Category Archives: Uncategorized

The Order of Change

Everything changes. If we want to see change then there is nothing more we need to do than just sit back and watch it happen. Change will occur one way or another. 

That’s the easy part. What’s difficult is influencing the change that is coming. In the natural world there is a fairly specific order to make this happen: 

  1. Someone cares,
  2. They accept responsibility,
  3. Authority is given so they can influence change. 

But as is often the case, what is normally last in the natural order of things usually comes first in God’s Kingdom. Jesus has given each of us the authority to influence change in communities, individuals, and even the Church. It’s the Great Commission. And with his authority as our starting point, it’s up to us to fill in the other two variables of the equation.

So if we aren’t influencing the changes occurring around us, then one of two things has happened. Either we haven’t accepted responsibility for our mission or there is something else we care about more. 

There can be no doubt about our authority—it’s clear and already granted. What’s left is for us to choose to accept our responsibility, choose to care, and choose to shape the world around us. 

The authority of Christ is challenging us to be agents of change. 

Live The Mission,
Greg


If my son decided to start a church…

My friend Artie Davis wrote this… Great thoughts. Thought I’d repost it here.

Artie’s blog is… www.ArtieDavis.com

If my son were to start a church today and he came to me and asked, “Dad, what are the most important things I need to know?” I would think, “Man, this is my BOY! He has got to get this right.” I would pray a minute, ask him to take out his Ipad, and then say…

1-What you’re doing is all about loving people. Forget that, and you’re doomed

2-Make your wife priority! Never let her feel she’s in the back seat behind ministry

3-Raise your kids in freedom! Don’t let your position make you feel they have to be superstars

4-Learn to hear God’s voice. Know what His whisper sounds like… There is NO other way

5-It would be better to promote someone a year late, than a day early

6-Invest in those on your team. Let them see the good, bad and ugly

7-Never get in a rut! If you change 1-Degree at a time, you will maximize effectiveness

8-Preach from the overflow of what God is telling you

9-Don’t serve bread dough on Sunday morning, serve hot bread

10-Find a group of other leaders, form relationships… They will save your life!

11-Never seek to please people. That is a merry go round that never stops

12-You serve a Supernatural God, look for His movement, if you don’t look, you wont see

13-Hear God, follow Him, and leave the results to Him. “And the Lord added.”

14-Never forget to have fun! Serving God is hard, but you have to fun too!

15-Don’t ever try to be someone else. God put you there to be you…He likes you just as you are!

16-Strive to be a giver and not a taker! Always sow into others, rather than being the “Asker”

Those are some of mine, if I had more time to think, I’m sure there are other things I would tell my son!

What would you tell your son?


Focused Living: My New Plan

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For the past 38 years, I have lived a fairly ‘spread out’ life.  From a very young age, I had many hobbies and interests.  I took piano and vocal music lessons.  I tried my hand at guitar.  I played golf, tennis, baseball, soccer, rode bikes and skateboards, ran track, hiked, fished, learned to water ski and camped.  As a young adult, while in college and working on my Master’s and Doctoral degrees, I took up Raccoon Hunting and dog obedience training.  I’ve also played around with shooting, archery and various other country boy activities…

Most of these things have found some way to work into my adult life.

Today I spread my free time between enjoying my family as well as reading, hiking, running, mountain biking, working out, playing golf, fishing and writing.  And the truth is, sometimes I feel spread thin.

I wonder if I would be better off focusing on a few activities and giving up on a few of the others.  

I have led our church to think that way.  We organize the ministries of 4RC around a ‘keep it simple’ church process.  We only do 3 things.  And we try to do those 3 things as well as possible.  We oversee worship gatherings, small groups and outreach events.  That’s it.  And over time, this has helped us to become better at the few things we do instead of spreading our resources thin in many ministries.

So would that process work in an individuals life?

Or are we better off enjoying many activities and spreading our time among various things?

I’m really wondering what you think about this?

Leave a comment here so that we can discuss this idea…


Linchpin Choices

There have been several times in my life were I have had to make a Linchpin choice. This is a choice that holds two or more things together… or sets them apart.

Usually, for me, these choices fall between the realization of my dreams/goals and the adherence to my standards/values.

That is important to note.

