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Missional

Five Innovative Missional Ideas for Serving Your Community

Here are five wacky ways I have tried to love my community this year.  I thought they would be fun to share and might stimulate some other ideas.  Only number 4 was actually "successful."  These are extremely experimental.  In chronological order, here they are:   

1. Fix the Wikipedia entry for your town so that it is accurate and helpful. Wikipediaword_1 I did this earlier this year with Upland, Indiana.  The description of the town where I live was about three sentences before I added to it earlier this year.  I thought it was good for the world and for the town to have an accurate description at Wikipedia.  Has it had a positive impact?  I don’t know but I know lots of people have read it.      

2. Start a blog for your favorite organization or business that does not have a website.  This blog can serve as a fan club for that organization and post relevant information for the world.  I did this earlier this year for Ivanhoe’s – a local ice cream shop.  Has this had a positive impact?  I don’t know but it has gotten lots of hits. 

3. Write a politician.  I recently wrote Barack Obama to urge him not to portray himself as a one-issue politician because I was reading that he was getting his biggest cheers for his "Pull our troops out of Iraq by March 2008" talk and that his campaign believed his stance on Iraq was his primary strength in comparison to Hillary Clinton.  From what I know about him, he has more to contribute than just that perspective.  Has it had a positive impact?  Maybe I’ll never know.  Obama

  • Obama’s speech to Call to Renewal in June 2006 is especially helpful to listen to if you are interested in learning about his faith.  The transcript and MP3 of the talk are both at Obama’s website here
  • You can also read the transcript of his speech on AIDS at Rick Warren’s Saddleback Church in December 2006 here.
  • Evangelical? Obama’s faith too complex for simple label is also an interesting article. 

4. Protest appalling things.  Si_logo Yesterday I was really annoyed to see the four-inch banner advertisement for the Swimsuit Issue on Sports Illustrated’s website SI.com.  I wrote them and complained.  See my note here.  (I also sent a note to The Jim Rome Show and Dan Patrick of ESPN radio but I don’t think anything was said on the radio about it.  I like both of those sports talk radio shows).  Well, a day later Sports Illustrated reduced the advertisement to a half inch.  I’m shocked but thankful.  Thanks, Sports Illustrated.   

5. Advocate for something better in your community.  Bk_logo_1 Today I wrote a letter to Burger King (which is the closest fast food restaurant to where I live) because the children’s playground has been "closed for maintanance" for five months (at least).  I sometimes study there and it breaks my heart to see kids come in disappointed which today (a Saturday) was like five kids per hour.  So we’ll see what happens on that.  See my letter here.

Update: They reopened the playground at the end of March!  🙂 

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Ben Witherington on Rob Bell

If you are a Rob Bell fan, this is must reading.

Update February 26, 2007

Witherington has now reviewed all of Bell’s videos.  He thoroughly appreciates all of them.  He questions a couple of his Jewish rabbi comments but still thinks they are outstanding. 

Rob Bell’s Nooma Videos 11-15

Rob Bell’s Nooma Videos 6-10

Rob Bell’s Nooma Videos 1-5

 

Update February 18, 2007

Ben Witherington has written a more comprehensive and gracious appreciation and critique of Rob Bell at "Velvet Elvis and the King"– Has he Left the Building?   Read it.  He encourages Bell to consult the standard commentaries and to ignore some fringe scholars who would liken Jesus to a third century AD Jewish Rabbi.   

Original Post:Witherington

Ben Witherington has posted his assessment of Rob Bell’s presentation last night in Lexington: Rob Bell hits Lexington and a Packed-Out House.  Ben is a professor of New Testament at Asbury Seminary and a prolific commentary writer.  Rob is the most downloaded preacher on the internet (perhaps behind Joel Osteen) and pastor of Mars Hill Bible Church in Grandville, MI.Rob_bell   (See ITunes "Religion and Spirituality" category – Bell’s ITunes podcast link is here).

Witherington praises Bell’s style but critiques his substance saying that Bell doesn’t know the difference between 3rd century AD Rabbinic judaism and Jesus’ context and he critiques Bell for waffling on homosexuality.  I guarantee that this post will be the hottest one in the Christian blogosphere today and this week. 

I commented saying that I don’t know how Bell puts together his creative, brilliant presentations each week.  With his influence, he should speak a little less and research a bit more.  (By the way I love listening to Bell).  I also say that perhaps Bell was addressing pastoral responses rather than actually stating his doctrinal position.  Brian McLaren took some heat for this a while back on the Out of Ur Leadership journal blog.          

I also mentioned that Bell was the most downloaded preacher on the internet.  Those statistics change regularly though.  See the iTunes Religion & Spirituality podcast page for the latest rankings.  Like other iTunes store links, that link will only work if you have iTunes (which is free to download and install on your computer) installed on your computer.

