boost earlier this year when the room we use was repainted with a slick color scheme, and dubbed Zone 45. That was nice and all, but the class was still the same as before the change.

Having taught this class for over a year, one of the things I recognized was that the kids leaving 5th grade weren't quite prepared for the 6th grade environment. Fortunately, this month has brought a change that will meet this need.

Zone 45 has moved into a new, bigger room. This room has three, widescreen televisions, video games, fooseball, and a jazzy decorating scheme that sets it apart from any other area in the church. To call it "cool" is an understatement.

More volunteers have joined the classes, making the environment easier to manage and teach. The lessons are still the awesome ones we used before the move, but with more adult help, they are easier to facilitate.

Prior to this latest move, some kids wanted to skip the class and go do something else, something more fun. Now, they can't wait to get to Zone 45. Their excitement for church excites me. Perhaps as they grow older they will remember that church can be an exciting place to be a part of, and will continue to include it in their lives.

Monday, September 13, 2010

Monday Ten

1. Wiring projects are not fun. They're great once they are completed, but today at my employer, we are running audio wire for the third time this summer. It's a long project, and ceiling tiles plus insulation are not fun when they fall on your head.

2. The NFL season is under way. My fantasy football team isn't faring very well for the first week. I need a huge night from San Diego's Phillip Rivers in order to beat my boss in our head-to-head matchup.

3. I love NFL games, but only really if my teams are playing well. The St. Louis Rams showed lots of promise on Sunday. Tonight, we find out if Kansas City can muster some offense.

4. This past weekend was a busy one for me and church.

5. On Saturday night, I taught the 4th and 5th grade kids in our new Zone 45 environment. It was very cool. Plus, I had three other adults with me, so crowd control was easy.

6. I returned Sunday to train as an usher. I'm trying it out for a month to see if it is a good fit.

7. This could be one of the toughest decisions I've ever made about serving in church. I would likely be giving up something I really enjoy for an opportunity I'm not totally sure about. Praying about that one.

8. This Wednesday morning, I start a new men's connect group through our church (North Point). I'm starting with just three guys (myself included). Most guys aren't interested in a Bible study before going to work. Personally, I'd rather do it in the morning instead of using up family time. I think it'll grow with time.

9. I love serving people through my church. Serving through your local church can be one of the most enjoyable opportunites you'll be able to experience. Plus, it can make an eternal difference.

10. People have all sorts of gifts and abilities. If you're a Christian, you should be using them through the work of your local church to serve other people, especially those that don't know Jesus.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

To Burn Or Not To Burn

I've been mulling over the discussions about this Saturday's planned demonstration by a Florida pastor to burn a stack of Korans (equivalent of the Muslim bible). The debate rages across the country and around the world about whether or not the Rev. Terry Jones should go ahead with the book burning as part of the September 11th terror attack remembrance he has dubbed "International Burn A Koran Day."

Political leaders around the world are running scared that Rev. Jones' actions will fuel terrorist actions. Meanwhile, Jones' supporters (at least 14,400 according to his Facebook page) point that the Islamic extremists regularly burn Christian Bibles, and attack both Christians and Jews with a strong desire to blot both from this planet.

So, I figure this discussion needs some no-brainer talk.

1) It has struck me that the political leaders who are afraid of insulting terrorists are reacting very much similar to the way the world did when Hitler was invading European countries. The key word then was Appeasement. The actions of our current set of leaders (and those around the world) remind me of the cowards who let Germany and Italy run amok through Europe, because they were afraid of war.

2) Let's be honest, Islamic terrorists don't need a reason to murder people. They do it for sport, and in the name of their religion. Peaceful Muslims will react much the same way Christians do Bible burnings: get angry, voice their displeasure, and maybe demonstrate a little. But, those who will use this an an excuse for violence never needed it as an excuse. Terrorists kill. That's just what they do.

It's at this point that someone will probably drag out the crusades or the inquisitions as proof that Christianity is a misguided religion that also supports extremist views. The only problem with that argument is that Jesus never taught us to hate our neighbor. The crusades and Spanish inquisition were based on twisted misuses of Scripture. So, to bring that argument is like comparing apples and oranges.

And, going back to #1, a scared bunch of world leaders will only entice terrorists to kill more. The only answer to terrorism is a strong military force.

3) My third point pulls an illustration from Jesus and one from Paul. Paul wrote that everything was permissible for him, but not everything was beneficial. He wrote in regards to eating and drinking, issues some of the early Jewish and Gentile Christians were struggling with. But, I think we can use the point to mention that, even in America where we have the freedom to burn flags, Bibles, etc., not everything is beneficial (or wise).

Taking this to the next level, Jesus told us to love our neighbor as ourselves. He also told us to go into the world and share His message with all peoples. By his planned actions, the Rev. Jones will be forfeiting any chance to ever love or minister to Muslims. He will be building a steel wall between himself and them that will nearly impossible to break down.

In addition, part of loving your neighbor as yourself has to do with respect. The Islamic extremists have no respect for Christianity. Jesus taught that the best way to lead people to Him would be by loving and respecting people (opposite of the world system).

As such, the Rev. Jones should fore go his book burning and just have a prayer time...and maybe some fried chicken.

UPDATE: The pastor late this afternoon decided to call off his demonstration after Christian leaders urged him to do so. Good move.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Hypocrites: Part 2 of 2

Yesterday, I wrote about how we Christians should be in agreement with those who don't believe in Jesus that many times Christians (correction, all the time) are hypocritical.

That being said, let's be realistic about one thing. The people criticizing Christianity for its hypocrites have also likely never read the Bible. If they had, they would realize the truth that we all have fallen short of God's standard (Jesus for those who didn't read yesterday's post).

