Tuesday, November 30, 2021

It's Tuesday: 'Narnia Meets Middle Earth' and More


Narnia Meets Middle Earth
In this article Devin Brown, professor of English at Asbury University tells the story of the friendship of C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkein

Did the Early Church Oppose Abortion?
The early Church opposed abortion and infanticide and rescued and adopted abandoned babies and children,

12 Signs You Are a Modern-Day Pharisee
Phariseeism is not only alive and well in the American Church, it is estimated that more than one half of US Christians are strongly influenced by its way of thinking. Christians who emulate the character of Jesus and his teaching and his example are in the minority. Indeed they form a very small segment of the American Church.

The Most Impactful Tech Shift Your Church Can Make
Online giving sees slower growth than online worship. But churches that adopted onlinge giving have benefited from taking that step.

Anglican Network in Canada Founds Packer College The ANiC will be launching a new seminary named in honor of the late J.I. Packer in Fall 2022.

Monday, November 29, 2021

It's Monday: 'Supporting Families This Advent: Should You Make a Shift?' and More


How is your church going to support young families during the holidays?

Offering Hope, Comfort, and Healing this Advent
...we must approach Advent differently this year. We have to be more nimble, thoughtful, compassionate, and responsive than perhaps we’ve ever been.

No One Took Christ Out of Christmas
Let’s dispense with our worries that Christmas as we know it isn’t Christian.

6 Economic Factors That Will Impact Churches in 2022
With so much movement in the U.S. economy coming out of the 2020 recession, six specific factors will directly affect churches in 2022.

3 Keys to an Effective Guest Services Team
...these are the most important responsibilities of a guest services team....

Take This First Simple Step before You Respond
It is a mistake to assume that you know what someone else is talking about.

How Eagle Feathers and Copper Mines Might Alter Your Religious Liberty
A peculiar case in Arizona has the potential to shape churches, ministries, and schools across the country.

Setting Criteria for a 2022 General Conference
Organizers expect to decide early next year whether General Conference can go forward as scheduled in 2022. In the meantime, they named the values that will guide their decision. In the meantime, they named the values that will guide their decision.

Saturday, November 27, 2021

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Sunday Evening (November 28, 2021) Is Now Online

All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

We cannot hasten Christ’s second coming as some Christians attempt to do. The Son will come again when the Father wills it. It falls to us to watch, to pray, and to serve until that happens.

The Scripture reading for this Sunday evening is Luke 21: 20-38 The Second Coming of Christ.

The homily is titled “Watch, Pray, and Serve.”

The link to this Sunday evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2021/11/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for-sunday_27.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

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

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/


May this service be a blessing to you.

Saturday Lagniappe: 'Why Your Church Needs Advent' and More


"We do feel the world is broken, and we don’t like it—and so our collective tendency is to downplay or deflect those feelings."

The Season for the Reason
The United States is not only facing several epidemics. One is an epidemic of substance abuse.

10 Dangerous Myths About Church Growth
Church growth and church health are not synonymous. A church can be small and healthy. However, a lack of church growth can be a sign of an unhealthy church. It may also be a sign that other factors may be inhibiting a church's growth. We should not be quick to jump to conclusions but carefully examine why our church is not not growing, that is not making new disciples.

8 Tried And True Practices To Lead Up Well
Dan Reiland identifies 8 ways that we can lead from the middle of the pack.

Praise and Worship Leadership – 18 Traps to Avoid
Good advice from Mark Cole.

Small Groups: Ideal Place to Experience Ministry
Looking for a place to minister, join a small group.

The Underground Church
The early Christians held their church meetings in houses. In many places in the world Christians continue to meet in houses and in similar venues. Some meet under trees.

Friday, November 26, 2021

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Saturday Evening (November 27, 2021) Is Now Online


All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

In the stores Christmas merchandise was on display before Thanksgiving Day. On Sunday some churches will sing Christmas hymns and carols. Whatever happened to Adventide—the season of expectancy and preparation? It is a short season but important one—four Sundays to get ready for the coming of a king.

The Scripture reading for this Saturday evening is Jeremiah 33: 14-16 A Promised King.

The homily is titled “Preparing for the Arrival of a King.”

The link to this Saturday evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2021/11/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for-saturday_26.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

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

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

It's Friday: 'The Best (And Least Expensive) Way To Grow Your Church' and More


The Best (And Least Expensive) Way To Grow Your Church
It's probably not what you think.

Being a Christian Does Not Make You Immune to Depression, Hopelessness, and Suicide
Yes, Christians can experience depression, hopelessness, and suicidal thoughts.

Michael Flynn Is Wrong. Christians Shouldn’t Mandate One Religion for Everyone in America.
One has to only look at the history of Christianity in countries where there was one established church to know that it is a bad idea. At best it produces nominalism. At worst it can lead to religious persecution.

