My Mother-in-Law got a new cell phone. Her flip phone broke in half and she got tired of having to use both hands to talk. She didn’t want a smart phone, but wanted another flip phone, so my Honey got her one. Same color, same style, but it has a few upgrades that the first one didn’t.
We got daily phone calls for two weeks about her frustrations. She would open it in the night to use the light and hit a button. It took her picture. She wants to know what Verizon is going to do with a picture ‘they’ took of her in the night. She found the flashlight button, which we thought was a good upgrade, but now she can’t turn it off and she says it blinds her and she really doesn’t want to use her glasses at night to turn it off. Somehow she has gotten a ding alarm set for 3am and wants to know who is calling her in the middle of the night. We chuckle and we have tried to ‘fix’ her new phone, but as she found out when she went to the Verizon store, upgrades can’t be removed. She has now quit calling us and is finally settling into her new, upgraded cell phone. If she finds a new challenge, she now goes straight to the source, the Verizon store, and they teach her.
The staff and worship committee at my church have taken on the challenge to instill excellence in worship for 2015 and we aren’t waiting until January to get the ball rolling. We are ‘shooting a few bullets’ this fall. Jim Collins, noted author and researcher of the book Good to Great, calls it ‘shooting bullets before cannonballs.” http://leadershipfreak.wordpress.com/2012/08/09/jim-collins-on-bullets-before-cannonballs/. Over the last several months we have spent time with the best: Mark Burrows from First UMC in Ft Worth, and Rev Dr Marcia McFee. We have continued to participate in online training and working diligently alongside our laity in prayer and discussion about some of the things we have ‘sprinkled’ here and there before we go ‘all in’ for the Advent season.
We’ve been
at this a month now. We are putting educational information in the weekly bulletin and in our monthly newsletter. I note it in the emails addressed to folks who serve on the worship teams on Sunday morning and our worship leader is talking it up at their practices. We are taking every opportunity to speak face to face with energy and enthusiasm. Our senior pastor is even planning for a few Sunday School class visits over the next month or so to give folks a chance to participate in word, deed, and prayer.
I LOVE the energy that comes with the tension of change in the local church. It gives me a chance to share in the whole church, not just my area of Children’s Ministry. It gives me a chance to be invited into the hearts and spiritual histories of the saints of the church as I may be more accessible, maybe even ‘safe’, when the tensions come. Just last week, I happened to be sitting behind someone who needed to ‘share’ immediately
after services. She placed her hands on my shoulders, looked me in the eye, and shared her personal challenge with tenderness and grace. In that very moment, I got to feel, hear, and see her heart as I looked into her eyes. It allowed me to encourage, affirm, and pray for her. I was invited into her journey.
The sense of the movement of the Holy Spirit comes to more people when we make changes at church. And it can be uncomfortable. And they don’t know what to do with the discomfort…the tension. Folks begin to articulate their personal preferences, their personal histories, and their personal narratives. How they do this is a direct result of their dedication to prayer and bible study. How I respond is also a direct result of my dedication to prayer and bible study.
Every church I have every served has been a place of change. Some congregations handle it well, some just get mean about it. Thom Rainer, President of Lifeway says, “Obstacles and critics are common, but not insurmountable.” Church saints and leaders who are in the Word on a daily basis and in prayer on a daily basis, share their challenges in a way that invites others to know their hearts because they are kind,
they are constructively involved, and they read everything that comes out: bulletins, newsletters, emails, everything! Those constantly in the Word and prayer speak of their tensions with tenderness, open minds, and discussion for clarity for understanding. Oh the filter that is afforded with a regular diet of prayer and bible study!
I, too, get frustrated when I have to take on an upgraded cell phone, an upgraded computer, any upgraded device. Yet I have discovered the situation invites me to slow down, to pay attention to the details, and to participate fully until I can be more confident in my place in the mix.
When it comes to participating fully in church change, I will devote myself to prayer (talking with the Lord), bible study (the Lord talking with me), and to be ‘all in’ in the community of faith (read everything that comes out from the leadership). It’s a ‘whole church’ thing, not just my particular area. Then I’ll ask, “What ELSE can I do to help?” When the Holy Spirit is involved, I will not settle to sit on the sidelines and wait to be invited onboard. I’m jumping on and holding on for dear life because something great for His Kingdom is going to happen and I don’t want to miss a thing.
“To love Him with all your heart, with all your understanding and with all your strength, and to love your neighbor as yourself is more important than all burnt offerings and sacrifices.” Mark 12:33











