20 Tips for Reducing Stress

by Phil Gons on July 16th, 2007

20-tips-for-reducing-stress.jpgMark Driscoll (Wikipedia) continues his series Death by Ministry. In part 9 he shares 20 tips for reducing your level of stress.

  1. Accept the size of your plate and fill it.
  2. Exercise.
  3. Do not allow technology to be your Lord.
    1. Have two cell phones.
    2. Have two email accounts.
    3. Have someone schedule appointments and screen all email.
    4. Consider getting rid of your voicemail.
    5. Delete emails quickly.
    6. Have an assistant send you a daily items email.
    7. Use an out-of-office autoreply as needed.
  4. Sabbath hourly, daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly, and annually.
  5. Schedule your vacations first and block them out on your calendar.
  6. Pick an acceptable release valve.
  7. Appoint someone other than your wife as your lightning rod.
  8. Spend most of your time training leaders.
  9. Pay attention to what God is saying through your body and emotions.
  10. Feel your emotions but do not allow them to drive you in a bad direction.
  11. Do not worry yourself into a frenzy.
  12. Work from conviction, not guilt.
  13. Get a coach or a counselor.
  14. Have a study and an office.
  15. Schedule meetings rarely.
  16. Say no, and keep saying no.
  17. Get a wedding coordinator.
  18. Carry a notebook at all times to jot thoughts and notes.
  19. See your days as buckets to fill.
  20. Consider regular medical massage.

Many good suggestions and reminders. Do you agree? Disagree? Have any others that you’ve found helpful?

Here are all the contributions to the series so far.

See our previous post: The Burden of Pastoral Ministry.

Like this post? Subscribe to our feed .

Radical Return to Duty

by Matt McCarnan on July 3rd, 2007

New Life 2010According to the Christian Post, the American Baptists are seeking to jumpstart their struggling association with a call to a “‘radical new form’ of ministry.”

The American BaptistAssociation has been through hard times lately, wrestling with doctrinal, practical, and spiritual issues. The whole southwestern constituency split from the Association a year ago.

A. Roy Medley, the general secretary of the Association, declared the need for a “righteous reboot” within the Association, beginning with the launch of New Life 2010. New Life 2010 is a missions project, seeking to produce 1,000,010 new Christians and 1,010 new churches by 2010.

Dr. Edmund Gibbs, of Fuller Theological Seminary, summed up the new vision eloquently:

We must re-imagine the church as ever-multiplying clusters of believers, each one shaped by its mission context, coming together with an intense sense of call to mission in worship style, in elements of ministry, and in the call to ministry in the community.

It seems that behind all the dramatic speech lies not a call to “reimagining” or “radical new forms of ministry,” but a call to renewed dedication to the pursuit of Christ and the furthering of His gospel.

Truthfully, Christianity does not need an exterior makeover. It needs internal, spiritual revival.

Read the Christian Post article here.

Like this post? Subscribe to our feed .

Conrad Mbewe on Expository Preaching

by Phil Gons on June 28th, 2007

Conrad MbeweColin Adams asks Conrad Mbewe, pastor of Katwaba Baptist Church, Zambia, 10 questions about expository preaching. Here are a few selections:

