Monday, June 15, 2009

All Good Things Come to An End...

This blog is done...

Well, I will still leave it up and if the mood hits me I will write something and link it on my facebook page or twitter about it so you will know to come visit.

But as far as feeling the pressure to update it on a semi-regular basis - done!

It was fun! Thanks for coming along for the ride.

If you happen to stumble on this blog and you want to get a feel for it, here are a few of my favorite posts:

Lead Like a Follower

Behind the Scenes With Pastor Furtick

It is My Fault

The Selfishness Test


Piece vs. Part

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

This is Broken

As a staff, we recently did an exercise that we called "this is broken". We took the concept from Seth Godin who did a twenty minute talk on the idea at the Gel conference in 2006. If you get a chance to check it out sometime, it's pretty funny...here's the link.

We found this exercise to be very helpful and it has changed the way we look at things.

So the other day I was pumping gas and saw this picture:

At first glance this seems promising, right? I mean, the economy is tough! I'd like an extra 15 bucks, wouldn't you? Unfortunately, this add scheme is broken. Take a look at the fine print:

WHAT THE CRAP IS THAT ABOUT?!?!?

Give me a break! I would be better off going through the hassle of getting a part-time job at McDonalds and quitting after 4 hours if all I wanted was $15. The thing that is so amazing about this add is that someone was sitting in a conference room somewhere discussing the fact that they needed people to sign up for their credit card and THIS was the plan that they came up with. In the words of Seth Godin - "Broken!"

Of course, before I get too frustrated about this add I need to say that I'm guilty too! There are things at Elevation Church that I want people to experience like participating in our 4 Gs: giving, using your gifts as a volunteer, getting into a group, and growing the church by inviting your lost friends. Am I making it easy to commit to these Gs? Or, does the person who is trying to get involved feel like I felt when I read this credit card add?

I have broken systems that I oversee right now. But if you have fallen victim to some of them at Elevation Church, please know that we are committed to fixing that!

Friday, May 8, 2009

To Pastor Furtick...

Wednesday night I was able to go with Pastor Furtick and other members of the leadership team to a conference.

This particular conference was was a little different...there was a point in the evening when Elmo was hyping the crowd to very loud gospel music. The sermon was intense...and over an hour long. In the sermon there was a 10 minute instrumental breakdown that provided us with an opportunity to praise God and dance before Him - it was awesome! If you haven't had the opportunity, or if your mind is too closed to enjoy a good, old-fashioned, charismatic ho-down then you're missing out...

The very next day, we were at a different church. There were greeters at the door, free coffee and lots of conversations going on in the lobby. Pastor had an opportunity to preach a phenomenal message (that was very different then the one we had heard the night before). The music was unbelievable! This experience was much different then the previous night, but equally as awesome!

These two churches could not be more different in look and feel. They are cut from different molds and employ different methods. They have different philosophies and approach their communities from very different positions.

On the other hand, they are both doing everything they know to do to make an impact for the kingdom of God. They are reaching lost people and Jesus is being exalted.

The most profound part of this story, however, is that we seemed to fit in at both churches.

There are some stupid lines that we (denominational believers) have drawn and I am glad that I serve a leader who has been gifted to walk freely back and forth over those lines. We serve a leader who is confident enough in what God has called and gifted him to do that he can engage with just about anyone and come away with something that will help us achieve the vision God has given him.

Pastor,

Thanks for creating a culture that allows us to seek God fully without conventional, man-made, self-limiting restraints. In the same breath, thanks for being so convinced of who you are, and of what God has uniquely gifted you to accomplish that you can see everyone as a potential partner in ministry. It's an honor to be part of the vision God has given you to reach our city. Through your gift thousands of people will come to faith in Christ, and thousands more will go on to be used by God in the advancement of His kingdom!

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

16 Days of Silence...

It has been 16 days since my last blog post...

That's because in that time I:

- Took a mini vacation in the form of a 900 mile motorcycle trip through South Carolina and Georgia.
- Was caught up in all of the details that surrounded bringing Ted and Gail Haggard's to our church.
- And, participated in the planning and execution of our "non-conference" THR3E.

It's been a busy 16 days...I am now planning to get back to my regular posting (once or twice a week).