A Different Kind of Christian
One of the reasons for the decline in church attendance is that many Christians reflect poorly on Christianity. They do not embody the character, teaching, and example of Christ.

How to Stop Being Crazy – 4 Steps
Craziness is "repeating the same behavior over and over again expecting a different result."

Why Bad Things Happen to People, According to 6,500 Americans
On the problem of evil, Pew’s pandemic philosophy survey finds few blame God or doubt God’s omnipotence, goodness, or existence.

Thursday, November 25, 2021

Count Your Blessings


In difficult times like ours we may be tempted to question God's divine care and guidance.

Psychologists tell us that our brains are hard wired to think negatively. Rather than focusing on the positive things that may be happening in our lives and the lives of other people, we focus on the negative things and exaggerate them in our minds. We fall into the habit of catastrophizing them, viewing them as far worse than they are.

When we find ourselves dwelling upon the negative in life, remember the words of this old gospel song.

When upon life's billows you are tempest tossed,
When you are discouraged, thinking all is lost,
Count your many blessings, name them one by one,
And it will surprise you what the Lord hath done.

When we shift our focus on the positive in life, we will be amazed by the mercies and kindnesses God has shown us. He is a gracious and generous God, showing good even to the wicked and the ungrateful. 

Take a moment to count God's blessings this Thanksgiving, not just the big ones but also the little ones. Then lift up your hands in praise and thank God for all that he has done for you.

Have a happy, safe, and blessed Thanksgiving.

America Cannot Be the Biblical City on a Hill


That's what the church is for.

Last weekend, Lt. Gen. Mike Flynn (Ret.) told a large crowd at the three day Reawaken America tour event held at Cornerstone Church in San Antonio that America should really have just one church and be one nation under one God to be the city on a hill. He went on to say that all of the churches in America needed to come together to help make this happen. Now, some of that is in the Pledge of Allegiance (the one nation under God part) and is well accepted. However, his remarks and call to action caused some people from other religions or no religion to wonder what that kind of vision for our nation would mean for them. Those are good questions, but I wanted to address Flynn’s misuse of Biblical imagery in calling America the “city on the hill.” Read More

Wednesday, November 24, 2021

Tomorrow Is Thanksgiving

I admit I sometimes have ambivalent feelings about Thanksgiving. Is it a gathering of family, significant others, and friends around food? Or is it an occasion for thanking God for his divine care and guidance? Or is it a mixture of the two—a meal together and a time of thankfulness?

Thanksgiving for me usually does not differ from any other day. No church. No school. All by my lonesome. I have no family and no significant other to celebrate Thanksgiving with me where I live.
 
Friends have on occasion invited me to their Thanksgiving celebration. I don’t make a good dinner guest. I am a relatively strict vegetarian on a restricted diet.
 
“We have salad.” I don’t live on lettuce like a rabbit. “Are these bacon bits?” “You can pick them out.”

My friends are well-meaning, and I love them. But vegetarians are not going eat something from which they must first remove pieces of meat or fish. Or in which meat has been used as a seasoning.
 
I am also a diabetic. I am not going to eat pumpkin pie, brownies, sugar cookies, or any other sweets. I might fruit provide no one has sprinkled sugar over it.
 
I must either bring my own food or politely refuse the invitation. I am apt to do the latter.
 
Do I do anything special on Thanksgiving day? Make myself a special Thanksgiving dinner? I think about it. That’s about as far as it gets. The thinking stage.
 
I may look back over the year to date, looking for the times where I experienced God's care and guidance, for things like my new church family, the Freedom Fest parade, VBS Sunday, the Help Food Distribution Ministry, my voice class, and that sort of thing. They are high points and I am grateful for them. I am thankful for all the kindnesses and mercies God has shown me. I may pray a prayer of thanksgiving.

I may also recall the disappointments and the sad moments, the times when things did not go the way I hoped they would.
 
I don't know what part God played in them. He does allow us free will.
 
The special people God has placed in my life do make choices which disappoint and sadden me. I can only trust in God in his way, in his time, to redeem things.
 
God puts the special people in our lives for good, not ill. We are to keep on loving them whatever happens. That’s one of the reasons God put them in our lives.

My prayer is that everyone has a safe Thanksgiving.
 
The winter COVID-19 surge has begun. People drink too much at holidays and drive while they are under the influence. Domestic quarrels often occur on holidays. Children are often abused on holidays. People can turn ugly for no apparent reason.
 
When I was in child protection, we circled the holidays on our calendars in red, the holidays and the full moon. We got the most referral around those times.

May God protect everyone and particularly those who are dear to you.
 
God bless you with every spiritual blessing, in particular with a thankful heart for all the ways God’s grace is working in your lives.
 
Have a blessed and safe Thanksgiving.

