Friday, March 24, 2023

Friday's Catch: 'The Southern Baptist Convention’s coming ‘Great Ejection’' And More


Will this summer’s SBC annual meeting make Christian history?

The Least of These: A Guide to Practicing a Faith Without Margins
Angie Ward suggests four key practices, based on biblical principles, that can help us better show God’s love to “the least of these.” Following each practice, she provides questions to move you and your church toward concrete action in that area. 

How Christians grieve the Holy Spirit and mess up everything
Dan Delzell takes a look at the different ways that we can grieve the Holy Spirit. Wrath Is Not an Attribute of God
To say love and anger can coexist doesn’t go far enough. Anger arises because of love.

How to Detect Deception
Whether dealing with ancient texts or contemporary speech, when it comes to detecting lies, "the devil is in the details."

Small Group Structure: 3 Effective Ways to Organize for Youth Ministry
No matter your small group structure, these meetings are an important part of effective student ministry. Small groups move students past just showing up at youth group every week and listening to you teach. They move teens to a place where they can better develop community with their peers (and an adult leader or two) as well going deeper into God’s Word.

Report: LGBTQ Americans tend to be younger and have no religion
The new report from PRRI also found that many religious Americans support LGBTQ nondiscrimination rights, even those who oppose same sex-marriage.

Branding Jesus
Church attendance is in decline. This has given birth to many articles and think pieces exploring why churches are shrinking, and has prompted many churches to increase their efforts at evangelism. While spreading the good news is obviously more than this, it is definitely marketing. Church leaders and those concerned about keeping churches alive seek to promote the Jesus “brand” in ways that are relevant and compelling to modern audiences.

The Many Meanings of Connectionalism
If churches leave The United Methodist Church, are they still "in connection"?

These are the schools the Global Methodist Church recommends for hopeful clergy
The fledgling Methodist denomination, which broke away from the United Methodist Church last year amid ongoing debate over the role of LGBTQ Christians, has announced a list of recommended educational institutions for candidates seeking ordination as a deacon or elder.

Michigan's largest United Methodist congregation votes to leave denomination
The largest United Methodist Church congregation in Michigan has voted to leave the mainline Protestant denomination over the ongoing debate over homosexuality and same-sex marriage. Cornerstone Church of Caledonia, which has satellite campuses in Grand Rapids and the city of Wyoming, voted on Sunday to disaffiliate from the UMC and become a nondenominational congregation. The final tally was 616 in favor, nine against and two abstentions.

Thursday, March 23, 2023

Thursday Evenings at All Hallows (Thursday, March 23, 2023) Is Now Online


Welcome to Thursday Evenings at All Hallows! The best description of All Hallows Murray is an online gathering place for Christians and those exploring the Christian faith. The services of praise, proclamation, and prayer that are offered on this blogsite are not intended to replace those of a local church but are offered for the benefit of those who are unable to attend a local church for any reason, who may be traveling, or who wish to test the water before taking the plunge, or who otherwise may benefit from them.

Reading: Hebrews 10: 19-25

Message: Why It’s Important for Christians to Meet Together

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2023/03/thursday-evenings-at-all-hallows_22.html

Please feel free to share this link with anyone who may be interested.

If you are new to Thursday Evenings at All Hallows, you may find these directions helpful:

-When you open the link to a video in a new tab, check auto-play to make sure it is in the off position. Otherwise, a second video with a different song will follow the first.

-If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears.

-If a song begins partway through the video, click pause, move the slider to the beginning, and then click play.

-An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.

May Thursday Evenings at All Hallows be a blessing to you.

Thursday's Catch: '6 Traits People Value in Online Faith Communities' And More


There are six traits that people value in online communities, writes Heidi A. Campbell.
This material is excerpted from “What Religious Groups Need to Consider When Trying to Do Church Online” in the free ebook The Distanced Church: Reflections on Doing Church Online, Heidi A. Campbell, Editor.
Signs of a Jesus Movement in This Generation?
Generation Z is marked by an increasing number of “nones,” meaning people who claim no faith at all. Watchful Christian observers, then, take genuine hope in two recent notable events.

8 Hispanic Values Every Church Must Keep in Mind
The Hispanic population continues to grow in the U.S. What Hispanic values are shared by the community and how do those values impact evangelism?

8 Terrible Reasons To Leave a Church
Perhaps more than ever before, people are leaving (or changing) churches en masse. There are some good reasons to leave a church. What I’m seeing of late, though, doesn’t fit in the “good reason” category. The pandemic launched several more pandemics — fear pandemic, anger pandemic, political pandemic, racial pandemic, and a church pandemic. TThe recent climate has given way to a mass exodus from churches, mostly for terrible reasons. Here are a few....

What Does the Holy Spirit Do?
Maybe you think of communing with the Spirit as hearing whispered messages or getting overtaken by waves of warm fuzzies. There are certainly places in the Bible where the Spirit manifests himself in demonstrative ways. In the book of Romans, however, Paul’s focus is on how the Spirit assists us in our growth toward Christ-likeness. Here are a few things Paul identifies.

6 Ways Churches can Support Foster or Adoptive Families
While the world tells us, “look out for yourself,” God’s Word tells believers, “look out for one another.” This is true inside the church, but it is also true of those outside the church. Galatians 6:10 says, “So then, as we have opportunity, let us do good to everyone, and especially to those who are of the household of faith.”

How to Choose a Curriculum? The Most Important Question No One Asks
The challenges we are facing at this moment in time are that the world has changed so rapidly over the past decade and cultural formation is having a significant impact on our kids. In this new post-Christian environment there’s a question almost no one is asking the publisher but should ask, and it’s this: Can you show me an impact study on the effectiveness of your curriculum?

The Doubling Group Movement – A Worthy Goal
We can reach our nation for God with an army of small group leaders like you who long to see a doubling group movement. We can reach our nation for Christ.

How to Overcome the Great Commission Gap
Somehow the church has come to see discipleship and evangelism as disconnected. Or, even more insidious, as rivals or enemies. Too many pastors devote themselves to the work of discipling church members and helping them grow up spiritually, but see no connection to mobilizing believers for the work of the Great Commission.

