Tuesday, May 30, 2006
Open Source Ministry
Thursday, May 25, 2006
Crowdsourcing
- When a movie shot by 50 fans of a rock group with 50 Hi-8 video cameras makes it to the box office. (I won't give a link--the name of the movie is objectionable, to say the least.)
- When SportingNews.com made its reader blog community--not articles written by its own staff--the heart and soul of its Web site.
- When Threadless.com solicits t-shirt designs from its customers--and makes $20 million selling the t-shirts.
- When financial services company Marketocracy, a community of 60,000 online stock traders, tracks the decisions of its top 100 portfolios to set the investment strategy for its mutual fund. (Its index has outperformed the S&P 500 in 11 of the past 17 quarters.)
Tuesday, May 23, 2006
Better vs. Different
Remember when Sears rated items in their catalogs as 'good', 'better' and 'best'? Of course, the assumption was that the more discriminating one's tastes, the more likely they would choose the 'best' pillows or--in my case--walkie-talkies (this was the early '80s, mind you). In a recent blog entry, marketing guru Seth Godin offers some advice that's particularly relevant to church leaders: sometimes better isn't good enough. Seth challenges leaders to seek 'different' solutions to challenges. 'Better' is built on the assumption that one's way of doing things only needs improvement, not renovation. In the words of Apple, 'think different'!
Monday, May 15, 2006
In the Moonlight: Bi-vocational Pastoring
- What is the greatest benefit of being a bi-vocational pastor?
- What is the greatest challenge?
- Why have you chosen to stay bi-vocational?
Friday, May 12, 2006
Outlaw Preacher
Thursday, May 11, 2006
Ministry Today Size Change
Wednesday, May 10, 2006
Da Vinci Response: All Grown Up?
Saturday, May 06, 2006
24 Hours in the Hive
I just returned from visiting a nest of creativity, the first annual Buzz Conference at National Community Church (aka theaterchurch.com) in D.C. Among the speakers were NCC pastor/Buzz host Mark Batterson, Fellowship Church pastor Ed Young and Center for Church Communication founder Brad Abare. Our tagline is discerning analysis for innovative church leaders, but it wasn't until Buzz that I began to reconsider what the word innovative means--particularly in a church context. It's not so much about a dictionary definition, but about identifying ingredients. Here's a start ...
- Creativity: Is my new way of doing things unique to my context?
- Risk: Does my new way of doing things entail a likelihood of failure?
- Discernment: Does my new way of doing things organically spring from my understanding of God's ways and God's Word?
- Results: Does my new way of doing things accomplish the objective for which it was conceived?
We're going to be much more intentional about looking for these criterion as we continue our quest to find--and connect our readers with--innovative leaders in ministry.
Wednesday, May 03, 2006
MegaChurch: The Game
For many fans of the SimCity series, it will come as a massive disappointment that this megachurch simulation game is merely a cruel joke.Tuesday, May 02, 2006
The 'Undocumented' Church
Today I heard a self-proclaimed "pastor" call into a talk-radio station to defend the rights of illegal immigrants. Did he cite the Mosaic Law's command to care for the "alien and stranger in your midst"? Nope. Did he observe Paul's instructions to practice hospitality (a word in Greek which can be literally translated "love of foreigners")? Not a chance. Did he observe Jesus' command to welcome strangers as though they were Him? Hardly. Instead, the caller based his argument on the fact that (1) illegal immigrants are poor, (2) Jesus likes poor people and wants us to like poor people too and (3) the command to like poor people transcends all human laws--immigration laws notwithstanding. (Before being verbally eviscerated by the talk-show host, the hapless preacher even suggested that Jesus was an illegal alien because He went to Egypt to escape Herod.) If only it were so simple, as Hispanic church leader Sammy Rodriguez observes in his column in the May/June issue of Ministry Today. While biblical writers such as Paul defend the state's right to wield the sword and execute justice, prophets such as Malachi rail against systemic injustice that takes advantage of the poor and defenseless. The 21st-century church is faced with the reality of millions of fathers and mothers willing to take great risks--and even break laws--for the chance to provide for their families. As Rodriguez points out, a good number of these are otherwise law-abiding evangelical Christians. The church's challenge? Taking a stand for law and order (Rom. 13:4) and simultaneously welcoming the stranger and alien in our midst (Deut. 24:17).