It's Wednesday: 'Ministry in the Metaverse' and More


A comment I posted on Facebook about the digital mission field prompted laughter from one individual. The laughter revealed more about that indiviudal than it did my comment. I suspect that the last laugh may be on him. I believe that it would be a grave mistake not to take this paradigm shift seriously. We must minister in the world as we find it, not as we might like it to be.

9 Things to Thank God for Today (and Tomorrow)
You may think of other things that you may wish to add to Brother Chuck Lawless' list. We indeed have a lot to be thankful for.

Research Roundup: 6 Takeaways on the Goodness of Gratitude
A growing body of research shows that gratitude and thankfulness have physical, psychological, and emotional benefits.

3 Reasons Preachers (and Christians) Should Say “I Don’t Know” More Frequently
It does not hurt to admit that we don't know when we don't know.

God’s 5 Purposes for Your Marriage
A major reason for dating someone who shares your beliefs and values.

Intergenerational Ministry: Strive for Understanding, Connectivity 
In my lifetime I have experienced age, gender, and racial discrimination. Because I am an aging, Caucasian male people related to me as a stereotype, and not as a human being, not me, my self.

Tuesday, November 23, 2021

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Wednesday Evening (November 24, 2021) Is Now Online


All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

Thanksgiving is more than a gathering of family, significant others, and friends. It is an occasion for thanking God for his divine guidance and care.

This year we have opportunity to rethink how we celebrate Thanksgiving. The winter surge of COVID-19 cases has begun in many parts of the country. Europe is hard hit by its fourth wave of the COVID-19 virus.

Many families are planning to celebrate Thanksgiving as they did in normal times. We, however, are not living in normal times.

Family members and guests who are fully vaccinated can ditch their masks around each other here in the United States, according to the country’s top medical adviser. But people who are traveling or who do not know the vaccination status of those around them are advised to wear a mask in these situations.

The Scripture reading for this Wednesday evening’s service is Isaiah 12: 2- 6 Hymn of Thanksgiving.

The homily is titled “Called to a Life of Thanksgiving.”

The link to this evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2021/11/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for_23.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

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

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you. 

It's Tuesday: 'The Antidote to Celebrity Church Is Mere Church' and More


The Antidote to Celebrity Church Is Mere Church 
Jesus call us to follow him, not a celebrity preacher.

Foundations of the Cell Church Movement
Great insights into the core concept of the cell church from Joel Comiskey.

5 Digital Shifts That Are Impacting Church Growth
It is a different world from your grandparents'.

5 Posts About the Importance of Reaching College Students
Like I just wrote, it is not your grandparents' world.

Church Speaker Placement 101 – Everything You Need to Know
Church acoustics matter. Nothing can improve the quality of your church sound system as much as determining the proper church speaker placement for your system.

How to Stay Open-Handed & Generous as a Family
Three ways we can be more open-handed during Thanksgiving and Christmas.

How to Deal With People Who Don’t Like You 
While we might wish that everyone liked us, some people regrettably may not take a liking to us.

Monday, November 22, 2021

It's Monday: 'Into the Metaverse' and More


The metaverse--something to keep a close eye on. It will be a game changer. You can count on it.

I Can’t Quit My Evangelical Heritage. Neither Can You.
I grew up in the Church of England and the Episcopal Church and the tradition with which I identified in the Anglican Church was its evangelical tradition. But like American evangelicalism, Anglican evangelicalism has morphed into something unrecognizable from its heyday in the last century. You may disagree but that has been my observation.

Five Problems with Designated Church Giving
Churches need to develop a giving policy and strictly enforce it. Money earmarked for something that a church wil never do is not money earkmarked for the service of God's kingdom.

10 Commandments For Great Discussions
Leading a discussion is a learned skill which all small group leaders should acquire.

Around the Corner and Around the World
Learning to love our neighbor near and far.

How Christians Should Respond in the Age of Skepticism
Solid advice from Ed Stetzer.

Sunday, November 21, 2021

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Sunday Evening (November 21, 2021) Is Now Online


All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

Past generations may have had a better idea of what being a servant meant than we do today. Americans have not had a king since the Revolutionary War. So both the concepts of being a servant and serving a king are unfamiliar to us. A king’ servant was more than an employee. A king’s servant took an oath of loyalty to the king, an oath that bound the servant to obey the king’s commands. It was an oath of loyalty that bound the servant for life. When someone became a servant of a king, they embarked on a new life. Whatever they did or said would reflect well or badly upon the king.

The Scripture reading for this Sunday evening is John 12: 20-33 Jesus speaks of his death.

The homily is titled “Servants of the King.”

The link to this Sunday evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2021/11/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for-sunday_21.html


Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

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

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

Saturday, November 20, 2021

Saturday Lagniappe: '5 Ways to Care for Your Planting Team this Thanksgiving' and More


5 Ways to Care for Your Planting Team this Thanksgiving
Your church does not have a planting team?! Why not?!

Millions Are Mourning. How Can Your Church Respond?
Definitely a must read.

