Author Archives: Lane Corley
Northshore Pastors Utilizing Social Media for Ministry
The Gospel of Jesus Christ is big news. It’s a message to be declared, proclaimed, announced, and distributed to as
many people as we can as often as we can. God’s work among His people is also news and a story that needs to be told. The tools that churches have relied upon to announce their message and distribute their stories are the pulpit, newsletters, letters and post cards, phone trees, scrolling power point announcements, and email. As a Pastor, my church utilized each of these tools and still I heard regularly from people in my church – “I didn’t know anything about that.” Communication is definitely one of our biggest challenges. Also challenging is the fact that a generation is here that is abandoning paper and phone lines for wireless messaging and social networking. Many pastors and churches are beginning to take communication to another level and engage the world in the fastest growing means of messaging that we have today and utilize the world of Social Media.
Check out some of our Northshore pastor blogs:
- Waylon Bailey, waylonbailey.com – Pastor FBC Covington.
- Pete Charpentier, godswordapplied.blogspot.com – Pastor Woodland Park Baptist Church, Hammond.
- Lane Corley, lanecorley.wordpress.com – Pastor/Church Planter Bridge Church & NSBA Church Planting Strategists.
- Randy Davis, kudzuvine.org – Pastor, Trinity Baptist Church, Hammond
- Avery Dixon, www.misfitjoys.com – Pastor Hope Church of Waldheim.
- Jeremy Harper, adesperateseeker.wordpress.com – Worship Leader at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Hammond
- Jay Johnston, jayjohnston.org – Associate Pastor at FBC Covington
- Matt Marrs, worshiptoolbelt.wordpress.com/ – Creative/Worship Leader at Bridge Church.
- Tobey Pitman, thechurchbreakingout.wordpress.com – NSBA Community Ministries Strategist.
- Ken Schroeder, kenschroeder.wordpress.com – Pastor FBC Mandeville & NSBA Vice-Moderator
- Nathan VanHorn, fbcfolsompastor.blogspot.com – Pastor FBC Folsom
Check out these resources on Social Media and Ministry:
- Why I Want to Write A Blog by Waylon Bailey
- How to Start a Blog by Tim Challies
- Utiilizing Social Networking in Ministry by Lane Corley – Presentation for Ministry Assistants Conference in 2010.
- All About RSS by Tim Challies – the best way to follow blogs and news sites.
More than Maps
How many sub-groups, sub-cultures, people groups, neighborhoods, cracks, and crevices are there in your city or region? The homogenous suburban mass is breaking up and many cracks and crevices are left that only relational outreach can fill. So, mission strategy must look at the cracks and crevices, not just the maps. A block party Saturday in a local neighborhood turned out families from China, Virginia, and New York City. All had moved here in the last year. We have a new Jerusalem (Acts 1:8). Just planting worship services with a “ya’ll come” cannot be counted as a sole strategy that births regional transformation with more cracks and crevices developing around language, digital tribes, generational shifts, economic pressure, and information/activity overload.
Reading through the Missional Community Field Guide this summer, which proposes “in addition to using maps to determine our course of action we also implement cracks as a way of becoming the church.” Empowering people to see “the Gospel come to life and incarnated in whatever crack and crevice of society they find themselves in.”
“Reaching the world requires us to release the church to penetrate society, rather than simply offering more centralized services. Such a church, gradually infiltrating subversively through all the networks of society, will birth genuine city transformation.”
Some natural cracks and crevices that are common across our culture: Multi-housing complexes, restaurant workers, language groups, the first responder community. Are there others?
Check out Launching Missional Communities: A Field Guide by Mike Breen and Alex Absalom. Also, Mike Breen’s blog.
12 Things I’m Thankful for after 12 Years of Marriage
12 years ago today I did something right. I married a most amazing woman. I grow more and more grateful for
her each day. Here’s 12 of the things I’m thankful for reflecting on our 12th Anniversary:
- “Find a good spouse, you find a good life-and even more: the favor of God!” Proverbs 18:22 (MSG). Thank God for showing His favor by giving me you!
- I started noticing in year one – People like me better when you’re around. Thanks for completing me.
- Finally realized around year three – I am better when you’re around. Thanks for making me better than I am.
- Two are better than one, because they never quit at the same time. Thanks for helping me persevere through tough times.
- It’s OK to not iron the tucked in portion of the shirt. Thanks for helping me to not sweat small stuff.
- A mother’s voice is a powerful weapon (Proverbs 31:26). Thanks for being a great mom to my boys.
- Unselfishness is a pre-requisite for success in almost everything, especially marriage. Thanks for demonstrating how to put others first so clearly.
