Archives for category: ministry

I met Dan King (perhaps better known as @bibledude) through the Idea Camp, a unique tribe of idea-makers who collaborate for good in their neighborhoods, and around the world. Dan’s love for his family and for the church to rise up and become the force for good that God intends stood out to me as we shared a meal together.

The title, The Unlikely Missionary: From Pew-Warmer to Poverty-Fighter, captures the essence of what Dan seeks to do with this book — to move people from lukewarm church attending to passionately following Jesus to serve those He loves. For a more in-depth conversation on why Dan wrote this book and what he hopes to accomplish through it, read this interview I conducted with him for ChurchLeaders.com.

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This is the second of a two-part series, reflecting on the news of a handful of well-known pastors leaving their churches.

As a pastor of a local church community, I have often been asked, “So, what, exactly, do you do during the week?” This lack of clarity about the pastorate as a vocation extends not only to curious congregants, but ministers seeking to be faithful to God’s call as well.

As Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove writes,

Our vocation is facing something of a crisis. Many pastors aren’t sure how to describe their calling or explain why it matters to the rest of the world.

My wife and I have served together in vocational ministry as pastors for the last eleven years, but neither of us would claim to have even begun figuring this thing out. Far from being a systematic treatment, here are a couple of my thoughts on pastoral ministry:

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News of author and pastor Rob Bell leaving the church he founded, Mars Hill in Michigan, has set off another round of tweets and updates in the Christian blogosphere and Twitterverse. While this particular flare-up doesn’t seem to carry the particularly nasty tone of the whole Love Wins controversy, a few prominent church leaders have already taken to their keyboards with harsh words (which I won’t be quoting here).

While the cynic in me wants to wipe the dust of this latest Christian dust-up off my feet, particularly in light of some of the important national and geopolitical happenings this week, this news raises some significant issues for the Church and how we’re called to be the people of God together Read the rest of this entry »

As Eugene Cho commented recently, it’s altogether too easy to act like a jerk in the name of “contending” for the Gospel.

I think Rob Bell’s characterization of broader American culture is unfortunately true of the church many times as well: “There is this low-grade boiling rage that many people carry around with them everywhere they go.”

[Ironic edit: The aforementioned Rob Bell has become a trending topic on Twitter because of a group of people who are adamantly opposed to him, filled with the typical name-calling, gnashing of teeth, and end-of-the-world-as-we-know-it hysterics typical to such trending topics.]

Apologies for sounding like a stereotypical, institution-suspicious Xer when I say this (but totally not apologizing for still nerding out over The Breakfast Club, as seen in the photo above!), but I am growing weary of the infighting in my denomination. I think we could play a pretty mean game of church insider-bingo with the vocab being thrown around: tall steeple churches, white papers, open letters, angry responses, clarification letters… BINGO!

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Among the slew of robocall messages urging our church to reply to various offers, scams and odd promotions, I found a message on our answering machine from an irate neighbor (anonymous, of course) to our church building.  The message went something like this:

Around 7:30 last night, I saw several homeless people on your church property. They are a nuisance to our neighborhood. This is our neighborhood.  It’s your church, so you should call the police and take care of this problem.

Apologies for the over-italicization of the above quote; the message basically sounded the way it looks, though.  So much anger in such a short message.

Our church community is continually trying to figure out how to be a redemptive part of our neighborhood and, in Point Loma, that means doing our best to reach out to the homeless community there. Through efforts like Laundry Love and the Ladle Fellowship downtown, we’re in the process of demonstrating Christ’s love to those in need.

But what to do about angry, territorial neighbors who aren’t so, well, neighborly?

I am certain they need to know the redemptive, transformative love of Jesus.  Maybe it’s because the brokenness of so many of the homeless people I’ve met is so evident, but my capacity for empathy and compassion comes more easily for them than for the person who left the message on our answering machine.

Reminds me of a story Jesus told.  Instead of asking, “Who is my neighbor?” the real question is, “To whom can I be a neighbor?”

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