success in ministry

Character > Success

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An elder must be blameless, faithful to his wife, a man whose children believe and are not open to the charge of being wild and disobedient. Since an overseer manages God’s household, he must be blameless—not overbearing, not quick-tempered, not given to drunkenness, not violent, not pursuing dishonest gain. Rather, he must be hospitable, one who loves what is good, who is self-controlled, upright, holy and disciplined. He must hold firmly to the trustworthy message as it has been taught, so that he can encourage others by sound doctrine and refute those who oppose it. Titus 1:

In my short time in ministry, I have seen a lot of things. I have learned a lot of what to do and a lot of what not to do in leadership. As we all are flawed, it comes out eventually. Does it matter what we do behind closed doors or how we interact with others in ministry? Most would say "YES!" But is that reality?

What is sacrificed on the altar of success? Too much, I'm afraid. 

A movement has arisen. A movement of success of systems, procedures and strategies. It is a continual search for the next magic pill that will slingshot the church into growth. Without knowing it we forget that our job as leaders is to communicate God's Word and not our "thoughts" about God's Word. You see, character is what matters most. Why? Because as leaders our goal should be to be the same person 100% of the time. Jesus does not want part of our lives, He wants all of it.

We are all broken and sinful. We make dumb decisions and have the wrong attitudes on a daily basis. So my question is do we simply accept our depravity as believers and quit pursuing holiness because we think it is legalism? 

Another movement is all about freedom. Freedom in Christ. Freedom in the sense of indulging in anything you enjoy. Actually when Paul talked about freedom, he always talked about being a bondservant to Christ. Why is it now cool to be as much like the world that we hardly look any different? Am I a legalist? Some might say so. I simply want to ask the question.

In every area of my life am I willing to seek character?

It matters what we say.We will take an account of every word we speak in public and private. Past, present and future. Jesus said, "And I tell you this, you must give an account on judgment day for every idle word you speak." Matthew 12:36

The church is bigger than one location. I'm amazed at all the great churches, leaders and missionaries across the world. Why not become an encourager to other people? Why not celebrate when others grow? Why not speak highly of others?

It matters how you lead people you work alongside in ministry. I have seen my Dad in ministry for over 30 years honor others who he has served alongside. He shares his ups and downs with me, but always goes back to the attitude of forgiveness. Too many leaders have unresolved conflict that erodes their hearts. A bitter person is insecure and bashes others who do not agree with their every move. It is a struggle for me and I'm sure if can be for you too. Jesus championed the disciples. Even when they were clueless, Jesus had a long term mindset. He focused upon who they would become and not just who they were at the time. In ministry, we need this attitude.

By the way, Jesus sees our motives so why try to hide it. The truth always comes out in the light eventually.

It matters how we live morally. Am I talking about moralism? No. I'm talking about morality. Too many "successful" ministers have fallen because of a quick decision to slack in their convictions. As leaders, we need to be accountable. We should always strive to be above reproach, or as the scripture above stated - blameless.

Success is being faithful to the call of God. 

No More Lone Rangers

Here are some notes I've taken down while reading, “No More Lone Rangers: How to build a team centered youth Ministry” I have been focusing lately on how we are to do this thing called "ministry." This book has been great in opening my eyes to the "equipping" that we see in Ephesians 4:11-12

I have learned this far in my short life that being a “long ranger” in youth ministry will not cut it. The focus needs to move off of the youth pastor as the only leader and move to a team mentality. What is success in youth ministry?

  1. Success is sharing ministry, not being a one-person show
  2. Success is modeling the body of Christ, not just teaching about it
  3. Modeling it is the most important along with solid teaching.
  4. Success is caring for the students we have rather than worrying about students we don’t have
  5. God won’t bless with more students if we aren’t caring for the ones we have currently.

    Quote by Jim Burns (The Youth Builders) We firmly believe that on the day we stand before God, He won’t be asking us how many kids came to our ministries. He won’t be delving into our programming, He’ll want to know what we did with the students He entrusted to us. Are we faithful with the students He has entrusted to our care?”

  6. Success is more about what happens after students leave the youth ministry than what they do while they’re in the ministry...Where will they be in 5-10 years after the student ministry?
  7. Success should be viewed as a journey, not as a destination.
  8. Success is God’s job, faithfulness is our job (Parable of the Talents).

Ultimately it comes down to faithfulness. We are to be committed and passionate about following God call on our lives. Hang on for the ride!

What are your thoughts?

Ministry Thoughts - Clarify the win

heavenroad

I'm really enjoying reading through the book: "7 practices of effective ministry." I am being challenged to look at how effective ministry is done.

The first chapter is about finding the goal of ministry. The ultimate priority of the church is changed lives ("to make disciples"). This must be our first priority as the church. That is ultimately how you clarify a win for ministry.

Changed lives is simply the scoreboard for the church.

I think using questions like these will help in measuring success:

- Do attendees feel comfortable inviting their unchurched friends?

- How many people are connected to a small group?

- Do the people understand how to apply the scriptural truths we're teaching in their daily lives?

What do you think? I'd like to know your thoughts.