Categories
Business

Three outstanding business advice resources that church leaders will love

These new business resources have helped me to become a better strategic thinker as a church leader.   

1. TED Talks.  This is church for secular people.  They bring in the most passionate, worthwhile, creative and successful people to share what they feel other leaders most need to hear.  You can watch the videos of the talks online.  They are informational, inspirational and remind me of what church should be.  In March 2007, David Pogue of the NYTimes gives this summary,

Last week, I attended my second TED conference, which stands for Technology, Entertainment, and Design. During the four-day conference, you hear 50 speakers, who are given 18 minutes each. They are the most compelling, passionate, informed speakers you’ve ever heard (all right, maybe 45 of them are). Some bring back reports from the edge of medicine, archaeology, nanotech, neurology, psychiatry or the Web. Some, like Paul Simon, Tracy Chapman, and They Might Be Giants, perform live. But a good number of them bring you face to face with some of the most upsetting realities of human existence. The horrors in sub-Saharan Africa. The viruses that are gaining on us. The increasing scarcity of drinkable water. And over and over and over again, climate change, presented with the most harrowing examples, measurements and projections . . . There are so many standing ovations, you’re practically doing 18-minute calisthenics. And the cumulative effect of the conference is devastating. You can’t return to the real world thinking the same thoughts you thought before; you just can’t do it.  Only 1,000 people can attend TED live (it’s in Monterey, California). The auditorium holds only 500 people; the rest sit downstairs in a comfortable "simulcast lounge" and watch on flat-panel high-definition TV sets. (So why don’t they hold the thing in a bigger theater? They tried. Last year, they held one afternoon’s talks in a Broadway-style theater. It was a disaster. The enormous hall drained all sense of intimacy, humanity and urgency from the speakers.)

 

I listened to Bill Clinton’s talk on the world’s health-care crisis.  At the beginning, Clinton rattles off statistics about the plight of the world.  Oh, that all American pastors (including me) could do the same. 

I can’t help but think these 18 minute presentations are what our congregations are hungry for: intelligent, passionate talks about changing the world.  Watch them at TED’s website here

2. Jack and Suzy Welch’s The Welch Way column and podcast.  I have listened to all the podcasts.  They are outstanding.  It is great to hear the "greatest CEO in history" give his take on common management (leadership) issues.  You will be a wiser supervisor for having listened.  The Businessweek Welch Way website is here.  I subscribe with iTunes.  The link for that is here

3. Businessweek’s Cover Stories.  I love the interviews on iTunes but you can read all of the past cover stories on Businessweek’s website.  These give you the latest of what is happening in business from the inside.  There have been fascinating recent stories on Wal-Mart, Best Buy, McDonald’s, Home Depot, Amazon.com, the Best Performers, the Best Places (Companies) to Launch your Career, MTV and the World’s Most Innovative Companies.  Businessweek’s website is here.  The iTunes link is here.

Of course, a church is not a business but we can certainly learn from the strategic thinking and the creative structures of other effective organizations.  All of these resources inspire me and give me confidence to be an innovator – to make changes, to lead.

For more information about podcasts and iTunes, see my article the Best Podcasts for Church Leaders.

For more arguments about church and business, see the various posts related to Andy Stanley who embraces business practices.  He is a good case study of the strengths of that approach and I also point out some possible weaknesses.   

Categories
Pastor's Life Sociology

Clergy are the most satisfied in their jobs

Check out this excerpt from an April 2007 article in the Chicago Tribune:

According to the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago, clergy ranked by far the most satisfied and the most generally happy of 198 occupations.

The worker satisfaction study, set for release Tuesday, is based on data collected since 1988 on more than 27,500 randomly selected people.

Eighty-seven percent of clergy said they were "very satisfied" with their work, compared with an average 47 percent for all workers. Sixty-seven percent reported being "very happy," compared with an average 33 percent for all workers.

Jackson Carroll, Williams professor emeritus of religion and society at Duke Divinity School, found similarly high satisfaction when he studied Protestant and Catholic clergy, despite relatively modest salaries and long hours.

"They look at their occupation as a calling," Carroll said. "A pastor does get called on to enter into some of the deepest moments of a person’s life, celebrating a birth and sitting with people at times of illness or death. There’s a lot of fulfillment."

