Archive for the ‘books’ Category

Review – A Multi-site Church Road Map

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010


Evidently I like the books that are part of the Leadership Network Innovation Series. Dave & Jon Ferguson’s The Big Idea 1 which I reviewed here and Larry Osborne’s Sticky Church 2 reviewed here were both significant reads for me, and now Geoff Surratt, Greg Ligon & Warren Bird’s A Multi-Site Church Roadtrip: Exploring the New Normal (Leadership Network Innovation Series) 3 dropped in wanting to be read and I’ve dog-eared many of the pages, just as I did their previous book, The Multi-Site Church Revolution 4.

The authors seem to enjoy drifting around the country visiting other multi-site churches – and they must have done it a lot in preparing this book. It’s a great scam! I only wish I’d thought of it first – but it’s always such a big deal for me to get organized for travel. However, I think they should take me with them for the next book.

‘Roadtrip’ is not an obvious book. Obvious would have been to write a chapter on each church visited, list the goods and bads of their implementation, then perhaps the history of the transition and a bunch of facts. And they do that, to a certain extent. But they also use each chapter to open up a sort of discussion on other areas of the multi-site challenges: technology, for instance (chapters 6 & 7) or international campuses in chapter 9. The end result is that they cover different approaches to multi-site – Do we want to open a new campus locally, in another state, in another country, on another continent, even on another world (the internet (not Mars (yet)))? Does the preaching happen live because the other campus has its own teacher? Or does the preacher drive from one campus to the next to preach? Or is a message transmitted by satellite or the internet or mailed or driven around? All these have their discussions. Then again, what triggers the church to open the new site? Is it a deliberate spin-off, or did the second site start as a church in its own right and merge in (and why)? How do you go about doing this? What are the hard-and-fast rules, and what are the guidelines? (See IPOD for instance, chapter 1.)

(As an aside: Not so sure about the (somewhat difficult to read) infographic on p. 17 that has 6 milestones of multi-site history; number 1 is the birth of the Church and number 5 is the publication of their previous book. Seems like the relative importance of things went adrift somewhere there – not sure I’d put my book on quite the same level as the birth of the Church!)

Their definition of ‘Multi-site’ is “one church meeting in multiple locations, sharing a common vision, budget, leadership and board” (p. 10).

  • You don’t have to be a mega-church to go multi-site.
  • 10% of all Protestant Christians in the US and Canada worship in a multi-site church. (This seems high to me, but I’m convinced that multi-site is a trend that God is using – read ‘Is God Dismantling Denominations?’ for more on that.)

I appreciated the summary facts about each church at the front of the chapter. As it happens, many of the churches they visited are the same ones that get me excited about church innovation, and so I get this extra low-down on them. Cool.

Other points of interest:

  • What kind of madman launches multiple new campuses at the same time? I mean, why would it even cross your mind? (See chapter 12 for how well it worked.)
  • What’s the difference between being a church with multiple sites and a church of multi-sites (See chapter 3.)
  • Think a long-established liturgical church made up of parents and grandparents can’t go multi-site? Wrong. (See chapter 3.)
  • Do not overlook the appendices. They’ve got some great summary information – resources, job descriptions and pitfalls to avoid.

There is one page in the book that I think is very wrong (sorry guys!), and I realize that the authors may have been more carried away with the idea than considering the ramifications: Chapter 6 has the story of the woman who lives in Texas but every Sunday turns to her old church (in Florida) on the internet for her time of worship. True, some weeks she invites friends and family over to watch with her. But we’re specifically told that she is not connecting to a local church. Usually when you move to a new town you put down new roots; you find a new church; you make new friends and enjoy and grow from their fellowship. It’s not all perfect, but it’s important. Sad to say, at this point the book lionizes the fact that this woman ‘and a growing community of people’ have used the internet to remove themselves from fellowship. This self-isolation – or clinging to the past – is emphatically NOT what we are called to do as Christians.

