BEAUTIFUL by Phil Wickham
I see Your face in every sunrise
The colors of the morning are inside Your eyes
The world awakens in the light of the day
I look up to the sky and say
You’re beautifulI see Your power in the moonlit night
Where planets are in motion and galaxies are bright
We are amazed in the light of the stars
It’s all proclaiming who You are
You’re beautiful, You’re beautifulI see you there hanging on a tree
You bled and then you died and then you rose again for me
Now you are sitting on Your heavenly throne
Soon we will be coming home
You’re beautiful, you’re beautifulWhen we arrive at eternity’s shore
Where death is just a memory and tears are no more
We’ll enter in as the wedding bells ring
Your bride will come together and we’ll sing
You’re beautiful, You’re beautiful, You’re beautiful
Phil Wickham
Neil Postman could be right…
Neil Postman wrote a book: Amusing ourselves to death. And although Neil writes on his perspective on the way media is infultrating our culture and socitey 30 years ago… I think Neil Postman could be right about a few things.
I read his book 3 years ago and it has been helpful to guide my thoughts when deciding how to do church in ways that engage? Whether we do things at church because we give into the laziness & distractedness of our generation!
We sit in church singing praise to God while checking facebook on our iPhones. We listen to the sermon while writing our shopping list. We read our bibles while we eat our breakfast, comb our hair and brush our teeth, all the while we are listening to a new album we bought.
I don’t think we should make life impossible for our generation to be engage with the gospel at church. We should strive to be creative and relevant. However I do sometimes think less frills and whistles means people will have to think about their faith… and we allow the power of the gospel to transform.
It is sad that so many Christians I come into contact are so shy of their faith, haven’t thought deep about some of the issues of life that are effecting them or are just not confident knowing their way around their bibles – even after decades of being a Christian. I find this disturbing after all this is also the we are also living in an age where a high percentage of the western world are university educated. We can think but we choose to entertain ourselves to death and fill our minds with rubbish instead of the soothing and refreshing words of the gospel.
Sometimes churches perhaps try too hard to be engaging and make church more and more like a performance. Not in terms of lighting & production design but in the way the humble service leader just guides the night as though an MC at a wedding. Peoples hearts aren’t guided, peoples hearts are not engaged although they may be slightly entertained?
What do we need to do to grab people’s attention with the good news of Jesus?
Is the news of Jesus riveting enough?
If you plan worship meetings, service lead or find it sad to see church attendees leave church unaffected>>> read more on The Necessity of Boredom @ Neue Ministry.
Free Online Leadership Conference…
THE NINES is a free one-day event that will take place totally on-line, offered by Leadership Network. It is designed for all church staff members who want to be motivated and stretched in their leadership.
It begins: 09/09/09 at 9:09am CST.(which works out to be 11pm Sydney time – I think!)
You will hear from 47+ speakers, who will each spend 9 minutes giving their best leadership advice.
Speakers include:
Mark Batterson :: National Community Church (Washington, DC)
Dave Ferguson :: Community Christian Church (Naperville, IL)
Reggie Joiner :: reThink Group
Dan Kimball :: Vintage Faith Church (Santa Cruz, CA)
Perry Noble :: NewSpring Church (Anderson, SC)
Ed Stetzer :: LifeWay Research
and many many more!
It’s totally free, but you must pre-register.
I think its a pretty unique way to run a conference – it will be interesting to see how it works and what the content will be like.
H/T ChurchRelevance
Who Are Your Neighbours?
There are lots of demographic resources, such as your Local Council’s website or Informed Decisions (www.id.com.au) which have community snapshots available, which can help you build a better picture of your parish or church suburb. I have blogged about them before however I have been recently convicted about how much time I spend researching outreach opportunities and/or getting to know my community via the web. (helpful thing to do, but shouldn’t be the only way it happens)
My encouragement to you is instead of sitting behind a computer to work out who your neighbours are, check out the demographics for yourself. Wander around your local community and see with your own eyes the people you are trying to reach.
Take off every couple of weeks to sit on a park bench, in a café or to just stroll the streets – and watch your community walk by. Go at different times and days in the week and as you scan the faces, shops, business and activity ask these questions:
- What are the businesses that thrive?
- Are there lots of the same services available?
- What does your local council focus efforts on?
- What other community services cater for people in your area?
- Where do the people spend most of their leisure time?
- How strong is the sense of common identity?
- Are they young, old, workers, wealthy, unemployed?
- What do they value?
- What is my church doing to reach them with the good news of Jesus?
From the web…
Churches that fit their communityChurch By the Bridge at Kirribilli recently ran an Art competition for depictions of the suburb. They offered a $1000 prize to the winner. It was a huge success at raising the profile of the church and engaging with the local community.
That made me wonder about how should a church fit into a community. After all, our efforts in Connect 09 revolve around contacting our community.
Gary Bully is a denominational church planting theorist from the USA.
Martin Morgan gave me one of his papers called “Developing a Contextualized Church Planting Strategy”. In it he says there are four possible relationships between a church and the community, two corporate and two personal. They are:
1. The church as the centre of community life
2. The church as part of the community
3. Church people loved as an important part of the community
4. Church people not really noticed in the communityMy thoughts on this are that the first two are not necessarily alternatives to the second two; they may feed each other. A much more important reality however would be that God is at the centre of the community. Bully is insightful though, because he helps us to see that people identified as Christians, and Christians as a group being known and appreciated is very helpful as we work toward God being the centre of our community.
So a couple of questions come to mind about my congregation. They are:
1. How do I perceive my place in the community?
2. How do I perceive the church’s place in the community
3. How does my community perceive my place in it?
4. How does my community perceive the place of our church?The difference between the answers to questions 1 and 2 compared to questions 3 and 4 will keep us honest. I have found Peter Bolt’s Mission Minded book a great help in thinking through how to better place ourselves and our church in the community.
from SydneyAnglicans.net
and I quote…

what is the greatest love? read this OR watch this

August 30, 2009