  1. Where do you place the importance of preaching in the grand scheme of church life?
    As far as I can see from the Word of God, preaching must be central to the life of the church. This can be seen from the way the church started in the New Testament. As soon as the first church was gathered together in Acts 2, the Bible records that “they devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer” (Acts 2:42). . . .
  2. How long (on average) does it take you to prepare a sermon?
    It takes anything between two to three hours, depending on how familiar I am with the subject or the text. Because I usually preach in a consecutive expository fashion in my own pulpit, most of the initial spade work would have been done much earlier. Hence, that is not included in this time. Also, I rarely ever write out my sermons in full. My final sermon outline is hardly ever more than one page long. So, again, you have to cut out the average writing time that most pastors go through. That is why I do not spend as much time in sermon preparation as most of my fellow preachers.
  3. Is it important to you that a sermon contain one major theme or idea? If so, how do you crystallise it?
    It is very important. I go before God’s people with “a word from the Lord” and it is important to me that they go home after listening to my preaching with that word—or theme or idea. I ensure that my introduction waters their appetite for that one “word” and that my conclusion nails it in with some immediate application. . . .
  4. What are the greatest perils that a preacher must avoid?
    Familiarity and prayerlessness. I have preached for (only) twenty years and I sense the temptation to handle the work of preaching as “just one of those things”. Yet I am aware that these two vices will cost me the presence of God in preaching and I will soon become a resounding gong or a clanging cymbal. May I add the temptation to use the Bible to say what you already started out wanting to say? . . .
  5. What books on preaching, or exemplars of it, have you found most influential in your own preaching?
    The sermons of Charles Haddon Spurgeon come immediately to mind. In the early years of my Christian life, I used to preach some of them out to an empty church building. Well, it was not completely empty because I had a few of my friends sitting in the pews, but it was not a worship service either. Martyn Lloyd-Jones’ Evangelistic Sermons and his Old Testament Evangelistic Sermons (both published by the Banner of Truth Trust) are great examples of evangelistic preaching. One can add to this his expositions in Romans and Ephesians. Those sermons are worth their weight in gold! You will notice, therefore, that I have learnt more from books that contain sermons rather than books that teach how to preach.

Read the whole post at Unashamed Workman.

See also:

Like this post? Subscribe to our feed .

Thabiti Anyabwile on Expository Preaching

by Phil Gons on May 9th, 2007

Thabiti AnyabwileColin Adams asks Thabiti Anyabwile, pastor of First Baptist Church in Grand Cayman, Cayman Islands, 10 questions about expository preaching. Here are a few selections:

  1. Where do you place the importance of preaching in the grand scheme of church life?
    I would rank preaching Christ and Him crucified as the most important commitment of the ministry. Everything else builds upon the exposition of God’s Word. . . .
  2. How long (on average) does it take you to prepare a sermon?
    Currently, I devote two full days to sermon preparation—Thursday and Friday. I’ll generally spend about twenty hours over those two days and a few hours through the week reading the text and making notes.
  3. Is it important to you that a sermon contain one major theme or idea? If so, how do you crystallise it?
    I think the sermon should contain the major themes or points of the text being considered. . . . I’d rather the number of themes or ideas from the text to determine the structure of my sermon than my “sermon framework/approach” to drive the number of themes or ideas I focus on in a text.
  4. What is the most important aspect of a preacher’s style and what should he avoid?
    I think it’s probably most important that a preacher be himself . . . whatever that means stylistically. Piper is Piper; MacArthur is MacArthur; Stott is Stott; Lloyd-Jones was Lloyd-Jones. I suppose Thabiti is Thabiti, though as a young preacher I’m still trying to figure out what that means. . . .
  5. What notes, if any, do you use?
    I take a full manuscript into the pulpit. I’ll probably deliver 85% of it. . . . I do this because I’m concerned about two things: 1) I want to be theologically more precise . . . . 2) Some of the most influential and prominent men in the history of the African American church left almost no record of their preaching ministries. . . .

Read the whole post at Unashamed Workman.

See also:

Like this post? Subscribe to our feed .

Vaughan Roberts on Expository Preaching

by Phil Gons on May 2nd, 2007

Vaughan RobertsColin Adams asks Vaughan Roberts, Rector of St Ebbes Church in Oxford, 10 questions about expository preaching. Here are a few selections:

  1. Where do you place the importance of preaching in the grand scheme of church life?
    Preaching is central. Christ gathers his church and rules it through his word. The preaching of his word must therefore be the focal point of our congregational gatherings if Christ is to be at the centre. . . .
  2. How long (on average) does it take you to prepare a sermon?
    About 12 hours. Early sermons in a new series on a less familiar book can take a few hours longer.
  3. Is it important to you that a sermon contain one major theme or idea? If so, how do you crystallise it?
    It’s certainly important that the sermon should have an aim. It needs to have a clear sense of direction and of what it intends to communicate. That is not a single point that’s chosen arbitrarily from a number of different points that could be made from the passage; it should rather be driven by the thrust of the text itself. . . .
  4. What are the greatest perils that a preacher must avoid?
    They will vary from person to person and from time to time. At the moment my biggest danger is taking on too much and drifting into a spiritually dull ‘professionalism’ as a preacher. I need to preserve the freshness of my own walk with Christ if my preaching is to remain fresh.
  5. What books on preaching, or exemplars of it, have you found most influential in your own preaching?
    John Stott’s ‘I believe in preaching’ was the first book I read on the subject and I still go back to it. John Stott, Dick Lucas, Roy Clements and Jonathan Fletcher were influential models when I first began preaching.

