Wednesday, 11 December 2019

Some questions to ask yourself as you finish 2019

A good post from Dave Kraft!

Socrates is often quoted as having said, “The unexamined life is not worth living.” This might be a bit of a stretch, and some even question whether Socrates ever said it, but someone obviously said it, as we still quote it today.

However, I do believe that it’s safe to say that an examined life stands a better chance of succeeding in significant ways as opposed to a life which is never examined evaluated or reflected upon.

Every year in late December, I take some time to both look back and to look ahead. It’s okay to use the past as a guidepost, but not as a hitching post.  I don’t want the past to hold me back but to point me forward through lessons learned as I reflect on what happened or didn’t happen, and plan for the next year.

I love what Paul says in Philippians 3:10-14 (ESV):
That I may know him and the power of his resurrection, and may share his sufferings, becoming like him in his death, that by any means possible I may attain the resurrection from the dead.  Not that I have already obtained this or am already perfect, but I press on to make it my own, because Christ Jesus has made me his own. Brothers, I do not consider that I have made it my own. But one thing I do: Forgetting what lies behind and straining forward to what lies ahead, I press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus.”

Paul is learning from the past, but not living in the past. With great energy, and Jesus-empowered resolve, he is pressing into what lies before him as he desires increasing maturity in Jesus.

With these thoughts in mind, here are some questions we can all ask ourselves as 2019 comes to a close, as we reflect on this past year and lean into the new year which is just around the corner.

1.  What is the greatest lesson you learned this past year that you never want to forget?

2.  How might you have behaved or acted differently this past year if you could do it over again?

3.  Looking back over the year, what did you set out to do that you didn’t do and why?

4.  What key discipline did you live out this past year that had a significant impact on your life? What was the impact? 

5.  What are you most proud of this past year?

6.  What were the key surprises (good or bad) that happened this past year?

7.  Which relationships in your life grew this year and which regressed?

8.  If you could go back to the beginning of this year, what piece of advice would you give yourself and why?

9.  Looking back, what was the overarching theme for the year?

Please don’t just read these probing questions, but take a good block of time and carefully and prayerfully respond to them. 

Monday, 2 December 2019

HOW TO DEVELOP TEAMS THAT TALK LESS AND ACHIEVE MORE

A great post by Dan Reiland.

Talking gives the illusion of action!

If the room goes quiet when you ask, “What are we going to do about that?”, you have a team that talks too much and achieves too little.
The illusion that talking is achievement leads to:
  1. Smug superiority. You look down on the people you talk about.
  2. Self-satisfied frustration. Leadership teams that talk more than act develop frustration toward the people they should encourage and support.
  3. Self-deluded stagnation. Teams that talk – but don’t act – imagine they’re getting things done.
Teams that talk focus on the responsibility of others.
Action creates personal responsibility.
Hidden value of action:
  1. Openness to listen and learn. People who talk too much over-estimate their knowledge.
  2. Momentum. You’re stuck until you act.
  3. Clear thinking. Guesswork happens while you sit and talk. Clarity happens when you get off the stool of do-nothing.
How teams overcome inaction:
#1. Set deadlines.
Before the discussion begins, ask, “When would you like to be doing something about this agenda item?”
Make small decisions now. Procrastination invites overthinking.
Distill big decisions into a series of small action steps.
#2. Ask for action.
Before the meeting ends, ask, “Is there any reason we can’t move forward on this now?” If the answer is, “We CAN’T move forward right now.”:
  1. List and rank the top reasons you can’t move forward now.
  2. Focus on the top three concerns.
  3. Assign concerns to the people around the table. “Please return to our next meeting with three possible answers to the concern you’ve been assigned.”
  4. Schedule your next meeting soon. “If we had to, how quickly could we act on this item?”
  5. Set the tone. The purpose of our next meeting is to find small ways to move forward.
Take a small step if you can’t take a giant leap.

7 Actions that Cripple Leaders

A great post by Ron Edmondson

I’m constantly thinking about how I can help people on our team improve as leaders. Of course, in order for that to happen, it means I must constantly be improving as a leader. I realize our team’s potential to get better at leading others is limited to the extent I am willing to become a better leader.