OK, flame off – I’ve just written about the only bit I disagree with. Not bad for 3 paragraphs of an entire book.

In summary and in the main, I found it a tremendously helpful book. Questions that have been surfacing as my church plays with the ideas involved in expansion – such as planting, moving to a second service or going multi-site – are finding answers here. And between it and its predecessor, The Multi-site Church Revolution, a good ‘roadmap’ of options and their costs has been laid out.

Give it a read – it’s a tremendous resource and documents the early days of what I am convinced is one of God’s next steps for His Church.

  1. Dave Ferguson. The Big Idea: Aligning the Ministries of Your Church through Creative Collaboration (Leadership Network Innovation Series). Paperback. Zondervan, Jan. 12, 2007
  2. Larry Osborne. Sticky Church (Leadership Network Innovation Series). Paperback. Zondervan, Oct. 1, 2008
  3. Geoff Surratt, Greg Ligon & Warren Bird. A Multi-Site Church Roadtrip: Exploring the New Normal (Leadership Network Innovation Series). Paperback. Zondervan, Oct. 1, 2009
  4. Geoff Surratt, Greg Ligon & Warren Bird. The Multi-Site Church Revolution: Being One Church in Many Locations (Leadership Network Innovation Series). Paperback. Zondervan, June 1, 2006
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No Scars?

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010


I was reading through the blogs that I follow this morning and came upon this one from a friend in England – Mike Kendall, pastor of St Neots Evangelical Church in Cambridge – follow him here.

Poetry speaks in ways that prose doesn’t. Why is that? Is it the use of extravagant imagery? Is it the rhythm that strikes some chord? Is it the word-form that makes us focus more intently in a search for meaning? I have no idea – possibly all of them combined.

But this poem Mike quoted by Amy Carmichael spoke to me:

Amy Carmichael

Hast thou no scar?
No hidden scar on foot, or side, or hand?
I hear thee sung as mighty in the land;
I hear them hail thy bright, ascendant star.
Hast thou no scar?

Hast thou no wound?
Yet I was wounded by the archers; spent,
Leaned Me against a tree to die; and rent
By ravening beasts that compassed Me, I swooned.
Hast thou no wound?

No wound? No scar?
Yet, as the Master shall the servant be,
And piercèd are the feet that follow Me.
But thine are whole; can he have followed far
Who hast no wound or scar?
- Amy Carmichael, “No Scar?”

How many people grow to fame within the church and act as if they are perfect? We want to follow people who have no flaws – flaws are a sign of weakness; they tell us that you have problems, so who are you to lead us? So some leaders work hard to overcome any such limitations, while others simply try to cover them up. But the greatest of the leaders acknowledge them, shame or no shame; get help if they need it and get on with a life of obedience.

Having flaws as a leader is a two-fold gift: First, it forces you to realize that you are not perfect, no matter what your follows may say. Secondly, it forces you to remember that you must rely on Jesus for your victory. Thirdly, you are not alone – the Master Himself took on flaws in His desire to make us whole. (OK, that’s three-folds there. You’ll have to deal with it.)

But this doesn’t just apply to our church leaders. It applies to us and also to our fellow travelers. If He can bear and acknowledge that brokenness, then we must do no less. As people walk through the church doors and stay a while, we begin to assume that they are now all perfect.

“He’s been in church for 2 years,” we say. “How come he still gets drunk? He’s supposed to be ‘one of us’. Hasn’t he learned anything while he’s been here?”

We need to stop thinking about ourselves as healed and rather think of ourselves as healing. God isn’t finished with us yet.

