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  • Home
    • Administration
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  • Start
    • Church Planting
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    • Strategic Mentors
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March 26th, 2020

3/26/2020

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  • Keep the fundamentals of the faith in front of your people: staying in the word, not isolating themselves relationally, growing spiritually in the midst of the challenges, building an attitude of hope, keep making disciple your focus
  • Multiply what you are already doing—one pastor is taking his daily devotional and journal reflections and creating a short 2-3 minute video. He is then posting it daily to FaceBook.
  • Knock and Run—you used to do this as a kid with your neighbors. Now it can be a positive thing if you drop off a nicely worded note saying your praying for your neighbors and telling them if they have any specific prayer requests or needs to let you know—leave your e-mail address or phone number to text
  •  Wisdom from the coaching world with a catchy rhyme thrown in at no cost:
    • Stabilize—pursue (be proactive) and innovate to create stability in the midst of chaos.
    • Re-normalize—in a season of chaos find peace and move forward within the new environment. We can spend too much time complaining and not get to adjusting.
    • Mobilize—bring all the resources you can muster to fight the crisis that is in front of you today. The first century church did not ask God to remove the persecution, but to give them boldness in the midst of it. (Acts 4:29)
    •  Futurize—recover and re-emerge. Lead through disruptive innovation and use movemental leadership—innovative and forward looking leadership.
  • Post or send out in advance listening guides for your sermons along with resources to let folks develop or reinforce their family chapel time. Give them or point them to online tools that will help them engage their children and youth.
  • Proactively identify the marginalized within your church an community: seniors, singles, couples whose marriages were already struggling, dysfunctional families, those who have been laid off, individuals who for a variety of reasons were already stressed by life BEFORE the virus made it even worse. AND then prayerfully consider how to minister to them.
  • Find ways to assist parents who find themselves home schooling for the first time—connect them to tutors and/or teachers or to experienced home schoolers.
  • To address the previous two issues, build a buddy system to connect people with one another so they don’t have to “swim alone”
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Insights March 26, 2020

3/26/2020

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If you have limited experience recording video preaching and worship, here are some pointers from one pastor after his first week:
  • If your camera is too close, you can create a 3D effect with hand gestures as you point to your audience through the camera. I observed that on a zoom meeting today and it was a bit distracting.
    • Make sure you maintain eye contact with the camera.
    • Guard against verbal pauses—they will be magnified.
    • Watch your lighting or you might need to borrow some of your wife’s makeup so you don’t end up with too much “holy glow.
    • Stay upbeat when you do announcements and any stewardship emphases you use.
    • Be very practical and foundational in the messages you share—a great opportunity to do a “Vince Lombardi” series on the fundamentals of the Christian Faith. Lombardi is famous for focusing on the fundamental skills needed to win at the professional level.
    • Don’t go over the top on the COVID-19 theme.
  • Rural areas and even some urban contexts are having on-line challenges due to the increased number of churches posting services on-line. You might have to decrease the quality (file size) of your transmissions to minimize buffering.
  •  Be careful that you don’t end up with information overload as you look for “best practices” on how to respond. Collect good ideas and keep them in a “crock pot” until you can prayerfully figure out which ones will work best for you. Remember, you can’t do all of them.
  • But definitely don’t do the opposite and just sit around and wait for things to get back to “normal.” Too many churches are still waiting for the 1950s to return.
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Ministering in Unprecedented Times

3/19/2020

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Pastor,

This note includes two major sections: (1) Encouragement/Exhortations and (2) Practical How To for those who haven’t used on-line communications with your church.

Encouragement and Exhortation

Let me suggest some strategic ways we can all respond in the midst of these challenging days.

First, I would encourage you to BE PRAYERFUL: We serve a God who was NOT taken by surprise by anything that has happened in the last two weeks. His Spirit indwells us and therefore through prayer we have the opportunity to be personally connected with the God who not only knew what was going to happen yesterday, but He also knows what lays ahead. II Chronicles 7:14 would be one of the most appropriate prayers we could lift up to Him today: “If My people who are called by My name will humble themselves, and pray and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and heal their land.

