Monday, July 2, 2007

Creative Church

Four Qualities of Innovative Church Leaders

 Buzz Conference in Washington, D. C. Craig Groeschel, the pastor of LifeChurch.tv was one of the main speakers. One of his sessions he shared what he thinks are four great qualities of innovative leaders.  .

First, innovative leaders heal the sick.  Jesus sought out those in need and met their needs.  Unfortunately today, too many churches are inwardly focused and are not meeting the needs of unbelievers.  Craig said that in order to reach those who no one is reaching, we will have to do things that no one else is doing.  Our goal is to reach people for Jesus however we can (short of sin), and in order to do that, we need to teach our people to love people who don’t know Christ.  His question to us was, “Who is God calling you to reach that no one around you is reaching?”

Second, innovative leaders break the rules.  Jesus broke the Sabbath rules.  Craig used the analogy of Nascar.  “Go straight, turn left.  Go straight, turn left.” Innovative leaders don’t take the common path.  They turn right!  Every great movement of God was started by a leader making a right turn.  Quest:  What is God calling you to do that’s never been done before?

Third, innovative leaders offend the Pharisees.  When you do something new to reach people for Jesus, the Pharisees WILL attack with a vengeance.  But Craig said we shouldn’t worry when the Pharisees are shooting at us.  We should worry when the aren’t.  He asked, “What new thing will God call you to create that will be hated today and embraced tomorrow?”

Fourth, innovative leaders redefine success.  Instead of saying how many people they are reaching and bragging about numbers, innovative leaders are constantly reminded how many people there are still to reach.  We cannot be impressed with ourselves.  We need to stop building attendance and start building the Kingdom.

It was a great lesson on leadership.

So… you have my (and Craig’s permission):  Heal the sick.  Break the rules.  Offend the Pharisees.  And redefine success!

Buzz Conference Attracts Hundreds to 'Theater Church' Some 300 Christian leaders and pastors across the nation and from as far away as Australia gathered to share innovative and interactive ways to deliver the Gospel message and hold service.

By

Michelle Vu
michelle@christianpost.com
Fri, May. 05 2006 09:14 AM ETWASHINGTON – Popcorn, a soda stand, soft drinks, and a corridor lined with movie posters greeted attendees of the first annual Buzz Conference on Thursday.
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Buzz Conference Attracts 'Theater Church', Urges C
The first annual Buzz Conference in a movie theater in Union Station Washington D.C. attracted some 300 attendees throughout the nation including a pastor from Australia on Thursday, Apr. May 4, 2006. (Photo: The Christian Post)

Held in a theater underneath Union Station – once the world’s largest train station – some 300 Christian leaders and pastors across the nation and from as far away as Australia gathered to share innovative and interactive ways to deliver the Gospel message and hold service.

Hosted by Washington’s National Community Church, the two-day event was formed from the convictions that: the church ought to be the most creative place on the planet; the greatest message deserves the greatest marketing; and the Church is called to compete in the middle of the marketplace.

“We are called to compel,” said Mark Batterson, the lead pastor of National Community Church. “There is nothing passive, nothing static about the buzz commission in Luke 14:23. It is not prevent, defense but a two-minute offense. There is a sense of urgency.”

Batterson led the first session of the Buzz conference with the title of “The Buzz Commandments,” explaining the term “buzz” and how to create buzz.

“Born on the wrong side of the track in the Judea outback, working in a carpenter shop until he was 30, he never wrote a book, he never held a public office, and his ministry only lasted three years,” said the self-described “casual and goofy” pastor. “Yet 2000 years later two billion people claim to be his followers. How do you explain that? I think the answer is ‘supernatural buzz.’ It was a word of mouth revolution. It was a Spirit-powered word-of-mouth marketing. Jesus started a word-of-mouth revolution and he gave his agents the buzz commission – compelled them to come in.”

“Let me tell you what Buzz is not. Buzz is not a marketing gimmick. Buzz is not a publicity stunt. Buzz is an ancient mandate,” Batterson continued. “We are called to compel and the truth was that no one was better at it than Jesus. It is amazing how many times the phrase ‘and the news spread’ is repeated in the Gospel.”

The pastor of the movie theater church highlighted podcasting as an effective ministry tool for fulfilling the buzz commission.

“Podcasting is the latest and greatest example. Podcasting is field teaching. It is circuit riding at the speed of light,” said Batterson. “Digital technology allows any preacher to travel 250,000 miles to preach 40,000 sermons at the click of the mouse. We live in a unique generation where we have unprecedented opportunities to fulfill the great commission.”

“It is our job to redeem technology and use it for God’s purpose.”

Ed Young, senior pastor of Fellowship Church, one of the ten largest churches in America, spoke during the second session, agreeing with Batterson that churches need and should be creative in delivering Biblical messages.

“We are made in the image of God, and He is the Creator, so we should be creative,” said Young in his session titled Creative Leadership. “The Church should be the most creative.”

One way Batterson finds effective in communicating Biblical messages is being creative in how he delivers a message.

“What I try to do is say old things in new ways because the Gospel has to be incarnated for every generation in every culture,” said the National Community Church pastor. “You know, maybe if we stop thinking like pastors and started thinking like missionaries we would get it.”

He also emphasized the need to exceed expectation, to redirect one’s competitiveness for God’s purpose, and to not be afraid to be oneself and different.

“I don’t want to be a criticizer. I would think that we would do better at giving other churches some biblical latitude to be who they are,” said Batterson. “We need a lot of different kinds of churches because there are a lot of different kinds of people. It is not about better or worse but about us fulfilling our unique destiny.”

For more information about National Community Church visit: www.theaterchurch.com

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