Instead of getting defensive, I suggested yesterday that we need to be in agreement. Christians are hypocrites. Even our best actions can't close the gap between us and Jehovah (God for those of you new to the blog). Jesus is what is required to do that.

Now, keeping in mind that people who don't believe in Jesus have likely never read the Bible, or at least the great majority of it, we need to counter their belief that Christians are hypocrites by living a lifestyle that defuses those claims.

Romans 12 is a great study on how this works. The Apostile Paul, who wrote Romans, starts out by telling us to let God transform our way of thinking, and acting. Then, Paul gives us some easy examples of what this "alternative lifestyle" looks like.

He tells us to not pretend that we love people, which is what a lot of Christians in America are accused of doing. Instead, he says we should REALLY love them.

Hate the stuff in this world that is wrong and cling to what is right. Human trafficking, poverty, disease, abuse, murder, illiteracy, homelessness, etc. This is another area where the Church in America has taken a big hit. For too long, we have turned a blind eye while the world has suffered. We've ignored the poor, the widowed and the orphaned. And, I think it's because we forgot how to care for them. Over time, the Church stopped teaching believers to not just hate the wrongs, but then to do something about them.

Verse 11 is especially pointed at the American Church today, because we have grown lazy in our relationship with God. We've been conditioned over the past 50 years that the spiritual care of our neighbors is the hired pastor, and not our own duty. And, our church services have gradually become dull, boring and indifferent. All of which violate the commands of this verse.

The rest of the chapter fills in a lot more of this discussion, and you seriously need to read it rather than wait for some blogger to write about it. Romans 12 is truely an application chapter.

But, before we leave our discussion on the Christian hypocrite, Romans 12 gives us a couple of words of advice to help diffuse the hypocrite claim. Doing these two things will truely set you apart from the crowd, and your non-believing friends will take notice, and want to know what's inside of you.

  • Do things in such a way that everyone can see you are honorable.
  • And, Don’t let evil conquer you, but conquer evil by doing good.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Hypocrites: Part 1 of 2

If you have ever tried to talk to someone about becoming a follower of Jesus, you've no doubt heard the line about Christians being hypocrites.

One of the biggest arguments against Christianity is that people who call themselves Christ-followers are very hypocritical. In other words, the argument is that Christians say they believe the Bible and Jesus, but don't live a lifestyle that follows those teachings.

For the next couple of days, I'm going to tackle this topic. Today, I want to speak to the Christian that encounters this line in their discussions. The natural tendency is to defend and protect. In other words, we like to point out that not every person who says they believe in Jesus is a devil in sheeps clothing.

But, I think that is the wrong approach. You see, the truth is that we actually ARE wicked by our very nature. The truth is that each one of us who calls ourselves Christian is hypocritical. The Bible says that ALL have sinned and fallen short of God's standard. God's standard is Jesus. When you look at perfection, it is Jesus. Not a single person on this globe (or off it) can match God's glorious standard.

Isaiah 64:6 says that we miss God's standard so badly that even our good works, the things that we conclude are righteous are filthy rags when compared to God's standard. Translation: Our best behavior, which by far surpasses our bad behavior, is still not good enough to close the gap that sin creates between God and ourselves.

Fortunately, God sent Jesus, and as Romans 3:21-22 point out, Jesus closes that gap. God made the way for man to be reconciled to Him, and that way is Jesus.

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Reasons To Celebrate

Anytime there is life change in God's kingdom -- anytime someone gives their life to Jesus -- that is a reason to celebrate.

Read about two of them today.

Elevation Church saw 581 people commit their lives to Jesus this past weekend.

Newspring Church saw 516 saved from an eternity separated from Jesus.

Monday, August 30, 2010

Monday Ten

1. This past week was a true whirlwind of activity. It was also a lot of fun.

2. The Southern Gospel Picnic at Silver Dollar City started last Thursday. As part of our involvement, the KWFC staff went to hand out fans on Friday. The KWFC fan is a very popular item with the peeps.

3. My family and I spent the weekend at the Grand Country Inn to make it a big weekend for us. The hotel is okay -- a typical one room, two bed type of room that served our needs for a sleeping place, but not much more. It was a far cry from the Chase Hotel we stayed at in Overland Park, Kansas, a few weeks ago, mainly due to the square feet available.

4. Part of the Grand Country stay included unlimited access to the Splash Country waterpark. Again, it was okay, but didn't live up to the hype they put into advertising. Even still, my kids had a blast, and I enjoyed the Lazy River (could've spent the whole day on an inner tube in that thing).

5. Sunday was our big day. My oldest son turned twelve, so we celebrated by going to Silver Dollar City. Beautiful weather, great time riding, and we discovered that my middle son is now tall enough to ride any ride except Wildfire on his own. He was super excited about that.

6. Came back home Sunday night for dinner at Cheddars and ice cream cake from Dairy Queen. Good times.

7. By the way, I am hoping for some great deals from all the places I'm name dropping. It's probably wishful thinking, though.

8. In all, it was great to relax for a few days, and now it's time to return to another busy work week.

9. As an aside, our weekend getaway caused us to miss the new service schedule at North Point Church. Saturday night's are still the same, but a fourth service (video message) launched Sunday morning.

10. I'm also excited about the new Zone 45 for 4th and 5th grade kids. New room, bigger room, and tons of cool stuff for the kids. I missed the debut, but can't wait to experience it this weekend.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Where's Our Heart

A few weeks ago, I was in a public setting with a little over a thousand people at a Christian event. During that event, someone gave a report about a ministry effort outside the country that had seen thousands of people come into a salvation relationship with Jesus.