I’ve learned along the way to being a better leader that there are some things that simply keep leaders from being effective. I used the word “cripple” in the title and I don’t think that is too strong a word. The things I’m going to list have all crippled me during the seasons of my leadership. There are some actions or characteristics which can simply derail a leader’s potential for success if not identified and addressed.  Understanding these and disciplining ourselves to avoid them can make us better leaders.

Here are 7 actions which can cripple a leader:


Trying to personally handle too much.
Too many changes at one time. Too much on your plate. Refusing to delegate. You can only do so much and when you try to do more you almost always lose efficiency and effectiveness.
I realized this as our church plant was growing quickly. I was trying to meet with people, be active in the community, lead our staff and organizational structure and still preach effectively on Sunday. Something had to give. I started giving some things away and it was amazing how much better my messages became on Sunday – and how much more effective I was in my other responsibilities.

Refusing to rest.
Resting isn’t just a nice quote on a 10 commandments plaque. It’s a command for a reason. Our bodies and minds need time to rejuvenate and recover. Burnout is almost always a result of leaders who fail to say no or are never still.
I have had more than one hard learning curve in this area. Thankfully, I’ve matured and now I can say the more stressful the season the more I discipline myself to exercise and get away from the office. In the busier than normal season, I don’t have to work harder, but smarter.

Allowing critics voices to dominate.
You will always have critics. And, you shouldn’t ignore learning from them – even when you don’t agree with them. As leaders, we must remain humble and teachable. But, this doesn’t mean we allow the dominant voice to be those who aren’t even supportive of leadership or where we are leading. In my experience, most of the time there are some people that are critics regardless of who is leader.

I’ll never forget the time this one lady continued to blast me about the “satanic” music our church sang. It wasn’t satanic at all. In fact, we were careful with our lyrics on every song we used in our worship services. The problem was it wasn’t her style. For a while I let this haunt me every Sunday. I was paranoid about what others might be saying. But, then I realized there were lots of people who were better engaging in worship because of our style. Plus, there were plenty of other churches that might have more closely aligned with her preference. I couldn’t allow her preference to control what was leading a couple thousand other people in worship every week.

Ignoring the hard decisions.
Leadership isn’t needed if we simply manage the status quo. Leadership takes people to unknown places. This requires change – and change can be uncomfortable. Let me correct that – change is always uncomfortable – to someone. In my experience, leadership is often crippled until someone is willing to make hard decisions. As leaders, we must not lead to be popular but to do the right things to achieve the worthy, pre-established visions of our organization.
This has been true so many times as we have had to change or stop programming in an established church. I’ve learned “we’ve always done it this way” is rarely true. When a church is over 100 years old there’s nearly nothing done the same way it was when the church started. They’ve simply done it that way long enough to be comfortable. But, part of our success has been the willingness to move forward – strategically and cautiously – with needed improvements towards our vision. This has included hard decisions involving programming, but even harder decisions regarding people. (And, the people decisions are always the hardest – but, sometimes the ones most needed.)

Controlling everything.
When the leader has to know everything happening in the organization or when they are paranoid because they don’t, we know there is crippled leadership somewhere – either with the leader or those being led. Most leaders don’t want to be surprised on major things, but when they have to be intimately involved in every decision and every detail it usually indicates they don’t trust their team. That’s crippling to any leader – and the team.I’ve always been pretty good at delegating. It may have come when we bought a small manufacturing company and I was completely in over my head as a leader. I quickly realized if I was going to have any success I had to release control and trust other people – often people more qualified in areas than me. That learning experience has surely helped me as a pastor.

Impatience.
Rome wasn’t built in a day. And, neither are healthy organizations. Leaders must learn to have patience and perseverance, even when those on the team are growing weary. Many times we quit just before the turnaround.
I have sat with so many pastors – especially attempting revitalization – who were short-term at their churches – not because the work was finished, but because they were not patient with how long the process of change was taking. The best leadership happens over seasons and years – not over days and weeks.

Developing a sense of entitlement.
The leader who ever feels they’ve “arrived”, stops learning, or begins to take all the credit for success in the organization has become a very crippled leader. The team will no longer support the leader fully. They will trip on their own ego. It’s simply the quickest way to failure. I could spend a whole blog post – and probably should – on how I have personally witnessed egos lead to moral, spiritual and professional failure. Chances are, however, you have witnessed this plenty of times also. Pride always goes before the fall.
Those are a few actions or attitudes which I have seen cripple good leadership. It’s always sad to me to see a good leader fail. My prayer is this could be a check for any leaders who may be struggling in any of these areas.

