Archive for the ‘Influence’ category

Rich Mullins

June 12, 2008

Do you ever find things on your iPod that surprise you? Apparently I had put Rich Mullins’ album A Liturgy, A Legacy & A Ragamuffin Bandin my playlist. So I decided to take a listen. Now the album is a number of years old and has a decidedly early 90’s Christian music folk sound, but…it floored me.

There I am sitting in the car and my eyes are welling up and emotions are bombarding me and the freshness of Rich’s delivery and lyrics has taken over. I heard “Hold Me Jesus” like it was the first time I had ever heard it.

Perhaps it was the first time I really heard what Rich was trying to say in those words. Whatever the case I had to pull into Barnes & Nobles and get out of the car to pull myself together. Emotions are such powerful things. They can be allies or adversaries.

I am thankful that my day was invaded by the late Rich Mullins. A liturgy is a path to God’s presence; a legacy is something that lives on after we are gone. I’d say Rich’s album title was prophetic and true – at least today, long after Rich’s too early passing, it brought me to God’s presence, and let me know Him just a little more.

Real Success

June 10, 2008

I’m a quote guy. I love quotes. In fact, I think quotes are better than just rattling off some thought or idea because they have come out of someone else’s mouth. How many times, parents, have you told and retold your child something only to have them come back after hearing the same thing from another individual…and doing it.

Somehow hearing things from outside our normal “tribe” gives the words more meaning. David McCullough says that “real success is finding your lifework in the work that you love.”

When you have found a way to do something you love and get paid doing it, you have found true success. Look at your situation right now and ask the hard question, “Do I love, really love what I’m doing?” “Is what I’m doing something I would do even if I didn’t receive a paycheck?”

The answers to those questions will reveal the reality of your situation. It may be that you are not where you want to be. If you are young, you have time to find what really gives you joy. If you are older, you know what gives you joy, but it may not be the same thing you are employed to do.

Re-evaluation is key in all of the processes of life. Culture and time move on and we must adjust to remain relevant and able to contribute. Ask the hard questions and resolve to put action behind the answers. As Rob Schneider says in every Adam Sandler movie, “You can do it!”

Are we acting?

June 9, 2008

Johnny Depp has proven himself time and time again as a great actor. His ability to invest himself into a part and “become” the character he has been asked to play is a credit to his talent, preparation and quest for more than just “playing a part”.

He is quoted as saying, “With any part you play, there is a certain amount of yourself in it. There has to be, otherwise it’s just not acting. It’s lying.”

We all have people in our lives who require a different context for our interaction with them. We are different with family than we are with business associates; we modify our language around customers as opposed to co-workers. Throughout our lives we shift in different modes when faced with different situations and different people.

We must maintain ourselves in those transitions. Authenticity is not defined by the minute actions and information exchanged, it is defined by the inner force behind those actions. People know when we are faking. Not because the don’t believe the words we are saying, but because they don’t believe the “we” that are saying them.

When we don’t believe what we say we mutiny against ourselves. Subliminal sabotage results as we embark in conversations, relationships or proposals that we are not confidently secure in at the onset.

When Paul spoke of being “all things to all people”, methods and decorum were the items that changed, not the authenticity of the message. Center yourself around your message, only when you believe it will you have any chance of securing belief from others.

What Are We Here For?

June 8, 2008

Today we finish out the series “God and Your Bod”. We’ve discussed the eyes, ears, mouth, feet and conclude with the hands. How to glorify God with our hands.

I’m writing this after the musical portion of the first of our three services. The last song we sang was “Amazing Grace (My Chains are Gone)” made popular by Chris Tomlin. Louie Giglio the founder of the Passion movement spoke about how this song came about. Chris had been asked to remake “Amazing Grace” for the movie of the same name about William Wilberforce’s struggle to end slavery in England.

Talk about a tall order. Remake the most familiar song in the world? As it turned out, Chris did remake the song, and by all accounts did a great job. Louie jokes that some of the kids listening to Chris and his contemporaries will think he (Chris) wrote “Amazing Grace”. In the chorus, Chris took the context of the song and put it into words of action – “My chains are gone, I’ve been set free.” 