This was a huge report. Yet, it was greeted with only a smattering of applause. What should have been received with celebration was relatively ignored.

That begs the question: When did we Christians in America become so numb to the work of Jesus that we stop celebrating Him and those He has drawn to Himself?

Elsewhere, I see efforts in churches to get out into their communities completely ignored by the congregation. A pastor friend told me a story of how he tried to get his church to volunteer at a local organization. The first time out had a good response. But, future volunteer efforts were met with a "been there, done that" mentality.

Here's what I see from personal experience. We, as followers of Jesus, would much rather throw money at an issue (or hire someone) rather than get our hands dirty fulfilling the Great Commission.

So, I ask you, where's your heart?

Monday, August 23, 2010

Monday Ten

This week, I've offering ten observations about God, Jesus and the Church. Let's get started.

1. In Matthew 28, we read: Then Jesus came to them and said, "All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age." This is the Great Commission. Sadly, the church in America tends to treat it as the Great Suggestion.

2. In Matthew 16, Jesus says, "And I tell you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of Hades will not overcome it. I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven; whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven." Translation: Jesus gave His church access to His incredible power. In America, many times we ignore what Jesus can do and settle for the stuff that we can manage.

3. Same chapter, a few verses later, Jesus says, "If anyone would come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross and follow me. For whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for me will find it. What good will it be for a man if he gains the whole world, yet forfeits his soul? Or what can a man give in exchange for his soul?" Yet, in our churches today, we'd rather let someone else do the hard stuff while we sit idly in our comfort zone.

4. Matthew 16:2-3, Jesus proves the old adage is true, "Red sky in the morning, sailor's take warning. Red sky at night, sailor's delight."

5. John 2 recounts the first miracle of Jesus' public ministry. He was invited to a party. Okay, that isn't as much a miracle as his turning water into wine, but the point is that Jesus was a likable guy, and people liked having him around. Unlikable people don't get invited to weddings.

6. Many people like the picture of Jesus that is humble and peaceful. Jesus is showing us how to live. But, I like the Revelation 19 picture of Jesus where it says, "With justice he judges and makes war. His eyes are like blazing fire, and on his head are many crowns. He has a name written on him that no one knows but he himself. He is dressed in a robe dipped in blood, and his name is the Word of God. The armies of heaven were following him, riding on white horses and dressed in fine linen, white and clean. Out of his mouth comes a sharp sword with which to strike down the nations. "He will rule them with an iron scepter." He treads the winepress of the fury of the wrath of God Almighty. On his robe and on his thigh he has this name written: KING OF KINGS AND LORD OF LORDS." That's ULTIMATE FIGHTER JESUS. And, He is totally awesome.

7. In Luke 15, Jesus tells the story of the prodigal son. In the story, the younger son is representative of the sinner, and the older brother represents the religious establishment. The older brother would have run the younger off is he had his way. Fortunately, there is a Father who runs to the younger to bring him back to the family. When encountering those who don't know Jesus, how do you interact? Are you father-like or older brother-ish?

8. John 12:7, Jesus shows incredible respect to women when Judas gets upset that Mary (sister of Martha and Lazarus) pour expensive perfume on Christ. His words, "Leave her alone." What do you do when people attack well meaning folks? Do you let the attack continue, or step in and tell the attackers to "leave them alone?"

9. Mark 3:13-19 lists Jesus' disciples. Even by today's standards, this is a bunch of misfits wouldn't be selected for anything spiritual. That's a testimony to the power of Jesus to transform ordinary people into extraordinary people.

10. Mark 6 recounts that Jesus sent out his disciples to preach and conduct ministry. Verses 12-13 say, "They went out and preached that people should repent. They drove out many demons and anointed many sick people with oil and healed them." This means that even Judas cast out demons and healed sick people in the name of Jesus. Sadly, that wasn't enough to keep him from committing the cruelist act recorded in human history.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

TSL

TSL is a broadcast and webcasting term used in determining ratings for radio and web stations. It stands for Time Spent Listening, and means just what it stands for: The amount of time the average person spends listening during a particular time period.

I'm preaching to myself on this one. But, let me ask you a question. In your relationship with God, what is your TSL? One of the biggest problems that Christians in America face shows itself in the amount of time we spend listening to God. Our culture is fast-paced, media-based, and has constant demands on our time and attention.

If we want answers to our questions and/or problems, we "Google" it, or seek the "Readers Digest" version. Our microwave society has moved over to the digital, information highway, and demands immediate satisfaction.

But, the Bible tells us that God doesn't work this way. Psalm 46:10 tells us to "Be still, and know that I am God." To hear from God, we must silence all the noise and pre-occupations of the world. Our TSL with God depends on this.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Kids Need Moms ... And Dads

I came across this opinion piece in the Washington Post recently. It's the story of a young woman, conceived with donated sperm from an anonymous man nearly two decades ago.

The saga of cyro-kids is turning out to be a tale that emphasises the importance of both mothers and especially fathers in the home. The gist of this article (and recent studies) is that kids need both of their parents in order to grow and mature properly. A mother and a father inside the home goes a long way toward raising well-adjusted children.

Moms and Dads, the Bible says that we are to train up our children in the ways that we want them to go. If one of you is missing from the picture, your children are only getting half of that training.

And, from what the article and the study I've linked suggest, these kids aren't too thrilled when we abandon them.

Monday, August 16, 2010

Monday Ten

1. It has been a wild couple of weeks, filled mostly with vacation time, hence the lack of blogging.

2. For our vacation, we went to Kansas City. Had good times at Worlds of Fun, The K.C. Zoo, Union Station, Crown Center and more.

