Freshwater

Located in the wilds of Wyoming, the name Freshwater was chosen as a Western analogy to Christ. Just as He is the Living Water, and we must have Him to have eternal life, any desert dweller knows the importance of fresh water to life, both for self, and the nourishment of crops or livestock. By taking nourishment in God and His word, we strengthen our own relationship with Him, our faith, and the quality and abundance of our fruitfulness.

Our keystone verse is from Jeremiah, Chapter 17, Verse 8: "For he shall be as a tree planted by the waters, and that spreadeth out her roots by the river, and shall not see whenSave heat cometh, but her leaf shall be green; and shall not be careful in the year of drought, neither shall cease from yielding fruit."

The fruit that we speak of is mentioned in Galatians 5:22
"22But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, 23Meekness, temperance: against such there is no law."

And the heat could be anything we experience that might test our faith in God; trials and tribulations, relationships, anything that focuses our love and attention anywhere but on Him...

Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Leading Major Change in Your Ministry by Jeff Iorg

 

Leading Major Change in Your Ministry by Jeff Iorg




Goodreads Description:

Many ministries must undergo major change in order to fulfill their mission, and more importantly, to fulfill God’s mission, in today’s world. This book tells the story of the relocation of Gateway Seminary—as well as other stories of major change. In doing so, it lays out the principles and processes necessary to get the job done.

The first section of Leading Major Change in Your Ministry outlines foundational concepts to leading major change. The second section explains a six-fold model for leading major change in churches and ministry organizations. The book includes illustrations throughout, not from hypothetical situations, but from real-life ministry challenges in both local churches and large organizations. While theories about leading major change are interesting, practical insight about how to do it—written by someone who has led multiple organizations through major change—is far more helpful.

The stakes are high. Leadership decisions in ministries have eternal consequences. Almost every church or organization needs—or soon will need—to be led through major change. Leading Major Change in Your Ministry is your guide to successfully getting it done.
 
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I really enjoyed reading Leading Major Change in Your Ministry by Jeff Iorg. It was very easy to follow and he wrote at a level that anyone could understand. I didn’t have to be a ministry expert in order to make sense of what he was explaining. A lot of the illustrations and examples were familiar, and I think he may have used some of them in previous books, or they’ve been mentioned in class, but they were absolutely perfect for the context and topics where they were used.

The first thing I looked at closely was the definition of Leadership from the 1933 Oxford Dictionary “The dignity, office, or position of a leader, especially of a political party; also, the ability to lead.” I followed the instructions from the beginning and crafted my own definition of Leadership. “Leadership is guiding others, by example, design, and language, toward a common goal or purpose.” I also took note of this leadership definition from the team of Joseph Rost, “Leadership is an influence relationship among leaders and followers who intend real changes that reflect their mutual purposes.” Some key take away items for me were that Leadership involves a relationship, includes real change, and that the parties involved need to have a mutual purpose for the change to be successful. In fact, he goes on to state that “without mutual buy-in, a leadership relationship does not exist, and real change cannot happen.”

Leadership is not only about real change, but the leadership relationship itself is dynamic and fluid, constantly changing and evolving as team members learn new insights, adjust to unexpected changes, manage personal challenges, and develop new interests. Leadership relationships by definition cannot be static because leadership is about change.

I really found his clarification between leadership and management enlightening. Both are important, but management is about improving processes, creating efficiency, streamlining progress, and making timely decisions to keep an organization running smoothly. Leadership is only in effect when real change is required.

Also, he reiterated many times throughout the book, “The mission matters most.”, even going so far as to state that it became not only a catchphrase at Gateway, but the definition of their mutual purpose. Meaning that the mission, God’s specific mission for your church or ministry organization, comes before anything else, that it is the key. “There are no self-serving Christian leaders, only self-serving people occupying leadership positions.” If you’re a true leader, you’re not in it for yourself, you’re there to glorify Christ and pursue the mission God has set you to complete. He also discussed the fact that the mission is not only the most important, but also the first step that should be taken. “Aligning your organization’s mission with God’s mission is a step you must take before initiating any other major change.” Even the very last chapter in the book brings this thought back with the heading “Focus Everything on God’s Mission”, and a reminder to keep fulfillment of it at the top of the list throughout the project. This also ties into another text we are reading for class, Aubrey Malphurs Advanced Strategic Planning. “Laying a spiritual formation is foundational to strategic envisioning. Zechariah 4:6 Then he said to [a]me, “This is the word of the Lord to Zerubbabel, saying, ‘Not by might nor by power, but by My Spirit,’ says the Lord of armies. Spiritual formation connects God with the strategic planning process and then its ministry product or model, and it must undergird the entire process” (Malphurs, 79).

I know I’m not perfect, none of us are, but when we’re feeling inadequate, we need to remember that God chooses flawed people as leaders – He chooses and uses us despite our shortcomings. In fact, he uses our shortcomings and our past experiences to prepare us or suit us for certain tasks. “Have confidence in God’s placement and bring all of who you are to the task at hand.”

Reading about ministering effectively during unhealthy conflict, and what happens when there is unhealthy conflict made me think about some conflicts that I have seen in churches. There are often illustrations shared in class that make me think of a specific conflict from my childhood. My family attended a local church, which at that time was a neighborhood church that was healthy, but not gigantic. This was still the era when Southern Baptist pastors didn’t stay. They came for a few years, and then moved on. In this case it was definitely not that they didn’t love Wyoming or wanted to be somewhere else. He has passed away, but she is 93, and in our frequent phone conversations she often talks about how much she loves Wyoming and misses all of us. That’s not necessarily relevant to the story, just some context.

During the search for a new pastor, the church had an interim pastor who stepped into shepherd the congregation for a time. The search committee and I guess the body agreed that they would not consider this interim pastor as an applicant for the position of pastor. I’m not sure on all the details, because I was 8, and I just know some of what happened, and what I’ve been told in the years since.  Several months, maybe even longer, went by, and some of the church members who had been praying earnestly really began to feel led to call the man who was serving as the interim pastor. It was a bitter battle, led by one individual in particular who absolutely refused to budge on the initial agreement, and refused to even consider that this could possibly be the person God had chosen. The church split. We left and went to another local church, where we stayed until my folks left the area. I know of other families who went to different area churches, and some who quit going at all.

I guess I feel this story relates to this book, because it was a Major Change, and there was definitely unhealthy conflict, and now I see how a united purpose to accomplish God’s mission could have negated that, or at least showed them how to work together for God’s goal, not just because “this is what we decided”.

One of my favorite quotes from the book is “When God guides, He provides.”

 


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