Serve or compete?

It’s official, I have a man-crush on Andy Stanley.

Recently on one of his leadership podcasts he was being reminded of a time early on in his churches history where he, his 5 other leaders and all of their spouses got away for the weekend to talk about what kind of church they were forming.

At some point Andy brought everyone into the room and asked all the wives this profound question, “what can we do to create a church that would serve your family and not compete against it?”

Apparently this was a huge turning point in the staff team culture as the women began to trust the vision of the organization their husbands were working for.

What if our organization began to ask that question? I want our Portland staff team to be a place that serves the families of our staff rather than compete against them. What can our staff teams do to accomplish this?

I want to be careful with this discussion because Campus Crusade is an incredible place to work while raising a family, but there are some things that compete against a healthy family life that we can tweak!

Photo courtesy of AndYaDontStop’s

Problem or tension? You decide.

I work as a campus minister with Campus Crusade for Christ. I have a lot of problems to solve in this job. Here’s a few of them off the top of my head.

  • Evangelism – transferability and training vs. communicating the depth of the Gospel
  • Team Dynamics – relational vs. accomplishing goals
  • Moving toward scope vs. growing where we are
  • Systems and administrative duties vs. campus time
  • Family life vs. job responsibilities

A recent Andy Stanley leadership podcast asks the question…what if those problems aren’t necessarily problems, but rather a tension that we have to manage? Here’s Andy’s 3 ways you can know…

  1. Does it keep resurfacing?
  2. Are there mature advocates on both sides of the issue.
  3. Are the two sides really interdependent

If our teams and staff recognize the tensions that we manage, the competition to win ceases to exist. We can literally take a deep breath and tackle the tension together with a greater sense of peace.

What do you think? What tension do you need to start managing better on your staff team or in your life?

Cru Conference Video team does good work

The video’s at our Cru Conference were off the charts good this year. One thing that helped was a super fancy HD projector that launched a crystal clear image all the way across the back of the stage so we could watch things like this MC introduction.

Jason & Kirk Intro 2 from CRUCONFERENCE on Vimeo.

The added flexibility the video screen gave the program team was amazing, plus major arts and crafts weren’t necessary for set design. For example we had a looping video of Times Square during a vision spot about Destino in NYC. It added an element of connection to the content that we haven’t seen before.

What about your conference, any thing cool in production you’ve seen across the country?

Cru Conference on Facebook = Engagement

An engaging Cru Conference facebook page has been a huge hit…before, during and after the conference. Darren Holland has done a great job at making it an engaging place where conversations are happening. There’s no way to prove this, but I can’t imagine conversations like the one below hurt recruiting.

Apparently giving away a free ESV Bible helps build momentum too…
What do you think?

Keller on how to reach a city

This is powerful stuff for all you city laborers out there. These are Tim Keller’s thoughts from the recent global church leaders conference in Africa on how to churches reach cities. Great thoughts that have implications for our campus ministries, especially about evangelism (9ish minute). He also affirms ministries that are reaching college students…yeah!

More thoughts from I Once Was Lost

Everything I’ve been taught about evangelism has been from the perspective of the person doing the evangelism. What I like about I Once was Lost by Everts and Schaupp is that it examines those who don’t know Christ and what the process has looked like for them to take steps toward Christ.

I Once Was Lost describes the 5 Thresholds that many non-believers cross on their path to Christ. Understanding these has helped me have categories for relational evangelism and reasons to celebrate with our staff and students.

Threshold #1 – Moving from distrust to trust of Christians. —I’m quickly finding out the need for this, and realizing that I’m not trained in this area.

Threshold #2 – Moving from complacent to curious about Jesus.

Threshold #3 – Moving from being closed to change to being open to change in their life.

Threshold #4 – Moving from meandering to seeking.

Threshold #5 – Crossing the threshold of the kingdom itself. —As an organization we’re really good at this, but ultimately this is hard if you can’t get an audience.

Great content in this book, but again what does it mean for us as a ministry in Portland (and on a larger level) on a practical level? I’m not sure. Any thoughts? Have you seen these thresholds to be true?

Kind of a book review – I once was Lost

I just powered through  I Once was Lost – What Postmodern Skeptics Taught Us About Their Path to Jesus, in two nights. I felt like I was living the first page yesterday, except that it was raining.