3. We stayed in Overland Park, and while there we visited a dying shopping mall. It was a sad place. Two anchor stores were still there, and not much else. It reminded me of the North Town Mall before it closed down here.

4. One oddity in that mall. A woman was selling cats that she had rescued. They were presumed to be abandoned or abused. I say presumed, because for all I know, she might've picked them up off the street to sell in her store. Here's the odd part: A sign out front was requesting donations of cat food. But, inside the store, this lady ways trying to pawn cats for $100 - $150. Smelled like a scam to me.

5. It was good to get away from the house for a few days, but it was also good to return. Now, we're getting back into school mode and regular life.

6. I always post something about church from the past weekend, and this weekend was exceptional. North Point Church's 2nd Saturday event this month was a Back 2 School bash. A thousand kids from low-income homes were invited to get new shoes, socks, underware, a toy, haircuts, medical and dental exams and groceries. My oldest son and I worked the toy table. That was fun.

7. Also exceptional at NPC were this weekend's services. We're doing a two week vision series, and this past weekend saw the initial plans revealed for North Point's new video campus. It'll be located in an abandoned nightclub on East Sunshine Street in Springfield. Tentative launch date is the second weekend in January 2011.

8. My wife and I had the chance to take in a video campus service at another church recently. There isn't much different in a video campus than at the live campus. Some people like to make a big deal out of not having a live speaker, but the teaching is still the same, the Bible is still the same, the impact is still the same. It's good!

9. As we get set for another school year, I commented to my wife last night that I don't really like the school year. For the next nine months, we will be confined to a school schedule. Everything will revolve around it.

10. Finally, as I wrap the Ten for this week, I'm going to be a captain for this year's Pregnancy Care Center Walk 4 Life. I'd appreciate your financial support when the time comes to raise funds.

Friday, August 13, 2010

My Response to God's Love

As I briefly pointed out yesterday, God loves you. That's a wonderful thing. But, what am I supposed to do with that knowledge?

It would be one thing to just bask in God's love, and let that be all there is. However, Jesus gave us a clue about what we should do.

The Pharisees, trying to trip Jesus up on a religious legal technicality, asked him what was the most important commandment. With his response, Jesus tells us what we should do with God's love in Matthew 22:37-40: Jesus replied, “‘You must love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, and all your mind.’ This is the first and greatest commandment. A second is equally important: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ The entire law and all the demands of the prophets are based on these two commandments.”

In short, we are supposed to return God's love with all our being, much the same way that God loves for us. Plus, we're supposed to love those around us.

So, in our effort to become more Christ-like, this is a direct example on how we can behave just like Christ.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

God Loves You

Just in case you didn't know, God loves you.

We live in a world full of pain and difficulties, and it is easy to get lost in all of our junk to the point that we forget this truth.

Jesus said in John 3:16 that God loves the world so much that he sent Jesus to pay the price for sin in order for us to have a relationship with God.

In Romans 8:38-39, Paul summarizes God's love this way: "And I am convinced that nothing can ever separate us from God’s love. Neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither our fears for today nor our worries about tomorrow—not even the powers of hell can separate us from God’s love. No power in the sky above or in the earth below—indeed, nothing in all creation will ever be able to separate us from the love of God that is revealed in Christ Jesus our Lord."

That's an amazing love. And, it's a love unique to God alone.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Vacation Is Over

I know some of you had to be wondering if I had fallen off the face of the earth. But, my recent blogging break was due to an overdue vacation.

See you tomorrow.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Investing in Someone's Life

A few years ago, the place where I work hired a kid fresh out of high school. He had no experience in our field, but he had a connection with my supervisor. That foot in the door eventually led to a great friendship between this young man and myself.

During our time working together, we got to take a few work-related road trips. These trips provided some one-on-one time where the two of us were able to share ideas and thoughts.

Our relationship began as a mentor-apprentice one (me as the mentor), but eventually evolved into a relationship where we viewed each other on the same level. We could share thoughts, ideas, and the stuff going on in our lives. We invested in each other.

Today, my friend has moved into a different work environment, and now he is mentoring and investing in people over there.

One of the best ways to leave a positive legacy for ourselves is to invest in someone's life. Parents do this for their kids, and leaders do this for those they lead.

The Bible gives us the best illustration of investing. We find it in the first four books of the New Testament. Jesus had many followers, but chose twelve to invest his time into. And, out of those twelve, there were three that received the most attention.

Jesus provided a great leadership model for us to follow. Investing in people is a great way to help shape them into becoming someone special. It's also establishes a legacy for the investor.

Who are you investing in?

Monday, July 26, 2010

Monday Ten

This Monday Ten is dedicated to people other than myself. Here we go:

1. Two kids from next door recently accepted Jesus into their lives. They were baptized yesterday. My wife and I are so happy for them.

2. My pastor delivered one of the best sermons about the Bible this past weekend. It will be posted here later this week.

3. My wife had a brilliant idea Sunday morning...a Dowden grillfest. Burgers, hotdogs, BBQ chicken were all offered to the smoke and fire of our charcoal grill.

4. My middle son is learning to ride a bicycle without the training wheels. He just started, so he's a little scared.

5. Today will be a somber one. Last week, a good friend and fellow radio veteran passed away suddenly. Today is Ben Birdson's funeral.

6. At KWFC, we relied on Ben's knowledge for a lot of things. He will be missed greatly.

7. Staying in the radio field, a good friend of mine, and my former boss, Dave Hutton won the August Golden Mic award from the Singing News. I worked with Dave at KCMG. He's now at KTTK.