Wednesday, March 22, 2023

Wednesday's Catch: 'Churches viewed favorably nationally, Barna Cities research shows' And More


Churches viewed favorably nationally, Barna Cities research shows
More than 75 percent of adults have a positive view of the church in Nashville, in the center of one of the fastest growing metropolitan areas in the nation. A prevailing positive perception of the church is common in research the Barna Group has unveiled.
It would be interesting to see how widespread this positive view of churches is, in what age groups, in what parts of the country, and what are major contributing factors.
4 Factors That Predict Church Growth
Pastors and leaders can evaluate their congregations by asking four questions associated with predicting church growth.

How to Create an Awesome Internship Program
Internships are great ways to find and develop your future church staff. When done right, you can have a lasting impact on the kingdom by the way you develop and mentor the up-and-coming church leaders of tomorrow. Let’s learn some best practices and how your church can train up the next generation of leaders.

Why Work from Home Won’t Work for the Church
...having a couple of office days is important. Why? Five reasons stand out.

Let’s Say NO to Winging It
 
When it comes to leading worship, say no to winging it! The goal is not to be scripted, flawless, flashy, or impressive. The goal is to be ready.

Members Who Build Up the Church
Healthy local churches make a powerful and attractive testimony to a watching world. This means that every church member has to be devoted to building others up. Church members who build up the church are those who....

How to Nurture a Disciple of Jesus
This is a follow-up to the last post on what a Disciple of Jesus looks like. It came out of a discussion in a clergy study group....
While the means of grace are important in the spiritual growth of a disciple of Jesus, spiritual formation is key. This includes teaching new Christians and longtime Christians on how to employ the means of grace to their best advantage. Spiritual formation needs to become a far more deliberate process in local churches than it has been.
Fewer Churches Face Limited Cash Reserves
Compared to 2016, churches are more likely to have more than seven weeks of cash reserves. Additionally, few have had someone embezzle funds from the congregation.

38 churches suing Maryland-based UMC Conference over disaffiliation process
 
A group of 38 congregations that have decided to leave The United Methodist Church over theological issues have sued the denomination over objections to the process of disaffiliation. Filed last week in the Circuit Court of Maryland for Anne Arundel County, the lawsuit accuses the UMC Baltimore-Washington Conference of “holding their church buildings and property hostage.”

Judge rejects lawsuit against United Methodist Church over disaffiliation process
A judge has dismissed a lawsuit by over 30 congregations that sued a regional body of The United Methodist Church and its bishop, accusing the denomination of an unfair disaffiliation process. Last November, a group of 38 congregations filed a lawsuit against the UMC Western North Carolina Conference, its board of trustees and its bishop, Kenneth H. Carter, arguing that the regional body had an unfair disaffiliation process. North Carolina Superior Court Judge Richard L. Doughton issued an oral ruling on Monday, in which he granted the Conference’s motions to dismiss the departing churches’ lawsuit.

Judge dismisses lawsuit by 36 United Methodist churches
The North Carolina churches sued in state courts to leave a denomination they view as having strayed from its theological moorings on LGBTQ issues.

Court rules on General Conference questions
The United Methodist Church’s top court has ruled on questions from the Council of Bishops about the coming General Conference, now scheduled for 2024. The bishops had asked about filling delegate vacancies and whether another General Conference needs to be scheduled after the postponed 2020 General Conference takes place in 2024. The Judicial Council also has released two other rulings, including a memorandum about complaints in the Congo Central Conference
.

Tuesday, March 21, 2023

Tuesday's Catch: 'Company that Trademarked "Worship Leader" Makes Others Drop the Term' And More


Company that Trademarked ‘Worship Leader’ Makes Others Drop the Term
Popular meme accounts lose social media pages after being reported by Authentic Media, which says it coined the phrase.

5 Options to Recreate the Church Property
The church building and property may be too large for your current needs, and you may wonder what the church should do. Here are five options that I would encourage you and your church leadership team to review.

Ed Stetzer: A New Church-Planting Era
It’s time for another shift in church planting. This shift must move the focus to church multiplication rather than just church growth or planting, as important as both are.

Stop Ceding the Pulpit on Immigration
Many pastors are afraid to speak on immigration, as it is both a biblical and political issue. But the stakes are too high to stay silent.

How Immigration Can Revive a Christian Nation
While white Christianity is declining in the U.K., migration has meant true gospel Christianity is not.

From Christchurch to Emanuel AME, we must recognize the patterns of white supremacy
Recent reports suggest the attacks on houses of worship are not rare and the perpetrators are seldom acting alone.

7 Tips for Church Marketing and Communication
Marketing and communication play an important role in any pastoral team’s ability to connect with congregants, as well as the church’s overall ability to connect with the community.

Unlocking the Lewisian Imagination
Why did C.S. Lewis write such good books?

Why I Quit Doing One on One Discipleship
Jim Egli explains why he switched from one-to-one discipling to disciplining in mini-groups.

Do the Happiest People in the World Want the Gospel?
So the myth—that the Nordic people are happy and don’t need the gospel—is like looking at someone you know (perhaps on social media) and saying, “They look like they have everything under control, and don’t have any problems. Certainly they don’t need me to share Jesus with them.” That’s a dangerous lie. So how can we combat it? Here are four ways.

Eurasia and Estonia begin exit from church
Church regions in Eurasia and the Baltics, built up after the breakup of the Soviet Union, now plan to leave The United Methodist Church. Church law has a multistep process for church regions outside the United States to change their relationship with the denomination. Delegates of the Northern Europe and Eurasia Central Conference voted on March 18 to allow the church regions to begin the withdrawal process.

Bitter infighting threatens Kenya’s Methodist Church
At the center of a controversy that has been unfolding since 2015 is Presiding Bishop Joseph Ntombura.