Monday, April 13, 2009

I Don't Deserve Any Of This...

Our Lead Staff went through an exercise the other day where we listed out the top ten statements that we felt described what it's like to be part of the culture of Elevation Church.

My #1 statement was, "We don't deserve any of this...so we will remain grateful."

After an Easter Weekend like the one we just experienced (check out Pastor Furtick's blog for details) I find myself sitting in my chair wondering how I got here...

Five years ago you would have found me building decks in Shelby, NC trying to make some cash to help supplement my wife's income while she was paying my way through school. I had my plans for my life, but I had no idea what it meant to follow God's plans for my life.

Now, on the Monday after 740 people received Christ at Elevation Church I am having a hard time figuring out how the steps I was taking then were leading me to this office chair! It's like putting 2 + 2 into a calculator and having 4,000 come out!

I really don't deserve any of this and for that reason I will remain grateful.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Student Small Groups Director

Elevation Church has a lot of students. In fact, we have students who drive 45 minutes every week to spend most of the day serving.

Any time we pull together our leaders for a special vision-casting event you can count on a few rows of rowdy students to be there. They’re the loudest and proudest group of “bought-in” owners of the vision of our church.

So here’s the irony:
We don’t do very much that is specifically for our students!

We have tried a lot of different things from hype events to revivals for students. For the most part they have been pretty successful.

We’ve got small groups for students, but students get involved just like adults do…by seeking them out.

We have a lot of students who volunteer but that’s because when we ask the whole church to volunteer they walk to the table on their own and sign up.

We did a study recently of the top 10 fastest-growing churches and the top 25 most innovative churches and discovered statistics like the following:
• 23 of 25 have a Student Pastor on staff
• 20 of 25 have a separate worship experience for students
• 7 of 10 have a website designated for students

In every statistic we looked at we were the odd one out...

This always troubles me until spring break when our attendance drops and our volunteer teams are thin. Our students are involved! They are serving. Many of them are taking advantage of the opportunity to be in groups. And, probably most importantly, they are here!!!

So, because we want to steward the momentum that God has sent us through our students and, because we want to harness that momentum to make a bigger impact in our city, I’ve got an announcement to make:

We are hiring a Student Small Groups Director! (NOT a Youth Pastor!!)

Check out this link for the job description and if you think you have what it takes, ask five trusted friends and an enemy or two…if they agree you have what it will take, you should consider applying!

Friday, March 27, 2009

That Mountain!

Yesterday I wrote a post about some of the things I'm learning from Matthew 28. I'm going to pick it up where I left off so read this to catch up if you want...



So here's my thing with the Great Commission...the scope of what Jesus intends for us to accomplish is unbelievable!



"All nations...All commands..."



Both of those directives seem pretty overwhelming!



To add to it, the "all commands" part took on new meaning when I stumbled across this little detail in verse 16 that I hadn't ever noticed before.



16 Then the eleven disciples went to Galilee, to the mountain where Jesus had told them to go.



I thought, "I know Galilee, that's Jesus' hometown...but what's this mountain?"



And then it hits me! Jesus preached a famous sermon at the outset of His ministry that we have nicknamed the Sermon on the Mount...



Sure enough, Matthew 4:23 puts Jesus in Galilee and Matthew 5:1 puts him on the mountain to preach his famous sermon.



In other words, Jesus tells His disciples to go back to the exact spot where it all started and then Commissions them to go and make disciples of ALL nations...teaching them ALL commands, on top of the same mountain that He was standing on when He preached the Sermon on the Mount!!!



The disciples were so blown away the first time they heard Jesus preach this message that Matthew wrote this about their reaction, "28 When Jesus had finished saying these things, the crowds were amazed at his teaching, 29 because he taught as one who had authority, and not as their teachers of the law."

Imagine what they must have been thinking after seeing all they had seen over the three years of Jesus' ministry.

"I mean, Jesus was dead 24 hours ago, and now we're back where it started except it's our turn!!!"



That's probably enough for now...to be continued!

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Discipleship

What do you think of when you hear the word discipleship?

Bible Study? Prayer? Tithing? Service? Evangelism? All of them wrapped up into a book sold by LifeWay complete with a semester schedule, benchmarks and gold stars???