8. One week from today will be KWFC Day at the Ozark Empire Fair. Our concert that night features Signature Sound. That's going to be fun.

9. This week promises to be cooler than the last two. That should allow a friend and I to hit the driving range. I enjoy being able to invest in other people.

10. The city of Branson has been voted the best small town vacation destination in the midwest. Sounds like a vacation spot for us in a few weeks.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Do What You Can With What Little You Have

When I was in my teens and early 20s, I had dreams of making a lot of money and owning a lot of stuff. I reasoned it in my mind that with a lot of money and stuff, I could really help a lot of people through giving to my church or other charitable organizations.

Life didn't turn out like I had planned. That wealth has never materialized the way I had envisioned. In fact, that's pretty common for many folks, especially in foreign countries where poverty is abundant.

In Mark 12, Jesus witnesses a woman giving all that she had as an offering to God. She was surrounded by those who had great wealth, and were also giving to the temple. Jesus makes the distinction that the widow gave more than all the wealthy people, because she gave all that she had, where the rich people gave of their abundance.

This illustration is used in many ways, but one of the best applications I can come up with relates to how those with little to give can still impact the kingdom of God.

I still have a desire to be wealthy (although I'm not consumed by this desire) in order to be able to help those in need. But, because I'm not wealthy, does that mean that I shouldn't try to help those in need? Better yet, because I cannot help all, does that mean I shouldn't try to help one?

I'm not sure how it is in other cultures, but in America, we live in an entitlement society. In other words, many of our young and poor have been convinced that they are entitled to something they have not earned. As a result, when help is delivered, but is limited in scope, there is some chastizement that sometimes comes from those who didn't receive any help.

There is also a sense of helplessness for those who give, because of the reality that no size of gift will cure all the ails of the world.

So, what do we do? Do we give up? Do we forge ahead? How do we handle those that criticize our efforts? How do we make everyone happy?

The widow gives us some insight. She would say, "Just give what you can. Any amount helps."

We don't know how the temple leaders used her gift, but rest assured they did use it. In your church or community, rest assured that those you give to will use it, no matter the size of your gift.

So, the next time you think what you're giving won't make a difference, just remember that in Mark 12, Jesus noticed.

Monday, July 19, 2010

Monday Ten

1. This week's forecast, Sun and 95, 94, 94, 92 & 92. It's going to be miserable outside.

2. We had a great time picnicking with our fellow Kid Point volunteers from North Point Church on Saturday. There are a lot of great people that give of their time to invest in a bunch of kids.

3. Speaking of teaching minds full of mush, teaching 4th and 5th graders is a lot easier than most people realize. It just takes determination to stick with it, and build relationships; enough bluff that they think you might just pin them to the wall; enough caring that you'll never actually do that; and enough vision from God to see that someday these youngsters will be our leaders.

4. The weekend of "fun" ended early for us. We got a call during church that my mother-in-law was being brought to the ER. Fortunately, it was nothing too serious. She went home Sunday.

5. I have golf fever. Anyone who has played golf, even if just two or three times a year, gets golf fever.

6. This longing for the links is being fueled by a scramble round at Branson Creek last week for the Cardinals Care pro-am. We didn't get close to winning, but had a lot of fun. I probably lost a dozen balls, but its all good.

7. I followed that up the next day by hitting the driving range. Hopefully, I can trim down those lost balls.

8. I didn't look to see how much it costs to play Branson Creek until after the pro-am. I nearly passed out at the $90 charge. I enjoy golf, but it can be an expensive sport.

9. We're two weeks away from KWFC's day at the Ozark Empire Fair. I'm interested to see our grandstand show with Signature Sound. I have never seen them live before.

10. It's going to be a busy work week. Let's get to it.

Monday, July 12, 2010

Monday Ten

1. Sleep. My wife and I have been deprived of it. Primarily due to the kiddos.

2. Rest. That's what we tried to do this weekend...with marginal success.

3. Mow. I downed the forest growing in my yard. Worst weed-eating job I've ever had to do. Not because the growth was that bad, but my gas tank ran dry on the machine, and I had to fill the thread twice. I have never had to do either of those before. EVER.

4. Sleep. I tried to do that Sunday afternoon, but there are three things that set little kids' radars off: someone trying to nap, someone on the phone, and their parents trying to have some "quiet time." I got beat up trying to nap.

5. Movies. North Point Church is doing the God At The Movies sermon series again. This year doesn't contain the controversial films that last year's series did. This past weekend was "Avatar," and dealt with the parable Jesus told about the Pharisee who thanked God that he wasn't like the nasty tax collector; while the tax collector begged God for forgiveness.

6. Perceptions. Just like the Pharisee in that story, many times we can develop unfounded prejudices toward people not like us. But, we may be way off base in our assumptions. We must get to know people before we try to pass judgement on them.

7. Baseball. Two years ago I promised my oldest son that we would go to a Springfield Cardinals game. But, my wife and our other two kids were in a bad wreck the night before, and our plans were scrapped. Now, barring a rain out, we should get our outing tomorrow night. Should be fun.

8. Golf. On Wednesday, I get to participate in the Cardinals Care Pro-Am in Branson. It's part of the charity work for the upcoming Price Cutter Charity Championship on the Nationwide golf tour. I'll be golfing with a member of the Cardinals, two co-workers, and the Baptist Bible College president. Should be fun.

9. Leader. I'm looking forward to hanging with the college president. He's a very good leader. Maybe he'll share some leadership gems while we play golf.

10. Men. I've been reminded recently about how important it is for kids to have strong father figures in their lives...boys especially. It's driving me to be a better father to my own kids. Manhood has been watered down in our culture. It's time for the men to discover themselves again.