The Biggest Challenge For Young People In Ministry
A few may be called to minister in the church of their dreams, but most of us are not.

5 Reasons That Make It Difficult To Empower Others To Lead
Surrendering and sharing leadership can be a challenge.

How to Be Less Thankful
Satire from A Small Work. (It is satire but some folks may take this article seriously!)

The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly of Screen Time for Kids 
The internet has its upside and downside for kids. For adults too.

Printable Christmas Plays For Church 
I love a good Christmas pageant, but I am glad that I missed the year my church's pageant featured dancing Christmas presents!

Friday, November 19, 2021

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Saturday Evening (November 20, 2021) Is Now Online


All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

We read articles and watch videos in which different views of whether Christians, Jews, and Muslims worship the same God. But do those who call themselves Christians worship the same God? Do we reflect the one true God? Or does our God reflect us?

The Scripture reading for this Saturday evening is 1 John 5: 18-21 Our certain knowledge.

The homily is titled “What or Who Is Your God?”

The link to this Saturday evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2021/11/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for-saturday_19.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

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

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

It's Friday: 'Why I’m Inviting John Leland to Thanksgiving Debates About Christian America' and More


Just as established churches produce nominal Christians so do other state-sponsored forms of religion produce nominal adherents. There is wisdom behind the seperation of church and state clause. We cannot legislate belief.

More Witches than Presbyterians
This article was originally published in 2018 but it points a development of which we should be aware when we as Christians have spiritual conversations with our fellow Christians and non-Christians. Relying on God and resorting to magic are antithetical. Wicca and witchcraft elevate the self as the arbiter of right and wrong, good and evil, and do not draw a clear distinction between them.

I Love Santa
We can celebrate the festivities that have become associated with Christmas and the Christmas Season without losing sight of the main reason for celebrating them--the birth of Jesus.

The Small Group Bump
"The Small Group Boom of 2021 ended up being more of a Small Group Bump, but it was a significant bump. These churches ended up with more small groups than they ever had and more people in groups than ever. And, more of their groups continued. In places where we might have launched hundreds of new groups in more normal times, we launched dozens of new groups instead. They were 'COVID successful.'"

The Brain and Small Groups
This sis the first article in what promises to be an interesting series of articles on the neuroscience of transformation change particularly as it relates to small groups.

Two Ways Social Media is Changing Whether or not you are involved in Christian ministry online, you definitely need to read this article.

Thursday, November 18, 2021

The Death of a Congregation



On Sunday a small Continuing Anglican congregation will gather in its building for the last time. It will celebrate the Holy Eucharist as a congregation for the last time. Several weeks ago, the congregation voted to disband after meeting for fifteen odd years. It had shrunk to a little more than a handful of people. Its building was deconsecrated last Sunday and will be up for auction in the coming weeks.

What happened?

The congregation was not open to change, the kind of change that it needed to make to be viable in the twenty-first century. It would have liked to have had additional members as long as it did not require it to make changes needed to attract them and as long as the new members did not disrupt the way that it did things.

The congregation had weak leadership at critical points in its life cycle. The lay leadership became divided between an official leader and a de facto leader. The latter called the shots. The latter, however, was not someone who should have been leading a church in this century.

The building in which the congregation worshipped was located in a community which at one point none of its members lived. Consequently, the congregation had negligible connections with the community in which it was located. Its longest-serving pastor lived in a different community from the one in which the building was located—roughly a 30 minute drive from that community.

The congregation was inward-looking and not outward-looking. Early in its life some effort was made at community engagement. The members of the congregation did not understand what they were being asked to do, how it worked, or the length of time that it would take. When it did not produce immediate results, they gave up. They adopted the attitude, “We’ve tried everything, and nothing works!” They were highly resistant to attempting anything else.

The congregation relied on the 1928 Book of Common Prayer, The Hymnal (1940), and a traditional style of worship to attract additional members. People living in the region acquainted with these worship resources, much less attached to them, formed a very tiny, shrinking population segment. The congregation made no attempt expand beyond this base. It bound itself to the use of the King James version of the Bible in its bylaws when it could have used more recent translations of the Bible in its services of public worship under the canons of the jurisdiction with which it was affiliated. Members of the congregation, however, used the more recent translations in the Bible reading and study at home.

Demographically the congregation was a good fit with the community in which its building was located. However, its use of the aforementioned worship resources and its particular style of worship were not a good fit. They were too unfamiliar to the occasional visitor to the congregation’s services of public worship from the community. They were, however, what the congregation preferred, and it placed its preferences before community engagement. The services were long and included lengthy recited portions.

The congregation experienced a number of splits in its life cycle as members vied with each other for leadership of the congregation. It changed jurisdictional affiliation several times and was affected by splits in the jurisdictions with which it was affiliated.