Monday, 21 October 2019

HOW TO RISE ABOVE PESSIMISM AND LEAD OPTIMISTICALLY

A challanging post by Dan Rockwell 

Pessimistic leaders focus on faults and weaknesses.
Success with people requires optimism.
You choose:
Think of optimism as a skill, not a disposition.
Choose optimism over pessimism. Optimists honor progress, affirm strength, and celebrate good. Pessimists notice shortcomings, complain about things they can’t change, and anticipate bad.
7 advantages of optimism:
  1. Better health.
  2. Longer life.
  3. Richer relationships.
  4. Greater achievement.
  5. Less stress.
  6. Emotional health.
  7. Grit.
When seeing bad is good:
Optimism is usually the best approach, but pessimism isn’t always bad.
Pessimism is useful in high risk situations. You don’t want your brain surgeon saying, “Let’s try it and see what happens.”
You want airplane pilots assuming the worst, not the best.
The upside of pessimism:
  1. Lower expectations. (Less disappointment.)
  2. Preparing for the worst, as long as you don’t catastrophize everything.
  3. Attention to detail.
The downside of pessimism:
Successful leaders have the gift of strengthfinding, not faultfinding.
Faultfinding leaders…
  1. Destroy morale.
  2. Demotivate teams.
  3. Create caution.
  4. Motivate blaming.
Your team is better without you if you’re a faultfinding pessimist.
A lunchtime challenge:
I challenge you to only notice good until lunch. No faultfinding, complaining, or finger-pointing allowed. None!
Rules:
  1. If you’re a diehard pessimist, think of how much worse things could be and be thankful they aren’t that bad.
  2. Don’t hide in your office until after lunch! (Cowardice)
  3. Silence isn’t optimism. Sometimes silence is a good thing. If you’re a negative leader, your silence will help your team feel better. But for this challenge, you must practice optimistic speech.
  4. Ask an optimist for suggestions if you can’t think of anything good to say.
  5. Expect people to be shocked, but don’t let that deter you.
What concerns you about optimistic leadership?
How might leaders develop the skill of optimism?
Quotes:
“The learner always begins by finding fault, but the scholar sees the positive merit in everything.” Hegel
Why do you see the speck that is in your brother’s eye, but do not notice the log that is in your own eye? Jesus
To find fault is easy; to do better may be difficult. Plutarch
Don’t find fault, find a remedy, anybody can complain. Henry Ford

Monday, 14 October 2019

8 FOOTPRINT TRACKS TOWARD MORAL FAILURE


Thanks to Dave Kraft for posting this article - very helpful for leaders who see the importance of building safeguards into their lives and ministries.
Author Jim Collins (Good to Great) also wrote a book titled, “How The Mighty Fall.” It deals with why companies fail and fall. In Scripture, we also observe story after story (especially in the Old Testament) about mighty leaders falling. Things haven’t changed much in this regard. Well known and seemingly successful leaders both in the church and in the world of business are “Falling.” Chuck Lawless shares eight steps that can assuredly lead to a fall. Please read carefully and prayerfully with an open heart to the Holy Spirit.  Originally posted by Chuck Lawless

By God’s grace, watch your step!

I love hiking and backpacking. Recently, I read an article about recognizing “critters” in an area by looking at footprint tracks in the dirt. Some tracks aren’t alarming, but others say, “Be careful. There could be trouble in the area.” Based on my knowledge of far too many moral failures among church leaders, here are some “footprint tracks” that could signal upcoming trouble:

1.     An unhealthy marriage somewhere. It might be that only a few people know the troubles, but every moral failure I’ve seen occurred in the context of somebody’s struggling marriage.

2.     Undisciplined living. I’ve never met a fallen leader who says, “But, I was walking faithfully with God, reading the Word and praying intimately – and the affair just happened.” I’ve met several, though, who admit they weren’t meeting with God in their spiritual disciplines at the time of their fall.

3.     Ministry companionship. Some church-based affairs begin with two people doing ministry together in some setting – perhaps as simple as serving on a committee together. The time together becomes alluring, and it’s easy to excuse it because it’s ministry.

4.     Unwise sharing.  If you want to invite trouble, tell someone of the opposite gender the difficulties you’re having in your own marriage. Even pastors must be careful when they’re in counseling situations dealing with such matters.

