Archive for April, 2010

I Know Some Servants …

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

With the Spiritual Gift of Teaching:

to instruct others in the Bible in a logical, systematic way so as to communicate pertinent information for true understanding and growth

Servant #1:  He could almost always be found teaching somewhere … in Sunday School, men’s ministry, small groups, and even from the pulpit.  He enjoyed studying the Word to prepare the lessons but came alive when he could share what he learned with others, field their questions, and take them to higher levels in their knowledge of God.

Servant #2:  She rarely taught in Sunday School but she had the gift of teaching.  It came out in other ways.  She led worship in accordance with musical talents she had but didn’t simply lead singing.  She taught people how to worship.  She started homeschooling her children.  She viewed it as a means of discipling them and poured everything into it.  She gave homeschooling a good name.

Servant #3:  She writes curriculum and training materials for others to use.  When she directed children’s ministry, she would often develop the Bible lessons to fit her church’s situation as it was hard to find suitable material.  She carefully designed the material to be teacher friendly and to help students understand truth in ways appropriate with their age level.  When she would teach Sunday School or Bible studies, she most enjoyed when she could develop her own lessons rather than use pre-written curriculum.

Each of these servants had the spiritual gift of teaching but enjoyed using it in different ways.  One thrived in the classroom where he could interact with people, the other in unconventional or less formal settings, and the third more behind the scenes in developing Bible lessons. 

Lesson to be learned: 

People with the same gift, even in the same measure, can look very different in the way they use that gift.  Personality is a big factor but also heart passions and life experiences.  Spiritual gifts are only one piece of the puzzle in forming our best fit in ministry.

Do you have the gift of teaching?  Click on the links below for more:

Online Teaching Ministry Training at MinTools.com

Teaching Ministry Resources

Lining Up with God in Ministry

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make your paths straight.  (Prov. 3:5-6)

These verses have been a good reminder to me throughout my Christian life of lining up with God in ministry and not relying on myself or human wisdom.  Lining up with God has required the following:

Congruence with the Word of God

As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts.  As the rain and the snow come down from heaven, and do not return to it without watering the earth and making it bud and flourish, so that it yields seed for the sower and bread for the eater, so is my word that goes out from my mouth: It will not return to me empty, but will accomplish what I desire and achieve the purpose for which I sent it. (Isa. 55:9-11)

Since God knows more than I do and since His ways are best, it only makes sense to line up with what He says.  In addition, lining up with God in ministry by adhering to His Word comes with PROMISED RESULTS. 

The precepts and principles in the Bible provide a grid through which all else must be filtered because of whose Word it is and the life-changing potential it brings.  Even in teaching, when I stop and consider the Book I am teaching, it affects all I do, including my lesson preparation.

Lining up with God in ministry makes it all seem worthwhile because we know He will use it in some way.

Consistency with the Character of God

You will keep in perfect peace him whose mind is steadfast, because he trusts in you. Trust in the Lord forever, for the Lord, the Lord, is the Rock eternal. (Is. 26:3-4)

We can’t always find a specific verse that addresses every situation in life or every decision we must make.  Sometimes we must look at principles in His Word.  Sometimes we must look at God Himself … His attributes.  God will never ask us to do anything that is inconsistent with His character.  When we keep focused on God, we are PROMISED PEACE.

When we make decisions or respond in ways consistent with the character of God, we are standing on a solid foundation. (Ps. 40:2-3)
The Ministry Worker’s Devotional: A Mighty Fortress is Our God looks at each of God’s attributes as a resource to hold onto in ministry. Put all these resources together and we have a mighty fortress in our God.

Lining up with God in ministry makes it all seem possible because we know He is all we need.

Controlled by the Spirit of God

Be very careful, then, how you live – not as unwise but as wise, making the most of every opportunity, because the days are evil. Therefore do not be foolish, but understand what the Lord’s will is. Do not get drunk on wine, which leads to debauchery. Instead, be filled with the Spirit. (Eph. 5:15-18)

Where are we going to get the wisdom we need to make the most of every opportunity?  The Holy Spirit came to live within us as our Counselor (Jn. 14:16, 26).

Where are we going to get the power we need to do what we know we should do?  The Holy Spirit came to live within us as our Power source (Acts 1:8; Eph. 3:16; Gal. 5:16).

As wine can take over and control a person, so we need to be filled with the Spirit of God (Eph. 5:18).  Our part is to walk with or live by the Spirit, to “keep in step with the Spirit” (Gal. 5:16, 25).  When we do, we get what we need — PROMISED PERSPECTIVE AND POWER.

