Archive for the ‘church’ Category

The Silent Sermon

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

A member of a certain church, who previously had been attending services regularly, stopped going. After a few weeks, the pastor decided to visit him.

It was a chilly evening. The pastor found the man at home alone, sitting before a blazing fire. Guessing the reason for his pastor’s visit, the man welcomed him, led him to a comfortable chair near the fireplace and waited.

The pastor made himself at home but said nothing. In the grave silence, he contemplated the dance of the flames around the burning logs. After some minutes, the pastor took the fire tongs, carefully picked up a brightly burning ember and placed it to one side of the hearth all alone then he sat back in his chair, still silent.

The host watched all this in quiet contemplation. As the one lone ember’s flame flickered and diminished, there was a momentary glow and then its fire was no more. Soon it was cold and dead.

Not a word had been spoken since the initial greeting. The pastor glanced at his watch and realized it was time to leave. He slowly stood up, picked up the cold, dead ember and placed it back in the middle of the fire. Immediately it began to glow, once more with the light and warmth of the burning coals around it.

As the pastor reached the door to leave, his host said with a tear running down his cheek, ‘Thank you so much for your visit and especially for the firey sermon. I will be back in church next Sunday’.

We live in a world today, which tries to say too much with too little. Consequently, few listen. Sometimes the best sermons are the ones left unspoken.

Leadership and the Church

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

Carl’s current speaking schedule

March 2, 2010, Tuesday
Portland Metro Chapter of the Full Gospel Business Men’s Fellowship, The Old Spaghetti Factory, 12725 SE 93rd Ave., Clackamas, OR, 12 Noon
Carl will be speaking on leadership issues and share some of his testimony working with leaders in Portland and internationally toward a spiritual awakening in today’s world. He will have copies of his latest book for sale, Beyond Illusion: Leading from Reality. No reservation necessary, lunch is $13.

April 11, 2010. Sunday
Rolling Hills Community Church, 3550 Southwest Borland Road, Tualatin, OR 97062,
Forties and Up Singles Group, 10:45 A.M. (You don’t have to be single to attend, but message will be targeted to singles. )
Carl will be speaking on leadership issues. There is no doubt that we have a massive failure of leadership today, even in the churches. What is necessary for a leader today? What is the secret of leadership in today’s world? Carl will have copies of his latest book for sale, Beyond Illusion: Leading from Reality. Free session.

“Carl is a man who hears what the Spirit is saying and places the poetry of that message for the reader to hear for himself.”
Bettie P. Mitchell, International Executive Director, Good Samaritan Ministries

“I have a special place in my heart for Carl Townsend….Carl has taken some of the toughest trials life can dish out, and hangs in there with grace and love. He will never know how positively his life has impacted mine. ”
Bob Waymire, international researcher for the church and co-author with Carl of Discovering Your City

The Future of the Church

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

The institutional church, as we know it, is dying. If you talk with almost any church growth leader, they will tell you this.

Today’s Church is incapable of responding to the present moral crisis. It must reinvent itself or face virtual oblivion my mid-21st century.
George Barna, The Second Coming of the Church

In the face of these waves of change, the institutional church in America has two options. Either it will go about its business as usual—and be swallowed up by obsolescence and die by default. Or the church will choose to die—and thus find life. Mike Regele (co-founder and president of Percept Group, Inc.), and Mark Schulz, Death of the Church

The current church culture in North America is on life support. It is living off the work, money, and energy of previous generations from a previous world order.Reggie McNeal, The Present Future: Six Tough Questions for the Church.

This doesn’t mean the church is dead, it is just that the “institutional” church, as we know it, is essentially non-functional. When Reggie McNeal came through Portland a few years ago, he shared with us that only 10% of the Millennials are in church (institutional church) on a Sunday. It’s not that the Millennials don’t have a faith, it is just that the institutional church has failed them and their spiritual needs are met outside of this instituion. A Millennial doesn’t join an organization, he or she joins a vision, a passion, a dream. And the institution they see has none.

What does this mean for the future of the Church. How can the Church recover its mission?

The mission of the Church was given by Christ to his followers in Matthew just before He left us:

And Jesus came and spoke to them, saying, “All authority has been given to Me in heaven and on earth. Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all things that I have commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age.” Amen. Matt 28:18-20 NKJV

Jesus also left the Holy Spirit to give us the power to claim authority in the name of Jesus. Unfortunately, most of us have lost something that is very important. We have lost much of the vision of what God is doing here, and with it the passion to carry that forward. We aren’t desprite enough.

Fortunately, God is still at work. Massive spiritual awakenings are already occurring at cities and even regions all over the world. Christian leaders such as George Otis, Jr.. Peter Wagner, and others are trying to document these, now in hundreds of cities (and even regions) around the word.