I have to be honest, as a Creative Pastor, it is a great thing to plan services and create environments condusive for people to meet God, but what is greater than that is seeing it happen right before your eyes. Greater still is to be able to experience it alongside the people whose stories you are familiar with, and know that their chains are gone and they have been set free.

No greater joy is there than when you have done all that you can do and then see God take it a quantum step further. None of it would be possible without a team of people – musicians, singers, tech people – who have the same desire of creating environments that help people “tune in” to God.

Today we talk about using our hands to glorify God. I’m grateful for those who use their “hands” each Sunday to glorify God.

Thanks to: Gerry Marshall, Kevin Kinkade, Joe Booker, Kim Hague, Chris McCray, Gary Lane, Amy Hildreth (who gives me more support and love than I think I’m worth), John Sloan, Eli Hoffman, Jed Broussard, Lauren Evans, Casey Leeb, Lauren Gill, Bianca Broussard, Laura Kinkade and all of the other volunteers who make Sundays run so smoothly.

What are we here for? We are here to use what we have for the greater good, in the moment, to glorify God by actively pursuing God’s “kingdom here on earth as it is in Heaven”.

Re-invention

June 4, 2008

One of the things that successful organizations have to always keep before them is the value of, what I call, Thinking Forward.  While it is important to have your focus on the Now, it is also just as important to look ahead. In fact, one of the keys to Lifepoint’s continued relevance is it’s ability to review current culture and point out where the church can best impact the local community of Byron and Peach and Houston Counties.

To let you in on some thinking and how far we allow brainstorming to go, ask yourself some questions. What can Lifepoint do to positivley impact its locality more than it is currently doing? Don’t just think of adding programs, think deeper to what inner cultural changes can be made…or should anything be changed at all?

We all know that all things green are prevelant in culture, more now than at any other time. What could or should we do as a church to acknowledge this shift in culture?

What about the impact of a black candidate for President? How should or could we work toward racial unity in our local environment? 

What about the increase of Islam as a world religion and its misunderstanding in most conservative southern churches? What should or could we do to motivate a combining of efforts with Islamic, Jewish, Catholic and Protestant faiths to promote a better city and rural life for those around us?

These are not questions that most religious leaders want to listen to or acknowledge, but this is the life we live. These questions and more are on the minds and hearts of Middle Georgians. If we as a church do not seek to cultivate a community that at the very least entertains these questions, we will find ourselves running toward a road that ends with divisional walls separating the “us” from the “them”.

Lifepoint is a different place entirely. We challenge the “us/them” question consistantly. We see Macon in a downward spiral and ask, “What can we do?” We see the increase in gas prices and ask, “What can we do?” We look out and hear the discomfort and unease around us and ask, “What can we do?” But more than just ask the questions, when we have defined a place where we can make a difference, we do something.

No, we do not feed thousands and build hundreds of homes and provide countless jobs, but we do what we can. Often we as individuals look out and feel overwhelmed by the magnitude of problems that surround us. We become paralyzed and still. At Lifepoint we have been there too. Paralyzed and unsure of what action to take.

The difference is that we constantly relook and relook at circumstances to provoke us to do something. We have provided water for those in Africa and shelter for those in Houston County. Is there more to do? Certainly, and because of that don’t be suprised when things change.

The central guiding focus of Lifepoint is to provide an environment where those who do not know God or who have known and left can come and experience a place to grow into faith. It’s OK to not believe in God, or be gay, or have a less than stellar background. We know that the God we serve is large and His love is large. We also know that when allowed to question faith without resistance in a supporting environment, people find a God that loves them way more than they first thought, loves them where they are and walks with them throughout life. 

Re-invention and innovation go hand in hand. For a church to be innovative it must continually be re-inventing itself. Two results follow. One is that the core continues to evolve and change; the other is that new people who once thought that God had no place for them, suddenly find themselves immersed in a community of people set on making a difference one person at a time.

That is Lifepoint.

Just Words?

June 1, 2008

Words – are they just words?

Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country – Kennedy

I have a dream – Martin Luther King Jr.

Mr. Gorbachev tear down that wall – Ronald Reagan

Lincoln at Gettysburg

These words unified and catalyzed a nation, but words can also have negative consequences.

I am not a crook – Nixon

No new taxes – Bush Sr.