Lining up with God in ministry makes it all seem endurable because we know we are not on our own.

Hidden Messages in Disciplining

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

Sometimes the message we intend to send when disciplining is not received that way because  . . .

Words and actions do not match:  Sometimes we will say one thing and do another … inconsistency.

Words and demeanor do not match:  Our tone of voice or body language give out a message different from what we are saying … mixed messages.

Words and intent do not match:  We say one thing but mean another … empty threats.

   : (   Is it then any wonder behavior doesn’t change?

Then there are those words that do match our actions, demeanor, and intent but we don’t think about their effect:  Frustration, anger, apathy, or disrespect are there and coming through.  Even then, we could think we are merely communicating our feelings about their behavior but they might be receiving a different message like:

It’s all about the teacher, not the student.  The teacher doesn’t really care about me.

It’s about putting the student in his/her place, not helping him do better.  The teacher thinks I’m stupid or hopeless.

   : (   Is it then any wonder behavior doesn’t change?

When you discipline, think before you speak.  Examine your heart.  Line up with God’s intent and focus in disciplining.  Choose your words carefully.  And then follow that proverbial wisdom to “say what you mean and mean what you say.” 

Article on MinTools.com that could help:
         Ten Things Not to Say When Disciplining

VBS . . . Is It Worth It?

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

Vacation Bible School can be very consuming of time, resources (people and financial), and energy. A lot of effort goes into a short blast of ministry. Is it worth it?

Obviously I can’t answer that question for you.  You need to look at your particular situation.  I can, however, give you a few suggestions to maximize your effort.

1) View prayer as critical.
Make sure this is what God wants you to do. “Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding” (Proverbs 3:5-6). If this type of ministry is His will for you, ask Him to give you a clear purpose for it. Then envelope everything you do in prayer. “Pray without ceasing” (1 Thess. 5:17). For more help on praying your way through VBS, read: 4 Critical Steps to Effectively Prepare for Vacation Bible School.

2) Have a clear purpose and diligently pursue that purpose.
Having Vacation Bible School because “We’ve always done VBS” probably isn’t the reason God would have you hold VBS. We have a purposeful God.

Is your VBS to be a way to disciple your own church’s children and youth during the slow summer months? If so, get beyond the fun of VBS and make sure it also truly helps students know and love the Lord better.

Is your VBS to be a means of community outreach? If so, do everything you can to make sure community kids come and not just those from your own church. And, make sure the Gospel is clearly presented.

3) Choose your curriculum wisely.
A friend told me of her church choosing a certain curriculum because they liked the theme. As teachers prepared, they began to find teaching they did not believe was biblical. Now it was too late to change. All they could do was ask teachers to make necessary fixes … hoping they all knew the Bible well enough themselves to find what needed to be changed. There is more to consider than the theme. Get help here: Choosing Curriculum for Vacation Bible School

4) Plan well enough in advance.
The best time to begin is right after finishing. If you wait too long to begin, everything becomes a rush. You are tempted to take short cuts and not put adequate time into it.  People get frustrated not knowing what they are supposed to do, not having materials early enough, etc. Think through all that needs to be done and strategically plan when to do it. Here’s a tool to serve as a guide: VBS Planning Timeline

5) Recruit strategically.
There is no reason for a handful of people to be overwhelmed. The work of leaders and teachers would be greatly reduced if you got more people involved. How, you might ask, are you supposed to do that when you can’t even fill all the volunteer positions needed in the on-going work of the church? Most people are more willing to help out in time specific, low-commitment ways that fit their gifting and passions. Delegate to many rather than to few and you will spread the load. Yes, that takes coordination but if you do the previous suggestion to plan well enough in advance, that won’t seem so daunting. Here are some examples: A Place for Near All Spiritual Gifts in VBS

6) Take time to follow-up.
Don’t expect that just because you had a VBS program that brought in the community that they will come back. Don’t settle for an unspoken sentiment that those who got saved at VBS are better off than before they came, that you fulfilled your responsibility. If you want people to keep coming back and you want participants to continue growing, you need to follow up. You can read some ideas here: When VBS is Over, Then What?

These suggestions, if followed, could very well tip the scale on whether or not VBS is worth it for you because you

go beyond simply having a nice program that is an end in itself and stresses out its workers 

to something God is in and is able to bless that leads to an even greater purpose and that people find rewarding.