Source:

Money really can’t buy happiness, study finds
Clergy are the most satisfied with their jobs; lawyers, doctors down on the list

By Barbara Rose
Tribune staff reporter
Published April 17, 2007
Chicago Tribune

But it would be naive and misguided to think that pastors are having an easy time out there.  For a more complete picture, check out some of the resources below that have looked at why clergy leave the profession.  Loneliness, conflict with denominational officials, difficulty managing change, burnout, lack of mobility in rural settings . . . these are significant issues.  The authors conclude that seminaries need to do a better job preparing students for practical issues, clergy need to continue to monitor self-care issues, and real issues that plague clergy need to be addressed in the open as opposed to being hidden.   

See some good clear research that has been sponsored by Duke Divinity School’s Pulpit & Pew: Research on Pastoral Leadership

Reports.  Summaries and full reports available at links below. 

Factors Shaping Clergy Careers: A Wakeup Call for Protestant Denominations and Pastors
By Patricia M.Y. Chang

Assessing the Clergy Supply in the 21st Century
By Patricia M. Y. Chang

Book.  Reviews available at link below:

Pastors in Transition: Why Clergy Leave Local Church Ministry

By Dean R. Hoge and Jacqueline E. Wenger

For another article on the job satisfaction survey see:

April 20, 2007
Service to others not just a job
Clergy happiest in U.S. work force, survey indicates

Categories
Personal Th.D. / Ph.D.

Starting Doctor of Theology (Th.D) at Duke Divinity School in the fall

Update: see my March 2009 post: Advice about Duke Th.D. and Ph.D programs in theology

Original post:

Lots of news: This fall I am starting Duke Divinity School's Doctor of Theology (Th.D.) program.  We bought a house today in Durham, NC.  And we are having baby 2 in September!    Duke

Below I have answered the basic questions. 

What is the Th.D.? 
The Th.D. stands for Doctor of Theology.  It is the equivalent to the Ph.D.  Duke University's Graduate Program in Religion has offered an outstanding Ph.D. program for many years.  The Th.D. will be headquartered in Duke Divinity School.  This is only the second year that the Th.D. degree has been offered by Duke Divinity School.  Like Duke, Harvard University has a Ph.D. and Harvard Divinity School has a Th.D.  I will be able to take courses at Duke University. 
This degree differs from the Doctor of Ministry or D.Min. which is offered by many seminaries.  The D.Min. is a degree which can be done by pastors while they are in full-time ministry.  The D.Min. takes about three years and pastors spend a couple of weeks a year on campus at the seminary.  It is loosely equivalent to another masters degree.  The Ph.D. or Th.D. are 4-7 year full-time academic degrees that prepare people for work as professors.
 
What do you hope to do with the Th.D.?
I hope to serve as professor of Christian ministry at a Christian college or seminary.  I also hope to continue in church leadership. 

What are you going to study?
My area of concentration is ""Scripture and the Practice of Leading Christian Communities and Institutions."  I'm hoping to do qualitative research on a few innovative churches and effective church leaders and analyze them through the foci presented by Duke professor Richard Hays in his book Moral Vision of the New Testament.  The foci are cross, community and new creation.  Duke has an outstanding faculty and I hope to learn from many of them. 
 
How long is the program?
The first two years I take three courses per semester.  I'm trying to decide what to take next year.  Here is the list of courses.  The third year I prepare for comprehensive exams and nail down my dissertation proposal.  The fourth year I crank out that dissertation.  However, most people in the Duke University Ph.D. in Religion take 5-7 years so we'll see. 

When are you moving to North Carolina?
We bought a house today in Durham and the closing is June 15 so we will move from Upland, IN around then.  We were in Durham last week for a Th.D. orientation day and house-hunting.

What will Amy be doing?
 
My wife Amy Rowell is going to be having Baby Rowell #2 around September 26th.  We're excited.  Hopefully she won't have this one two months early like last time.  We're very excited about baby 2. 
We are also really praying that she will find a pastoral position in a church.  She is interested in the areas of adult discipleship, preaching, women's ministry, small groups and pastoral care.  Amy is currently serving as a professor of Christian Ministry at Taylor University where she teaches courses such as Personal Foundations for Ministry and Ministry by Women in the Contemporary Context.  She has her MDiv from Regent College and won the preaching award there.  She has served on the pastoral staff at a number of churches.  Thanks for praying that she will find a position where she can use her gifts.

Do you have any advice about applying for Ph.D. programs in church leadership?
I wrote blog posts about my Ph.D. application process and my advice about the GRE and my CV.