Me too...kind of!

I've been reading the "Great Commission" in Matthew 28 and it has been changing my understanding of this word.

Here's the part we all know:

19 Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20 and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you..."

It's a very powerful statement. Unfortunately, it's incomplete! I cut the front and back out of Jesus' actual phrase. Here's the whole thing:

18 Then Jesus came to them and said, "All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. 19 Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20 and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age."

It's interesting to me that we cut Christ out of the great commission! We trust Him for salvation but after that it's almost like we say, "Thanks, I'll take it from here..."

I think this approach is really stupid!

Here's a couple takeaways that hit me pretty hard:

1) This statement is really about Jesus' activity through me not my activity for Him! (All authority to Christ...therefore go...)

2) His request (ALL nations, ALL that I have commanded you) is actually pretty ludicrous.

3) Jesus seems to know that it's ludicrous since He reassures us that He will be with us to the end of the age...you know, like it's going to take that long!!!

To be continued...

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Blitter...I should write a blog but only have time to twitter...

Sometimes everything is due on the same day...


This is the stack of paper I brought into a 45 minute 1 - on - 1 meeting with Chunks Corbett (my boss, our Executive Pastor)...
Sorry trees...

Our 45 minute meeting turned into 2 hours!


Monday, March 23, 2009

Butler Campus...I'm all in!



Hey Butler Campus,




Just wanted to thank you for a great Sunday. The Worship Experience was VERY powerful, the message was great and you (the volunteers) went above and beyond.




Now, you probably know that I'm not a big sports fan, so it may surprise you to know that I completed a bracket (for those of you who don't know what that is...I feel you! It's a little sheet that people who love basketball fill out to give their prediction for who will win the NCAA tournament...)




Here's a picture of my completed bracket:




Wait a minute, you can't see who I've picked to take it all. Here's a closer shot shot:


That's right! Butler takes it all...They took Carolina (a.k.a. the Devil..not the Blue one) in the second round...


I'm all in! I love you guys!!!

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Carol Mac...

Carol Mac is the custodian at Butler High School who unlocks the doors for us every Sunday morning and goes above and beyond helping us when we need her. She has been with us since I became the Campus Pastor in April, 2008. I have developed a great personal relationship with Carol Mac and I wanted to tell you a little bit of her story.




About three weeks ago, Carol moved into her new house. Carol was selected by Habitat as a candidate for a new home. For the last year she has been working tirelessly every weekend investing countless hours building her new home and consequently her new life.



I had the privilege of being there the week she moved in, to pray for her and thank God with her for the blessing of her new start. I was able to bless her with a house warming gift and give her a card on behalf of Elevation Church. She was very touched by our generosity.

So, Butler Campus, thanks! Because you have been faithful to give to Elevation we are in a position to be generous. This is only a small example of how we have been placed in a position to be generous and to serve our community. For Carol Mac, however, who has been impacted by our church from behind the scenes, this unlooked for blessing was anything but small.
If you get a chance this Sunday, tell Carol Mac congratulations!

Monday, March 16, 2009

A Great Day

Yesterday was a great day! Attendance was great. The worship experience was great. All the volunteers who waded through the puddles to greet, park, load, unload, etc... you are awesome. Pastor's Message was incredible! That video of the guy running on the street, it was great. The BBQ was great. The 6:00pm worship experience packed full like Christ was coming back when we were done - great! Bob "the reader" Aycock, you were great! In short, yesterday was a great day.

By far, however, the best moment of the day for me was the man who came up to me after the 11:30 worship experience with his family and said he was ready to give his life to Christ. I had the privilege of leading him to Christ on the spot. He was not the only person who gave their life to Christ yesterday either. about 35 people raised their hand to accept Christ when Pastor gave them an opportunity at the 6:00pm worship experience. Yesterday was a GREAT day!

To all of my Butler people, thank you! Each of you played a part in creating a great day yesterday and I am so thankful for you.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Ministry Time...

Yesterday we had a "ministry time" in the worship experience. Pastor preached the second and final week of The Dip and challenged people to turn back to God's perfect plan for their life. He used a story about his son Elijah who was afraid of a fly to illustrate a powerful point. Just like Pastor (Elijah's father) is much bigger than the fly, God (our Father) is much bigger than our "dips" - no matter how big we fell like they are. By putting our problems back into perspective we are in a better position to receive God's work in and through that situation.