Monday, March 20, 2023

Monday's Catch: '3 Stereotypes of Christians (And How to Change Them)' And More


3 Stereotypes of Christians (And How to Change Them) 
Today’s non-Christian 20- and 30-somethings are big fans of Jesus but are less thrilled with His followers and the churches where they worship. Pastor/author Dan Kimball reveals their most common stereotypes of Christians and the Church, what they wish church was like—and why you should be listening to these emerging voices.

4 Powerful Reasons Why Revival Often Starts With Young People
Over the past month, we have watched as the fires of prayer and revival have swept across colleges and universities nationwide. Some of those, like Asbury, Lee, Samford, Cedarville, and Belmont are private Christian universities. LSU, Western Kentucky University, and Texas A&M are public institutions. This most recent outpouring is not selective.

What Jesus Sees (Even When Others Do Not)
Jesus saw who Peter would be. Or perhaps better, Jesus saw who he would make Peter to be.

What Jesus Saw When He Looked at Peter after the Rooster Crowed
While we can’t know with certainty how Jesus looked at Peter, I think we can make a reasonable deduction based on who Jesus is, how Peter responded, and how Jesus pursued him after his resurrection. I agree with Charles Spurgeon, who says, “I think it was a heart-piercing look and a heart-healing look all in one,— a look which revealed to Peter the blackness of his sin, and also the tenderness of his Master’s heart towards him.

5 Biggest Mistakes Pastors Make on Sundays (and How to Avoid Them)
Evaluate this list to find out how many you make. Charles Stone follows the list with some suggestions on how to avoid them.

Five Questions for Churches as Worship Gatherings Become Smaller
We at Church Answers are asking church leaders and church members five key questions regarding smaller worship gatherings. We are concerned that these smaller sizes are being used in some churches to accept decline or to become comfortable about not reaching the community. Here are our five questions....

Why We Need Worship Pastors, Not Worship Leaders
One of the greatest blessings a church can receive is when the person leading music is a worship pastor, not just a worship leader. Worship pastors increase the spiritual sensitivity of the weekend service, expand the church’s pastoral reach, and create a synergy between the music and teaching. While it is important for worship leaders to be competent, talented, and able to execute their portion of a weekend service with little difficulty, there is so much more that worship leaders bring to the table.

Is Every Christian Called to Go? 
Should every Christian be a missionary? Does the Great Commission call everyone to go to the nations? In this episode of Neighborhoods and Nations, Steven Morales is joined by David Platt to discuss the responsibility of every Christian in the Great Commission.

Saturday, March 18, 2023

Sundays at All Hallows (Sunday, March 19, 2023) Is Now Online

 


Welcome to Sundays at All Hallows! The best description of All Hallows Murray is an online gathering place for Christians and those exploring the Christian faith. The services of praise, proclamation, and prayer that are offered on this blogsite are not intended to replace those of a local church but are offered for the benefit of those who are unable to attend a local church for any reason, who may be traveling, or who wish to test the water before taking the plunge, or who otherwise may benefit from them.


Reading: Ephesians 5: 18-14

Message: Believe, Follow, Share—The Life of Discipleship

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2023/03/sundays-at-all-hallows-sunday-march-19.html

Please feel free to share this link with anyone who may be interested.

If you are new to Sundays at All Hallows, you may find these directions helpful:

-When you open the link to a video in a new tab, check auto-play to make sure it is in the off position. Otherwise, a second video with a different song will follow the first.

-If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears.

-If a song begins partway through the video, click pause, move the slider to the beginning, and then click play.

-An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.

May Sundays at All Hallows be a blessing to you.

Saturday Lagniappe" '‘Lord, Do It Again’: Tim Keller on Revival' And More


Real revival is the intensification of the ordinary operations of the Holy Spirit.

The Importance of Affirming Online Engagement
This post is an excerpt from the just-released book by James Emery White, Hybrid Church: Rethinking the Church in a Post-Christian Digital Age (Zondervan).
White makes avery good point. We have experienced a major shift in the way things are done and there is no going back to the way things were done before this shift.
3 Pivotal Questions to Ask When Considering a Church Merger
How do you determine if a merger is right for your church?

3 Warning Signs You Could Love Your Title More Than Your Task
How can we evaluate ourselves? How can we recognize a drift in our hearts towards loving our position and title more than what our position and title is for? Here are three warning signs....

Worship Director Discovers Term ‘Worship Leader’ Is Trademarked After His Facebook Page Is Suspended
Did you know that the term “worship leader” is trademarked by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO)? The man behind the social media account, “Rogue Worship Leader,” a worship director, made this discovery after his Facebook account was shut down for trademark infringement.
"Worship leader" is a widely-used term in churches, on the internet, and in books and magazines. I am surprised the US Patent Office granted this company copyright.
How to Engage Youth in Church: 5 Important Ways to Reach Teens
No matter your congregation’s size, you probably wonder how to engage youth in church. One major mistake many churches make is not engaging young people. This is one reason college students leave the church. They don’t feel engaged and involved in the ministry of the entire congregation.

Truths and Tips for Discipling Teens
We cannot pour out to our kids what hasn’t first been poured into us.

Who Needs Missionaries? (It’s Not Just the ‘Unreached’)
We can’t view the Great Commission as a linear task to be fulfilled or finished. It’s a command to be perpetually obeyed.

Americans like Jews, Catholics and mainline Protestants. Evangelicals, not so much.
A new Pew Research poll finds that only 18% of nonevangelical Americans had favorable opinions of evangelicals; 32% had somewhat unfavorable views.

Church hit by vandalism sees outpouring of support
Windows were broken. The organ and piano were overturned. Resources were ripped up. Vandalism that occurred March 4 at The Village Church of Indiantown seemed like one of the worst things that could happen to a church. Instead, it has become a blessing.
I would suspect that more than one person was involved. Pianos are heavy and require more than one person to move. The extent of the vandalism also points to more than one person.

Friday, March 17, 2023

Friday's Catch: 'The Hidden Growth Opportunities for Churches in Every Community' And More


This is the video replay of the Church Answers webinar in which I participated on Thursday. Church Answers offers a number of useful resources for local churches seeking to learn more about their community and to reach and engage the unchurched and spiritually-disconnected in their community.