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

My Son Tells About Getting Baptized

My middle son, Jonas, got baptized Saturday with his older brother, Jeremiah. He writes on my wife's blog today.

Check it out here.

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Tuesday Ten

1. A three-day holiday weekend can only be beaten in likability by taking the whole week off. That's what I should've done.

2. Had a great Independence Day weekend. Three straight days full of stuff. Now, it's back to work to recover.

3. Saturday was extra special. My two oldest boys were baptized at church. Visit my wife's blog to learn more.

4. My folks visited North Point Church for the first time Saturday. It was loud, explosive and a lot of fun. And, that was just guest speaker Herbert Cooper. I'm glad my folks got earplugs.

5. There is a home in a nearby subdivision that, for the last three years, has held their own fireworks display. The 20-30 minute show is always fun to watch, and it's a secret to most of Springfield.

6. "I Love America" was a huge success again this year. Over 100,000 people sat in a field on the east side of Springfield to enjoy the fireworks and entertainment. Around 250 people also gave their lives to Jesus. That makes ILA more than worth the cost.

7. ILA was nearly upstaged by a fireworks display in a nearby subdivision. That thing went on for nearly 45 minutes, and was non-stop, high-quality fireworks.

8. I ran into the morning guy from The Wind at ILA. We had been golfing together at Highland Springs a few weeks ago. Aaron's a nice guy.

9. My wife, kids and I set off the last of our explosives last night. We still have a ton of sparklers, though. This was the first year we've done any fireworks other than the little snap-pops. The boys loved it all.

10. But, they loved the snap-pops the best.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Birthday Boy

If you've followed this blog for any length of time, you have probably picked up that I have three boys. Today is our middle son's 7th birthday. Jonas keeps us on our toes all of the time. Happy Birthday, son.

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Debt is Dumb

I dispise debt. If you're a frequent reader of this blog, you already know that.

Earlier this year, my wife and I took a good sized sum of money that had come into our possession, and followed Dave Ramsey's steps to paying off debt and saving for the future. His Seven Baby Steps are easy to understand, and with a good dose of determination, they will get you out of debt.

It took several weeks of hunting down change to pay bills before I got, as Dave says, "Sick and tired of being sick and tired." Once a person reaches that point, they become determined to end their debt slide, and work toward freedom.

For some, this means getting a second job, or an entirely new and better paying job. For us, it meant throwing everything we had at our debt, regardless of where it came from.

We could have easily blown that large amount of cash and left our debt in place. That's what most people would have done. But, we understood the truth of Proverbs 22:7 where it says "...the borrower is the slave of the lender."

When you are in debt, you lose a great deal of your freedom, even though we live in the country devoted to personal freedom. When debt is a part of your life, you are forced to sacrifice some of who and what you are in order to pay someone else. In the words of Proverbs 22:7, you are forced (like a slave) to work for your lender before you can work for yourself.

Take my advice, get yourself out of debt. Or, if you have never been in debt, steer away from it. You don't need that brick placed on your shoulders.

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

People Matter To God

I have chosen a new look and name for my blog. I trust you will enjoy the new feel and theme.

I had been discontent with my old site for a while, because the blog had taken a shape that was outside of the original intent. That happens as things grow and mature.

With this change, my focus is going to primarily sharing my thoughts on the things God is doing, the ways he is working, and my thoughts on Christianity. I may delve into other areas from time to time, but telling you that people matter to God is the main priority.

Why this title? It's rather simple. I see a lot of churches and Christians that don't really live like people matter to God. We have a tendency to say all the right things, but our actions sometimes betray our words. We talk about the fact that people need Jesus, but then we do nothing to lead them to Him.

People matter to God. That's a phrase I've heard pastor Herbert Cooper use in some of his messages as Peoples Church in Oklahoma City, and I'm going to borrow it for this site.

Let me know what you think of the changes.

Monday, June 28, 2010

Monday Ten

1. I know I haven't posted much lately, but that is because I have been busy with real life. It has been a very busy week.

2. Most of the work this past week has been prep work a big re-wiring project at KWFC this past weekend.

3. We got the majority of the re-wiring finished, but there are a handful of things left to do.

4. Our church debuted the renovation of the worship center. New lights, a big screen re-alignment, and better cameras. It's all in preparation for a future video campus.

5. This is going to be an exciting week for us.

6. Our two oldest kids are getting baptised this weekend at our church's Freedom Splash event.

7. My middle son turns seven this week. He's super-excited.

8. Independence Day is Sunday. I love my country. Thank you to all who have served in our military to protect and defend out country.

9. We will be celebrating July 4th at the I Love America event.

10. I hope to do a better job of posting thoughts this week. Stay tuned.

Monday, June 21, 2010

Monday Ten

1. Father's Day is always great around our house...mainly because I get treated.

2. Breakfast was at Golden Corral.

3. Having church services on Saturday night makes it possible to do the breakfast buffet in a timely fashion.

4. After breakfast, my wife and boys bought me a new baseball glove. I can't continue to play catch barehanded with my boys.

5. After that, we spent most of the day watching NASCAR and the U.S. Open. It was too hot to do anything else.

6. Notice that I didn't say anything about the World Cup. Soccer is a terrible sport. IMHO!

7. The message that I preached last Sunday aired on the radio in the Mountain Grove area yesterday. I'm praying that someone's life was changed by it.

8. I'm also trusting God to open ministry doors for my family and I. I have no plans...only God.

9. A friend at another radio station gave me a pre-release copy of Hillsong's upcoming concert album. I've been taking it in over the past week. It is good, but sadly there are not many differences between this album and the previous four or five. "Mighty To Save" was the last really good Hillsong album. Again, IMHO!