The message was simple to understand but very challenging and humbling to apply (in my opinion, the best type of messages) and our people were faithful to the call of God to respond. We had dozens of people at the "altar" praying, crying, calling out to God, worshipping...it was a wonderful time.

After days like yesterday I feel a strange mixture of excitement and responsibility. God blessed us with His presence and people responded to His powerful message of grace yesterday, so I am excited. Yet, there are thousands of people in Charlotte who have never experienced God's presence or grace and so I feel a tremendous responsibility to reach them. This tension is often an uncomfortable place to be, but when I read Jesus' words in the great commission in Matthew 18:18-20 I am reminded that it is the right place to be..."go...and make disciples".

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Like Father Like Son...

The picture below is, in fact, a picture of my son passionately embracing the pole that marks the entrance to the line where you would wait to purchase a delicious donut from Dunkin Donuts...




It's amazing to me how much this kid is like me!

Monday, March 2, 2009

Our Sacrifice is Their Victory

Yesterday was an amazing day at Elevation. The weather was awful but spirits were high. Rather than try to explain it second hand I thought I would let you read an email I just got from our newest parking team leader at Butler, Eric Welch.

__________

Team Welch!

Considering it was your first day....AND most of the radios quit working (what, it's not like they were soaked with water or anything)....AND Hurricane Laffey was pouring through the area ("little bit of stinging rain, big 'ol fat rain, and sometimes rain that seemed to come from straight up")...AND most of us had standing water in our shoes... I'd say you guys did a FANTASTIC job out there! If anything, that was probably the best day for you to be out there on your fist time; you've tasted the "worst" of what we do...it can only go up from here! Sink or swim, boys, we're diving in!

All kidding aside, though, you guys (and gal) handled yourselves very well given the circumstances; and thanks to Hopkins, Bill, Frank and Jason for helping out!! It's even more important that we're outside on days like yesterday. If people coming into church see our happy, smiling, soaked faces they may think to themselves "huh, I wonder what it is about this place that makes their volunteers dedicated and crazy enough to be out in weather like this, there must be something special happening here." It all helps to open the door for what Pastor does inside. It's not about us, and how cold we are or how wet we are. It's about them. Our sacrifice is their victory.

Next week, we're scheduled for the evening service, but there is no evening service as it turns out; so we're not parking. I'll let you know when we're on again once we decide whether or not that will affect scheduling of teams.

Remember when you were a kid, and you'd go outside and play in the snow, and your jeans would get all wet? Then you'd get that itchy feeling all over once you were soaked? Anybody else besides me experience that yesterday?

Great job guys!!

__________

Here's the best picture I have of the conditions at 5:55pm last night - right before the 6:00pm worship experience started.




Thanks Eric (and all of the volunteers who are tired from a long cold day of volunteering) you continue to amaze me!

Monday, February 23, 2009

Some Moments Just Stick...

We got to be part of a monumental moment for Elevation Church last week. Pastor Furtick was invited to preach at the C3 conference at Fellowship Church in Dallas, TX. He preached on honor (a foundational ingredient of our culture) and did a fantastic job at it. Check out this blog written by Wade Joye for a more complete overview of Pastor's sermon. It was an amazing experience.
Before Pastor Furtick took the stage, the staff had decided that we were going to leap to our feet in celebration at the end of his message no matter what everyone else did...but we didn't have to. 24 minutes into a 30 minute message about 100 people all over the auditorium jumped up and cheered starting the standing ovation.

I can't really put into words how I felt sitting there watching my Pastor receive a standing ovation at C3 so for now I will let the simple phrase, "some moments just stick..." be all I say about it... It was incredible!

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

All That From a Dove?

I have been studying the first few chapters of Matthew along with a group of good friends recently and this morning I was pretty blown away by some parallels I discovered.

- Noah endured a 40 day waiting period after the flood that God sent to "cleanse" the earth from wickedness. (40 days)
- At the end of the flood Noah sent out the dove to find dry land but she "found no place to set her foot..." (Genesis 8:9) (water, dove)
- After this event, God made a covenant never to destroy the earth with water again, but our ways did not change, our salvation had not come, the law was powerless to make us righteous...