3 Advantages of a Small Church
Jesus is about mission, not church size.

Since the 1880s, Southern Baptists have argued over the role of women
At the SBC’s meeting this summer, delegates may debate a constitutional amendment to limit women leaders. It wouldn’t be the first time.

5 Practices That Help Turn Prayer Moments to Prayer Movements
Prayer is always personal first, it starts with a person, then catches fire to others.

12 Keys to Improving Worship Keyboards
So you’re playing worship keyboards for your band this Sunday! Here are some proven steps and practices to help you do a great job.

3 keys to being a life-long friend
There is a dearth friendship in our culture. Despite being increasingly connected on-line, there is much research which points to the scarcity of personal friendships as one of society’s main ails. People are mobile, and often raise their children in several cities through their life, making “old friends” an antiquated phrase.

Churches that don't evangelise will die, says Nicky Gumble
Rev Nicky Gumbel, the recently retired vicar of Holy Trinity Brompton (HTB), has urged a gathering of church leaders in London to be active in evangelism and resist the temptation to "water down" the Gospel.

Progressive United Methodists Cannot Have It Both Ways
John Lomperis responds to Bill Brownson’s recent article, “Put Down the Fear-Filled Playbook.”

Thursday, March 16, 2023

Thursday Evenings at All Hallows (Thursday, March 16, 2023) Is Now Online

 


Welcome to Thursday Evenings at All Hallows! The best description of All Hallows Murray is an online gathering place for Christians and those exploring the Christian faith. The services of praise, proclamation, and prayer that are offered on this blogsite are not intended to replace those of a local church but are offered for the benefit of those who are unable to attend a local church for any reason, who may be traveling, or who wish to test the water before taking the plunge, or who otherwise may benefit from them.


Reading: Genesis 49: 33; 50:1-26

Message: Lessons about God from the Old Testament

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2023/03/thursday-evenings-at-all-hallows_15.html

Please feel free to share this link with anyone who may be interested.

If you are new to Thursday Evenings at All Hallows, you may find these directions helpful:

-When you open the link to a video in a new tab, check auto-play to make sure it is in the off position. Otherwise, a second video with a different song will follow the first.

-If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears.

-If a song begins partway through the video, click pause, move the slider to the beginning, and then click play.

-An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.

May Thursday Evenings at All Hallows be a blessing to you.

Thursday's Catch: 'Faithful Christian Organizations: A Better Way to Stay on Course' And More


For any organisation to lose sight of its mission is regrettable. But if the organization’s mission has something to do with the person and mission of Jesus, it’s not just regrettable; it’s tragic. And yet it happens. All. The. Time.
Local churches suffer from mission drift just like other Christian organization. Among the reasons for the losss of interest in Christianity and the decline in church attendance in the United States and Canada is mission drift and its effects upon the life, ministry, and worship of the local church.
A Promise of Provision: 4 Benefits of Embracing an Abundance Mentality
Rejecting scarcity thinking and adopting an abundance mentality produces at least four life-changing results as you lead your church or ministry.

Look to Proverbs for Leadership Training
Leaders are learners, and great leaders are constantly seeking wisdom from those who have gone before them.

Preaching from a Place of Fullness
The contrast at the heart of this post is between periods of ministry where one’s reserves are low, and periods of ministry where the heart feels at capacity with the glory of God and the loveliness of Christ. They are starkly different experiences.

Appalachian Music Meets Anglican Liturgy in East Tennessee
Guitar, fiddle, mandolin, banjo, dulcimer, and harmonica often ring out alongside the organ and piano from the 1861 brick building in the historic district of Elizabethton, Tennessee. In recent years, St. Thomas Episcopal Church has focused on integrating bluegrass music into the Anglican liturgy, and the resonance of the two traditions has helped revitalize the parish, says its rector, the Rev. Timothy Holder.
Every region has its own particular music culture and in employing its music in services of public worship and other church gatherings a local church can build bridges with the community and reflect the community more closely. One of my favorite settings for the gospel acclamation--the alleluia sung to herald the reading of the Gospel at the Holy Eucharist is Timothy Fish's "Happy Land Alleluia." Fish composed service music for Roman Catholic parishes in Appalachia, using America folk hymn tunes with which the parishioners were familiar. The tune of this particular setting is the tune of the hymn, "There Is a Happy Land." In the region of Kentucky in which I live shaped-note hymns and songs have a long history. A neighboring town is the home of the Southern Harmony Big Sing, in which I have had the pleasure of participating.
Got Reverence? Try Minor-Key Songs on Sunday.
So many of us want God to be our friend but not our sovereign. We accept his transcendence, but we love his immanence.

How to Write Dynamic Agendas for Your Home Groups
Watch a bird in flight, and you will notice the two wings do not flap randomly; they are in perfect sync with one another. The cell church is often called a “two-winged” church, able to reach new heights because of the connection of its large-group and small-group wings. Just as in the early church, a synergy combines the dynamic of corporate gatherings and the intimate sharing of home groups (Acts 2:42-47).

Keeping Up With the Harvest
At Worship Harvest Church in Uganda, missional communities are literally front and center. Most weeks during Sunday morning worship, a different missional community group of five to 30 people takes the stage, and one or more of its leaders tell a story of God at work through the group.

Why Some People Aren’t Christians 
In this article Tim Challies shares four reasons he has found why people do not become Christians.

3 in 5 US workers fear sharing religious views in the workplace: survey
Nearly two-thirds of employed adults in the United States believe that respectfully explaining their political or religious beliefs at work can result in negative repercussions, according to a new report.
Christians are often unwilling to share their religious beliefs regardless of whether there might be negative repercussions because they have internalized the cultural attitude that religion is a private matter and adherents of a particular religion should keep their religious beliefs to themselves and not to talk about them, much less proselytize other people. This is particularly true of the younger generations.