The congregation had a poor understanding of the nature and purpose of a local church. Its idea of the local church was a chaplaincy which served the small number of families that formed the congregation. The priest, when the congregation had a priest, functioned as chaplain to these families, instructing them in the faith, administering the sacraments, and meeting their pastoral needs.

The building was used solely for one purpose--a service of public worship on Sundays. It was open for roughly two hours. For the rest of the week it was unused and closed. It was not offered as a meeting place for community groups. 

The congregation was not proactive in welcoming visitors. It had no one at the door to greet them and several minutes might lapse before someone stepped forward to welcome them. Too often congregants waited until the end of the service to greet a visitor. By then the visitor had departed.

The only people in the community that will miss the congregation will be the man who mowed the grounds surrounding the congregation’s building and the pre-natal and maternity clinic which received an annual donation from the congregation.

Why am I posting this postmortem? I am posting it as a warning to other small Anglican congregations. A congregation in decline can make changes at key points in its life cycle, which will give it a new lease on life. This congregation chose not to make those changes. While its members might like to blame circumstances for its demise, it chose to die!

Why Church Planting Is Important


We face an interesting time in our history: Both the supply of churches and the demand for them seems to be decreasing. Never has there been a greater need for more churches than right now. Considering this context, let me share with you five reasons why church planting is crucial today. Read More

Wednesday, November 17, 2021

It's Wednesday: 'The Most Overlooked Place to Plant a Church' and More


The Most Overlooked Place to Plant a Church
There is a difference between being online and having an online campus, meaning a digital campus of your church online. So what does an online campus entail?

Church Is Back, But Where Are the People?
The Barna organization reported one in three practicing Christians stopped attending church since COVID. As many as 32% of those who attended worship in person prior to COVID meeting restrictions seem to have not only quit attending worship, as per mandates, but unplugged online as well.

8 Keys to Recovering Your Missing Churchgoers
How can you recapture those churchgoers who were previously active parts of your congregation but have yet to return?

What Happens When Apps Replace the Offering Plate?
We need to think creatively about the role of giving in corporate worship.

Premarital Sex Is More Taboo for Today’s Devout Christians
Research suggests the current generation of religious young adults might value abstinence more than those in past decades.

How to Pray
Prayer can be hard work. But it is also a joyful and rewarding practice. As we continue to deepen our life of prayer, we’ll find that we crave it when the busyness of life has edged it out.

4 Things The Next Generation Is Looking For
What are young adults actually longing for? Here are four of them....

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Wednesday Evening (November 17, 2021) Is Now Online


All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

Some Christians believe that we are living in the end times? What do you think? Other Christians think that going to church on Sundays is following Jesus? What do you think?

The Scripture reading for this Wednesday evening’s service is Mark 13:1-11 Jesus prophesies the ruin of the Temple.

The homily is titled “Are We Living in the End Times?”

The link to this evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2021/11/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for_17.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

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

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

Tuesday, November 16, 2021

It's Tuesday: 'Your Life vs. Your Lips: Which Demonstrates True Belief?' and More


Have we fully yielded ourselves to Jesus?

Amid COVID-19, Most Churches Provide Hybrid Worship, Half Stopped Picnics
Eight in 10 U.S. churches now provide hybrid worship services, offering options for congregants to worship either in person or online during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a new study from the Hartford Institute for Religion Research. Almost a quarter of churches, the report said, have moderate to severe conflicts about pandemic restrictions.

What is Most Important for a Church Guest Services Team?
Eeic Geiger identifies what he considers the most important responsibility of a guest services team.

4 Roles Scripture Plays in the Life of a Believer
"God isn’t just after your mind; he’s after your heart. And he’s not just after your heart; he’s after everything that makes up you."

Guidelines for Youth Ministry Leaders: Essential Rules for Groups
Youth groups to need guidelines for the protection of the church as well as the youth.

How to Share the Gospel With Kids: Keeping It Simple
Sharing the Gospel with kids is, in my mind, something that we should be regularly in our teaching, not just in a single gospel presentation. Asking children to pray a kids' version of a sinner's prayer, if they do not fully grasp what committing themselves to Jesus means and its implications for their lives, is pointless. It may be gratifying to the children's ministry leader, but it does not mean that the child has yielded themselves to Jesus. They have just done something to please an adult.

Monday, November 15, 2021

It's Monday: 'Anglican Membership Figures Could Be Out by Millions' and More


Anglican Membership Figures Could Be Out by Millions
Estimates of the number of Anglicans worldwide may be seriously overinflated.

Reaching a World of Fake News and Fake Gospels
This article originally appeared in Lausanne Global Analysis by the Lausanne Movement.

Your Church Doesn’t Need More Fans
When applied to church, fan mentality undermines true Christian community.

