Category Archives: Ministry

Are You Getting in the Way?

Great post here by my On Mission Partner Mauricio Hance.

Mauricio, his wife Rebecca and there three awesome kids moved from the safe confines of seminary housing into a 64′ Mobile Home in one of the Northshore’s largest Mobile Home Parks in order to be On Mission, plant life, and help our church go forward with our incarnational church planting strategy. He’s written about how this move meant moving below the poverty line for their family. And his observations here make for one of the clearest cases for incarnational ministry that I’ve read:

Getting in the way is not always a bad thing. In fact, perhaps we should get in the way more often.

I have been praying for God to show me how coaching and living here in the park are connecting. In searching for what He has called me to do the I have found that He has called me to get in the way. Get in the way of what?

He has called me to get in the way of young boys becoming drug addicts and womanizers. He has called me to get in the way of people feeling like they are worthless and unable to achieve beyond what they have. I am called to get in the way of young girls becoming mothers too early, or prostitutes to support a drug habit. He has put me here to get in the way of young girls feeling low and inconfident, making them prime candidates for sexual abuse. He has put me here to get in the way of young men ending up in prison or becoming thugs. He has put me here to get in the way of spousal abuse and oppression. He has called me to get in the way of women becoming objects of lust and men becoming oppressors of women. What has He called me here for? To get in the way of those walking the path to death and darkness, and guide them out of the darkness and into the light.

Check out the entire post and follow Mauricio at missionarycoach.wordpress.com. Also, pray for Mauricio and Rebecca’s work. And, you can get involved this weekend as we put our Faith in Action at the park through light construction projects, delivering food to elderly residents, and more. Check out our projects for Sunday here and/or message me for more info – lanecorley@gmail.com.

Recent Haunting Conversations

  • “I’m scared. I can’t read. I can’t get a job. I only know one way to live.” ~ 23-year old addict trying to break free in need of mentorship.
  • “I failed. I’m repeating 9th grade.” ~ 15-year old fatherless student in need of mentorship.
  • “I’m a lost cause. Forget about me. I’m not strong enough to make it. I don’t have anyone in this world that cares if I’m alive. I have nothing to live for. Just let me go.” ~ 40-year old inmate prepping to get out of jail, in need of mentorship.
  • “I’m 8-months pregnant, my lights get cutoff on Monday. I’ve run out of options. You’re my last hope. Can you help?” ~ 24-year old single mom, in need of mentorship.
  • “My father died, you’re the only person I know that goes to church. Could you help us with a memorial service?” ~ local single mom with a disabled child who lost her job the same week that her father passed away unexpectedly.
  • “Doesn’t God give second chances?!?!” ~ Parent of a mentally retarded teen convicted of a sex-offense after learning that the management of their apartment complex would not allow their son to live with them upon release. Heard Dad say this as I looked at the word “UNFORGIVABLE” tattooed across his sons stomach.
Some conversations stick with you. Praying they drive me and us to action. What are you hearing in your community? How are you responding?

Discipleship and Choice

American Christianity has become about choices. Early service, late service, contemporary music, traditional music, small groups, Sunday School, big church, little church. And these choices are for the most part self-focused – “I’m looking for a great kids ministry” or “I like a small church” or “I like the early service” or “I like an older pastor.” Not that any of these things are bad and we must commend ministries in the west for making church life and the word of God as accessible for everyone as we can get it. The question is, How does this square with the New Testament picture of a disciple or follower of Christ? Read the New Testament and THE CHOICE was often RISK or SECURITY, DEATH or LIFE. I know the environment was different, w/o the freedoms and technology that we enjoy today, but did Jesus intend Christianity to be free from risk and sacrifice. Jesus said, “If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me. For whoever would save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake will save it” Luke 9:23-24. In Acts, we see the first Christ followers, after initial fears, CHOOSING risk and suffering over and over again. The Apostle Paul spoke of “the brand marks of Jesus” Galatians 6:17 (NASB) on his body, obviously speaking of the torture that he’d endured for sharing the Gospel in unreached areas. He catalogued his suffering in 2 Corinthians 11:25-28:

countless beatings, and often near death. Five times I received at the hands of the Jews the forty lashes less one.Three times I was beaten with rods. Once I was stoned. Three times I was shipwrecked; a night and a day I was adrift at sea; on frequent journeys, in danger from rivers, danger from robbers, danger from my own people, danger from Gentiles, danger in the city, danger in the wilderness, danger at sea, danger from false brothers; in toil and hardship, through many a sleepless night, in hunger and thirst, often without food,tin cold and exposure. And, apart from other things, there is the daily pressure on me of my anxiety for all the churches.

Neil Cole in his interpretive biography of Paul’s life called Journey’s to Significance suggests that Paul could have avoided the “forty lashes minus one” but could not b/c of his love for the Jews.