- I’ve noticed, families that serve together make a greater impact. Thanks for serving along side me and opening my eyes to new opportunities everyday.
- Marriage is humiliating, b/c you can’t hide who you really are. Thanks for being patient and forgiving.
- Beauty is only skin deep, and I’m thankful for a wife who’s smokin hot, inside and out.
- Peach cobbler and red meat are still my favorites. Thanks for always going out of your way to know my favorites.
- “Lane, you know we only hired you, b/c we met your wife.” Thanks for inspiring confidence in me and others. I’m a better man because of you.
For the City
There are four postures that churches take toward their society and populations: 1) IN the city. Just a location. 2) AGAINST the city. An US vs. THEM mentality. 3) OF the city. There’s no godly distinctives at all. 4) FOR the city. A model of engagement where church seeks to speak the truth and bring transformation to its region.
So say Matt Carter and Darrin Patrick in their book entitled For the City: Proclaiming and Living Out the Gospel. This
was one of my Exponential Conference book takeaways and it was on my summer reading list. It’s a short book but packed with ideas and the kind of ideas that’s shaping how church will look for the next generation. In the book, these two young leaders tell the story of the growing churches which they planted (Austin Stone in Austin, TX and The Journey in St. Louis) and how they are transitioning them to be focused on being FOR their respective cities. Lot of great ideas here, including one that we’ve picked up in our region of partnering with local non-profits and starting new non-profits to meet the practical needs in the city. Well worth reading. Here’s a few of my favorite quotes:
- We are on dangerous ground when we seek to define the worth of a church by how it meets our felt needs.
- A great church, a healthy church, is one in which Jesus Christ is found in word and deed.
- A God-honoring, gospel-loving church is one where the Word of God is the primary motivator for doing the work of God.
- the church does not exist to fix problems. Instead, the church is to carry the burdens of the world to Jesus.
- the most effective way to know God more intimately is to be in deep relationships with other Christians who are also seeking to know God intimately.
- The common temptation in the American church is to neglect the world in order to protect the church…yielding to this temptation results in a bunch of Christian who, instead of being bought in – loving and serving their neighbors – are mostly checked out from their neighborhoods, closing themselves up in a sanctuary several hours a week rather than opening their home to share dinner with unbelievers who live right next door.
- …if you are not currently in a relationship with a drunk, a prostitute, a beggar, an outcast, or a modern social equivalent to one of these people, you are not wholeheartedly following Jesus.
- …true, biblical community is so rare. And even rarer is a Christian community that sets its focus on the welfare of its city and not just the welfare of its church.
- We want to tear down the false teaching that has crept into our churches that church is all about checking an attendance box and eating out after service on Sundays
- Church is a group of radically changed people infiltrating the world and propelled to love others at great cost to themselves, all empowered by the simple message of the gospel.
- The church in the west has drawn people into the church, but it has done a poor job of sending them back out into the messy world.
- the notion that God will not put on us more than we can handle is unbiblical. God always calls us to do more than we can handle, and he does this in order to bring us back to him as the source of our strength and power.
Finding Meaning
The summer has taken Bridge Church on mission to Chiapas MX, into several of our neighborhoods to do Block Parties
and home repair, into our local jail with a new Fatherhood initiative and round two of Celebrate Recovery, AND through the book of Ecclesiastes on Sunday’s at the West St. Tammany YMCA during our weekly worship gatherings. We have several weeks to go, but here’s a few highlights from the series so far.
- A 40-year study was conducted by the wealthiest man who ever lived, of every pleasure known to man, to see what would bring real fulfillment. His full report is known to us as the Old Testament book of Ecclesiastes.
- Here would be a good headline in tomorrow’s paper for this report: “Can Meaning be Found in Life? 40-year, Multi-Billion Dollar Study says No”
- Who is Solomon? a cross between a Saudi Arabian prince, the President of the United States, Socrates, & Mickey Mouse. The wealthiest, most politically powerful, wisest, & most famous person in the world. He reigned for 40 years as King of Israel and his life serves as a case study for FINDING MEANING. He tried it all and spared no expense in search for meaning and found it ALL meaningless.
- Life on earth – “under the sun” – is a lot like a soap bubble, you float for a while and then you pop and the shows over, usually leaving much to be desired by onlookers.
- Don’t let what you can’t control or can’t explain destroy what you can enjoy.
- The power to enjoy life comes from within. It’s about character, not circumstances.
- Worship and wealth go hand in hand, b/c our checkbook follows our hearts desire.
- God is in control. Worship, don’t negotiate.
- Friendships are worth more than paychecks.
- Money is to keep us and others alive, not to give us life and meaning.