5.     Email or social media flirting. It’s surely not an affair. It’s only jesting. Just words, and just for fun. Nobody really means anything . . . . except that I don’t want anybody else to see what we’re writing . . . .

6.     Conversational hints. People in the midst of a fall sometimes inadvertently give hints about what’s going on. They speak more often about the person. They respond differently when the person’s in the room. The problem is that others don’t recognize the “tracks” until after the failure’s made public.

7.     Emotional connections. More than once, I’ve heard, “But, it was just an emotional affair.” That may well have been the case, but I’ve also never seen a physical affair that didn’t start with an emotional connection – tracks that indicate coming trouble.

8.     Ongoing lies. It’s hard to have moral failure without telling lies at some point. In fact, it’s not uncommon that the church leader living a lie also lies about other stuff as well.

What about you? Are you leaving any tracks that could spell trouble? 

Saturday, 21 September 2019

6 Dangerous Viruses That Take Leaders Down

The enemy of our souls and of His ministry through us is always on the hunt for ways to bring us down. Eric Geiger shares 6 dangerous viruses that take leaders down. Please prayerfully read what Eric has to share and pray for the protection of the Holy Spirit over your life and ministy.  Originally posted by Eric Geiger


6 Dangerous Viruses That Take Leaders Down

Six deadly viruses that leaders can be hit with!
Not all viruses have the same devastating impact on people. For example, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other organizations have plotted viruses on a chart with deadly on the y-axis and contagious on the x-axis. Some viruses are just more deadly than others. Regarding spiritual viruses, here are 6 (not an exhaustive list) that take leaders down.

1. Greed

Leaders, even ministry leaders, can be filled with greed—the continual desire for more— often more money. When greed has a leader’s heart, the leader makes decisions that are centered on cash and not on Christ and His people.

2. Lust

When lust resides in a leader’s heart, the leader makes destructive decisions. What once seemed unthinkable becomes a fantasy that can easily move to reality. When lust grows in the heart of a leader, a fall is inevitable.

3. Revenge

When leaders are harmed or feel like they have been harmed, they can wrongly feel it is their role and responsibility to right every wrong and extract pain from others—pain they feel makes the scales even. A leader filled with a desire for revenge fails to walk in wisdom.

4. Independence

Sometimes leaders use the excuse that “no one understands” as justification for their preference to be alone. But when leaders are alone, they make foolish decisions.

5. Pride

Because leaders are often in places of authority and influence, pride can easily build in the heart and mind of a leader. When pride spreads, the leader fails to learn from others, fails to recognize the fragility of the moment, and fails to serve for the benefit of others.

6. Laziness

Laziness can plague leaders who feel they have earned the right to stop serving or who have lost their passion for the mission they have heralded. When leaders grow lazy, the culture of those they lead quickly deteriorates.

These may start small, but they can quickly spread in the leader’s heart. Leaders are wise to continually ask the Lord to search their hearts to bring these to mind so repentance can occur.

Saturday, 14 September 2019

6 Areas of Life Where Successful Leaders Practice Self-Discipline

No matter how you look at it, it all eventually comes down to discipline. Effective and fruitful leaders develop disciplines in key areas of life and ministry. Rick Warren shares 6 areas of life where successful leaders practice self-discipline.  Originally posted by Rick Warren

High achievers usually have one obvious thing in common: personal discipline.  Successful people are willing to do things that most people are unwilling to do.

I’ve observed that successful people express self-discipline in six key ways:

1. Successful people master their moods.

They live by their commitments, not their emotions. People who do the right thing even when they don’t feel like it accomplish most of what gets done in the world!
“A man without self-control is as defenseless as a city with broken-down walls” Proverbs 25:28 (TLB).

2. Successful people watch their words.

They put their minds in gear before opening their mouths.
“He who guards his lips guards his life” Proverbs 13:3 (NIV).

3. Successful people restrain their reactions.

How much can you take before you lose your cool? Unfortunately, a lot of potential influence can be cut short by a short temper.
“If you are sensible, you will control your temper. When someone wrongs you, it is a great virtue to ignore it” Proverbs 19:11 (GNT).

