2011 - Page 16 of 20 - Church Executive


Does your church have a farm team?

On several occasions I’ve had the privilege of being part of a great team whether it was sports or at work. As much as I desired to have those times go on forever, the reality is that just doesn’t happen.

I see the same each year in baseball. When they need to pull someone up to the majors, they call on the farm team. The whole purpose of the farm team is to provide training and experience for players. At any given time any successful player could possibly move up. This isn’t only for sports, as some business schools are referred to as farm clubs for the business world.

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Prepare for the impossible

To prepare for the impossible may seem like an unlikely assignment.

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Church Executive, March 2011, Volume 10, Issue 3

Among the highlights of this issue is an interview with Rick Lemons, senior pastor of Fellowship Bible Church of Forney, TX who used NASCAR as the basis for a sermon series. Also included are two stories that highlight the unfortunate problems of embezzlement and fraud that are still taking place at churches.

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Churches need to focus on true safety when transporting members

Every church has someone or a group in charge of safety.

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Oh, Oprah

‘Many deceivers have gone out into the world … Watch out

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Who is Rick Lemons?

Rick Lemons’ interest in NASCAR came out of the number of people at his church

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EXCERPT: Uncomfortable decline among churches

Three recent books examine church attendance trends and confirm Willow Creek’s Reveal study. The church’s failure to make disciples is growing worse each year. Based on current statistics, George Barna’s book, Revolution, predicts that by 2025 only 30 percent of those seeking ways to experience church will do so in what is now the traditional congregational form of church. Many of those opting out are “post-congregational,” that is, while they no longer go to church, they still have church with friends and family in an intimate setting.

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Sabbatical helps getting from one’s element to one’s essence

I was tired, bone tired, more weary of soul than I wanted to admit. The challenges of life and ministry had taken their toll: A major building project, the decision to let a much loved ministry partner go, my beloved wife diagnosed with cancer. Fortunately I pastor a church that loves me and not just in words, but deeds. So they sent me on a three-month sabbatical with enough money to get away and get the help I needed. That help came in the form of a ministry called Pastors on Point. If you go to their website you will find the phrase, “taking Pastors ‘out of their element’ and ‘into their essence,’” which sounds a bit corny. But corny or not, it worked for me. Three gifted men took seven pastors and four lamas up into the Colorado wilderness to rediscover God’s calling on our lives and, thankfully, I was one of them.

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Churches need to be aware of Wolves in their midst

Fraud targeting Christians is an epidemic. Of the $40 billion that Americans lose to investment fraud every year, fraud against the faithful accounts for as much as $1 billion of it. Antiquated notions of why churches fall victim to fraud are at least partially responsible for the epidemic. Old adages like, “If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is,” are not only useless as protection against fraud, but also dangerous. Church executives concerned with sound financial stewardship and protecting the flock must reach beyond trite axioms. In this post-Madoff world, where scam artists are smarter and their schemes harder to spot, church leaders must adopt a pro-active, 21st century approach to protecting their church.

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Home(s) sweet home(s): Update on housing allowances

Most pastors are probably familiar with the provision in the Tax Code that allows pastors and ministers to exempt a parsonage, or housing allowance from their taxable income.

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