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The Best Blogs for Church Leaders to Read

Update March 2008:

See my new List of 81 Church Leadership Blogs I am watching.

Original Post:

These are the very best 70 blogs for Church Leaders. 

Ok, ok, who can really say what the best ones are considering the vast internet and the huge spectrum of churches?  But this is a good place for start if you are interested in innovative, emerging, megachurch, American churches like I am.  (See also Kevin Hendrick’s list of The Top 20 Web Sites for Church Communicators)

The blogs that made my list have met at least 5 of the 6 criteria below.   

1. They help me improve my church leadership. 

2. They write thoughtfully.  Emotion and rants are great but they should take into account the different sides of an issue.  You shouldn’t be mean-angry unless serious injustice is taking place.    

3. They keep their writing about personal things to 20% or less.  I don’t want to read about what they had for breakfast or see their vacation photos.  But personal reflection on the material is great!

4. Often they are proven writers with published books. 

5. These blogs have not been eliminated from my blogroll for some other reason.  Admittedly, I often just skim post titles of these blogs and don’t read all that they write.

6. The design of the blog is sufficiently attractive. 

This is my "blogroll" i.e. the blogs I skim.  See my post about Newsgator entitled "How I Keep Up Reading Blogs." 

Feel free to suggest your own blog in the comments or others you would recommend. 

Two other similar posts by me are: The Best Podcasts for Church Leaders (and how to use ITunes) and The Best Free Audio on the Web for Church Leaders.   

The very best blogs for church leaders:

Alan Hirsch – The Forgotten Ways – Hirsch has written the important books The Shaping of Things to Come and the new The Forgotten Ways: Reactivating the Missional Church

Alan Nelson, Stan Toler, et al. – Rev! Unplugged – Rev. is the magazine by Group Publishing for pastors

Alex McManus – into the mystic – brother of Erwin and was active at Mosaic until recently

Andrew Jones – TallSkinnyKiwi – well known emerging church blogger from outside the USA.

B.J. Woodworth – what’s your wood worth? – missional pastor in Pittsburgh

Ben Witherington – Great New Testament scholar at Asbury Seminary

Bob Roberts, Jr. – the Glocal Trekker Blog – wrote new book Glocalization and pastors in Dallas/Ft. Worth, Texas area

Brian Bailey – Leave It Behind & Blogging Church – has the new book Blogging Church

Brian McLaren – well known emerging church leader and writer

Byron K. Borger – Hearts & Minds BookNotes – great book reviews from great bookstore owner between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh

C. Wes Daniels – gathering in light – Fuller Ph.D. student under emerging church author Ryan Bolger

CatalystSpace – Catalyst conference blog

Chris Scharen – faithasawayoflife – works with Miroslav Volf at Yale Center for Faith and Culture; Emory Ph.D.

Christianity Today Magazine – great resources here.  I love Weblog highlights. 

Craig Groeschel and Bobby Gruenewald – LifeChurch.tv : swerve"the most innovative church in the nation" (Later note: August 1, 2007: These rankings about "most innovative" by Church Report are probably not from a reputable source.  See article about founder). 

Dan Kimball – Vintage Faith – author of Emerging Church and a new book on getting out of the office as a pastor They Like Jesus But Not the Church

Dave Ferguson – Velocity – pastor in Naperville, IL pioneering the multi-site thing with pastors preparing sermons together.  Has a new book The Big Idea.

David Fitch – the great giveaway – Has critical look at American church book  The Great Giveaway – teaches at Northern Seminary in Lombard, IL and pastors

Doug Pagitt – the pagittBlog – pastor of Solomon’s Porch in Minneapolis area and wrote Preaching Reimagined and other books

Douglas LeBlanc, et al. – GetReligion – variety of Christian journalists put stuff here

Dwight Friesen

Earl Creps – just wrote Off-Road Disciplines which I reviewed in the previous post.

Ed Young resources – CreativePastors – pastor of huge church(es) in Texas – Fellowship Church

Emergent Village – they have a blog – the main organization for the emerging church movement in the US

emergingchurch.info

Eric Swanson – author of The Externally Focused Church

Gavin Richardson – Hit the Back Button to Move Fwd

Gifted for Leadership – great new women’s blog from Christianity Today – highly recommended

Gordon Atkinson – Real Live Preacher – rlp’s blog – famous blog – has a book Reallivepreacher.com

Greg Surratt – Personal – wrote The Multi-Site Church Revolution

Greg Surratt – Seacoast Church Blog – wrote The Multi-Site Church Revolution

Holly Rankin Zaher – happydaydeadfish – emerging church leader – personal blog mostly

Jamie Arpin-Ricci – (e)mergent Voyageurs – canadian avid blogger and emerging church leader

Jason Powell – Church IT and other musings – runs technology at one of the most innovative churches in the nation at Granger Community Church and is Taylor University grad

Jim Plueddemann – The Missionary Iconoclast – teaches missions at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School

John Mark Rutter – Theological Ruminator – blogger pastor friend from Texas

John Stackhouse – Professor of Theology at Regent College and wrote Humble Apologetics and other books

J.R. Briggs – brokenstainedglass – graduated in 2001 from Taylor University and is a pastor in Souderton, PA at Calvary Church and has written a couple of books including When God Says Jump

Kem Meyer on Less Clutter & Noise – marketing expert at Granger Community Church.  One of my favorite bloggers.