10. I have golf fever!

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Guest Post: Handing Over the Keys

This is a re-post of my wife's blog from today. Enjoy!

How many of you like control over your life? Most of us, right? You may like your life just the way it is, and think "Why should I hand over the keys to God?" Christians hesitate to just give God their all. We make excuses as to why we can't do that. God asks us to live by faith. It is a hard thing to do for most Christians. It's hard to say, "Here God, I totally turn my life over to you and will live by faith." But, when we do, we reap huge benefits. I have not always been faithful at letting God totally have the keys, but when I do he always takes good care of me, and I am blessed.

To convey how important it is to hand over the keys to God I will tell you what happened to me. Two-years-ago I was was in a violent roll-over crash. It was the most terrifying night of my life. I can still hear the boys screaming, "Mommy, help me!" Just heart breaking for a mother to know her babies are that scared and in danger.

A young girl had hit a guardrail and slammed into the side of my van, sending me up under a bridge and hitting the top of the bridge support. I went airborne for 50-feet and then rolled end-over-end for three or four times before stopping. I had my two youngest sons with me that night. They were 2 & 4 years old. They were fine other than a few little bumps & bruises. I took the brunt of it with a concussion, bruised lungs, head & neck soft tissue damage and my right hand was sliced open by the shattered windshield. My right hand had three finger tendons shredded, nerves damaged and bone exposed. It was not a pretty sight.

I tell you all this to tell you this. That night I thought I was almost home with my babies. I had just looked in the mirror a few minutes before, and they were sleeping peacefully in their car seats. Next thing I know, I am being pushed up the bridge. At that moment I handed over the keys to God. The one I trusted could help us! You say, "But Rebekah, you were still hurt." Yes, I was, but my babies were fine, and we all survived. It's a miracle! So see when we truly let God take control, He takes good care of us. Who better than to trust your life with. So, I challenge you today to give it all to God. The one that made you. The one that loves you more than anyone. And if you're not a Christian turn over your life to God today! You will never regret turning it all over to God, but you may regret it if you don't.

To show you what a miracle our accident was, I'm going to share some pictures of my wrecked van! I'm so glad that I let "JESUS TAKE THE WHEEL."For I know the plan I have for you," Declares the LORD, " Plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you Hope and a Future. Jeremiah 29:11

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Blog Suggest

If you're in leadership, no matter how high or low on the totum poll, you'll get hit with criticism. John Maxwell writes "When You Get Kicked in the Rear, You Know You're Out in Front."

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Planting Guardrails

This past Sunday I taught at the church where my wife and I met when we were teens. The subject was on "Guardrails," and I talked about the importance of establishing solid boundaries in our lives to protect us from what the Bible calls sin.

A lot of times, we refer to these guardrails as personal convictions, and no matter the label you place on it, the Bible points out that it is important to safeguard our hearts and lives against the evil that is in the world.

Paul, in a round-about way, lists an example of a guardrail in Ephesians 5:18 when he talks about drunkeness leading to debauchery. The Bible tells us that drunkeness is a sin, and this verse essentially says that it leads to debauchery (aka, a lot of other sinful actions). So, the guardrail to protect against drunkenness must be placed in the safe area away from getting drunk.

For some people, this would mean only consuming a couple of alcholic beverages, but for others it would mean no alcohol at all.

You could actually insert any activity that leads to sin in the place of alcohol. In most places, there can be some gray area of activity before hitting sin. The only solid exceptions are in the area of sexual immorality and temptation. The Bible is very clear that we are to flee from these.

Additionally, guardrails are great to put in our relationships, since the people we associate with have a direct impact on who we become. Proverbs tells us that the wise hang around wise people, but that people of poor character will lead others toward danger.

What's cool about the verse I mentioned, Ephesians 5:18, is that Paul not only tells us where the danger area is, and what we need to avoid, he also suggests a substition. He says that instead of getting drunk with wine, we need to be filled with the Holy Spirit.

Jesus didn't come to this world to end the fun that your heart desires. Instead, he came so his followers would have life abundantly.

Monday, June 14, 2010

Monday Ten

1. I preached yesterday for the first time in two years. I spoke at the 1st Free Will Baptist Church in Mountain Grove, Missouri. It was a wonderful experience.

2. My message was titled "Guardrails," and was designed to get people to set protective barriers in their lives in order to avoid making bad choices.

3. Passage that struck me as totally awesome, Proverbs 13:20 - Whoever walks with the wise becomes wise, but the companion of fools will suffer harm.

4. I gave some radical tips for married folks to safeguard their marriages and avoid the temptations that lead to sexual immorality.

5. One of the best tips is to not ride in a vehicle alone, have meetings alone, or eat alone with a member of the opposite sex if you aren't married to that person. To do that is to swing the door wide open, and to invite tempation to come into your life. By the way, our culture scoffs at this type of guardrail.

6. Personal guardrails (aka: personal convictions) don't make sense to the culture. The culture tries to lure us to the edge of the moral cliff, then mocks us if we step off.

7. I spent the weekend without a cell phone. Service issues. I won't say more, because I'd say something I would probably regret.

8. I'm playing golf today with a co-worker and friends from another radio station. It's media day for our local golf tournament, so all the media folks will be hitting the course.

9. Then, on Tuesday, I plan to take a college buddy to the driving range. Good times!

10. Finally, I am entertaining invitations to come speak/preach/teach for your church, organization or club. I'm trying to decide if this is really where God is calling me, and can use your prayers as my wife and I seek God's direction.