Wednesday, March 15, 2023

Wednesday's Catch: 'Saddleback’s Andy Wood Explains Female Teaching Pastors Are Biblical, Female Elders Are Not' And More


Saddleback’s Andy Wood Explains Female Teaching Pastors Are Biblical, Female Elders Are Not
On Friday (Mar. 10), Saddleback Church lead pastor Andy Wood released a video responding to the Southern Baptist Convention’s (SBC) recent determination that the denomination’s largest church is no longer “in friendly cooperation with the Convention.”

Research Reveals Importance of Small Groups, Evangelism, Assimilation for Church Growth
A Lifeway Research study finds church growth requires active small groups, focused evangelism, and the assimilation of new believers.

5 Things Future Church Planters Should Be Doing Right Now
Have you sensed the Lord’s calling to plant a church? Here are five things future church planters can do now to prepare to be sent later.

How to Avoid Being Blindsided by Your Own Church
Charles Stone has, in his words, "found that creating a genogram of your church, called a family diagram in psychology, can yield much insight into how people may have perpetuated unhealthy patterns in a church. It’s simply taking a bird’s eye view of your church’s past, looking for connections, and drawing them out."

John K. Jenkins Sr.: The Apostle Paul’s Secret to Preaching
This article was adapted from a talk John K. Jenkins Sr., pastor of First Baptist Church of Glenarden in Maryland, gave at the 2022 Amplify Outreach Conference. To register for this year’s conference on October 17th & 18th go to AmplifyConference.org.

Are your sermons hard or easy to listen to?
In this post Charles Stone shares some interesting insight about the brain that can make your sermons easier to listen to.

Match of the Day Without Commentary - Lessons for the Church
In church services and other church gatherings we can fail to pay attention to what is important because there is too much comment on what is happening to simply enjoy it and participate.

3 Common Mistakes We Make When Reading the Bible
Wyatt Graham identifies three common mistakes we make when reading the Bible.

How the Holy Spirit Helps Us Read Scripture
Good interpretation is ... dependent on the ongoing work of the Spirit to in-spire us to understand, receive, and apply what God has spoken. We call this the doctrine of illumination of the Holy Spirit.

Where Should Teens Look for Answers?
3 reasons we must steer them to the Bible as their No. 1 source.

New Program Offers Accreditation for Child Safety Standards
An 80-point checklist provides churches with opportunities for accountability, awareness, and conversation.

The First Seven Things to Do When a Child Accepts Christ in Your Church
A child in your church decides to follow Christ. There is no greater decision! Now what?

What Does a Mature Disciple of Jesus Look Like?
If the church is about making disciples of Jesus Christ for the transformation of the world, then we need to know what that looks like. As Stephen Covey said, begin with the end in mind. Here is what Jack Shitama came up with.

Rise in LGBTQ+ Population Slows
According to the latest Gallup survey, the rise in the percentage of Americans who identify as LGBTQ+ leveled out in 2022.

Five charts that explain the desperate turn to MAGA among conservative white Christians
White Christians’ attempt to halt their demographic slide has fostered two narratives of American life.

Tuesday, March 14, 2023

Tuesday's Catch: 'How to Rekindle Your Heart for Evangelism' And More


For years, the Billy Graham Center has been gathering senior pastors into cohorts that meet monthly to receive encouragement and accountability in their personal witness, and to be equipped to lead their churches in evangelism. Denny Johnson of Annandale (Minnesota) Evangelical Free Church is one of about 60 pastors currently in an evangelism cohort.

How The Church Has Failed Single People (And What To Do About It)
Based on recent studies, over 40% of Christians in America are single and between the ages of 30 to 49. It’s time we start correcting our own assumptions about singleness. Society has gotten better about not making single people feel like outcasts. This is a mentality shift we need to adopt in the church as well.

Familiarity Blindness in your Church: 7 Ways to Cure It
Familiarity blindness afflicts many church ministries. We get accustomed to doing things a certain way, become so familiar with our surroundings, or slip into a ministry rut that we become oblivious to their staleness or their need for change.

3 Reasons Your Sermons Should Be Shorter
The job of a preacher is not to tell the congregation everything there is to know about a particular Bible passage. His job is to convey its central message and how it can be applied to their lives.

6 Helps To Pray When It Doesn’t Seem Like It’s Working
Dan Reiland offers 6 suggestions regarding what we can do when praying does not seem like it is working.

Do You Know What Group Leaders are Teaching in Your Church?
Three things are critical to ensuring group leaders are truly discipling individuals and leading them into a closer walk with Christ.

Seven Signs You May be Losing Your Love for Your Church . . . and What to Do about It
It happens. Even those who deeply love their local congregation sometimes go through situations and circumstances that test that love. In some cases, that love slowly erodes—almost imperceptibly. Here are some signs you might be losing your love....

Monday, March 13, 2023

Monday's Catch: 'As the American Church Shrinks, Global Christianity Can Point the Way Forward' And More


As the American Church Shrinks, Global Christianity Can Point the Way Forward
We believe the voices and presence of global Christians represent hope for a new, more faithful future.

Seven Considerations If You Are a Church Member Planning on Leaving Your Church
Thom S. Rainer gives seven things that we should consider before leaving our church.

How To Hear God’s Voice: 5 Things You’re Forgetting To Do
God speaks in as many different ways as there are people to hear him. Here are some of his most common forms of communication.

50 Thoughts on Preaching
Good advice for pastors and lay preachers.

How to Improve Singing Pitch – 7 Great Tips
If you are a singer or working with singers, here are seven keys for how to improve singing pitch.

5 Myths People Spread About Jesus, Sex and Gay Marriage
In his teaching Jesus does make reference to sex between members of the same sex but in a roundabout way. He uses the word, "porneia," which in some versions of the Bible is translated as "fornication." This word, however, has more than one meaning. Fornication is just one of its meanings. At the time of Jesus' earthly ministry it included not only sex outside of marriage but also sex between members of the same sex and beastiality, sex with an animal. The broader meaning of the word "porneia" is often overlooked.