Read the whole post at Unashamed Workman.

See also:

Like this post? Subscribe to our feed .

Voddie Baucham on Expository Preaching

by Phil Gons on April 18th, 2007

Voddie BauchamColin Adams asks Voddie Baucham, Pastor of Preaching at Grace Family Baptist Church in Spring, TX, 10 questions about expository preaching. Here are a few selections:

  1. Where do you place the importance of preaching in the grand scheme of church life?
    I believe preaching is central to the grand scheme of church life (see Acts 2:42ff). Preaching/teaching sets the tone and the parameters for all other functions of the church. . . .
  2. Is it important to you that a sermon contain one major theme or idea? If so, how do you crystallise it?
    Absolutely! I am always looking for the central theme in a passage. There may be more than one, but I have come to realize that I am most effective when I limit myself to the main idea. . . .
  3. What is the most important aspect of a preacher’s style and what should he avoid?
    The most important aspect of a preacher’s style is authenticity. . . .
  4. What are the greatest perils that a preacher must avoid?
    Laziness, pride and the fear of men. Laziness will keep us from plumbing the depths of the Word. Pride will keep us from prayer, and the fear of men will keep us from preaching the hard things.
  5. What books on preaching, or exemplars of it, have you found most influential in your own preaching?
    12 Essential Skills for Great Preaching, by Wayne McDill, Spirit Empowered Preaching, by Arturo Azurdia, and Preaching and Preachers, by D. Martin Lloyd Jones. As for exemplars, I am fond of men like Tony Evans, Alistair Begg and John Piper.

Read the whole post at Unashamed Workman.

See also:

Like this post? Subscribe to our feed .

Philip Ryken on Expository Preaching

by Phil Gons on April 11th, 2007

Philip RykenColin Adams asks Philip Ryken, senior minister of Tenth Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia, 10 questions about expository preaching. Here are a few selections:

  1. Can you provide us with a definition of biblical preaching?
    Expository preaching means making God’s Word plain. In an expository sermon the preacher simply tries to explain what the Bible teaches. The main points of his sermon are the points made by a particular text in the Bible. . . .
  2. Do you have any thoughts on the current concern over ‘redemptive-historical’ preaching? How does preaching Christ from all the Scriptures govern the shape of your sermons?
    I have been strongly influenced by Geerhardus Vos, Sidney Greidanus, Edmund Clowney, and other advocates of redemptive-historical preaching. What I take to be the main point of this emphasis is exactly right: that we are to preach Christ from all the Scriptures, as Jesus himself did (see Luke 24:25-27). . . .
  3. What books on preaching have you found most influential in your own preaching?
    I find Bryan Chapell’s book on Christ-Centered Preaching to be the best how-to manual for beginning to learn how to preach. For capturing the flavor of what preaching is all about my favorite book is John Piper’s The Supremacy of God in Preaching.
  4. What has been your practice in preaching as regards consecutive expository, textual or topical preaching?
    My general practice is to preach expository sermons from consecutive passages in whole books of the Bible. On occasion I have preached a more topical series, but I have generally done this in expositional format. . . .
  5. What concessions, if any, does the modern preacher have to make in order to speak to postmodernity?
    I’m not sure that any preacher ever has to make any concessions to anything except the Word of God, to which he submits as his only ultimate authority. Of course it is true that any preacher needs to know the context in which he is preaching. . . .

Read the whole post at Unashamed Workman.

HT: Justin Taylor

See also:

Like this post? Subscribe to our feed .

Pastor Shares Six Benefits of Blogging

by Phil Gons on April 10th, 2007

Pastor Mike Ballard, who blogs at Running for the Prize, just started blogging in January. He shares six benefits that blogging has had for his ministry.