This type of scourging was sometimes meant to purge or restore a brother to the synagogue instead of making him suffer excommunication. The punishment was executed by three or more leaders…and was exercised for a number of reasons…including being a false teacher and entering the temple unclean, both of which Paul would be accused of having done. Saul saw the synagogues as strategically important for the mission he was ultimately called to fulfill, and so perhaps HE CHOSE to be beaten raw in this way just to maintain access. He could have escaped this horrendous suffering by being excommunicated or keeping his mouth shut, but neither was a real option for him, and so instead he endured.”

New Testament Christianity seems to ASSUME risk and its adherents seem to CHOOSE risk and sacrifice at every turn. And the catch is, according to Jesus’ words in Luke 9:24, it’s in risk and death to self that we find the thing we’re often looking for in our choices at church – security and life.

So what’s the riskiest choice you’ve made as a Christ-follower lately? To attend service at a different time? Joining a new class or group? Do those things, but ask, does this require faith and denial and sacrifice for me? If not, could I be missing a key to real obedience and growth toward God?

What can I do to risk more? Well, you’ll most likely not be asked to endure beating and torture, but here’s a few risk for starters:

  • Take some risk in your neighborhood and invite someone over for coffee or dinner that you don’t know that well and build a redemptive relationship with them.
  • Find an organization that’s reaching out to the hurting in your region. There are many. Like orphans and widows, inmate children, homeless or those facing imminent homelessness, the hungry through local food banks, etc., etc.
  • Instead of consuming your church’s ministries, contribute by volunteering to teach or lead a group.
  • Take a short-term mission trip or fund another mission trip goer.

And Pastor, I’m asking myself as a church leader – Am I offering my church the opportunity to experience growth and grace through risk, sacrifice, and adventure? If not, do we keep our church from experiencing the life Christ spoke of in Luke 9:24?

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:

Check out these resources on Social Media and Ministry:

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.

Links I liked and learned from lately

Balancing Word and Deed?

Great conversations this week at a local pastors conference after a message from Tobey Pittman about Compassion. Tobey talked about a Biblical understanding of compassion and its implications for ministry. This led us to the topic of social actions relationship to local church ministry. A few questions generated:

  • Our oldest pastor/preacher in the area asked have we excused ourselves away from ministry because of the welfare state. Great question: Does the fact that some get government checks keep us from responding to genuine needs in our community? When should we help? When should we not?
  • Our newest Northshore Pastor exonerated us that the love of God is to be spread by word and deed. And that the church could do and should do more for the neediest than the government can and should. But what does a “word and deed” gospel look like?
  • And then the inevitable question for all of us as believers in the Sola Fide, Sola Scriptura, Sola Christo: Does social action subvert or hurt the primacy of preaching the Word of God? 
What do you think? I’ll be thinking through my responses. Will have to try to do it before Monday though, because that’s when the next Northshore Baptist Association Pastors conference will be and we’ll have another list of questions I’m sure. Join us, 10:30am, Monday, July 18th, Trinity Baptist Church in Hammond.

The Big Squeeze: Balance Study and Service for Spiritual Growth

I love what the Bridge Church Ladies ministry is doing this month. Having spent time together soaking up Bible Study, Fellowship, etc. They feel the need to be squeezed through serving others. So in July they’ve scheduled several opportunities to serve together, while encouraging spontaneous servanthood as well. They’re calling this “The Big Squeeze.” Love it! I believe this should be the natural ebb and flow of the believers life and the life of the church. Our learning should always lead to application and action.

Have you been Squeezed lately? Each week us church goers, like sponges, sit and soak up great teaching and preaching from professional and highly trained clergy, high quality Bible Study materials and devotionals, praise and worship music that moves us to experience God, and many, like me, listen to more great teaching and preaching through podcasting and conferences. Here’s the question: What’s next for the SPONGE after it’s has soaked? It SOURS and becomes unusable. Almost nothing is more disgusting than a sour sponge. No one wants to pick it up, it stinks up the entire kitchen, and most of the time at our house we just throw them out.

As a Christian, I’ve had seasons of my life that can be described as SOUR. The sour Christian is sour toward others – nothing meets their standard, no sermon is good enough, they and their class or group or church are the only ones doing it right. No one wants to be around the sour Christian and he/she doesn’t really care to be around them. Being right matters more than being generous and graceful. (For a Biblical illustration of a Sour Christian see the story of the Prodigal Son in Luke 15:11-32 and watch for the Elder Brother).