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By my Chair

Friday, April 9th, 2010


List of books I’m reading now (or RSN):

  • Andrew Murray. With Christ in the School of Prayer: A 31-Day Course in Christian Prayer, with Note on George Muller. Spire Books. Paperback, 1972 – with my small group.
  • Various commentaries on the book of Revelation for adult Bible fellowship at church
  • Mark L. Waltz. Lasting Impressions: From Visiting to Belonging. Paperback. Group, Dec. 8, 2008
  • Dan B. Allender. To Be Told: God Invites You to Coauthor Your Future. Paperback. WalterBrook Press, Nov. 7, 2006
  • Bob Kauflin. Worship Matters: Leading Others to Encounter the Greatness of God. Paperback. Crossway, Mar. 31, 2008
  • Dan Kimball. They Like Jesus but Not the Church: Insights from Emerging Generations. Paperback. Zondervan, Mar. 1, 2007
  • Jack Stack. A Stake in the Outcome: Building a Culture of Ownership for the Long-Term Success of Your Business. Hardcover. Currency/Doubleday, Mar. 19, 2002
  • Francis Chan. Crazy Love: Overwhelmed by a Relentless God. Paperback. David C Cook, May 1, 2008
  • Ronald Rolheiser. The Shattered Lantern: Rediscovering a Felt Presence of God. Paperback. Crossroad, Feb. 1, 2005
  • Terry Nance. God’s Armor Bearer Volumes 1 & 2: Serving God’s Leaders. Paperback. Focus on the Harvest, Dec. 2003
  • Tony Morgan. Killing Cockroaches: And Other Scattered Musings on Leadership. Paperback. B&H Books, Mar. 1, 2009
  • Geoff Surratt. A Multi-Site Church Roadtrip: Exploring the New Normal (Leadership Network Innovation Series). Paperback. Zondervan, Oct. 1, 2009

I’m just finishing off the last one, Multi-site Roadtrip, and will be writing a review in a couple of days.

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Review – The Big Idea

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009


How do you write an entire book about one simple thing? Dave Ferguson’s () The Big Idea: Focus the Message, Multiply the Impact is a book about one thought, and you’d think it would be pretty hard for the author to get past the first chapter – after all, that’s a lot of extra writing to go through once you’ve presented your single thought.

It might be a simple thing, but it’s also profound yet counter-intuitive in today’s church – just say one thing at a time. Say it to everyone. Say it clearly and loudly. Strip away all the competition to it. Get everybody on board. Drop the busy-ness of multiple programs whose schedules and resource requirements conflict and simplify everything into a more-easily-led approach.

The Big Idea reminds me of a business book I read some 10 years ago – Jack Stack’s brilliant The Great Game of Business – a brief set of profound truths backed up by the mechanics of how to build them into the daily business structure. That was one of the most exciting business books I’ve ever read (and I’ve read a bunch) – head and shoulders above trivial feel-goods like ‘The Apple/HP/IBM/Microsoft/Starbucks Way’.

What Stack did, and what Ferguson has also done, is to flesh out the mechanics of the process in subsequent sections. This is a good approach – techies (like me) connect to a structure through the blueprint; those who need help understanding (also like me) appreciate the explanation of the details that make an example of it work.

Unfortunately, churches with a more traditional and committee-driven structure will not be fully free to indulge in this approach. But I’ve talked about this concept to several pastors, and those who were positioned to take advantage of the concept got very excited. The idea of replicating a single idea throughout the entire congregation has a dynamism that can be both exhilarating and freeing – a permission to follow the vision of their heart.

An excellent book – worth a re-read once in a while.

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Reviews – 2009 Upcoming Reading

Monday, January 12th, 2009


Here are the books on my list so far for this year. As always, the links include my Amazon Associate number, so if you love me and want to buy the book click through the link. This will be a good thing.

Finished 2009

  • All My Friends Are Superheroes, by Kaufman, Andrew

That’s an hour of my life I’d like to have back – confusing, pointless and with a very unsatisfying ending.

Wonderful, warm, worthwhile. I’ll happily invest another couple of hours sometime to re-read it – lots to think about. It’s a bit messy itself, but that may be because the author has thoughts flying around at top speed. Great nuggets in here. Mike’s passing was a deep loss.