  1. Creativity – Blogging regularly has helped spark my creativity and challenges me to come up with different ways to keep my readers checking my blog.
  2. Information – Blogging allows me to share information with the members of my congregation about upcoming events and any updates.
  3. Transparency – I am able to share little bits of information about the happenings in my life and with my family that allow me to be a little more “real” with my members. . . .
  4. Discipleship – Blogging gives me a chance to teach my members throughout the week. . . .
  5. Preaching – Blogging has blessed my preaching because it is helping me develop my storytelling skills. . . .
  6. World Missions – Blogging has also allowed me to share God’s good news with people around the world. . . .

Read the whole post at ChurchCommunicationsPro.com.

Also, check out Cory Miller’s extensive ‘I Help Pastors Blog’ Series.

Related Post:

Like this post? Subscribe to our feed .

Members Using Blogs to Attack Their Pastors

by Phil Gons on April 5th, 2007

Bill Seaver, a guest blogger at Church Marketing Sucks, talks about the growing trend of disgruntled church members to vent their frustrations and disagreements with their pastors and church leaders.

I personally know of four churches that are dealing with this to some degree right now. Here are two examples from Bellevue Baptist in Memphis, Tenn. (these are not blogs in the purest sense of the word but are text-only web sites that serve the same purpose).

The issues that prompt the attacks vary, but in each case the church is under fire from a small group of individuals who disagree with the leadership (either the pastor himself or the leadership as a whole). Also, in every case the churches had no idea what hit them.

He suggests five steps to take for pastors in this kind of situation and for those who want to prepare for it.

  1. Start a Blog ASAP
    If you start a blog now, before a crisis, you will have more credibility when/if an issue pops up. I think it’s a good idea to be blogging anyway just for communication and feedback purposes, but now more than ever I’m convinced that it’s necessary for such a case as this. . . .
  2. Get Notifications
    There are two great places to easily find out what bloggers are saying about you and your church. Technorati.com is the hub of the blogging universe and allows you to search on words and phrases to see if any blogs mention the words. . . . You should also set up Google Alerts. . . . [I’d also recommend using the new Google Blog Search.]
  3. Be Open and Honest
    Here’s the thing about blogging, it’s a great medium that facilitates conversation and understanding, but if you’re not telling the whole truth, you’re going to wish you never said anything at all. Whether you get busted in your own blog’s comments or on someone else’s blog, I can almost guarantee you’ll be caught (probably by another blogger) if you give half truths, misleading statements or outright lies. As long as you respond openly, honestly and candidly, people will see that you don’t have anything to hide and that you’re willing to address the concerns of the attack blog. . . .
  4. Everyone Reads Attack Blogs
    Recent studies show that only about 30% of Americans read blogs, but that number will increase dramatically if there’s an attack blog targeting your church. Attack blogs are both easily accessible and raise curiosity once discovered. . . .
  5. Ask for Help
    If you don’t understand how to get a blog started or how to respond (if you find yourself in a crisis situation) find someone to help you. . . .

Read the whole article.

Like this post? Subscribe to our feed .

Tim Keller on Expository Preaching

by Phil Gons on April 4th, 2007

Tim KellerColin Adams asks Tim Keller, pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church, 10 questions about expository preaching. Here are a few selections:

  1. Where do you place the importance of preaching in the grand scheme of church life?
    It is central, but not alone at the center. Pastoral ministry is as important as preaching ministry, and lay ‘every-member’ ministry is as crucial as ordained ministry. . . .
  2. How long (on average) does it take you to prepare a sermon?
    I pastor a large church and have a large staff and so I give special prominence to preparing the sermon. I give it 15-20 hours a week. . . . When I was a pastor without a large staff I put in 6-8 hours on a sermon.
  3. What is the most important aspect of a preacher’s style and what should he avoid?
    He should combine warmth and authority/force. That is hard to do, since tempermentally we incline one way or the other. . . .
  4. What notes, if any, do you use?
    I use a very detailed outline, with many key phrases in each sub-point written out word for word.
  5. How do you fight to balance preparation for preaching with other important responsibilities (eg. pastoral care, leadership responsibilities)?
    It is a very great mistake to pit pastoral care and leadership against preaching preparation. It is only through doing people-work that you become the preacher you need to be–someone who knows sin, how the heart works, what people’s struggles are, and so on. . . .

Read the whole post at Unashamed Workman.

See also:

Like this post? Subscribe to our feed .

 
-->