Don’t Reject God Because of His People
God is faithful even when his people may not be.

4 Reasons You Should Keep Singing Hymns in Church
When I was involved in planning the music of services at my church, I blended the older hymns with newer hymns and worship songs. I selected newer hymns and worship songs that were accessible to the congregation, ones the congregation could learn, master, and sing.

The Songs We Sing Say a Lot About What We Believe
The hymns and worship songs that we sing do echo our beliefs.

Sunday, November 14, 2021

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Sunday Evening (November 14, 2021) Is Now Online


All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

Before the internet, parents played a much greater role in shaping their children’s beliefs and values. Now they have a competitor, and their competitor has their children’s full attention. Who is the competitor? Take a guess.

The Scripture reading for this Sunday evening is Galatians 6: 1-10 Some practical wisdom.

The homily is titled “A Steam Engine, a Spider, and a Babe in a Manger.”

The link to this Sunday evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2021/11/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for-sunday_14.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

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

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

Saturday, November 13, 2021

Elements of Effective Groups


You’ve seen how some groups produce great growth in their members while other groups merely tolerate each other. Some groups excel at reproducing leaders. Other groups seem to just go through the motions. What makes the difference? Read More

Also See:
Helping Your Small Group Deal with Grief


A New Aspect of the Tarot Boom: Diversity in the Deck


Black, Indigenous and Latino American people are leading the rise in tarot's popularity, a new study shows.

Since before the pandemic began, the boom in sales of tarot decks has served to complete a piece of the spiritual puzzle surrounding Generation Z: They may be famously areligious, but they are still getting their spiritual fix through old-school practices such as tarot.

A recent study has now added a new piece: Tarot’s popularity is being led by young people of color.

According to recent research from Springtide Research Institute, young people identifying with various indigenous groups, including First Nations, native Hawaiians and Alaskans, report the highest rate of tarot use, at 64%. That is followed closely by Black youth (62.9%) and then LatinX youth (55.3%). Read More

Photo Credit: Emilie Muñiz
While Generation Z eschews organized religion and may be functional atheists, that is, at a functional level, they live as if there is no God, they do practice divination, fortune telling. This is an interesting trend because it has its counterpart in mainland China and in Japan.In mainland China the Communist Party is officially atheist but many party members engages in divination practices and practices intended to ward off misfortune from themselves and to secure good fortune for themselves. In Japan the two religions with the most adherents are Bhuddism and Shinto. The adherents of these two religions, however, are largely functional atheists. The adherence is cultural. They may observe the festivals, retain a Buddhist priest to conduct a funeral, and purchase good luck charms from a Shinto shrine. Like the Chinese, the Japanese engage in divination practices and practices intended to ward off bad luck  and to secure good luck. In Generation Z we may be seeing the development of a segment of the population whose beliefs are similar to that of the Chinese and Japanese--functionally atheist but having a belief in the supernatural. This is only a few steps away from what existed in the ancient Mediterranean worl during the early years of Christianity--the existence of the cults of several major gods, including the Roman Emperor, whose public rites the population attended, various minor goods such as household gods and personal gods to which families and individuals were devoted, and varous divination practices, and practices for warding off misfortune and securing good fortune

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Saturday Evening (November 13, 2021) Is Now Online

All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

Did you know that we can come to have a greater knowledge of God by loving each other? Yes, when we love one another, we grow in our knowledge of God.

The Scripture reading for this Saturday evening is 1 John 4: 7-13 Let us love: God has shown us love at its highest.

The homily is titled “Love—An Open Window to God”

The link to this Saturday evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2021/11/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for-saturday_13.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

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

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

Friday, November 12, 2021

Give a Dog a Bad Name....


My school librarian in high school was a kind person. Very few students, however, went to the trouble of getting to know her. Rather they chose to believe the rumors spread by students whose sole purpose in attending high school was to be as disruptive as they could and to prove to themselves how mean teachers were.

The negativity bias, or negativity effect, plays a role in social judgments and impression formation, according to a Wikipedia article that I read. As a consequence of this bias, negative information is considered more diagnostic of an individual's character than positive information. It is considered more useful than positive information in forming an overall impression.

People place greater confidence in the accuracy of an impression when it is formed more on the basis of negative traits than on positive ones. They consider negative information more important to impression formation than positive information.

They are also not likely to question or verify that it is accurate or that is logically or factually sound.

In other words, they prefer to believe the worst about other people.

An ordinary person who on rare occasions does something that someone else interprets as scary even it is not from an objective viewpoint something that should elicit a fear reaction will be labeled a scary person. Other people then will treat them as scary person.

It is example of what the English proverb, “Give a dog a bad name and hang him,” means. One only has to besmirch someone’s reputation to cause him to suffer difficulty and hardship.