Now Reading

Ordered

In the Queue

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Reviews – 2008 Reading, part 2

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009


Here’s the other half of my 2008 reading list of books focused on church and Christian growth. For the first half, go here. (Once again, the links include my Amazon Associate number, so if you want to buy the book click through the link. You don’t pay any more, and I get a teeny tiny bit. This is still good.)

In a Pit with a Lion on a Snowy Day: How to Survive and Thrive When Opportunity Roars, by Mark Batterson
 

Readability: 8 Insight: 7 Practicality: 8

As it happens, the Bible Study I was leading had just covered this piece of Scripture (2 Sam 23:20) the previous week when I bumped into this book. Great insights by Mark Batterson (follow him on the web or Twitter ) to encourage the reader to grab life by the throat – don’t wind up your life piled up with regrets. Take courage, and be willing to tackle the lion in the pit.

I’ve lent the book out, so no quote, sorry.


Organic Church: Growing Faith Where Life Happens, by Neil Cole
 
Readability: 7 Insight: 8 Practicality: 8

Excellent book about starting/planting churches. Not money but faithful obedience; not by doing the traditional but by branching out; not by calling people to the church, but by taking the church to the people in a far more gospel-centric approach to service than is typical.

Again, I’ve lent the book out, so no quote, sorry.


Pop Goes the Church: Should the Church Engage Pop Culture?, by Tim Stevens
 
Readability: 8 Insight: 7 Practicality: 8

I follow Tim on his blog (Leading Smart and Twitter @TimAStevens). He’s worth following – he has good insights, and is generous in sharing them. This book is no different. It’s all about the need to connect to the current (‘pop’) culture if we’re to connect to the people that need Christ. Lots of examples, and a web site devoted to the book to boot – these things put into practice the things laid out in the book. Good enough, deep enough and simple enough that I’ve got his other books in the queue now.

Yep, lent it out.


The Story of Everything: A Parable of Creation and Evolution, by John Kotre
 
Readability: 5 Insight: 5 Practicality: 5

A rather confusing story – possibly confusing only to me because I’m trying to read too much into it. Nice, though, and easy to read.

More on the book in my review here.


The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference, by Malcolm Gladwell
 
Readability: 8 Insight: 7 Practicality: 6

An intriguing book, very well written, and keeps the reader moving forward. It came across as a pop research book. There are some interesting facts presented (Paul Revere’s ride, the Hush Puppy phenomenon, Georgia Sadler’s viral campaign in San Diego). And there is a dissection of these activities, and an explanation of the result. And the implication is that if you have these things (connector, maven, salesman), you’ll increase your chances of a successful grassroots marketing campaign. And I suppose that’s true; and I believe there is deep insight here as well. However, I’m not that comfortable with the sense of a ‘boxed solution’ – make sure you’ve got these three components and you’ve done all you can.

But it is an intriguing book. My issue isn’t with the insights but with the completeness of their presentation.


The Wild Gospel: Bringing Truth to Life, by Rev Dr Alison Morgan
 
Readability: 7 Insight: 8 Practicality: 7

It’s fairly rare to find an academically sound book that holds the interest of a casual reader like me. I stole this one from my father. (Hey, he’d finished it already.) It is organized into three sections – the ministry of Jesus, what works and what doesn’t, and a gospel for our times. The first section adjusted and deepened my understanding of what Jesus was doing in his incarnate ministry – why He was at such pains to break down the Pharisaic way of thinking. I found the metaphor of the bricks and mortar wall extremely helpful (and now use it in the Bible in a Day course); there are many other similar insights. The book speaks of her own faith journey, including her travel into Africa and her times at home. It is personal and it is instructive. I bought several more and gave them to friends. (But I still have my father’s copy!)

“… Jesus’ challenge ringing in my ears: the challenge to look at the world … through the spectacles worn by God Himself.” (p. 162)

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