4. Successful people stick to their schedule.

If you don’t determine how you will spend your time, you can be sure that others will decide for you. When you lead a church that grows in size, you will inevitably be pulled in a multitude of directions. You’ll have to become a great steward of time to be successful in life.
“Live life, then, with a due sense of responsibility . . . Make the best use of your time” (Ephesians 5:15-16 Phillips).

5. Successful people manage their money.

They learn to live on less than what they make, and they invest the difference into savings and give to causes that matter. The value of a budget is that it tells your money where you want it to go rather than wondering where it went!
“The wise man saves for the future, but the foolish man spends whatever he gets” (Proverbs 21:20 TLB).

6. Successful people maintain their health.

They form habits in their eating and activities that keep their energy level up and help them last through stressful seasons in good health. That way they can accomplish more and enjoy their achievements.

“Every one of you should learn to control his own body, keeping it pure and treating it with respect”
(1 Thessalonians 4:4 Phillips).

Where do you need to develop self-control?  The disciplines you establish today will determine your success tomorrow.
But it takes more than just willpower to produce lasting self-control. It takes a power greater than yourself.
The more you accept God’s control over your life, the more self-control he gives you!

Monday, 9 September 2019

A good name is more desirable than great riches

The Bible says, "A good name is more desirable than great riches." In other words, your self-worth is more important than your net-worth.
The common mistake most people make is thinking that reputation is a matter of “image.” So they worry themselves with questions like "How do I look?" or "Did I say the right thing?" To build a long-term good reputation, you must focus on your character, not your image. Respect must be earned. The book of Proverbs in the Bible identifies six character qualities found in people who are respected by others:
  1. RESPECT IS EARNED THROUGH INTEGRITY. "Respected people do not tell lies."(17:7) "The man of integrity walks securely, but he who takes crooked paths will be found out." (10:9)
  2. RESPECT IS EARNED THROUGH HUMILITY. "Arrogance will bring your downfall, but if you are humble, you will be respected."(29:23) "Anyone who listens to correction is respected."(13:18)
  3. RESPECT IS EARNED THROUGH DEPENDABILITY. "Like clouds and wind without rain is a man who boasts of gifts he does not give."(25:15) "He who keeps an oath even when it hurts will never be shaken." (Psalm 15:4-5)
  4. RESPECT IS EARNED THROUGH HAVING PRIORITIES. "If your goals are good, you will be respected." (11:27) "You will earn the trust and respect of others if you work for good."(14:22)
  5. RESPECT IS EARNED THROUGH GENEROSITY. "He who gives generously to the needy and shows kindness will be powerful and respected." (Psalm 112:9)
  6. RESPECT IS EARNED THROUGH PUTTING GOD FIRST IN YOUR LIFE. "If you want favor with both God and man, and a reputation for good judgment and common sense, then trust the Lord completely. In everything you do, put God first, and he will direct you and crown your efforts with success." (3:4-6)
What are people going to remember most about you? How many of these qualities could you work on this week -- starting today?

 

Saturday, 17 August 2019

OUR ENEMY HAS EMBEDDED HIMSELF IN THE MIDDLE OF LEADERSHIP


A great post by  Dave Kraft


For some time now I’ve said that I Peter 5 is the “lost” chapter on leadership. When churches are vetting potential leaders, often the go-to chapters are I Timothy 3 and Titus 1, where we have a list of leadership qualities and attributes.
Most of what we find in Timothy and Titus is not competence, but character in the context of healthy relationships. This is very notesworthy given today’s obsesssion with competency and talent.
However, 1 Peter chapter 5, verses 1-11 are often not referenced at all,  or not enough, when it comes to the choosing of future leaders. One insight that came to me not too long ago is that right in the middle (verse 8, ESV) of this exquisite chapter on leadership by Peter (who rose from the ashes of failure, defeat and disappointment to become a key leader in the early church) is a statement about our enemy, the devil.
“Be sober-minded; be watchful. Your adversary the devil prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour.”
What struck me was the fact that the enemy’s tactics certainly applies to all followers of Jesus; but this is in the middle of a chapter on leadership, which leads me to conclude that our enemy is mostly, and primarily, after leaders; to “devour,” take them out of the race, cause them to be disqualified. (I Corinthians 9:27).
I’m currently reading through the New Testament in the New Living Translation, and a day or two ago, I read I Thessalonians 3:5:
“That is why, when I could bear it no longer, I sent Timothy to find out whether your faith was still strong. I was afraid that the tempter had gotten the best of you and that our work had been useless.” (Emphasis mine)
The phrase, “…the tempter had gotten the best of you…” really caught my attention. The last thing true Christian leaders want is to have the tempter (the devil, the enemy, the accuser) get the best of them, taking them down and out. But we all know it happens to lots of leaders and has been happening for a very long time.
As I was reflecting and praying about this, I thought of four areas where the enemy can get the best of us:

1. SEXUAL

Men in leadership need to be especially watchful on this one. The strongest man in the Bible (Sampson), the wisest man in the Bible (Solomon), and the man after God’s own heart (David), all got  significantly hit on this one. This is something I pray about daily/hourly for myself.  Five minutes of illicit pleasure, real or imagined through pornography, can in a matter of hours reverse a legacy that has been years in building. Numerous chapters in the book of Proverbs deal expressly with this danger.

2. FINANCIAL

Personal greed, lack of integrity, the misuse and/or mismanagement of corporate monies, as well as financial envy and jealously, has brought many a leader down. Total honesty and honor in the handling of money is an endangered species in politics, business and, sad to say, in the church. Years ago I worked in a church where an elder stole money from the offering to the tune of $10,000 to pay off personal debt. I’m convinced this is not an isolated incident.

3. RELATIONAL

Not clearly and consistently living out of the fruit of the spirit (Galatians 5:22,23) in the context of working relationships is devastating and destructive to fruitful Christian ministry. 
Often relationally challenged leaders are given a pass (due to their stellar success) when it comes to loving relationships. But, sooner or later, the lack of genuine love, consideration and kindness in how people are treated, spoken to (and about) and appreciated can cause the outward trappings of success to come to a screeching halt.
Many leaders get promoted on the basis of their ability to get things done, but are eventually let go due to their inability to get along with the people they work with day in and day out.

4. PRIDEFUL

It was the late John Stott who said: “Pride is the greatest enemy and humility our greatest friend.” A leader all wrapped up in him/herself makes a very small package. Pride sent Lucifer crashing down and it has been the undoing of many leaders in the Bible, in early church history and still takes its toll today. As I said in my book, “Mistakes Leaders Make,” “Pride is a difficult issue for leaders to recognize in themselves and even more difficult to deal with. It often hides under the cloak of confidence and conviction.”

 Keep a watchful eye open

Please join me in praying for yourself and for leaders you know that the tempter will not get the best of any of us;  sexually, financially, relationally or pridefully.

Jesus wants the best of all of us!

Monday, 29 July 2019

Disturb Us, Lord


Disturb Us, Lord

Disturb us, Lord, when we are too well pleased with ourselves,
When our dreams have come true
Because we have dreamed too little,
When we arrived safely
Because we sailed too close to the shore.

Disturb us, Lord, when
With the abundance of things we possess
We have lost our thirst
For the waters of life;
Having fallen in love with life,
We have ceased to dream of eternity
And in our efforts to build a new earth,
We have allowed our vision
Of the new Heaven to dim.

Disturb us, Lord, to dare more boldly,
To venture on wider seas
Where storms will show Your mastery;
Where losing sight of land,
We shall find the stars.
We ask You to push back
The horizons of our hopes;
And to push into the future
In strength, courage, hope, and love.


(Attributed to Sir Francis Drake -1577)



Wednesday, 24 July 2019

What to Do When You Want to Give Up

This is a great post by Rick Warren.