These choices come in various areas of life. I’ve experienced them in educational experiences, family decisions, leadership options, job choices, marital issues and relationship/friendship endeavors. Linchpin choices are everywhere.

Tends to work like this…

I am a goal oriented person. So in every area, I’m usually working toward something. But implied in the “working toward” part of that sentence are a few values/standards that guide my processes.

Often, there seems to be a way to move closer to the goals quickly. But it would require me to violate my values.

And doing that is always the wrong decision.

The flip side, is that sometimes to stick to your values and standards, it feels like you are working backwards in relationship to your goals. But do it you must.

That is how you make good linchpin decisions.

Never violate your own God given/biblical values/standards in order to reach your God given/biblical goals.


Remember to Serve… with Terry Freeman testimony

This teaching is about the Spiritual Discipline of Service. It takes a look at all the advantages and challenges that come from having a servant attitude in your walk with Christ.

In this teaching, we also hear from Terry Freeman, 4RC Calvert City Worship Leader. He shares his personal story about life in Christ, service and growth. Its a definite must watch video.

So check it out.


Remember 8 Robert Morris on Tithing, the Bible and blessing

Do you believe in tithing? Why or why not? The Bible has many helpful teachings about money, the Christian life, generosity and ultimately God’s way of empowering His Kingdom on earth.

In this teaching, Pastor Robert Morris does a great job of talking about tithes, offerings, and an overall biblical understanding of money, God and life as a Christ follower. Check it out.


Loving the Men of Lifeline

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This is a great group of men. They are showing signs of dedication, seriousness, focus and heart. I believe in them.

We are going to see some real men of God grow out of this group of men.


Why leading Christians is Painful

I just began reading a new book entitled “The Painful Side of Leadership.” I’m only just beginning, but I am thoroughly enjoying this highly recommended piece of writing. It is proving to be so helpful.

The book is written by Jeff Iorg, the President of Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary in San Francisco, California. He ha served as a senior leader in multiple capacities including the seminary, local churches and other organization. And his words are proving to be very helpful to me. I suggest that any reader, especially in Christian organizations, give it a read.

Young leaders tend to romanticize leadership. In our minds, everyone wants to be helpful, organizations work well as long as they are led with passion and God always wins every battle. But in the long run, in the process of leadership, we begin to experience things that bring all of those expectations into question.

People get mad at us for doing what we thought was right and good. We hurt feelings unintentionally and cause others pain. Our mistakes slow down the church’s (or whatever organization we are leading’s) progress. We lose friends. We make new friends. Then sometimes we lose those friends as well.

Our reputations become ‘diverse.’ Some love us. Others don’t. And many times, young adults who are very used to impressing and being loved become unimpressive and hated.

Leading Christians can be different that we expect. And as I have learned over time, it can and will break you to your very core.

But that is where God steps in and builds you back up. And honestly, I’m beginning to see that it is one of the many ways that God builds us into the people we are created to be.

Here are some thoughts from the book on why leading Christians is painful.

1. Christians make sinful choices.
2. Leaders make sinful choices.
3. Sin infects everything.
4. Satan is on the prowl.

A. Satan is often behind ‘stealthy’ opposition.
B. Satan may be involved when the opposition is manipulative.
C. Satan may be involved when the opposition is secretive or ‘clandestine.’
D. Satan is also behind resolutely uncooperative opposition.

5. God allows painful circumstances that may not be anyone’s fault.
6. Leading change (which Christian leaders must do) can be painful.

In the long run we must remember a few things. And these are my words and not necessarily Dr. Iorg’s.

1. Our battle is not with people. We are to love people and treat them with respect, kindness, honestly and love… even when we think they are being jerks, or difficult or oppositional.

2. Our battle is with Satan. He is a liar, carries great influence in a world of people who are slaves to sin and desires our total and complete demise. Christian leaders are a hated people in the ‘spirit’ world. Satan literally hates us. And we should not be shocked at his attacks.

3. Jesus is faithful. He promised it again and again. And when we are under attack, the first thing that is tested is our willingness to trust Christ at His Word. He will not leave us. He will not forsake us. We are never alone in His work… even if it seems that we are totally alone. Jesus is faithful.