Saturday, March 11, 2023

Sundays at All Hallows (Sunday, March 12, 2023) Is Now Online


Welcome to Sundays at All Hallows! The best description of All Hallows Murray is an online gathering place for Christians and those exploring the Christian faith. The services of praise, proclamation, and prayer that are offered on this blogsite are not intended to replace those of a local church but are offered for the benefit of those who are unable to attend a local church for any reason, who may be traveling, or who wish to test the water before taking the plunge, or who otherwise may benefit from them.

Readings: Exodus 17: 1-7; John 4: 5-42

Message: What Jesus Teaches Us about Planting and Reaping

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2023/03/sundays-at-all-hallows-sunday-march-12.html

Please feel free to share this link with anyone who may be interested.

If you are new to Sundays at All Hallows, you may find these directions helpful:

-When you open the link to a video in a new tab, check auto-play to make sure it is in the off position. Otherwise, a second video with a different song will follow the first.

-If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears.

-If a song begins partway through the video, click pause, move the slider to the beginning, and then click play.

-An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.

May Sundays at All Hallows be a blessing to you.

Saturday Lagniappe: 'What God Wants From Your Church' And More


Jesus said He would build His church, but He chose to do that through us. It’s a divine partnership. His purpose and power, our calling and responsibility.

Rick Warren Shares With Russell Moore the Scriptures That Convinced Him Women Pastors Are Biblical
Rick Warren peeled back the curtain on why he believes it is biblical for women to serve as pastors and elders in the church this week (Mar. 8) while speaking with Russell Moore on “The Russell Moore Show” podcast.
This article goes into more detail than the article that I posted Friday.
How to Revitalise a Dormant Church
David Brown, a pastor based in Paris, has nearly half a century of experience revitalising churches across Europe. Christian Today speaks to David about his new book, Reconnect Your Church, and how churches can stay healthy and prevent decline.

What to Do When Revival Comes
"Suppose genuine revival breaks out. What should my priorities be?" D. A. Carson responds to this question.

4 Reasons Jesus Used Parables
Jesus used so many parables in his teaching that it begs the question: Why did Jesus choose to communicate in this way? Why didn’t he speak forthrightly to the crowds that gathered around him?

Bibliolatry: the Exvangelical Boogeyman
David Beadle shares his views on the relationship of Scripture and the sacraments and more.

Don’t Blame the Church Sound Guy: 5 Reasons It’s Not His Fault
Calen Neff gives 5 reasons that it may not be the sound guy's fault for sound issues that you are experiencing in your church's worship services.

Don't Try to Fix Your Group
The purpose of a small group is not to "fix" its participants.

Identifying—and Challenging—Our Biases
As a general rule, we can only do better when we know better. We only know better when we lean in, listen, reflect, and grow.
Everyone has biases, unfair personal opinions that influence their judgment. Some biases are more evident than others.
These 6 Questions Will Reveal How Well You Love Your Neighbors
What does it look like to keep ourselves accountable to joining with God on his mission in our neighborhood?

Friday, March 10, 2023

The Disaffiliation Dilemma: A Viewpoint


By Robin G. Jordan

When clergy and congregations in a denomination disagree to the point that some are considering parting company with the others and going their own way as a new denomination or church network or as independent non-denominational churches, what we are likely to hear is each side of an issue expressing their perceptions of the other side of the issue and the situation itself. Both sides of the issue will begin to look at each other’s perceived flaws. These flaws may have some basis in reality, or they may be imaginary. 

Perceptions, after all, are perceptions. They are beliefs and opinions based on how things seem and not how they are. They may be informed more by biases and fears than they are reality.

It is a process very similar to what a couple or a pair of friends may go through before one or both break off the relationship or friendship. It is far harder to part company with someone with whom we are on good terms, so we begin to notice small faults that we previously ignored and magnify them, or we imagine faults where there are none. The object is to make the other person in our own eyes undesirable as a spouse, partner, or friend. This makes breaking up with them easier and simpler and yes, guilt-free. It enables us to pursue a relationship or friendship with a more attractive or interesting or otherwise more desirable person without them in the way.

A part of this process is to convince others that a relationship or friendship with that person is undesirable so that they will support and affirm our decision. In the case of clergy and congregations they not only want others to support and affirm their decision but also to join them because joining them is very strong way of affirming and support their decision. The more who join them, the more supported and affirmed they are going to feel. Ultimately, it boils down to, “Yes, we are making the right decision. See how many other clergy and congregations agree with us.”

It is comparable to the reason that teenagers give their parents for doing or wanting to do something of which their parents may not approve, “But all my friends are doing it!” The thinking is that if a number of people are doing something, it must be okay to do. This, however, is flawed reasoning. Because a large number of people are making the same mistake does not make that mistake any less a mistake.

As with case of a new relationship or friendship, the new denomination or church network or independent, non-denomination church status may prove not to be what we had thought that it would be. The person for whom we rejected our old spouse, partner, or friend may prove over time to not be as desirable as we initially thought them to be. They may have their own share of faults, flaws and shortcomings, that we did not notice when we first met them but have become all too apparent.

This is likely to happen when clergy and congregations join a denomination or church network in formation. With an existing denomination or church network, they have some idea of what challenges they may face. But this will not be the case with a new denomination or church network or independent, non-denominational church status.

When it comes to becoming a independent, non-denominational church, a congregation and its clergy cannot assume that it will do well on the basis of the experience of other churches which have taken that step. Every church is different as are its circumstances. An aging church with minimal connections to its community is not likely to flourish while a young church with many connections to its community may have a far better chance of flourishing.

A substantial number of churches in every denomination in the United States is experiencing declining attendance. The factors contributing to the decline in attendance are complicated, and disaffiliation is not likely to be panacea for this problem or the other problems of a church. 

While independent, non-denominational churches are doing better than denominational churches, this is not necessarily going to happen when a church takes the step of becoming independent and non-denominational. Other factors come into play.

While the grass may appear green and lush on the other side of the fence, this may be an illusion. We may see it as greener and lusher than the grass on our side of the fence because we want it to be. The grass may be just as brown and sparse as on our side of the fence. It may be worse.