Kent Shaffer – churchrelevance.com – some interesting stuff here on marketing and the church.

Kevin D. Hendricks, et al. – Church Marketing Sucks – great blog about how to improve marketing in churches

Leadership journal and resources for church leaders – great journal from Christianity Today folks. 

Leadership Network Leanings – Leadership Network is a great organization interested in megachurches and leadership.

Leonard Sweet – Napkin Scribbles – prolific author – most recently 2007 The Gospel According to Starbucks

LeRon Shults, James K.A. Smith, John Franke, Klyne Snodgrass, Roger Olson, et al. – Generous Orthodoxy ThinkTank – variety of people write academic stuff here

Marc Heinrich – purgatorio – great humor and satire here

Mark Batterson – Thoughts on Life and Leadership – energetic pastor from Washington, D.C. – has a new book In a Pit with Lion on a Snowy Day

Mark Driscoll, Ed Stetzer, Anthony Bradley, et al. – TheResurgence – these are Conservative Reformed, Southern Baptist and PCA.  So if you are in that camp, good voices.

Mark D. Roberts Blog – Theology Ph.D. trained pastor

Mark Galli – GalliBlog – editor of Christianity Today

Mark Waltz | …because People Matter – pastor of welcome at Granger Community Church and author of First Impressions

Michael Bird & Joel Willitts – Euangelion – two young New Testament scholars keep us up to date on the latest in NT scholarship

nextwave News

Out of Ur – the central hub for church leadership info is Leadership journal and this blog

Perry Noble dot com

Pete Rollins – author of book sensation How (Not) To Speak of God

Richard Mouw – Mouw’s Musings – The President’s Blog – president of Fuller Seminary and prolific author including He Shines in All That’s Fair

Ron Martoia – velocityculture – wrote books including Morph: The Texture of Leadership for Tomorrow’s Church

Ryan Bolger – TheBolgBlog – author of Emerging Churches and Fuller Seminary professor

Scot McKnight – Jesus Creed North Park New Testament professor and best blogger ever.  Wrote Jesus Creed and many more books. 

Scott Collins-Jones – SCJToday – Philadelphia presbyterian pastor and Princeton Ph.D. student in theology

Steve Taylor – e~mergent kiwi – wrote Out of Bounds Church

Susan – The Philosophical Pastor

The CBE Scroll – pro-women in ministry blog

Think Christian – variety of people post here

Tim Conder – Wonderings & Wanderings – author of Church in Transition; doesn’t look like he has blogged since September

Tim Stevens – LeadingSmart – pastor of administration at Granger Community Church and author of Simply Strategic Stuff et al.

Todd Rhoades – Monday Morning Insight – lots of Christian news

Tony Jones – Theoblogy – emergent village coordinator and author of many books including The Sacred Way

Tony Morgan | one of the simply strategic guys – former pastor at Granger Community Church now a pastor in South Carolina

Business people worth reading if you are a church leader:

John Moore – Brand Autopsy

Chip & Dan Heath – author of Made to Stick

Fast Company Now – business magazine

Harvard Business School Working Knowledge – some good stuff here from secular leadership headquarters of the US

Kevin Carroll – Katalyst Blog – interviewed on Catalyst Conference podcast; used to work for Nike; inspirational speaker and author of Rules of Red Rubber Ball

Seth Godin – Blog – has written many books including All Marketers are Liars

Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner – Freakonomics Blog – thoughtful economic insight from book authors

Tim Sanders – Sanders Says – leadership expert and author of books including The Likeability Factor.  Was interviewed on Catalyst Conference podcast. 

Tom Peters Weblog – business leadership expert and author of many books including Reimagine!: Business Excellence in a Disruptive Age

Taylor University Friends:

Andrew Ulasich – digging for mummies – senior

David Landt – The Way of Jesus – graduated in 1997 and is pastor in Minnesota

Jim Garringer Photography – Taylor’s photographer

Ken Castor – jesusfollower – graduated in 1994? and is pastor in Calgary

Gary Friesen – Becoming a Millennial: 53-yr-old takes the dive – oversees technology at Taylor

Gary Thomas – art professor at Taylor

Other friends of mine:

Kirk Bartha – from theocity to lovelocity – went to Regent College with him and he is pray-er, prophet, preacher in Canada.

Steve Gisel – Asi Es La Vida… – Cousin working for the Peace Corps in Columbia