At Portland State University there was a church/Bible school group on campus singing worship songs and trying to awkwardly convert people, including yours truly. The leader was wearing bouncy moon boot shoes to attract attention…yeah, strange. To be fare, they did pray with me and were encouraging, but I couldn’t help but laugh as I read the first page of this book last night….

I can remember that afternoon as if it were yesterday. I (Doug) was standing out in the middle of the green grass of the quad on campus, singing as loudly as I could. Twenty of my Christian friends and I were holding guitars and singing to “witness” to the students who lounged nearby on the sunny patches of grass in the middle of the Cal Berkely campus. We wanted to show our fellow students our authentic joy and love for Jesus. What better way to witness than with bold worship?

And man, did we grow that day! It was a profound faith experience for all of us who were willing to be “fools for Christ.” We stood publicly and shamelessly for the gospel. Our faith was tested and affirmed.

But as for those who were trying to catch some rays on the lawn–well, no one was curious about issues of faith after our public spectacle. Instead of being attractive or intriguing witnesses for Christ, we were just one more random thing in their day, it seemed.

Our bold worship had grown our faith, but it made for weak evangelism. Our fatal flaw? We came up with our evangelistic strategy while we were alone in a room together with a bunch of Christians. Not once in our brainstorming and planning did we ask where our non-Christian fellow students were coming from. Not once did we try to find out what they might need to take a step toward Jesus. We were mostly coming up with something we wanted to do, not something that would be actually helpful to those unsuspecting sunbathers in the quad. I’ll never forget that afternoon.

More to come on the rich evangelism insights from this book that was given to us at our recent leadership conference. It’s written by college ministers doing the work, so it has hit home with me profoundly!

You know you want to subscribe!

If you haven’t figured out how to subscribe to blogs, now’s the time. It’s not Jesus, but it’ll change your life.

This is a practical guide to subscribing to blogs using Google Reader by Michael Hyatt. It’s designed for novices. By the way, I recomend Google Reader because it synch’s with many of the Phone app’s out there….thus I can read blogs on the go!

Once you have Google Reader set up all you have to do is to subscribe to my blog is click the little orange icon at the top of this page, or the little blue icon in right corner of URL bar at the top of the browser. No more wasting time to check if new blog posts have been posted, now they come to you!

Because I love my readers so much I made another way you can subscribe too. If you’re not into Google Reader you can enter your email address on the top right of this page at each new blog post will magically wing it’s way to your email inbox.

Hope it helps!

Poetry Slam highlights

Here are some highlights of the students poems from an outreach we did recently. The talent was unbelievable, and again, it was one of the most engaging outreaches I’ve ever seen. It wasn’t just one guy talking to the audience it was many people talking to many people and the reality of Christ shown brightly! If you want to host this outreach, visit Phil Long’s site here.

Thoughts on evangelism; skepticism and proclamation.

We want to see the campuses in this city transformed. To do that we share our faith a lot. Along the way a couple issues have surfaced for us that we’re doing our best to deal with.

  1. There is a general sense of skepticism here that was not present in my last location (Montana). It’s not that students won’t talk to you…they’re just skeptical (especially of Christians).  For them, Christians are judgmental and overly political. This means more trust has to be built, more rapidly.  One of the best ways to do that is to value the people we’re engaging with. This is where body language, listening skills and tone matters. They must know that I care about them and value them and their thoughts.
  2. This environment can become deadly suffocating when it comes to actually proclaiming the Gospel. If our team wasn’t careful, we could default to have amazing conversations for hours on end that never bring anyone to a point of understanding about who Christ is.  We could easily let cultural norms overtake bold proclamation of the Gospel.
  3. Teaching a student to share their faith here is tricky. Because of the complexity of many of the conversations, modeling an evangelistic opportunity often ends up with Suzy Freshmen wondering if she could ever be skilled enough to share her faith.

Out of these realities has come some action points for me….

  1. Get Biblical about evangelism. Before I bow to any sort of cultural pressure (or CCC staff pressure) I have to ask myself what the Bible says about it. I’m starting with a look at a few verses on evangelism in context (thanks Keith Davy)…John 1:35-51, Acts 8:26-40, Acts 17:16-35
  2. ’100% Try’. A while ago I heard someone say that every conversation they’d have with someone they would try to share the Gospel and bring someone to a understanding that they need to make a choice about Christ. Of course, sometimes God would close conversational doors, but they would try.  They called this the 100% try’. That’s what I want my life to look like.

Any push back? What about your context? What are you learning?

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