We may be scary to a few people. We may elicit a reaction of apprehension and uneasiness in them, feelings of anxiety and fear that something bad or unpleasant will happen, feelings of discomfort, and even feelings of embarrassment—self-consciousness, shame, and awkwardness.

Embarrassment may be compared to how we we might feel if we were standing naked in front of someone. We may feel exposed, highly self-conscious, dismayed at being subject to someone else’s rude gaze, and even humiliated. We may feel excited and even aroused. Surprising those feelings may be all mixed together. This itself may further add to our unease.

We are scary to small children who are generally frightened of strangers and unfamiliar people. Babies are easily startled. Even a game of Peek-A-Boo will startle them at first. A child may be naturally fearful by temperament, or they may have had experiences that cause them to distrust strangers and unfamiliar people.

The reaction of adults to us, however, is far more complex. Adults may have had childhood and later life experiences that cause them not to trust other people and to expect the worst from them. They may gravitate to situations where this perception of other people is reinforced.

We may know more about someone than they would like us to know (or they believe that we do whether or not we do) and they do not know how we are going to react (or we are not reacting how they expected us to react).

They are aware that we have knowledge of a socially unacceptable or frowned-upon act that they committed, and they are concerned what we might do with that knowledge and how it might affect how others evaluate them. We may have caught them in telling a lie or in making a mistake.

We may have put them in a socially awkward situation, making them the focus of unwanted attention. I know that on one occasion I innocently put a friend in that kind of situation, intending no harm, but unknowing creating an embarrassing situation for the friend.

We may be more open, straightforward, and honest in expressing my feelings than with which they are comfortable.

We may not react to what they do in the way other people have reacted in the past and they are not able to predict our reactions. Based on their own past experience, they may fear a delayed reaction.

We may elicit unexpected reactions in them, feelings that they did not expect to feel. We may not be scary but what they feel may be scary.

Different things scare different people. We may have ways of thinking and acting which trigger a fear reaction in one individual that do not in others.

These are a few of the things might make us scary to other people.

Most of us are not individuals who goes out of their way to frighten other people and gets off on terrifying them. We simply want to get along with other people and are surprised when they respond to us with fear or apprehension. We are not able to account for their reaction.

Due to the negativity bias it is best to take our time in forming an opinion of other people. Jesus offers us some guidance in this area. He reminds us that we will be measured by the same measurement that we use. He discourages us from focusing on their negative points. He urges us to make allowances and to give them the benefit of the doubt. While Jesus does not specifically refer to the negativity bias, he does exhibit an awareness of that bias in his recognition of our tendency to harshly judge other people and to focus on their faults and to ignore our own.

It is never a good idea to form our opinion of someone based solely on the fear-reaction of someone else to them. Rather than giving us an objective account, they are in all likelihoods sharing with us their perceptions.

I worked as a child protection worker. One of the tasks that we faced in conducting an investigation was sorting out the objective details from the perceptions of those whom we were interviewing. Perceptions are influenced by personal feelings, interpretations, or preconceived opinion not based upon reason or actual experience. For example, a neighbor may have developed a strong dislike for the alleged perpetrator due to past conflicts and consequently their account of what occurred may be colored by their feelings toward the alleged perpetrator.

The negativity bias is one of the factors that affects our perceptions. We may interpret behavior as negative, which is not objectively negative. We may exaggerate the frequency, extent, and seriousness of behavior which we are interpreting as negative. We may blow things out of proportion, make mountains out of mole hills.

For this reason, an investigator seeks to get as many accounts of what happened as possible. It is recognized that each person giving an account of what happened will present themselves in a positive light and will seek to make allies who are sympathetic to them and accept their account of what occurred. The alleged perpetrator may also seek to blame someone else for what happened. If two caregivers were involved, each will seek to shift the blame from themselves to the other caregiver.

As Christians one of the principles by which Jesus taught us to live is to treat other people exactly as we would want them to treat us. We would not want people to form their opinion of us solely on a single person’s perceptions of us, shared in a private conversation. Their perceptions of us may be colored by their feelings toward us and the negative bias may be involved in their feelings. We would want people to form their opinion of us, based upon ourselves.

As J. Michael once said, “Remember, there are always two sides to every story. Understanding is a three edged sword. Your side, their side and the truth in the middle. Get all the facts before you jump to conclusions.”

That said, there are times when our fear-reaction to a particular individual or situation may well serve us.

We feel that someone or something is staring at. Our brains are wired to sense things in our environment of which we may not be consciously aware. The feeling of being stared at is our brain’s way of warning us of a possible danger in our environment.

Someone is in a hurry to get us to go someplace to which we do not want to go, to do something that we do not want to do. They are very persistent and will not take “no” for answer. They want us to leave our friends and go with them. They may grab our arm and try to pull us away from our friends.

We are feeling uncomfortable and apprehensive. It does not matter whether or not we know them. Our brain is warning us of danger. Their behavior are red flags that they are up to no good. They are intent on sexually assaulting us or worse.