I hear from pastors all the time who are ready to give up. They’re tired. They’re frustrated. They feel like they’ve failed their family, their congregation—and God.
Any veteran church leader has experienced discouragement. In fact, some of us have been through several trying seasons.
It’s not a sin to get discouraged—it happens to all of us. Discouragement is a byproduct of spiritual warfare. It also happens when our expectations need to be readjusted.
God uses discouragement to draw us closer to him and to refine our ministry.
Don’t give up! What you are doing is far too important! We are in this battle together! God can still do more than you could ever imagine in your life and through your ministry.
If you are ready to give up, consider the following:
Remember how much God loves you. I suspect that you often preach about God’s love. If you’re feeling discouraged, it’s time to “preach it” to yourself. You can’t feel the love of God and feel discouraged at the same time.
Refuse to “fake it.” Typically, this is tough for those of us in ministry. Much of our lives are on display. We buy into the lie that we can’t be real and still be effective in church ministry. This simply isn’t true. The people in your church are struggling. It gives them hope when they know you are too.
Naturally, you need to be wise about what you share. You need to match your integrity with discernment. You may be able to live a double life for a little while, but it will eventually catch up with you.
Take the focus off of yourself. Remember that there’s more to your life than just you. IT’S NOT ABOUT YOU! The more self-focused you become, the more discouraged you will get. Life is bigger than you. Take the focus off of your problems, broaden your perspective to include others, and your discouragement will diminish.
Be realistic about your limitations. You are a ministry leader, not the latest hero in a comic book movie. You can’t leap tall buildings in a single bound. You are a normal person and you have limits.
Unless you have a realistic view of what you can and cannot do, you’re headed for regular bouts of discouragement. But there’s good news for you—when you learn to be realistic about your limitations, you’ll be less discouraged.
  • You can’t keep everyone happy
  • You aren’t going to hit a home run with every sermon
  • You won’t successfully handle every conflict
“That’s why I take pleasure in my weaknesses, and in the insults, hardships, persecutions, and troubles that I suffer for Christ. For when I am weak, then I am strong” (2 Corinthians 12:10 NLT).
Take time for renewal. If you want to be in ministry for the long haul, you need to find ways to recharge. You need to divert daily, withdraw weekly, and abandon annually.
You need to do something every day that recharges you—whether it’s taking a walk, engaging in a hobby, playing with the kids, or anything else that leaves you with more energy when you’re done. You need a day of rest, a Sabbath day when you don’t do any work. Maybe it’s not during the weekend for you. Make sure you’re taking another day as your Sabbath. Then, make sure you take vacation time every year.
Stay focused on eternity. I call it the tyranny of the trivial. It’s when we major in the minors and ignore the majors. Even in ministry, it’s tempting to focus on issues that just don’t matter. When we take on the weight of a seemingly infinite amount of insignificant things, the only result can be a discouragement.
Unless you can let go of the minutiae, discouragement will be a constant companion.
Don’t spend your time worrying about issues that won’t matter next week or even next year. Keep your perspective on what will outlast you on this earth. Your present struggles will only last for a brief time compared to eternity.
“But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 3:13–14 NIV).

Tuesday, 2 July 2019

THE FIVE PRACTICES OF SMART TEAMS

A great post by Dan Rockwell 

Teams, like individuals, can be stupid or smart.  Stupid teams consist of smart people who engage in stupid behaviors.

The 5 practices of smart teams:

#1. Team members disagree with the team leader.
Smart teams don’t have dominant leaders. The lid of a team’s intelligence is the dominant person who controls the team.
Effective leaders keep teams focused on important issues. 
Effective leaders establish and control the direction of conversations. Dominant leaders control the content of conversations.
Dominant leaders stifle conversations. Effective leaders ignite conversations.
#2. Conversations feel unscripted and spontaneous.
I heard an ineffective leader say, “I never hold a meeting until I’m sure of the outcome.” That leader has a stupid team.
It doesn’t matter how smart the individual players are if meetings are scripted.
Tip: Get heads turning toward each other, not the head of the table.
#3. Team members engage in vigorous debate.
Smart teams engage in respectful conflict.
Constructive dissent challenges thinking and sparks creativity.
#4. Team members notice emotional states.
Smart teammates say, “Something seems to be bothering you,” when a fellow team member isn’t them self.
Smart teams connect and care. Stupid teams bury their heads and stick to business.
Strong connection is the foundation for vigorous debate. (See behavior #3.)
#5. Smart teams explore crazy ideas.
Creative ideas don’t fit the mold.
Smart teams ask, “What if?”

3 ways to develop smart teams:

#1. Create psychological safety.
Anything that makes a team unsafe makes a team stupid.
Teams get smarter when the people around the table speak freely.
#2. Eliminate monologues.
Expect equal participation from every member, on average.
Monologues move teams from dumb to dumber.
#3. Practice social sensitivity.
Explore, don’t ignore emotion. “Professional” teams are dumb.
Smart teams may not be soft, but they are safe.
Have you been on a smart team? What made it smart?
Resources:
Amy Edmondson, “The Fearless Organization.
Patrick Lencioni, “The Five Dysfunctions of a Team.”
I first read about smart teams in Charles Duhigg’s book, “Smarter Faster Better.