While proponents of disaffiliation may paint a rosy picture of the future of a particular church and those opposed to disaffiliation a more dismal picture of its future, a church needs to conduct a realistic appraisal of what it will be facing if it adopts a particular course of action. A new denomination or church network will not be able to offer much of a safety net for clergy and congregations that join it. Those who become independent and non-denominational will have no safety net at all. It needs to take a hard look at its community and its possibilities for growth. Since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic we have seen a growing number of churches closing their doors, both conservative and progressive churches.

When churches that identify themselves as Biblically orthodox disaffiliate from a denomination or break away from a denomination, they weaken the Biblical orthodox witness in that denomination. They reduce the presence of self-identified Biblically orthodox clergy and lay delegates in the denomination’s governing bodies. They also reduced the number of self-identified Biblically orthodox clergy in the ranks of the denomination’s clergy. Their departure may actually make a major contribution to what they fear may happen in the denomination. They may believe that they are doing the right thing, even quote Scripture in support of their decision, but they would have served God better if they had stayed. Discerning what is the best place for a church to serve God is not something that can be done in a few short weeks, much less overnight.

In the late nineteenth century evangelical Episcopalians unhappy with developments in the then Protestant Episcopal Church in the USA broke away from that denomination and formed the Reformed Episcopal Church. As a result, the Episcopal Church lost its evangelical wing and what those who had departed from the denomination feared came to pass. They had removed a major obstacle to these developments, themselves. 

The Reformed Episcopal Church initially experienced a period of growth and expansion and then plateaued. 144 years later the Reformed Episcopal Church is in a number of ways indistinguishable from the Episcopal Church. Primarily it is more politically and socially conservative than the denomination from which its founders broke away.

In the 1970s a number of Episcopalian clergy and congregations broke away from the Episcopal Church over women’s ordination and prayerbook revisions. They would form the short-lived first Anglican Church in North America which quickly fragmented into a number of small jurisdictions. The Anglican Mission in America formed in the closing decade of the last century would eventually split over reaffiliation with the second Anglican Church in North America. The second Anglican Church in North America formed in reaction to developments in the Episcopal Church in the first decade of this century has held together so far, but it has a number of internal divisions. For a number of clergy and congregations who joined the new denomination, it has not turned out to be what they had hoped that it would be. It is moving in a direction with which they are not entirely happy.

While the proponents of disaffiliation would prefer only to look at the upside of disaffiliation and to have others join them in looking at its upside, disaffiliation does have its downside. It will have consequences that will affect the denomination from which a church is disaffiliating but also the church itself. 

For some churches it may be an easy path to take but for others it will be fraught with all kinds of perils. In the meantime, the denomination in question may be losing the wide range of diverse opinions that it needs to fulfill Christ’s mission for his Church. 

We live in an increasingly diverse world and face challenges which require diverse approaches. We must tailor our approach to the challenge and not expect one approach, our preferred approach, to meet all challenges. That calls for a diversity of thinking and not a “my way or the highway” approach.

Friday's Catch: 'The Church Has Left The Building – But WE Are Still the Church!' And More


The Church Has Left The Building – But WE Are Still the Church!
Whether the church has left the building or when we are at home and when we are together, we are still the church. Who we are and how we are living should flow seamlessly between those worlds without friction or tension. What we do in one place, we should be able to just as freely do in another place and our faith should reach beyond the walls of church into the everyday life we live.
The COVID-19 pandemic has caused Christians to think about the nature of the church. While our weekly gatherings are an important part of the Christian faith and way and life, they are not the church. The church exists beyond the four walls of a building and outside our weekly gatherings.
Rick Warren shares 3 Bible passages that changed his mind on women pastors
Pastor Rick Warren makes a case for the ordination of women pastors, based on three passages of Scripture. This raises the question whether we may be giving too much weight to what Paul wrote and not enough what to what is written elsewhere in the New Testament.

‘Vengeance is mine,’ says the Lord
Former President Trump’s “I am your retribution” comments at CPAC have created the expected firestorm...," writes Dr. Michael Browne. He goes on to explain what the New Testament teaches us about vengeance and retribution.

Leave Vengeance to God
J. D. Greear remind us that vengeance is God's prerogative.

5 Things Every Pastor Can Give up for Lent
As you consider how to draw near to God during Lent, remember no matter what you give up, this is a season for surrender and renewal.

4 Ways To Learn From Other Churches About Worship
We can learn from other churches. At the same time we need to make sure that if we copy what another church does, what that church does is the right thing for our circumstances.
Based upon my own experience and reading, a good practice is to tailor a church's worship to its circumstances and not to try to slavishly imitate what some other church is doing. The circumstances of that church may differ from ours--the community, the worship setting, the resources, the ministry target group, and that sort of thing. What works for that church may not work for ours.
10 Things You Should Know About Lifting of Hands in Worship
While clergy and members of some mainline and evangelical churches associate uplifted hands in worship with charismatic and Pentecostal churches, it is a Biblical practice.

5 Toxic Small Group Ministry Moves
I’ve noticed that there is a short list of small group ministry moves that can be toxic. They often seem harmless. They don’t look dangerous. But they can cause great damage.
Because a Bible class or adult Sunday school class has a few people in attendance does not make it a small group. The way a small group is conducted differs from the way a Bible class or adult Sunday school class is conducted. The group dynamics are different.
One Reason Personal Evangelism's More Difficult These Days
Chuck Lawless describes one of the obstacles to personal evangelism in the twenty-first century.

The Many Faces of Islam in Africa
Islam is one of the largest religions in Africa, making up of over 40% of the African population. To ignore Islam is the greatest mistake practicing Christians in Africa can make. Every minister of the gospel in Africa must have an understanding of Islam.
Practicing Christians in the United States and Canada also need to have an understanding of Islam. I live on the outskirts of a small university town in western Kentucky. Muslim American and foreign students attend the university and the town has a mosque, an Islamic center, a halal grocery store, and a Muslim community. They need to see beyond the stereotypical image of Muslims which they may have acquired.
Largest UMC church in Arkansas to amicably split into 3 congregations
A church that is reportedly the largest United Methodist Church congregation in Arkansas has voted to split three ways due to disagreements over the denomination’s longstanding debate over homosexuality.