At this point I recommend that if we cannot break free from their grasp to start screaming as loudly as we can to draw other people’s attention to what is happening. Break away from them and call 911 or get someone else to call 911.

It is better to make a scene that be found dead sometime later in a dumpster, a wooded area, or a river. The key thing is to not let our fear keep us from acting.

We pass a coworker or fellow student. They are very agitated. We are picking up their agitation and it is making us uncomfortable. If we are entering our workplace or school building, turn around and walk back outside and quickly away from the building, putting some distance between us and the building. Call someone in the building and tell them what is happening. Call 911. It may be a false alarm. It also may save lives.

There are situations in which our fear-reaction can protect us and others. We need to learn more about those kinds of situations.

It's Friday: 'How to Spot a Personality Cult' and More


How to Spot a Personality Cult
If a pastor of a church does not point past himself to Jesus, something is seriously in that church. We are called to follow Jesus, not a pastor. A pastor is an undershepherd. He is not "the" shepherd.

Kindness in a World Gone Mad
Kindness does not come easily.

Loving Your Neighbor and Neighborhood More Vital Than Ever
“When Jesus instructed His followers to ‘love your neighbor as yourself,’ there were no strings attached."

Why We Must Persevere in Prayer
Matt Brown offers us encouragement from the Book of Daniel to persevere in prayer.

5 Posts about Small Groups and Small Group Leaders
A Sunnday School class can be a small group, but all Sunday school classes are not small groups. While some small groups may have up to 12 participants, the optimal size for a small group is 5 to 7 participants. To achieve life transformation in a small group it is a good to rotate the different leadership roles weekly.

Sunday School Games: 10 Active Indoor Games That Help Kids Grow Their Faith
Plus a bonus of 4 more games.

The Joy of Living in a World Gone Wrong
"Don’t despair when you see how badly this world needs repair. Stand up and stand out. This is what makes the Christian life an adventure."

Wednesday, November 10, 2021

Praying the Scriptures


May Christ’s love delight your spirit today.

To pray the Scriptures and hide them in our hearts, so they re-emerge in times of need for decades to come, I’ve learned that we must have a few things in place for a 7 day period.
  • An accessible version of an encouraging passage
  • A time we repetitively do something else (like brushing our teeth)
  • A way to keep the passage in front of us throughout the day
I created the following as an example, with a special PDF (below) to help. Read More

9 Reasons Your Church Might Need a Choir


Most of the churches I’ve been a member of over 45+ years have had a choir. I realize that’s unusual now. I understand the various reasons for churches doing away with a choir, and I’m not arguing that every church should have a choir—but it might be the right move for your church. Here are some reasons why... Read More
A choir may be described as a committee of the congregation that leads and supports the congregation in singing the hymns, songs, and service music of a service. Its performance of special music is secondary. From what I have seen is that praise teams do not lead and support congregational singing. They sing instead of the congregation. The congregation listens or plays games on their cell phones, waiting for the main event--the sermon. The Sunday gathering is no longer corporate worship. The members of the congregation are no longer participants. They are an audience. 

4 Hacks to Recruiting New Small Group Leaders


Recruiting new small group leaders can feel like an all-year all-hands-on-deck operation. The ratio of people looking for groups versus people willing to lead seems like it skews to the latter.

Before becoming a pastor, I worked as an admissions counselor at a college. My role focused on recruiting students to apply and attend the college. Some nights, I would go to a college fair where three people would talk with me. Other times, I sat with four students over a cup of coffee who ended coming to the school.

Perhaps, the word recruiting comes across as too sales-y for you. Goals and metrics mattered to me as a pastor and admissions counselor, but the relationships meant the most. In many ways, we need to shift our view of “recruiting” to see it as ongoing relationship building.

As I think about my last eight years on staff as a Small Group Pastor and as an admissions counselor, I want to offer you a few recruiting hacks that you can start using today as a small group point person.... Read More

Tuesday, November 09, 2021

Effective Cell Group Lessons You Can Use


These lesson ideas work for any small group, not just cell groups.

The goal of my men’s life group is to make everyone a disciple who makes other disciples. This should be the goal of every cell group. Although I lead the group, I’m more of the coach than the leader. That is, my role is to make sure everyone in the group is participating and becoming a disciple in the process. Cell group lessons must support this goal.

Part of the discipleship process is that each one leads the lesson time. To ensure this happens, we rotate each month. That is, one person rotates each month leading the Welcome time (icebreaker); another person rotates leading the Worship time; another person rotates leading the Word (lesson time), and another person will rotate leading the Witness time. Are some naturally better in leading the lesson time? Yes, definitely. But the point is not to place the best person in front of the group but to make disciples by giving everyone the opportunity. Remember that people become disciples in the process of participating, rather than merely listening. Read More