See Beyond Illusion: Leading from Reality - just out - for more.

The recession will last how long?

Thursday, April 23rd, 2009

The latest TIME magazine showed the results of a survey of people on this question. Some 12% said six months. Some 53% said 1-2 years. Some 25% said more than three years or either we are in a long-term decline. I think the latter group is correct. You want to know why?

First, the guys that got us in this mess are still there. In Congress Chris Dodd, Barney Frank, Roy Blunt, and Judd Gregg got over 20 million dollars in lobbyist money the last few years and made sure the bailout they created kept the Wall Street Executives wealthy and happy with lots of money, bonuses, and parachutes at the expense of using our tax payer money. GM got taxpayer money so they could buy placement ads for their Hummer on CSI:Miami. The rest of Congress has turned their backs to this and have done nothing. They keep bailing out AIG with your taxpayer money because AIG holds their pensions. Nothing has changed. As long as these people are not held responsible, no one - and I mean no one - has any faith in the system.

In all fairness, there are people in Washington investigating and plan prosecutions. Meanwhile, the bad guys enjoy your tax money. Also, do you really think it will change? Or is this another Libbygate where the real baddies go free?

And it’s not just the government. Our educational systems have failed. In my church, most families home school, use the church school, or send their kids to Christian schools. The health system, business system, and even a lot of the churches haven’t figured what is going on yet.

The paradigm the world is moving into is a major shift from where we have been. To understand this, look at a quote from Pierre Teilhard de Chardin that he made about 1930 or 1931.

“For the Observers of the Future, the greatest event will be the sudden appearance of a collective human conscience and a human work to make.”

What does that mean? Even back then, Teilhard saw a global consciousness emerging, and now the Internet has become the tool for initiating this change. President Obama saw this and understood it when he ran for President. I’m not saying Obama is the answer. We’re on a Titanic that hit the iceberg and we are trying to turn it around and get home. President Obama is right in one thing, however. If the ship gets turned around, it won’t be President Obama that turns it. It will be our collective consciousness hearing the words that the Holy Spirit is speaking to the Church and then with us willing to take the risks necessary to make a difference.

Now here’s a tip if you are trying to get in there, change your life, make a difference, and need a job for it: If you are a professional, start with a membership in Linkedin.com and aggressively start your personal network. That doesn’t cost a dime. Then join a few groups on Linkedin.com that interest you. Make social networking work. Do all types of networking with and without the Internet. Then network with others in your church and build a network raising the consciousness in your church. Put your church group as a group on http://www.Linkedin.com. Pull the larger church into working with you. Then join Facebook, another social network. And then start publishing a blog (maybe use WordPress.com, it’s free). Remember, for this change we are in for the long haul and you need to be involved in changing things if things are going to be changed.

Churches helping the unemployed

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

Hockessin Baptist Church formed a strong networking group for the unemployed called Community Matters Networking. Their group has gotten a lot of press. Here are a few links into it:

This is their main site: http://communitymattersde.net/
News article: http://www.sparkweekly.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090412/LIFE/904120306/1005/LIFE
More news on it: http://www.communitypub.com/archive/x1569324414/Hockessin-networking-group-connects-jobseekers

One social network this group considers very important is http://www.linkedin.com. Their advice is to register there and go for it. Businesses today are far less likely to put possible job openings on job boards and they search Linkedin first for possible candidates. You should also join groups on Linkedin that are related to your skills and passion. If this is new for you, get the Dummies book for Linkedin.

How to Change the World

Monday, March 30th, 2009

Last week it was Denise Richards that got the boot from DWTS; but the big question many had was why Steve Wozniak is still there. Last week, in fact, Steve wasn’t even in the bottom two contestants. His professional partner, Katarina Smimoff, let out a shocked, shrill, and piercing scream as Tom announced the couple was safe for another night. Steve had only scored 10 of 30 points for his dance, which was one of the worst scores in the shows six seasons. One judge said it was the worst Samba he had ever seen. What happened?

The judges score is only 50% of the judges score, the other 50% of the score is determined by the viewers. Seems like all the Apple geeks started a massive social networking campaign. Using Twitter, Facebook, web sites, blogs and more there were able to vote Steve up to dance another week using social networking. The phenomena for Steve, or “Woznation”, increases each week as the geeks join to push harder each time.

Want to know something? Christians can, if they are willing, stand up and change the political, entertainment, education, economic and other areas of our culture. Unlike Steve, it’s not so much the 50% vote we are looking at here. If we are willing to commit, the Holy Spirit will step in. As Jesus said in all versions of the Great Commission, “all authority is mine”. A small church in Georgia did - a their movie “Fireproof” was an incredible success