Friday, June 11, 2010

Something to Ponder

I read this last night, and couldn't contain myself. Many of us are familiar with Romans 3:23, but we rarely read beyond it.

Sinners, that's all of us, get back on good terms with God ONLY by believing in Jesus. Jesus was the sacrifice that closed the gap that existed between mankind and God since Adam & Eve introduced sin into the world.

That's amazing stuff.

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Blog Read

Steven Furtick recently wrote about "The Easy Things Are Hard For Me." Check out what he says here.

Monday, June 7, 2010

Monday Ten

1. Today's Monday Ten has been delayed due to some issue with Blogger. But, it's back, and so am I. So, here's the remaining nine.

2. It was two years ago today that my middle son found salvation in Jesus Christ. We're going to celebrate that tonight.

3. We're also celebrating life, because my wife and my two youngest kids were in a violent, roll-over crash two years ago today. The boys walked away, but my wife had three tendons sliced on her right hand, and sustained numerous other injuries. She's mostly healed, but still deals with problems in her hand, and the after-effects of the concussion.

4. Our lives turned up-side-down that night, but the life changes that resulted have been positive. My wife has made sure of that.

5. She determined to accomplish something before the 2nd anniversary of that crash. She wanted to learn sign language or playing the piano, but those are difficult with out the use of the right hand. Instead, she learned how to swim. I'm proud of her.

6. Last night, my youngest son started asking how Jesus can live in your heart. That is very encouraging to know that we could soon all be headed to Heaven after our lives end on earth.

7. Our church is participating in the One Prayer campaign this month. This past weekend we watched a sermon from Lifechurch.tv's Craig Groeschel about Unstoppable Courage. Very good!

8. This past weekend was also promotion weekend at North Point Church, which meant that my oldest child left my class and entered the Middle School area. He got to join us for the 2nd service on Saturday nights. He was very excited to go to "big church."

9. Promotion weekend also meant I gained a lot of new kids moving into the 4th grade. It's time to show them who's boss.

10. Finally, I won't be teaching that class this weekend. I have been asked to preach at the First Free Will Baptist Church in Mountain Grove this Sunday. Looking forward to talking about personal convictions.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Bible Stories That Mess You Up: Part 4 of 4

Jesus gave the religious establishment plenty of reasons to conspire his demise. He constantly pointed out their hypocrisy. On a few occasions, they plotted to grab him, but because it wasn't time for him to die, God prevented it.

But, the Bible records for us a single event that became the tipping point in their hatred of the Messiah. We find it in John 11 in an event that showcases God's power like none other.

Jesus' friend Lazarus had died. His sisters had pleaded with Jesus to come heal their brother, but Jesus delayed. His reason for delaying? He told his disciples it was all happening so they would finally believe. If all the miracles and teaching hadn't convinced his followers, then this event would.

At the same time, it was also going to seal his fate.

The event was phenominal. Lazarus had been dead for four days. His body had begun to decay. And, with a prayer, Jesus spoke three words that changed Lazarus' life, "Lazarus, come out!"

And, he did.

This single event led the Pharisees to start plotting the death of Jesus. And, they didn't keep quiet their plans. With orders out (and wanted posters) that they wanted to arrest Jesus, he stopped his public ministry and stayed away from public areas until it was time to go to Passover.

This single event led many more to people to follow Jesus.

This single event fueled the jealousy of the religious leaders, because all the people flocked to Jesus.

As a result, this single event also led the religious leaders to plot the second death of Lazarus.

This event set the stage for the final act to be played out in God's plan to provide salvation to the world.

Monday, May 31, 2010

Monday Ten

1. It's Memorial Day. Thank you to all the men and women who have given their lives in military service to our country.

2. We visited family this weekend, and also stopped by a couple of grave sites.

3. We woke up this morning to a power outage in our neighborhood. Fortunately, the power came back on and all is well.

4. We're planning on grilling today, and might hit a swimming pool for some splashing fun.

5. We just learned last week that we have a public pool less than two miles from us. It's just a regular, outdoor pool, but it's a pool nonetheless.

6. Our city just finished renovating an older public pool, transforming it into a water park. Should be a lot of fun.

7. I'm losing all of my 5th graders in my Saturday night class at church (including my oldest son). They're moving into the middle school department next week. So, I'll be getting a fresh set of kids (3rd graders moving to 4th) joining the class next week. Time to get my bluff in.

8. I have scheduled my first speaking date of the summer on Sunday, June 13th. Can't wait.

9. Tomorrow, I'm going to conclude the Stories That Mess You Up series. It'll be fun.

10. Have a great and safe summer.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Bible Stories That Mess You Up: Part 3 of 4

In our society today, preachers are essentially taught to build their messages around a single point, and keep them to around 30 minutes. In some areas of the country, the message length might stretch out to an hour or so, but the majority of American churches do a 30 minute message.

So, what would happen if Jesus showed up on the scene today and whipped out His "Sermon on the Mount?" In these three chapters of Matthew, Jesus violates both of these public speaking "rules."

By most accounts, Jesus hits on around 20 separate points. He doesn't expound much on these, but what he does say is extremely revolutionary and life changing. What he says here is essentially the foundation for Christian living today.

It's a "no holds barred" teaching that was so foreign to their typical teachers that when it's over with, the crowds were astonished, not just for what he said, but because he said it was someone who had authority, not just as a teacher.

How would we react today to words like "if anyone slaps you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also," or "love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you," or "when you give to teh needy (do it in such a way) that your giving may be in secret," or "anyone who looks at another person lustfully has committed adultery in his heart?"

Jesus didn't pull any punches, and his words still sting today, but for the believer who applies them, these words are life changing. They are counter-culture. They get noticed. They mess you up.