- Do you want to stand before God and say…I didn’t invest much in your kingdom, but I did drive some great cars. I didn’t help those in need, but I did have a great cable package. I didn’t support world missions, but I did try everything on the menu at Copeland’s.
- We don’t live by explanations, we live be promises. We don’t walk by what we see, we walk by faith. We don’t get to heaven by what we know, but who we know.
Links I liked and learned from lately
- 12 Signs the Church has lost sight of the story of God – #2: “The church will measure success primarily by how many people attend services and programs, and fail to measure what difference the gospel is making in their neighborhoods.”
- 25 Ways to Engage Your Neighbors – “practical ideas to start engaging the people around me”
- Books that Equip Disciplemakers by Jason Dukes
- Are you a leader who is all in? 10 Characteristics of “all-in” leaders by Brad Lomenick
- The Missional Youth Group – “Youth pastors need to lead the youth to look past their own personal needs and attention to the needy in the community and church.”
- Helping My Boys Become Christian Men –
- Homeworks articles – Times-Picayune and Karen Baker’s op ed in the local picayune.
Missional Axioms
If you’re looking for simplicity in communication of your vision or pithy things to add to the twitter-verse, it doesn’t get any simpler or pithier than David DeVries Six Word Lessons to Discover Missional Living. 100 short statements about what missional living looks like. Each statement includes a one page explanation. Some of these make you think, start conversations, and keep you coming back to them. Here’s a few of my favorites:
- Love others like Jesus loves you.
- The outcome of disciple making is disciple makers.
- Don’t start services, start making disciples.
- Mission starts in my zip code.
- Every believer is sent on mission.
- Loving your neighbor requires knowing them.
- Gospel living is show and tell.
- Church isn’t a destination, it’s a people.
- Your character development precedes ministry accomplishment.
- God’s “well done” is worth it.
A Keepsake Made from a Prison Bed Sheet
Our church has been doing life on the inside for the past two years. On the inside of our local jail that is. We’ve treked with over 300 men through Celebrate Recovery and other Bible Studies. We’ve lost some guys and we’ve gained some brothers in Christ and some best friends. I’ve learned a lot about the gospel, about the sinfulness of sin, about justice, about grace. This week we received this simple drawing in the mail. Excerpts from the attached letter are below:
after listening to your classes and getting to know ya’ll a little bit, you truly love not only Christ Jesus, but even a man like me. You guys have helped me and other see that despite our current situation and circumstances we can learn a new way to live. Thank you for your honesty and for caring about us.
Grateful to be a part of a church that’s helping others “learn a new way to live.” Thankful to be serving a savior who loves “even a man like me.”
Getting involved in prison ministry is as simple as being willing and ready to be used. Contact me about local opportunities.
Incarnation-Transformation-Multiplication
Wrapping up a great week of ministry. A few things I’m grateful for:
- Incarnation: Bridge Church’s first building was a mobile home in St Tammany’s largest mobile home park. It is a
residential home and the residents are simply asked to live out the gospel and build relationships with residents that will lead to reproduction of disciples, leaders, and churches. Our second residents, Mauricio and Rebecca Hance moved in this weekend. Glad to have them on our team. Thanks to Brandon Bosarge for his 10 months of work in the park. He now passes the baton to the Hance’s. Just this week we were able to provide pastoral care for three families in the park facing crisis and two residents gave their lives to Christ at our weekly block party in the park. Incarnation is more than a fancy word on a Christmas card. For us, it’s about moving in to stay, being close and responsive to the needs of others. Hoping that our work at Oak Villa is multiplied many times across our region. - Transformation: Home Works of America had their summer session in Covington last week and repaired 4 homes in the
area. I was blessed to be able to spend some time working with Home Works on a home in the West 30’s owned by a disabled single mom. Her home suffered from storm damage, a house fire, and disrepair. Great to see the before and after transformation with a new roof, fresh paint. Still work to be done on the inside. 60 homes have been identified as substandard in the 8 block area known as the West 30’s. Much opportunity for transformation in this area. Next Home Works session will be October 8-9. - Multiplication: Prepping for and experiencing the power of multiplication in several areas of life and ministry right now.
After much work, our summer garden is finally to the point of overflowing and we’re experiencing the joy of plenty and of giving away. This can work for us in life as well. Our church has a small group that’s turning into a core group for a potential new church. Multiplication is just more fun. We’re also prepping for our fall training and network events for Church Multiplication on the Northshore. Two events I’m especially looking forward to: 1) September 8-10, Church Planter Basic Training at Woodland Park Baptist in Hammond. 2) Greenhouse w/Church Multiplication Associates, October 21-22 at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary. Check out our Northshore Baptist Association Church Planting page for more info and other noteworthy dates.