What’s the remedy for keeping sponges from getting sour in the sink and in the church? A GOOD SQUEEZE. A good wringing out. With the sponge, by hand. But how is the Christian squeezed? Two ways:

1) Through Suffering – When I’ve lost a loved one, or experienced discouragement, or dealt with sickness, or faced financial struggles, or walked with others who’ve experienced these and worse, I have been squeezed. I have had to put to use all that I know about God and His word. That’s why God’s word tells us that there is great benefit to suffering. See James 1:2-4, Romans 5:3-5.

2) Through Serving – Don’t wait to be squeezed through suffering. Give yourself away and be emptied out through serving others. As we give ourselves away as Christians, we are allowing God to squeeze us and use what He’s placed in us for His good and glory. As we serve others, we experience more of God and the joy of being used by Him and He continually fills us.

What are you doing that squeezes you? Church leader, is your church providing opportunities for people to serve and give themselves away on behalf of others?

July Opportunities for the Bridge Ladies:

  • Saturday, July 9th, at Trinity Church in Covington – cooking for Disaster Response Teams coming to serve in NOLA.
  • Tuesday, July 12th, at Mt. Zion Bapt Church in Mandeville – packaging school supplies for needy children.
  • Helping out with the Summer reading and writing program at the Covington Boys and Girls Club.
  • Serving at the Northlake Crisis Pregnancy Center in Covington.
Other Opportunities:
  • Homeworks of America, July 10-16. Repair homes for needy residents of West St. Tammany. Click here for more info.
  • Block Parties at Oak Villa Mobile Home Park, Wed July 13 and Thurs July 14, 5:30-7pm. Bring hope to residents of a local Multi-housing community.
  • Canned Food Drive, Wed July 13 and Fri July 15. We’ll be putting out grocery bags on doors in the Madisonville area on Wednesday and picking those bags up on Friday and delivering them to a local food bank. Contact Bridge Church for more info – 985.373.2748.

Local Missions Opp: Home Works St Tammany Session starts Monday!

One of the many great partners we gained because of Hurricane Katrina is Hank Chardos and Home Works of America from Columbia, South Carolina. Homeworks is non-profit organization that empowers youth 14 and up and adults to do home repair projects in their community, specifically for those on a fixed income. I love Home Works because of the BEFORE & AFTER IMPACT. A Home Works weeklong session makes a huge impact in homes and lives. This years session starts Monday! July 10-17 and we have about 5 projects in West St. Tammany for this week, including yard clean up, roofing, light carpentry. You can volunteer for four hours, one day, or all week. You could also help provide food for volunteers during the work week or donate $$ or supplies for a project. This year, some of the regular Home Works volunteers over the past five years are working with Hank to start a permanent chapter here on the Northshore. You can get involved:

Overheard, as a North American Church Planter

One of the #1 topics of conversation that I share with would be church planters is about expectations. And rightly so. 10 years ago my wife and I loaded all our possessions into a 24′ U-Haul and drove from Fort Worth, TX to Covington, LA to start a church on the Northshore of Lake Ponchartrain. We had no idea what to expect and were full of faith and a great deal of naivity as we began the journey. My wife and I have often unpacked our journey by thinking through the things we’ve overheard in 10 years of church planting. Here’s a few of those that may give you some hints about expectations:

We’ll try to have someone there to help you unpack.”  Expect to be alone. 

If you’re a church planter, you’re the initiator. Don’t expect others to prioritize your vision or values. If they do, you must communicate well to them. Proverbs 13:2 says, “from the words of his mouth, a man will enjoy good things.” If you don’t communicate, you’ll travel alone. And until you communicate, you will travel alone. 

For us, we arrived in Covington and hoped for help never showed up. Around 11pm the first day, Heather and I threw our mattress on the floor and crashed having unpacked 75% of our belongings alone. It would be two more days before we would meet someone from our partnering churches. The next morning, our neighbor came over and helped us unload the heaviest of our furniture. And we were able to begin casting a vision to them. Two months later, a Bible study started in our neighborhood, and neighbors began putting their faith in Christ. But those first few nights would be our first lessons on the loneliness of starting something new. The loneliness of shepherding and entrepeneurial ministry can be stifling. Get a coach or mentor, join a network, talk through the frustrations and expectation malfunctions. It is not good for man to be alone on this journey.

“I think we can handle that area on our own.”  Expect to be misunderstood. 

If your going to plant a church in North America, don’t expect every colleague to be receptive of the idea and of you. Unfortunately, us pastors often see church planting as unnecessary or a necessary evil, because we see it through the lens of how it will effect me and my church instead of a path toward more people coming to Christ. I was at first dismayed by this attitude, but began to see it as another objective in the process – to bring more people on board with God’s mission to multiply His church.

