08 Advance Round Table - Audio of Main Sessions  

Posted by Mike Sharrow in , , ,

Here are the 2 main teaching sessions from the 08 Advance Round Table event this past weekend:

Audio Recording of Session One - the Strategic Inflection Point of Change and Redefining Risk Within Our Community

Audio Recording of Session Two - Avoiding False Dichotomies & the Art of Asking and Raising Spiritually Qualified Leaders



The Advance: strategically inflected, the bad gap and false dichotomies  

Posted by Mike Sharrow in , , , ,


For the GP leaders who experienced the Advance Round Table this past weekend, here are your favorite "Mike Drawings." In a previous life I called this my future competitive sport: whiteboarding!



Still to come: the false dichotomy trap and some spiritual growth continuum diagrams!

A Disciple Shares the Heart of His Rabbi  

Posted by Mike Sharrow

Many of you know the story of my friend Marco from Cozumel. He was a guy my wife and I had the chance to share the Gospel with back in January and have since maintained an email dialogue on discipleship and life in Christ.

Marco is in his late 30s, highly intelligent, and wrestles with a lot of guilt from lifestyle patterns and deep questions about faith. His story and journey in Christ has been rapid-fast and amazing to watch. It's truly been an Acts 2 like experience without any prompting or scripting.

At the 3 month mark of his walk with Christ he hit some choppy waters. Externally he was being persecuted by some legalistic Christians nearby for what they saw as unholy habits; internally he was torn with frustrating questions about life and faith and what even matters. He reached an impasse where local Christians were forcing him to fix his "fruits" while he was struggling with his heart. It's a place that so many people fall off the saddle into a pit of despair, frustration, bitterness or into a dry life of legalistic faith.

For 3 weeks he disappeared and I couldn't find out what happened. I feared the Enemy had beaten this man down so young in his faith and that I'd lose connection with him. I got an email from him this past week. He had indeed been in a wilderness spiritually, but he weathered it and shared this testimony:

Don't worry, I'm okay and I'm even stronger in my faith now! I had some serious doubts and questions, but I've discovered through prayer how true Romans 8:28 can be for those who do love Him. I was doubting and then read Ecclesiastes - Wow! I've been praying and reading a lot and now things are making sense...I started having problems at work (not enough sales), but am seeing how even that was to help teach me to rely on Him 100% in my life. It was really difficult for a while, but now I am so thankful. I'm full of love and peace. I'm praying for everything now - I pray for direction, for my own needs and health, I pray for the salvation of everyone around me, I pray for my Christian friends and what they're going through...My faith is growing and feels like it is out of proportion to life and I feel so much love for everyone I meet. I'm thinking about and praying for you Mike!

Here's a man who has been 3 months in the Kingdom. A man who has a laundry list of questions to contend with and a community context that is opposed to his new life in Christ. In the face of swelling frustration and pressures around him his response is...to seek God. He channels his discontent into a driving force of a God quest instead of a rebellious abandon. The result is a humble heart of love and grace that reveals the heart of his Rabbi shining through his life.

A disciple is obedient to his teacher. A follower goes where the leader is heading. A disciple shares the heart of his rabbi. How is the heart of Rabbi Yeshua shining through in your life? Sharing that is fundamental to discipleship.

The Blisskrieg  

Posted by Mike Sharrow

My wife and I launched our first website recently. We're newbies at the world of true internet tools, but it was fun. House of Marital Bliss is our "address" as a tie to an affectionate and sometimes comical reference to our home. We're unabashedly unashamed about challenging everyone we know to pursue "bliss" in Christ, which leads to bliss in marriage, and bliss in all spheres of life.


A friend visited our site and sent me a note asking if we had any plans to "launch a 'blisskrieg' or a full attack from the heart."



*Blitzkrieg (Lightning War) is a popular name for an offensive
operational-level military doctrine which involves an initial bombardment
followed by the employment of motorized mobile forces attacking with speed and
surprise to prevent an enemy from implementing a coherent
defense.