- In Matthew chapter 3 Jesus is baptized - This was a baptism of repentance..."cleansing from wickedness and sin" and Jesus didn't need to do it! (water)
- during his baptism - a dove came out of the sky and "came to rest on him". (dove)
- Immediately following Jesus' baptism he went to the desert and endured 40 days of temptation from Satan himself but did not sin! (40 days)
- Following Christ, salvation has come, He has made a way for us, all who call on His name will be saved!

40 days...water...the dove...I think Matthew might be trying to send us a message?!? Don't forget that Matthew's audience was the 1st century Jew who would not have been able to hear 40 days, water, and dove without thinking about Noah. It would be like someone walking up to you today and saying September 11th...they wouldn't need to explain it, we just know!

In essence, Matthew was saying to his audience, "God tried once to fix us through the flood and had to end his attempt with a contract that He would withhold His wrath...in other words, it did not work fully...the dove found no place to set her feet..." The rest of history leading up to Christ was literally one story after another of how God extended grace to His people and we failed Him and broke His covenant over and over and over and over again.

For Christ, however, the water of baptism was not necessary, the 40 day temptation was ineffective and the dove found a solid perch. God's new plan WILL prevail! He has coordinated all of history to pivot on the days of Christ and the fulfillment of all of His promises are made true and real in Christ.

It's a new day and if you don't know Christ to be the fulfillment of God's plan for all history you ought to meet Him. He is the way the truth and the life, no man comes to the Father but by Him!

Monday, February 16, 2009

Follow Up on Volunteer Sunday

We did a great job Butler Campus!

192 new volunteers committed to serve this week!!!!

As I walked around on Sunday seeing dozens of people in groups being toured around our campus I was blown away. I was so pleased to be serving at a church where almost 200 people come to tour the volunteer opportunities on a single Sunday.

I also wanted to let you guys in on what I got to hear as I floated around all day listening in to the tour guides.

Here's some highlights:

1) "It is amazing what you get to be part of when you're a volunteer...They even made a 3 song CD for us at Christmas with Chris, Mack and Wade singing Christmas songs..." - Billy Dean - ekidz tour, 11:30

2) "Without set up and tear down volunteers nothing happens here...it's a great time to come in and work behind the scenes...my whole family helps out" - Randy Fuller - ekidz tour, 6:00

3) "Steve, show them your gun-shot wound..." - John Bishop to Steve Tubel, Production tour, 10:00

4) "We get to hear all of the good stories..." - Jennifer Clouser - FTG tour, 11:30

5) "We weren't going to tell them about the requirement of a parking tattoo..." - Joel Langley - Parking team stop on Guest services tour, 10:00

6) "Thank you..." - countless people all day who felt tremendously welcomed by you as they stepped into an uncertain volunteering opportunity...

A big fat thank you to all of you who got there early, stayed late and gave everything you had to make the new volunteers feel welcome.

I love you guys! I'm so thankful I get to see God's plan unfold on our campus with you at my back!

As Pastor always says, "the best is yet to come..."

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Plugging in New Volunteers This Weekend...

Last Sunday we had 1486 people sign up to volunteer!!!

This Sunday we are hoping to take just under 800 of them through their first experience.

The problem is our current systems were never intended to handle the volume of people that will need to get plugged in this weekend.

What do you do when the container is too small to hold all the oil?

We see this principle illustrated in 2 Kings 4 when the widow needed something to sell in order to pay her debts and all she had was a single jar of Oil. Elisha told her to go get more jars. Once she had increased her capacity for the blessing of God the oil began to flow and didn't stop until she ran out of jars.

The principle: INCREASE YOUR CAPACITY!

That's what we've done for this weekend. The old way wasn't working so we found a new way.

If you're content maintaining the level that you had the last time, you probably don't need to know this principle, but if you're interested in seeing ALL that God can do in and through you, you should always be ready to get more jars!

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

The Importance of Testing

Our Leadership Team read an article out of Harvard Business Review recently called How to Design Smart Business Experiments. (This link takes you to the right page but you'll have to wait a few weeks for the February issue to come out...)