4. The battle is worth fighting. Some prefer not to use battle metaphors for Christian living. But the more I am around the church and ministering in the world, the more of a battle I believe that it is. And it is a battle that Christ wins. I want to be on His team. I want to be doing His work. I want to be true to the calling He has on my life. And I want to keep going.

Jesus has sent the church on a mission. And it is a hard mission. It is a dangerous mission. It is a mission that will bring about spiritual and relational casualties. We have an enemy who wants to destroy us. But we have a God who will sustain us.

So lets keep going.

Sword (Bible) in our hand. Love in our Heart. Heaven in our sights.


We loaned the 4RC van to another church for a mission trip

Just got this text from Rusty Wirt, pastor of Community Fellowship in Mayfield, Ky.

“We got the van. Thank you so much for the use of this it for our mission. The team will leave tomorrow morning around 6:30 for Dallas TX. We have 36 people going on mission. 4Rivers is a part of any success we have on the trip. Rusty()(


Would you pray for me?

I’m usually the one asking how I can pray for you. And traditionally, pastors don’t open up about their own struggles and ask for prayer. That’s a big mistake I think.

So know that in asking for these things, I am a bit nervous about showing weakness. I’m also a bit nervous that someone out there might try and use these bits of information against me. But I trust God to honor this honesty and believe that it could be a big help to me, the church and all of us ultimately.

Here are a few areas where I would appreciate your prayers right now. Some are really important… some probably not so much.

1. Pray for my motivation. I have always been highly motivated. I finished 3rd in my class in high school, finished college in 4 years, a masters degree 3 years later and I had my doctorate by 32. I’ve always been the guy who pushed really hard and expected a lot from himself. But the past few months have been hard on my motivation. And although I know that God will do this, I feel a bit unmotivated as compared to my normal ‘driven’ self. I’m asking for a jolt of missional motivation from God.

2. Ask God to continually renew my hope. We are nothing without hope. And although I tend to live with a great deal of it, there are times when hope seems weaker than others. Please ask God to build in me a huge sense of hope. I want to live knowing that God is in control. I want to live knowing that God has a plan. I want to live knowing that every valley has a mountain top on the other side. And I want to live knowing that every challenge comes with a valuable lesson to be learned. As my hope grows larger and larger… so my faith and love do as well. Ask God to energize the hope in me.

Psalm 119:116 LORD, sustain me as you promised, that I may live! Do not let my hope be crushed.117 Sustain me, and I will be rescued; then I will meditate continually on your decrees.

3. Pray that God help me grow as a husband and father. I know that most people know me as a pastor or leader. But the most important thing I do in life is be a husband to Stephanie and a dad to Bradon and Jackson. This summer is going to afford me many opportunities to spend special time with them. And I don’t want to miss the opportunity. Pray that God show me clearly all the ways that I can continue to grow as a husband and father. This is a responsibility in my life and a calling of my time that I definitely do not want to miss.

4. Pray that I continually see clear vision for the church. I am certainly not the only one who helps fashion the vision for the church. But whoever and wherever (Christ) it comes from… I have to see it clearly in order to lead it well. There are times when I don’t know exactly what to do next. And I don’t want my lack of clarity to ever be a problem for the church. 4RC is an amazing congregation with amazing realities in it. God has a beautiful future for this church. And I desire to see as much of it as He will grant me privilege.

5. Pray that I not overlook people in a quest for task, strategy and missional growth. People is ultimately what its all about. But its easy in a busy, stressful job to miss that. And I’ve been guilty of it in the past. I don’t want to be guilty of it ever again. Pray that God keep a softness to my heart and an openness to my ears when it comes to loving and caring for people. This is a high value to me.

6. Pray that God protect me from the ‘fire darts’ or temptations thrown at me from Satan. God tells us in His word that those with responsibility will be attacked by the enemy. And as my responsibility as husband, father and pastor grows… so do the attacks. So pray that the Spirit of God wrap a protective presence around me. I want to finish this race. I want to follow His Spirit. I would never want to fall short due to lack of attentiveness to the enemies schemes. Even though its at the end of the list… this is an important one.

Thanks so much for praying for me. I pray for the people of 4RC and all of Western Kentucky regularly. And I am thankful for and respectful of your prayer support as well.

Thank you.

Brad


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