Archives For June 2012

The Friday Bag

June 29, 2012 — Leave a comment

 

The Creativity of Rule-Breaking  - “The prevailing form of creative inspiration is imitation. We copy what others have done…”

Answering Questions - “I was listening to a sermon by Tim Keller that addressed common objections to the Bible as God’s Word, and I thought he made a very clever point.  He has a way of turning an objection into a virtue”

Reflections on Leading your Family Well“All of us know tragic stories of wives and children of pastors, church planters, and missionaries who grow up to hate the church. These stories could have been avoided, in many cases, if the leader in the home had not neglected his family.”

Tuning the Preacher’s Ear – How good reading brings good preaching. “Preachers who read widely get the same benefits out of it as the rest of us, but their needs may be more acute.”

“Do not follow where the path may lead. Go instead where there is no path and leave a trail.”
Harold R. McAlindon

SOURCE -Indexed

I’ve written plenty in the past about leading others, and doing it with strategy, vision, perspective, and humility.  However, the great fear for any writer, is the belief others might have that I write about these things because I have great strategy, vision, perspective, and humility. I have various forms of all of those things, but what I’m learning is that I really have little more than my own experiences. Many of those experiences are rich and some of my experiences have even been productive, yet others have been abject failures; but all have been worth it.

There is no formula for “Making it Work”, but instead it takes a good leader being willing to combine the good ideas, with strategic planning, and really great people.  What comes of it, will oftentimes be determined by factors outside of your control; but the process you go through to discover success or learn from failure, creates the experience that makes you rich.

A mind that is stretched by a new experience can never go back to its old dimensions.
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.

 

Why Marriage Matters

June 26, 2012 — 1 Comment

Three Reasons Why A Healthy Marriage is Vital to Your Ministry’s Health

“Our culture says that feelings of love are the basis for actions of love. And of course that can be true. But it is truer to say that actions of love can lead consistently to feelings of love. Love between two people must not, in the end, be identified simply with emotion or merely with dutiful action. Married love is a symbiotic, complex mixture of both. Having said this, it is important to observe that of the two – emotion and action – it is the latter that we have the most control over. It is the action of love that we can promise to maintain every day.”

-Tim Keller (source)

I love this quote by Tim Keller, and the ramifications of the truth in what he says.  The context of this quote is about the differences of  “feeling in love” vs. “acting like you are in love”; and he is saying that it doesn’t always matter how one feels.  The only thing you can control is your actions.  That doesn’t sound very romantic, but it’s reality for all of us attempting to love one person for decades.

As a minister to children, students, and families it is never more important that in this moment in time for us to have healthy, happy, and fruitful marriages.  Having a healthy marriage is vital to your own ministry health.  Why?

It’s Foundational.  You have to stop separating marriage ministry from a successful family ministry.  They go hand-in-hand, and the fruit of one will always begat fruit in the other.  If we make our marriages a priority as ministry leaders, then we are building a strong foundation for us to be better leaders of our own families and better ministers to the families we serve.

It’s Empowering.  It’s a known fact that love is a powerful motivator.  When our marriages are healthy, we can use that love, support, and encouragement of a committed spouse to empower us to do the things we would never be able to do on our own.

It’s Missional.  Healthy marriages are desperately needed in a hurting world.  Do you want to be salt and light in a hurting world?  Then take time to invest in a healthy marriage.  It’s becoming more and more rare to see two people in a committed relationship that respect each other openly, share burdens together, and live out their days as a witness of God’s working power in their relationships.

Take the time to let your marriage be a foundational, empowering, and missional part of your ministry.  When we take the steps towards a healthy marriage relationship, we will see the story of our ministry grow richer and deeper with every passing day, week, month, and year.

 

The Friday Bag

June 22, 2012 — Leave a comment

In honor of the movie Brave releasing today…

The 22 Rules of Storytelling from Pixar“On Twitter, Pixar storyboard artist Emma Coats has compiled nuggets of narrative wisdom she’s received working for the animation studio over the years.” 

Pixar Launches Brilliant ‘Brave’ Projectionist Site – “No amount of attention during production is more important than that of the projectionist, who, with care and precision, shows the movie to the theater’s waiting guests.”

6 Film Making Tips from Pixar“Their newest film, Brave, is in theaters this week, so here’s a bit of free film school (for fans and filmmakers alike) from RenderMan and company.”

25 Best Pixar Movie Quotes“From “Toy Story” to the Academy-Award winning “Up,” Pixar has turned out stellar animated entertainment year after year.”

“You are a sad, strange little man, and you have my pity. Farewell.” -Buzz Lightyear

Recently I posted a infograph that outlined the Video Consumption of teenagers, and shared a parenting practice we do in our home called “No Screen Time.”  The comments on that post brought up an interesting question and response.  I thought I’d share those comments here, and then add my own response:

First is from Nathan Hart:

And then a great response from my wife, Starr:

 

I’m with both Nathan and Starr, and I’m sure at odds with many of my tech-inclined friends.  There is something about being on a screen (iPad, computer, television) that seems inherently uncommunicative.  Not that you can’t use that technology for those things, but it’s more of an extra step to do so.  I love Starr’s response that time spent in front of a screen seems to lead to less conversation, and less interaction as a whole.

I do NOT believe that screen time is a bad thing, but I think as with all good things….there can be too much of a good thing.  And in the year, 2012, screen time holds a real danger of being something that in large consumption levels can become destructive.

What do you say?