on the back porch with Mr. Bob after an amazing retreat weekend surrounded by the greatest servants on the planet, he suggested I apply for the Church Administrator and Financial Secretary job…..wait for it…in addition to serving as the Director of Children’s Ministry. I worked my way through college by running the customer service desk at the local A&P grocery store and as a bank teller. Before going into ministry and raising our family, I was an Assistant Vice President of Investments at a huge clearing house bank in south Louisiana. I fully understood debits, credits, deposits, expenses, assets, and numbers.
e organizations where I was volunteering and reset some time priorities to make it work. SPR agreed to let me continue my speaking engagements and we have precious volunteers to cover the office when I am out.
ust so the caller has to hear the tunes of my alma mater. So when I was invited to attend a preview of the upcoming Affirm Films movie, When the Game Stands Tall, to use the words of a football coach of fellow SEC team Auburn, I was “all in.”
to spend the day at the local VA hospital. When a football player paces a veteran running on a treadmill with prosthetic legs, the energy in the theater is palpable. I could hear the audience around me shifting in their seats to lean forward. When a football player gives a wounded warrior a bath and the most egotistical of the players has a run-in with a urine bag, the laughter is big and real.
ughout the church to promote this really good family movie. It’s clean, courageous, inspiring,
ol. I look forward to it every year. I’ve served in VBS where the kids totaled 400. I’ve served in VBS where the kids totaled 35. Each year takes on new space in my head and heart. This year is no different. These are a few of my favorite things about VBS 2014, and in no particular order:
al years, they know where everything is in the storage closets because I’ve sent them there often enough to help gather supplies.

kids so to avoid waste) and an inflatable, dual water slide AFTER the kids sang the VBS songs with motions and fun. Bumping elbows with old friends and watching old friends meet new ones to welcome new families into the mix.

the multiple sets of grandparents who not only volunteered in very visible areas, but they brought their grandkids every single day. These were the Christian Soldiers of the week for me. By the end of the week, I could tell they were exhausted, but their faithfulness to serving the Lord AND having their grandchildren see it, were legacies of faith that could only be accomplished with being sold out Jesus and what was being shared every single day.
kids.” I love that perspective. Everyone needs a revival every now and then: the kids
and the volunteers. Revival brings new messages and we do things differently for a short period of time than what we usually do on Sundays: snack, the best storytelling, turn on the water hose, decorate like crazy, and dress the part.
nd all the others, youth and adults. We are reminded in song, experience, energy, and every learning style of how God loves us and how loving Him binds the body of Christ in energy, service, and gifts.

le darlin’ is 6 years old. Commissions are paid weekly.
s across the county the Wednesday of Holy Week. After previewing the movie, I knew it’d make a great ‘late night’ event for our CLUB345 (3-5th graders) and our youth. And I wanted the ‘late night’ to be on Good Friday. And I wanted to share it with another local church, because we are better together.
ally have private parties on Sundays and during the week, but I was set on Good Friday. I set up a free EventBrite registration event that closed the week before and then waited until the Movie Tavern set up their online registration for our night. We registered 46 for the movie in the maximum blocks of 6. We registered for every seat except the front 2 rows for the 6:30pm showing and met in the parking lot at 5:45pm.
up with the rest of our students and families.
ting the students into pairs and threes, we answered the following questions with the scripture references and they answered by preparing a poster of what they discovered. We then had a poster party to answer our questions after 30 minutes.
1:25/22:5 day?night?
21:19-20 …jewelry?
d in worship art with a door-sized painting (purchased uncut wooden door from Home Dept for $24 and it was primed before the evening activities.)
are some things God has kept secret. But there are some things He has let us know. These things belong to us and our children forever.” Deuteronomy 29:29
t when we come to church with our bibles, ready to hear AND to see what is being read, we plan to walk away with so much more.