Archives For Ministry

My drive from home to the office isn’t very long, but for a few minutes most mornings, I’m able to listen to the morning radio show, “Mornings with Brant” on our local WordFM station. The show’s host, Brant Hansen is a great host and quite funny on most mornings. Like all radio shows, we only get to listen to the hosts and if you’re like me, you wonder what the person-behind-the-voice looks like, acts like in ‘real-life’, and whether we’d be able to point them out in a crowd of people if we met them in public.

Recently, I stumbled on Brant’s “I am Second” testimonial video and was pleasantly surprised at his humility and honesty.

Watching his video, I think, gives a true view of the “Oz behind the curtain”.

Pastor Craig Groeschel of LifeChurch has written a few books already that have challenged and inspired me. I’m looking forward to getting my hands on his latest: “Weird: Because normal isn’t working” which released just today, April 5th.

Here’s the promo video from Pastor Craig:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vwLkbB_gMEA

The book is available in a two formats on Amazon right now: Hardback (only $12.50 today) and Kindle eBook (only $7.99 today).

What I love most about Pastor Craig’s books is not only how thought-provoking and challenging they have been, but also how they translate very well into sermon-series inspiration, too!

FULL DISCLOSURE: If you pick the book up by clicking on my links, Amazon gives me a small percentage of the sale which helps me resource my own pastoral library! Thanks!

I received the following email last evening with the subject line, “We’re sorry you may have had trouble watching instantly”:
As you can see, the email was from Netflix and I was quite taken back as I read and then re-read it.

My family and I were away all-day on this purported service-interruption of Netflix’s streaming service that we subscribe to, but Netflix sent us the email anyway and offered us 3% off of our monthly bill for the trouble. (no, we didn’t take it)

Sure, 3% of $7.99 is “nothing”, but the service behind it is what is impressive to me.

Netflix left the decision up to me about whether to ask for my refund. I liked that. Trusting consumers isn’t a very popular thing these days I don’t think, so when it happens, I choose to highlight it and applaud it!

And I think there is something further to learn in other contexts via this example. We, as a people, are quite untrusting, too! What if we learned to stop being so untrusting all the time, took a risk and attempted to trust “outdide the box”? I can’t imagine that Netflix only refunded the 3% bill to those who actually experienced service interruption, and yet they went for a “mass-trust” of their customers and won!

Where are we missing out by not trusting?

The neighbor we don’t yet know?
The cafe down the street that we haven’t yet tried?
Trusting God with our finances? (I aknowledge the big leap here, but I think it makes a point)

I want to trust like Netflix, take faith-risks, trust in new ways that are unpopular and maybe even dangerous…

I think it’s what Jesus calls us to when he says, “Come follow me.”

Thanks for the reminder, Netflix.

If you’re a human being with working tastebuds and don’t happen to be allergic to chicken, chances are you’ve heard of and fallen in love with Chick-Fil-A. Often referred to as “Christian Chicken” by people like me who love the food AND love the story behind the chicken (ie, founder Truett Cathy’s personal faith in Jesus Christ), Chick-Fil-A is a favorite restaurant for our family.

Thanks to a recent Twitter-follow from user, “@annebelier” I uncovered another faith-based history of another frequented-by-our-family food-establishment that until now I had no idea about.

Turns out that @annebeiler is the account of Anne Beiler, founder of Auntie Anne’s Pretzels!

From The Beiler’s website:

To support Jonas’ [Anne’s husband] vision to help others, Anne bought a concession stand at a local farmers’ market in Downingtown, Pennsylvania. She sold everything from pizza to ice cream, but it was the hand-rolled soft pretzels that customers couldn’t get enough of. Because of the demand, Anne dropped the rest of the products and concentrated on perfecting the pretzel. Auntie Anne’s Soft Pretzels was born.

A little clicking-and-reading around revealed to me that the Beilers are Christians with a passion for loving God and loving people.

A glimpse of “their story”, also from their website:

The Beilers have always believed in leading by example, doing business with integrity, and giving back to the community. While at Auntie Anne’s, they demonstrated their business principles with the acronym, LIGHT: Lead by example; Invest in employees; Give freely; Honor God; and Treat all business contacts with integrity. These principles continue to LIGHT their way as they follow their passion to serve people, strengthen families, and build community.

I also discovered that Mrs. Beiler has written a book, “Twist of Faith”, published by Thomas Nelson back in 2008. I’ve already added it to my ever-growing wishlist and hope to eventually make time to learn more about the story of Anne Beiler, her love for Jesus and her love for pretzels. (Is it wrong to also hope that there is also a discount coupon in the back of the book somewhere?)

The book’s description:

Anne Smucker Beiler was born in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, where she attended a two-room Amish school. Bred into the fabric of her close-knit family and into her soul were the elements of sincere Christian faith, an excellent work ethic, and an eye for good business opportunity. Anne’s journey is a remarkable story of failure and success. She persevered through a series of difficult personal struggles-including the tragic death of her second child, being betrayed by someone she trusted implicitly, and a terrible six-year depression-to become the leading female franchise owner in the United States. Anne is one of the few women who have founded national companies in America. What makes her story most extraordinary is her determination to help others by telling her full story-the good, the bad and the ugly.

Anne blogs at thebeilers.blogspot.com.

Dr. Timothy C. Tennent has been the president of Asbury Theological Seminary since 2009. He recently blogged his 4-part review of “Love Wins”, the controversial book by Rob Bell, and had a great deal to say about the book, both the negatives AND the positives.

Dr. Tennent entitles his review, “Why Rob Bell needs to return to Seminary… and bring along quite a few contemporary evangelical pastors”

PART ONE | PART TWO | PART THREE | PART FOUR

Dr. Tennent gives 5-reasons we should be wary of the theology presented in the book:
1. Rob profoundly misunderstands the Biblical notion of God’s “love.”
2. Bell has an inadequate understanding of Sin – not the little ‘s’ kind, but the big “S” kind.
3. Bell has an inadequate understanding of the Kingdom of God.
4. Bell’s solution exalts Christ’s work on the cross, but in the process sacrifices or ignores major themes in Scripture.
5. Bell drives a wedge between the ontological (theoretical) necessity of Christ’s work and the epistemological (scientific) response of explicit repentance and faith.

Some great quotes from Dr. Tennent’s review:

Perhaps we need a recall and a re-tooling of a largely Christendom trained clergy to a clergy better prepared for a post-Christendom world which desperately needs a robust gospel, not a domesticated one. Bell has been listening to the church and to the culture and he has insightfully diagnosed that the church is theologically anemic. Bell is saying, in effect, “Houston, we have a problem…” and for that I applaud him.

The entire premise of the book is to declare that God’s essence is “love” (which Bell states repeatedly). However, Bell never actually describes the biblical and theological relationship between God’s joyful engagement with the human race and God’s justice upon which the very gospel he celebrates is declared.

…Bell understands that we all sin, but he doesn’t seem to comprehend that we, as a race, are part of a vast rebellion against God’s holiness. Without Christ we, as a race, stand under condemnation and desperately need a divine rescue.

Bell’s argument is that you may, indeed, belong to a different religion, such as Islam, but it is Christ who saves you. You may be a practicing Buddhist or Hindu, but God is counting your faith as faith in Christ. It is a sort of Christocentric pluralism known as inclusivism and serves as a kind of half-way house between exclusivism and pluralism.