The crux of the article can be summarized in the question, "Do lobster tanks increase lobster sales at Food Lion supermarkets?"

The article challenged the grocery store manager who might ask this question to quit wondering. There are tests that can be done in controlled environments to answer that question once and for all.

We have our own version of these questions:
- Does series length affect attendance?
- Do video announcements decrease the number of first time guest information cards we get back?
- Does the placement of our "Information Kiosk" in the lobby affect the number of people who get connected?

I'm sure you've got your own questions:
- Is "time out" more effective than spanking for my rambunctious 20 month old?
- Would I spend less if I stopped using a credit card?
- Does my spouse (kids, friends etc...) want more time or better time?

In agreement with the guys who wrote the article, go ahead and design an experiment and find out. Put the credit card in a drawer for a month and check this month's spending with last month's. You may feel like you don't have the time or energy to figure it out, but I would say you don't have the time NOT to.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Jesus or Immanuel

I was reading in Matthew this morning. In Chapter 1 verses 21 and 23 we see that Jesus was intended to have two different names.

Joseph was told to call Him Jesus (Save His people from their sin) - Matthew 1:21.

Isaiah said He would be called Immanuel (God with us) - Matthew 1:23 & Isaiah 7:14.

For the first time in my reading of this passage I wondered, "why the two different names? And, why have I never wondered why there are two different names before? And, why has no one ever gone out of there way to explain why there are two different names given? Should I be concerned that no one seems to be concerned about the fact that there are two different names here???"

For those of you who are now wondering along side me here's what I discovered.

Jesus is both! When Isaiah prophesied about Him in Isaiah 7:14 He was Immanuel. In a season of great turmoil in the history of Israel it was important the Jesus was Immanuel (God with us).

In Matthew, He had already come down to earth...He was actually "with us". That freed Him up to reveal Himself in another way as the God who saves!

Brilliant! God seems to have things under control. My job as chief inspector of God infinite wisdom has, yet again, been put in check...

If you didn't follow my thoughts check it out yourself in Matthew.

The Scripture is VERY rich and there is a lot to learn, even from passages you have read dozens and dozens of times before.

Monday, February 2, 2009

Superbowl 43

So I have to confess, I watched about 20 minutes of the Superbowl last night. To all 30 of you who fought the temptation and stayed true to your convictions I apologize but I just couldn't resist the urge to fit in with the other 100 million people who were watching it.

Why only 20 minutes? When Bruce went into a full back bend and held it for like 5 minutes I thought he might have broken his back...the stress was too much. Fear for the boss's health was too much to handle for a Superbowl rookie so I got up and read the instruction manual for how to play bridge.

With that confession out of the way let me get back to more important stuff...

I was so blown away by the crowd that attended "THE 6" last night. I would never have guessed that over 400 people would crowd into our night service at the Butler Campus on Superbowl Sunday. At some point, I will stop being surprised by the momentum that has been created around "THE 6" but for now I am still dumbfounded!

All around, yesterday was an amazing day. If you missed it, be sure to check out the link to Pastor's sermon. Can't wait for this coming weekend. It's our 3 year anniversary and we are planning a party!

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

The Dip Take Two...

As a staff this morning, we listened to the audio from a message that Pastor preached in October of last year. In hearing it a second time I was profoundly impacted in a different way then I was the first time I had heard it. In fact, I was looking at the notes that I had taken the first time (which were pretty thorough) but was still able to take an additional page of notes during the second hearing.

I learned a lot from the message itself but one thing that stuck out to me even above what I learned directly from the message was that I still took away fresh insight.

I could have checked out and thought to myself, "this message isn't for me, I've already heard it...this message is for everyone else..." but then I would have missed out on a powerful truth that God showed me.

Don't check out!

You might already know the verse, "Love the Lord your God...and Love your neighbor..." but you've got a different neighbor today then you did when you read it last time.

You might have already heard the Gospel message preached, but this time you've got your lost friend sitting beside you.

You might already know that God is a loving Father who disciplines His children but now you have kids of your own and that truth all of a sudden means a lot more to you.