Over half of Christians say they sometimes experience doubts about their religious beliefs: survey
Over half of Christians say they sometimes experience doubts about their religious beliefs, according to a new study from the prominent Evangelical research organization the Barna Group.

Thursday, March 09, 2023

Thursday Evenings at All Hallows (Thursday, March 9, 2023) Is Now Online


Welcome to Thursday Evenings at All Hallows! The best description of All Hallows Murray is an online gathering place for Christians and those exploring the Christian faith. The services of praise, proclamation, and prayer that are offered on this blogsite are not intended to replace those of a local church but are offered for the benefit of those who are unable to attend a local church for any reason, who may be traveling, or who wish to test the water before taking the plunge, or who otherwise may benefit from them.

Reading: Hebrews 3: 1-6

Message: God’s House Is Not a Building

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2023/03/thursday-evenings-at-all-hallows_9.html

Please feel free to share this link with anyone who may be interested.

If you are new to Thursday Evenings at All Hallows, you may find these directions helpful:

-When you open the link to a video in a new tab, check auto-play to make sure it is in the off position. Otherwise, a second video with a different song will follow the first.

-If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears.

-If a song begins partway through the video, click pause, move the slider to the beginning, and then click play.

-An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.

May Thursday Evenings at All Hallows be a blessing to you.

Thursday's Catch: 'Inspecting the American Evangelical House: Why We Need Missionary Lenses' And More


Missionary Matthew Bennett invites the American evangelical to inspect and treat their current context as if it were new to them.

Teen Girls in Crisis
The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) recently released its Youth Risk Behavior Data Summary and Trends Report: 2011-2021. If there was one headline above all others it would be this: “Teen Girls Are in Crisis.” As the Washington Post reported, stark findings “on the pervasive sadness, suicidal thoughts and sexual violence endured by teen girls have jolted parents and the wider public.” And jolted they should be.

7 Paradigms Which Can Encourage Church Growth
Go and make disciples really is the plan for church growth.

Give Your Church the Gift of Theological Education
Education in theology is a gift, and there are many avenues for instruction. May you fan the flame of another’s hunger for God and His Word.

How to lead Volunteers Who Are Older Than You
When I started in full-time ministry at the age of 22, I faced a challenge that all young leaders face. Trying to lead volunteers who are older than you. And at the age of 22, most of my volunteers were older than me.

In North Idaho, religious and secular activists work to fight Christian nationalism In a recent editorial, Episcopal Bishop Gretchen Rehberg decried Christian nationalism as ‘heresy for Christians and dangerous rhetoric for all Americans.’

Wednesday, March 08, 2023

Wednesday's Catch: 'How Your Church Can Help the Overlooked Children Affected by Abuse and Neglect' And More


Foster children are one of our nation’s most overlooked and underserved groups. Most communities struggle to find placements for these children. Local churches in the United States have more than enough homes to solve the problem, but few Christian families are pursuing fostering. What happens when people in your congregation start fostering children?

Without women, no shift of Christianity's center to Global South
Women make up the majority of the Christian church in every country of the world. Without women, there would have been no shift of Christianity’s center of gravity to the Global South. Without women, there would not have been such explosive growth in the Chinese house church movement.

7 Ways We Make People Feel Unwelcome At Our Church
From very personal experience Ron Edmondson identifies a number of ways that churches make people feel unwelcome.

Recognizing When the Mission Field Becomes a Mission Partner
It’s time for many majority culture churches to enter new ministry relationships with Hispanic churches—from mission field to mission partner.

The legacy of a decade of Pope Francis
Francis has opened windows that are difficult to close.

Sunday Liturgy without a Priest: Part Two (Morning Prayer and Antecommunion)
As increasing numbers of parishes are left without the services of a priest, decisions about how to celebrate the liturgy on Sundays loom ahead. Part one of this series considered and found wanting the idea of Communion by Extension. In this installment, I consider two far more viable options.
A fourth option which I do not expect Keane to consider in this series of articles is licensing deacons and lay readers to administer the sacrament of Holy Communion, not just to distribute the consecrated elements but to consecrate them. One does not need a Masters of Divinity to offer a heartfelt prayer of thanksgiving over bread and wine. The governing documents of the Reformed Evangelical Anglican Church of South Africa (REACH South Africa, formerly the Church of England in South Africa), permit the authorization of deacons and lay readers to consecrate the elements under special circumstances. The governing documents of the Reformed Episcopal Church at one time authorized missionary bishops to do the same in missionary districts. During the COVID-19 lockdown the archbishop of the Diocese of Sydney authorized diaconal and lay administration of the sacrament. The Evangelical Lutheran Church at one time had a provision in its governing documents that permitted the authorization of deacons to consecrate and distribute the elements in the absence of a pastor. The ELC would but discontinued the practice as a result of an intercommunion agreement with the Episcopal Church. The governing documents of the Methodist Church in Britain authorize the licensing of licensed local pastors/preachers to consecrate and then distribute the elements as do those of the United Methodist Church.
The Bible is Clear to Those Who Obey: The Clarity of Scripture Part 4
Certainly, there are intellectual challenges to interpretation because of our human limitations, and the clarity of Scripture needs to account for those. Still, God has spoken clearly in his Word, and we know that because we know that God is good. So why does Scripture still seem obscure to so many?

Why Youth Ministry Is Important
Here are three factors that make underscore that youth ministry is important for the future of the church....

Put Down the Fear-Filled Play Book
If it’s Monday, I must have an email from the Institute on Religion and Democracy bemoaning the conduct of United Methodist bishops. Indeed, I woke up this past Monday to see a lengthy lament, this time written by John Lomperis, complaining about episcopal leadership. Again.
Dissafiliating from a denomination and joining a breakaway group may not be the best response to the challenges that Christians face in that particular denomination. It can leave the denomination without a Biblically orthodox witness at a time whne it needs one. Break away groups have their own problems. What looks like lush green grass from a distance may prove to be an illusion.