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Real-world guide to the challenges, rewards, and advantages of bivocational ministry. Excellent for individuals and churches exploring pastoring options.
Like a fraying rope, pastoral ministry is often strained and stressed. Expectations seem unending, relationships strain to breaking, and emergencies and interruptions drain a minister's time and energy. If not handled well, the pressures of ministry can have negative effects on a pastor's health, family, and ministry. The Healthy Pastor confronts the expectations churches and ministers have of the pastor's role. With insight and understanding, author Dennis Bickers addresses some of the pressures commonly found in ministry. He identifies them and provides effective solutions to help pastors create balance in several areas of their lives, including their relationships with God, their families, the church, and themselves. A practical resource for all ministers, The Healthy Pastor will help you recapture the joy and excitement of serving God and his people. Book jacket.
Over the years, our nation's value system has been disrupted. During the rise of our present generation and the birthing of a new generation, our nation's caring and compassion appear to have diminished. People are more concerned with their own self-preservation and self-worth. Careers have become the focal point of men and women alike. People have become self-centered, looking for the advancement of their cause, and unfortunately, it is at the expense of love and compassion. Why is compassion in our society on the decline? Dr. Donald Davis seeks to find the causes of and solutions to this decline in his study, The Demise of Compassion: A Casualty of a Changing Culture. In this study, Dr. Da...
Do you understand the difference between a leader and a manager? How does your organization choose its leaders? Does your organization need vision? Are there undeveloped leaders under your supervision? Using home-spun humor and real life experiences, Mark T. Sorrels gives us a winner in this easy to read guide to better leadership that will have an immediate and positive impact upon your effectiveness as a leader. Conference Speaker, Seminar Leader, Pastor, and High School Football Analyst, Mark T. Sorrels was educated at Indiana University Southeast and Boyce Bible School (now known as Boyce College). He lives in southeast Indiana with his wife and son where he enjoys fishing and classic movies.
Would it surprise you to know that New Testament scholars, missiologists, and church-planting authorities cannot agree on how to define tentmaking, whether or not the church should be practicing it today, or even why Paul did it in the first place? It's true. In Tentmaking, the widespread confusion and overall disagreement within the church regarding Paul's self-support are exposed. Commonly held assumptions are removed from their entrenched positions and myths are debunked. In their place, Tentmaking offers an unadorned yet powerfully convincing presentation of Paul's own self-disclosed reasons for intentionally selecting to support himself in some ministry contexts, but not others. This well-researched book provides answers to crucial questions that currently surround tentmaking, as well as a practical guide intended to lead to the recovery of biblical tentmaking within the church. Readers who pick up this book should be prepared to embark on an engrossing journey that will reward them with clarity on the often-misunderstood topic of Paul's tentmaking.
Tentmaking is a growing reality in Western society that necessitates more reflection and relevant response from pastoral and mission leaders. The need to consider bivocational or multivocational ministries is catalyzed by established congregations wrestling with decline in attendance, by new immigrant communities looking for sustainable ways to minister, and by misunderstanding or lack of information on the nature of this ministry approach. This need is also triggered by the urgency to address biblical, theological, and pragmatic issues of tentmaking that can forge a way forward for the Canadian church in the midst of an uncertain future. This volume seeks to forge a way forward as a result ...
Learn how to succeed in bivocational ministry.
It is likely that you have never considered the possibility of serving as pastor of a local church. The idea may even scare you. However, the best servant leaders are those that feel ill-equipped, unprepared, and even unworthy for such a role. This book is written to help you see a glimpse of the types of men God has graciously given such a significant responsibility. You will find them to simply be ordinary men who were willing to say ÒHere am I. Use me any way you desire to bring glory to yourself God.Ó These men, recognizing they are unworthy, lean on Jesus for everything they must do to fulfill such a calling. They do their Òbest to present themselves to God as one approved, a worker who has no need to be ashamed, rightly handling the word of truth.Ó (2 Timothy 2:15) They are not perfect. They struggle trying to balance family, work, and ministry. But they find indescribable joy through serving God by ministering to GodÕs people and their local community.
In this book, two leading ministry experts place the missional church conversation in historical perspective and offer fresh insights for its further development. They begin by providing a helpful review of the genesis of the missional church and offering an insightful critique of the Gospel and Our Culture Network's seminal book Missional Church, which set the conversation in motion. They map the diverse paths this discussion has taken over the past decade, identifying four primary branches and ten sub-branches of the conversation and placing over one hundred published titles and websites into this framework. The authors then utilize recent developments in biblical and theological perspectives to strengthen and extend the conversation about missional theology, the church's interaction with culture and cultures, and church organization and leadership in relation to the formation of believers as disciples. Professors, students, and church leaders will value this comprehensive overview of the missional movement. It includes a foreword by Alan J. Roxburgh.
In Constructing Blue-Collar Leaders in a White-Collar World . . . "Dr. LaMar Herndon considers a group of leaders often overlooked and occasionally denigrated-the-bivocational pastor. Constructing Blue Collar Leaders in a White Collar World integrates important theoretical leadership concepts with spiritual and practical realities. Dr. Herndon explores important topics such as trends and issues facing the global church and its leaders, leadership models, values and ethics, character and integrity, cultural effects, creativity and innovation, reverse mentoring, and strategic planning. This book is a profoundly honest hands-on guide to what constitutes a true leader serving as a bivocational m...