Here's a practical suggestion. Get a new Bible. Your old one is marked up with the insights you discovered the last time you read it. Start fresh and God will apply His timeless truth in a new way to your new circumstances.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

"You're Crippled in Both Feet"

Every single week I believe that Pastor Furtick brings a powerful message that impacts people in profound ways. This week was no exception. if you have not heard the Message from this past Sunday check it out here.

During the 10:00 service at our Providence Campus, Pastor Furtick picks up a boy from the crowd to play the part of Mephibosheth from 2 Samuel 9. The point of his picking up the boy was to illustrate that even when we are crippled in both feet God comes to us and carries us.

Read the excerpt from an email written to us from the boy's mother that was used in the illustration in this message. The go back and watch the message again from the time stamps 24:30 - 32:40 with this excerpt in mind:

My son is physically disabled. He acquired polio from the vaccination when he was an infant in a Russian orphanage. We adopted him when he was 7 months old from Kirov, Russia. He has very limited muscle in his left lower extremity and left buttocks. He also has weak abdominal muscles. Although he has received the best medical care(I am a physician), there is little that can be done. He will walk with a limp the rest of his life. He cannot jump or run or do many of the things the other boys do. However, he is known to so many people because he still tries everything--with a smile on his face.

When Pastor Furtick was describing characteristics of people at the end of the sermon--he was literally describing my son. He looks fine from the waist up--you would never know(and Pastor did not).He will walk with a limp the rest of his life but God will love him no matter what. I can't even describe my feelings about today except to say thanks...

Behind every statistic there is a story! God is moving in powerful ways.

Monday, January 19, 2009

"THE 6"

Last week I was WAY off on my predictions for attendance at THE 6.

This week I saw lines of cars turning in at 5:40 and here's what I thought to myself, "Are You serious?"

Now, the capitol "Y" in "You" was intentional, because my thought was actually a silent prayer of disbelief. For the second week in a row the Butler 6:00pm worship experience was the largest service of the day at Butler. The campus itself was over 1800 people. It's just not supposed to happen this way!

At this rate, I wouldn't be surprised if we have a huge crowd on the 1st in spite of the game. After all, we've been saying it for 3 years, "Every Sunday is Superbowl Sunday at Elevation" and perhaps a "smaller" crowd will mean 500 people!

God is doing some amazing things with THE 6. For those of you who have committed to attend THE 6 in order to make room for others in the morning, I guess I don't even need to say thank you...you're getting your reward in full!

If you haven't come to THE 6 yet, you may want to check it out this week. It will be your last chance before you'll need to make arrangements to DVR the game. Just a friendly suggestion from a HUGE football fan...Here's some proof for the doubters of my fanship!

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Is This the Right Quick Win?

Yesterday, I posted on an article I read in Harvard Business Review. Check my post out here to catch up.

The tool I described at the end of that post is on the right.
I challenged the team that leads the Butler Campus along side me with achieving a pretty lofty goal related to the number of volunteers on our campus. (Since we just launched a new service time we need to recruit more volunteers)
In order to ensure that our goal (90% new volunteers on Sun. pm teams by 2/9/09) was worthy of the time and effort we ran it through the grid on the right. At the end of the exercise, everyone agreed that it was at least a 9 and therefore worth our attention.
As there boss, I could have just said, "here's the goal, get it done" and they would have gotten it done. But I am not just interested in achieving today's goal but in laying the foundation for achieving tomorrow's. Since I believe I am only as good as the team I lead I am glad to have stumbled on a tool that can help me create that team while achieving necessary goals.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

The Quick Wins Paradox



I read an article the other day in Harvard Business Review. It was about new leaders trying to prove themselves to everyone they lead and it was very challenging. You can check out the abstract here. Or get your own copy of the magazine for like 20 bucks!!!!

Basically, the article highlighted all of the mistakes I have made as a developing leader and listed them in order like they have been following me around for 3 years. The only thing missing from the article is pictures of me actually making the errors, otherwise it reads like an interview. My guess is, if you have lead anyone at any time you'll feel the same way after you read it...

The article outlines five traps that new leaders fall into:

1) Focusing too heavily on details - "Here's an inventory report I developed for your department...use it!"
2) Reacting negatively to criticism - "Then I'm just going to take my ball and go home..."
3) Intimidating others - "Do you like your job?"
4) Jumping to conclusions - "after 2 1/2 minutes of conversation I think we should throw away your system and start over..."
5) Micromanaging - "Do you think that color works? I mean, if I were developing that report I would use green not blue..."