I did not have sex with that woman – Clinton

Intrinsic in words are power, influence and impact. Today’s message we talked about this issue of words. It should cause us pause as we prepare for the events of life. Words are free and we can use them however we choose, but the choosing is perhaps the hardest part.

The easy thing is to just say what we feel and let the chips fall wherever and on whoever they will, but the hard thing is to control and harness our words to become the most effective life creating thing we have.

Today, look for opportunities to change a situation from negative to positive with just the power of your words.

True Innovation

May 29, 2008

Innovation is too often linked to technology and the newest gadgets to flood the market. True innovation goes much deeper. True innovation is onlyfound in the minds of those willing to think the thoughts that others – those who define the status quo – have ceased to think.

In many cases, the ones who currently sit with the reigns of culture in their hands, have gained their position because of their own innovative thinking. Now they find themselves defending a change to the status quo trying to hold on to their position by recycling old ideas.

Real innovation challenges everything and once a truly innovative idea has invaded culture, nothing remains as it was. Only the truly innovative embrace the fact that their “great idea” will soon be replaced by another. Those who innovate, change; those who do not will simply pass by into the ether of the past.

Matters of the Heart

May 25, 2008

To continue on the talk we heard this morning, the issues of the heart are, without a doubt, issues that define who we are in the moment. The way we respond determines our future. In times of stress and anxiety the struggle between the heart and the mind can become fierce, but we have the last say in which one wins.

In every situation our heart plays a dominant roll because the heart listens and speaks on a different level than the mind. Actions that may seem perfectly coherent and logical with the mind can cause the heart tremendous stress. In relationships, arrangements and group activity the mind and heart are continually vying for dominance.

We can work on trying to alleviate this pressure, but the focus of our attention should be on watching and observing our actions. Taking ourselves out of the situation and looking through the eyes of an observer can cause us to experience frustrating and exhausting heart/mind struggles in a different way.

As an observer, we don’t “have a dog in the race”. Our position is merely to watch and see what is happening. Many times when we do this one thing, the attitude and build up of emotional pressure will be lessened considerably making way for a more rational approach to a problem or set of circumstances.

The battle between heart/mind ownership won’t stop, but observation can remove the power they both try to wield.

Fast Company

May 23, 2008

I love culture. Let me say that agin – I LOVE CULTURE! It never stays the same. It is always challenging the now. It is not predictable…I love it.

I do my best to stay up with and look a little ahead of culture. I’ve been right about a few things and wrong about many more, but the intrigue of “what may be” has always had it’s hook in me.

One of the ways I stay in tune with culture is Fast Company. It is a magazine that, from my experience, has it’s hand on the pulse of culture. The stories you “need to know about”, in reference to culture and its changes and shifts are always there. Fast Company gives the reader what they need to make informed decisions about the world culture.

This month the focus is on a guy named Alex Bogusky. He has been hired by Microsoft to reinvent its image and go on the offensive against the Great Advertising Wonder that is Apple. Only time will tell, but a lot is on the line for Alex and Microsoft.

One thing he mentioned in the interview was, “edginess and risk taking mean nothing without results”. Often we try to be cool and do things that are edgy, but in the end if the results aren’t there, all we’ve done is spin our wheels…we’ve gone nowhere. Nowhere is not a place we want to be or a place we want to be comfortable in. In life results are the measure of correct decisions and choices.

“Q” Question

May 20, 2008

“How can you engage with your local community in a deeper way?”

That was the question placed on tables at the Q Conference in New York about a month ago. It is a great question. So many times churches tend to deal with their own people and only concern themselves with the needs of their congregation. Granted, these needs can be time and resource consuming, but the real need for the world is churches who see beyond those who look, act, and believe the same.

It is critical that churches look out into their community and face the challenges of the day with their neighbors. At a time when spirituality is everywhere from books to television, why would a church who desires to do and be more hesitate to become involved with those in its surrounding area?

The greatest need today is not larger churches, not better churches (whatever that means). No, the need is for selfless churches who look to meet the needs of those who will never contribute monetarily to the churches efforts.

The “least of these” need tending to. While we focus on deepening relationships and activities within our local communities we will begin to see a seismic shift of sense…we will see that we are becoming The Body.