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Connections & partnerships with local businesses (3 of 3)

A local tanning and waxing salon emailed our church with the following request:

“Each Xmas I have helped different charities and have managed to get our clients to contribute to give as well each year! This year I personally want to help 3 different families in our area locally that need some help this year. I would like to arrange a hamper for each family and hopefully I can get clients to donate gifts & goods to the chosen families. I was told that your church would know who would benefit from this.” 

This is great on so many levels:

  • Partnering together to care for those in need.
  • Its a great thing for those in need to receive this Christmas.
  • We both cross promote each other, as we let people at church know and they let their clients know about the venture… awareness of both groups grows. Mutually beneficial.
  • It’s an encouragement to know that we have a reputation in the community of “doing good” and would know people in need this Christmas.

So this Salon will do up some hampers and then we will distribute it to 3 people we know who would welcome such a gift this Christmas.

Check out post 1 and post 2 in this 3 part series

Connections & partnerships with local businesses (part 1 of 3)

Churches will often say that they are looking for ways to connect with and serve local residents, workers, and businesses. What does this look like? In particular how do you seek ways to connect and seve local businesses?

Some do’s and don’ts in connecting & serving businesses:

  1. Pursue mutually beneficial partnerships - Don’t exploit local businesses. Often churches only approach businesses to get something out of them or assume they ‘should’ help churches out and donate to our cause or allow us to put posters up … but what do they get in return.
  2. Seek their prosperity. Think of things that might bless them, help their business to thrive. What things can you do to help them build new connections, clients or customers. (This can still be ‘beneficial’ to your church also – wait for the next post in this series for an example.

  3. Lead the way on important issues. Demonstrate to your community how we ought to repsond to tragedy, disaster or poverty around us. Although our motives my be different, I think it is good for the church to be the leader in mercy activities. Help unbelievers care about other people and perhaps include them in to your already established structures that contribute to those in need
Why do this?
  • “He must also have a good reputation with outsiders” – 1 Tim 3:7
  • Also, seek the peace and prosperity of the city to which I have carried you into exile. Pray to the LORD for it, because if it prospers, you too will prosper.” – Jeremiah 29:7
  • “We loved you so much that we were delighted to share with you not only the gospel of God but our lives as well, because you had become so dear to us.” – 1 Thess. 2:8
  • “But love your enemies, do good to them, and lend to them without expecting to get anything back” – Lk 6:33

AND….. 

Things like this connects local business with with more Christians.

The more local Christians use the local business, and they more the local busineees knows more and more Christians, the world gets just a little smaller. My hope would mean genuine community is built, locals know each other better… and Christians have even more opportunity to share our lives with them :)

Doing things in partnership will mean your church ‘brand’ keeps being put in front of people, not only the owners or employees of the businees that you are dealing with but also their cliental. If it is a local business servicing, then you have access to the demographic you should be trying to reach within your parish: locals.

3 tips for a missional Christmas

  1. Throw a block / street Christmas Party.
    Get your apartment block together for a party or if you live in an area that has laneways why not a street party? Get some inspiration from one of my dear friends The City Mouse: Good Neighbour plans laneway parties for Surry Hills
    Why not do something similar this Christmas? Have on hand flyers to church and invite your guests along. Or perhaps arrange to sing one of your favourite Christmas Carols and share in 1 minute or less why it is your favourite: “its tells me Jesus is… “etc.
  2. Send Christmas Cards
    You dont have to buy Cheesy Christian Cards rather buy ordinary Christmas cards and put the gospel in them yourself. As you send cards, pray for the people as you sign off on them and pray also for the people you receive cards from. Or hand deliver a Christmas Card and a gift to your apartment block. Spread the Christmas cheer.
  3. Invite People to Church or to your Carols Event
    Most people are up for a good sing-a-long at Christmas or are happy to wave around a candle at a carols by candlelight service… so invite them along. One of the biggest obstacles to our friends/neighbours/collegues/baristas not coming to church are Christmas time, is that we fail to invite them along.

 

 

Kiwi’s doing Christmas…

Stumbled across St Paul’s Church, Auckland NZ Christmas stuff:Love it!!

This is a video they created for Christmas 2010

This is the website for their Christmas Carols Event, Glow: Simple & Effective website.

Preaching ideas for Christmas Services

  • Joy!
  • Oh for the joy!
  • Joy of every longing heart
  • Peace!
  • Rejoice! (Augustine)
  • Adore!
  • Home for the holidays
  • Come and stand amazed
  • Tiny Baby, Total Saviour
  • 12 days of Christmas
  • The Manger and The Cross (Bonhoeffer)
  • Christmas Travels – God Travels Wonderful Paths  (Bonhoeffer)
  • The gift of Christmas
  • The sounds of Christmas
  • Christmas Unwrapped
  • Not Only Christmas Day
  • Riches
  • Wise Men Still Seek Him (Men’s Christmas Event?)
  • Recipe For Christmas (Women’s Christmas Event? Gingerbread Event?)
  • Feasting
  • The Gift that keeps on giving
  • Authentic Jesus
  • The case for Christmas
  • Rediscovering Christmas
  • Christmas Around the World
  • Family Christmas
  • Living Christmas
  • Stuck with the same plans for Christmas?
  • The best gifts
  • This is Christmas
  • Simply Christmas
  • 3D Christmas

26 Outreach Ideas for Christmas…

I know it is only June, but what are you thinking of doing this Christmas?

Are you going to be exploiting the festive cheer to preach the good news of Jesus Christ given unto us?

Ideas for Christmas Outreach:

  1. Community Carols Event
  2. Christmas Festive Market
  3. Anglicare Christmas Appeal – Toys and Tucker
  4. Blue Christmas (church service for those grieving)
  5. Free Community Christmas Day Lunch
  6. Kids holiday program
  7. Letterbox drop
  8. Christmas Hampers for those in need in the local area
  9. Music / Concert / Recital
  10. Gingerbread House making night
  11. Nursing home visit with caroling
  12. Street Christmas party
  13. Apartment block Christmas party
  14. Outdoors large Nativity scene
  15. Nativity Play
  16. Church Christmas Tour
  17. Youth Band Night
  18. Additional Church services to the normal weekend
  19. Carols by Candlelight
  20. Midnight Mass Christmas Eve
  21. Family Christmas Service
  22. Christmas movie night screen “The Nativity Story” (bit old but…)
  23. Operation Christmas Child, invite community to take part.
  24. Christmas Shopping Child minding… look after kids while people shop. Have gospel content… Christmas craft etc.
  25. Christmas tree delivery
  26. Bible / Scripture giveaway

Winter Snow…

Audrey Assad has a beautiful voice. This song evokes in your heart a tone of reflection of our Christmas exceptions… Jesus came as a humble little baby, dependent, fleshly, weak and vulnerable… yet was God, clothed with all righteousness and power.

Could’ve come like a mighty storm
With all the strength of a hurricane

….You came like the winter snow
You were quiet

Community Christmas

There’s a reason that Christmas peels back the layers of life and shows community in a unique way. We celebrate Christmas in honor of Jesus Christ being born a baby in a manger, of God being made flesh. One of the many beautifully painful things the incarnated Christ did was to knit together a patchwork of people from very different cultures into His church. Just look at the motley crew of apostles—a tax collector, a couple hardheaded brothers, fishermen, a former Pharisee. Even within the “homogeneous” land of Israel, this ragtag group became the builders of the early Church.


Click Here
to read the rest of this article…. from Relevant Magazine


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