The basic point of the article is that in order to establish yourself as a new leader you'll need to strive for that "quick win". Everyone is looking to the new leader to make a difference. If I hire you to work for me I want to know that I invested wisely and the right "quick win" can give me that confidence. The problem arises when you go about trying to achieve the "quick win" in the wrong way inevitably falling into one or more of traps above.


Instead, the article describes that the leaders who are successful focus on the following:

1) Communicating a clear vision
2) Developing constructive relationships
3) Demonstrating empathy
4) Play a hands-on role in developing team capabilities
5) Pull everyone together


Picking the right "quick win" becomes very important and the article provides a diagnostic tool that was exceedingly helpful. I'll post my thoughts about that tool tomorrow. In the meantime, if you're leading in any capacity, I would highly recommend the article.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

And We Kicked it Off Right...

WOW!



The first Butler 6pm worship experience this past Sunday was amazing but my faith was way too small:



I expected 565 people to come...there were 779!



I expected about 50 people to respond to the message...and they did, but so did 75 additional people making a total of 125 people who came home on Sunday night!



My dream was to break 1500 people at the Butler Campus for the whole day...(I have a hard time writing this number) - 1998 came!



Over all on our campus this week we saw 334 people "Come Home" and in our church 925 people total!



We have a lot to celebrate. We have a lot to be thankful for. God has placed all of us in the middle of something amazing. If you were at the 6pm worship experience Sunday, you, like me, felt that "something amazing" in a way that you have never felt it before.



Here are some pictures:









Friday, January 9, 2009

Forecast: Sunny Skies

Last night I looked at the weather for today and realized that the forecast was for sunny skies. When I saw that it would be 50 degrees and sunny when I would be leaving work to come home I decided to ride to work this morning. The problem was at 6:15am when I left my house I felt more like this guy:




Here's what I know: when the forecast is for sunny skies sometimes you have to endure this:



in order to enjoy this:


This Sunday night we are launching our first evening worship experience at the Butler Campus of Elevation Church. For those of you who have been part of the process of getting this service off the ground you can empathize with me when I say it is not always easy! Recruiting your friend to volunteer with you, stepping into a leadership role that you're uncertain about, giving up your seat at a convenient time to make room for someone else, or agreeing to volunteer all day to get us through the launch of this service are all examples of how you have decided to trust the forecast rather than the circumstances.


Well, now that the morning ride is over and the day has shaped up to look like this:




I'm glad I rode to work today.


This Sunday is going to be a benchmark day for the Butler Campus. For those of you who have trusted the forecast get ready for a great ride!


See you Sunday!





















Thursday, January 8, 2009

"Take That Devil"

We have a little saying around here that most of us use sparingly. I probably use it more than I should...but then again, there are a lot of good opportunities to use it!

When something happens that clearly advances the Kingdom of God and therefore subdues the attacks of the enemy against God's Church you might hear someone on staff at Elevation say, "Take that Devil...".

The heart behind it for me comes from the charge that Jesus gives to Peter when he tells him, "You will be called Peter (rather than Simon) on this rock I will build my Church and the Gates of Hell will not prevail against it." - Matthew 13:18. To which I would say - Take that Devil.

So, I hear that a homeless man was given a ticket right outside the doors of our Christmas Eve service. He comes in and gets saved. I say, "Take that Devil".

I'm quietly flipping through the Scriptures and I read something like this...Take that Devil!

We have planned an incredible worship experience for this Sunday's Come Home series. You're bringing your friends who are far from God and when they are exposed to the Power of Christ and see that they need him in their lives they're going to "Come Home" to Him...so you will quietly say under your breath, "Take that Devil"...and maybe you'll add a little fist pump - that's appropriate.

At Butler we are launching a 6pm worship experience. we've been climbing an uphill battle to get the facility secured, identify volunteers, and get ready for the new service. This week it's going to happen and hundreds of people are going to come and dozens will have their lives changed. What else can I say?

Sometimes you need a phrase that carries a measure of celebratory violence...if you don't already have one of your own your welcome to use ours.

See you this Sunday!