What a beautiful image - a full attack of love from the heart. A lightning strike of love as an offensive!

Leadership Legacies  

Posted by Mike Sharrow in , , , ,

I met with a lady this past weekend who was a missionary kid. Her parents spent 30+ years as missionaries across Latin America. Her aunts and uncles were all missionaries in Africa. Her cousins have all chosen to remain as missionaries in places like Congo, Ghana and the interior of Africa. Her sisters were missionaries. She herself was highly involved in local church ministry plus multiple trips a year to do women's ministry abroad and help foreign missionaries. What a legacy her family has in the Kingdom! How blessed to be the great-grandparent in that family, looking at a series of generations all obediently sold out to Christ! To see God use your "children to bless the nations" is truly a mighty legacy for any leader to behold.

Yesterday we had a gathering of area pastors to welcome a new guy to town. It drew high profile guys, new guys just starting churches, pastors of struggling churches and some "patriarchs" who had been icons of regional church leadership for decades. With many generations represented at the gathering, there was a remarkable distinction in how various generations tended to establish their legacy.

George Harris and Buckner Fanning were looked up to by half the guys in the room because so many of them had been mentored, encouraged, supported, and commissioned by those guys early on in their Christian walk. They saw them as patriarchs of their own ministry journey. The legacy of George and Buckner was that their leadership was beyond themselves - they freely and whole-heartedly invested in raising up others who went on to lead with great independence from them. CBC and BRCC are not "church plants" by either of these guys, yet both pastors were mentored and supported by George.

There was a free loving investment in others by that generation of leaders that stood out as exceptional to the present norm. It's so easy for a church, an organization, a team or any group to only invest by addition - to recruit the best for their own effort and want to grow their team superior to everyone else by "drafting" top talent. Contrast that with how these elder statesmen sent out leaders to go and flourish for the Kingdom without any strings attached.

How do you measure legacy of leadership? Personal reign, personal accomplishment, or the beyond-self passing on of Godly love, counsel, discipling, instruction and wisdom that bears fruit outside the fences of your territory?

How would your leadership legacy be measured today? How will it be in 10 years?

When Jesus was asked by John the Baptist's followers if He was truly the Christ, Jesus pointed at His track record in the lives of people - "the blind now see, the lame walk, and captives are set free."

A Man Named "The Rock"  

Posted by Mike Sharrow

This essay was written by Shelby Reese -- a 9th grader in our youth ministry -- as part of her "Leadership Rocks" course in The Point University (TPU).


*****

Pushing to the head of the line and blurting out loud, outrageous assertions. Named first in the list of disciples, Peter is often seen elbowing his way to center stage. With a big heart and unlimited enthusiasm, bold and courageous, yet cowardly when it really counted. Peter didn't show the signs of the "Rock" Jesus had for him to become. Yet through the Lord and through the power of His Holy Spirit, He transformed him into a tremendous witness for His glory. By the time Peter sat down to write his first epistle, a lot had changed. The shifting sand of his personality began to solidify into granite. His main focus was not on the cause of suffering, but rather on the results. "For a little while you may have had to suffer grief in all kinds of trails. These have come so that your faith - of greater worth than god, which perishes even though refined by fire - may be proved genuine and may result in praise, glory and honor when Jesus Christ is revealed." (1 Peter 1:6-7)


The man once known as being blustery and loudmouthed, Peter now counsels wives to have "the unfading beauty of a gentle and quiet spirit" (1 Peter 3:4), and for husbands to "treat their wives with consideration and respect" (1 Peter 3:7). Taking suffering as a badge of honor, as proof of his commitment to Christ at any cost.


With every new step, from Simon, to Peter, to the Rock - his example and influence was widely felt by the church, during his entire lifetime of service to the Lord.


********The End****



Not bad for a young student of Jesus, His Way, and the path of leader-followers!