I also believe that part of this mindset is a result of a severe lack of vision on our part, especially with churches in the south. A church plant or mission church for many is a small red brick building that our men built last summer in a poor community for a struggling congregation. And that’s how it should be and that’s how we like it. They are there to make us feel good about our church, as a place to give our used Sunday school material, and not necessarily as a serious partner in the Great Commission cause. I felt hemmed in by this lack of vision at times in our journey. Especially when I was asked at one point, “do we need another ‘little’ church in that area.” Don’t get hemmed in by wrong headed or low expectations. Learn to ask the right questions about your community and let the fruit of your labor and God’s story of His work through you lead others to see the necessity of church multiplication.

“I didn’t know churches helped people.”  Expect to find opportunities

I hate to admit it, but at one point, I began believing that maybe we didn’t need to multiply and the whole thing was a lost cause, but then I began getting out and meeting people and I saw the divide between the opinions of the Sunday morning faithful and the other 80% of the people in the community. One particular conversation I had with a leader in our community drives the nail home for anyone trying to answer the question, “Why do we need new churches?” I gave him my short spill about planting a new church in the area and asked him my standard question for community leaders, “How could a church help you?”

His honest reply has been foundational for me over the last 10 years. He said in all seriousness, “I didn’t know churches helped people.”

Personally, He had been deeply offended and hurt by churches. Professionally, he had reached out to churches for help with community events only to get turned down again and again. Over time, he had lost confidence that the Church was on his side. That conversation led to a personal friendship that grew very deep and led to open doors into the community including our new church’s first meeting place along with countless opportunities to show Christ to people in our area.

Almost every church planter I’ve talked with can point to one relationship or one event or one big break that opened the door for movement to begin. It’s like the Apostle Paul finding the prayer group by the river led by Lydia, or Phillip happening upon the Ethiopian eunech reading the scriptures, or Peter looking up and seeing the doors of the prison cell are wide open. If God calls you to reach a community, you can expect Him to open doors into and already be working in that community. The work of the church planter is to be intentional, look for those open doors, and prepare to be used in tremendous ways.

“Here’s my deal – $270,000.”  Expect God to provide. 

For 54 months our new church met in the bay of an un-airconditioned Fire Station. We had prayed and sought for land and space in the area where our denomination had asked us to plant. Then in May of 2005, my phone rings and a local business owner whom we had befriended and served on a number of occasions said abruptly, “$270,000.” She owned a business on the busiest highway, in the very center of our community. As we investigated her offer, we learned the property was worth at least twice as much and she’d been offered three times as much, but for some odd reason, she wanted us to have it. We worked with partners to purchase the property and began preparing the building for a place of worship and we held our first worship gathering there on July 26th, 2005. That date is significant to everyone in SE Louisiana, because on August 29th, 2005, Hurricane Katrina devastated our entire area. The day before the storm I realized how God had provided. Our new building had a 125K Diesel Powered Generator, a full commercial kitchen with 1,000 gallon propane tank, and it was in one of the highest areas of the community. I think we were the only church in our parish that was able to have worship gatherings IN AIR CONDITIONING every Sunday after Katrina. Many meals were served, volunteer groups were housed, and people were saved. And that Fire Station was rendered completely inoperable by the Hurricane. A good friend of mine says, “God gives you what you need, when you need it.” Church Planter, you can expect Him to do the same for you. 

“I think you dropped the ball.”  Expect to be criticized. 

One of the toughest seasons of the journey for me personally, was when body life began to be solidified and difficult decisions had to be made. Purchases that not everyone agreed with, lifestyle issues that led to church discipline, relational issues in the body that threatened division. If you’re a leader, you can’t avoid having fingers pointed at you during these seasons of body life. And as a church planter, you may suffer sleepless nights, because you gave someone influence and they weren’t ready and now they’re turning on you or others or they’re overwhelmed and burning out. Or because someone got mad and left the church, but kept the directory, and now is having dinner parties in your dis-honor. Or because you have to ask someone to leave for reasons that shouldn’t be aired in public. Or because someone comes to you and announces they’re leaving the church right before you supposed to get up and preach a sermon on unity. You could run from all of this and just sink into a people pleasing mode, trying to make everyone happy, and keep as many butts in the seats as possible. Or you can learn, grow, admit mistakes, confront divisiveness, correct sinfulness, forgive those who trespass against you, and count on Christ to grow his body in his way. I’ve still got some learning to do on this one.

“If it hadn’t been for Hope Church…”  Expect to make a difference. 

For me as a church planter, these five words bring chills and tears – “If it hadn’t been for…” Why? Because I can remember when there was no Hope Church or Bridge Church. And I can remember how many times I wanted to say no and I wanted to give up and I lay awake at night asking God why we’re not making headway. In his book Failing Forward, John Maxwell says, there is no such things as failure, only those who quit too soon. Don’t give up. God’s called you for a reason. There are those in your community who are waiting on you to bring Good News to them. Keep fighting, keep praying, keep planting seeds. You can and will make a difference.