Second, I would suggest that you BE PURPOSEFUL: No, we cannot do what we have been doing in the ways that have been doing them. BUT we can still do the things that God has called us to do if we focus our attention on the “WHY” first and then the “HOW.” God called you to be a "pastor and teacher, for the equipping of the saints for the work of ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ.” (Ephesians 4:11-12) Together we have all been called to make disciples, who make disciples, who make disciples…for the Glory of God. (Matthew 28:19-20 and II Timothy 2:2) How we do it in the midst of this season WILL be different, and I believe it will drive us back to purpose and away from programs and established processes. 

Third, I would challenge you to BE PASTORAL:  Yes, you and your family are hurting, and yes, it might be the most difficult time you have ever experienced as a pastor. And if it this is your situation, then give me a call! at 402-680-0820. But I can guarantee you that there are individuals in your flock who need not only the comforting touch from the Good Shepherd, but they also need the listening ear and wise counsel from you--their under shepherd.

Fourth, let me suggest that you BE PROACTIVE: These are not the days where we can function like the lonely Maytag repairman who sat waiting by his phone for a distressed customer to call. Your motto should be “carpe diem” (seize the day)! Your attitude should reflect Paul’s exhortation to the church in Corinth: “'In an acceptable time I have heard you, And in the day of salvation I have helped you.’ Behold, now is the accepted time; behold, now is the day of salvation.” (II Cor 6:2) In times of distress, people tend to be more open to the caring touch of someone who truly loves them and truly cares for them. The number of people who need “the touch of the Master’s hand” hasn’t changed, but their hearts have been changed by the unprecedented circumstances we are all facing.  “Lift up your eyes and look at the fields, for they are already white for harvest! (John 4:35)

Fifth, I would suggest that you BE PERSONAL: With the restrictions on worship gatherings, let me encourage you to shift your focus and energy into strengthening your small groups. For some of you this will be an easy and natural response. For others it will almost be like starting from scratch. If you need help thinking through this process, give me a call. For me, personally, I am having to rethink how I can connect more effectively with pastors and churches. My methodology for 26+ years has been to join you for a worship service as my calendar permitted or to connect over a cup of coffee or lunch—those options are no longer available. Just like I am going to have to change the way I connect with you, you are going to have to change the way you connect with your people. We are all going to have to be far more personal in our approach—which probably isn’t a bad thing!

Sixth, let me encourage you to ADJUST YOUR PERSPECTIVE: While I was in the middle of composing this e-mail, I received a call from Pastor Kojo Allen. In case you don’t know Pastor Kojo, he is a native of Nigeria—a nation that even today is embroiled in conflict between the Muslims who dominate the northern area and Christians who are prominent in the southern area of the country. He grew up with those conflicts as a normal part of life along with the additional hardships of growing up in an area without the ample blessings we experience even today in the midst of what we are considering “extreme hardships.” I am not saying, accept the “new normal.” What I am saying is that it might be good for you to connect with some of your brothers in Christ who are pastoring one of our language churches. Pastors who have fled persecution and poverty that they experienced in Sudan, Burma, Nepal, or Central America. Connecting with men and women who have experienced deep poverty and political persecution can help all of us to adjust our perspective, and to be thankful even in the midst of adversity.  

Finally, I let me encourage you to ADJUST YOUR PROCESSES: I was just on a conference call with the Governor of Nebraska. For the next two weeks we are in a government mandated restriction limiting meetings to groups of ten. Even in a best case scenario that restriction will go back to 50 or less for several weeks after that. So…let me suggest you move to a small group (New Testament house-to-house) discipleship based model  and then take advantage of the technologies that are at your fingertip related to corporate worship. That brings me to section two.

Practical How To’s for doing on-line corporate worship. 

Click the button below and it will take you to our HCN website and to information about both Zoom and Facebook options. If you have any questions after you have reviewed the information please contact our office. We can help trouble 
COVID-19 Resources
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    Author

    Retiring in April 2022, Mark R. Elliott served as a Director of Missions (Associational Mission Strategist) in Western Iowa and Eastern Nebraska for almost three decades. He is a strong advocate for obedience and Biblically based disciple making. As such, he knows that making healthy disciples requires Christian leaders to be constantly pursuing spiritual maturity—be lifelong learners. Because of the time constraints of ministry, most pastors focus their reading list on resources that assist them in teaching and preaching the Word of God. As such, books focusing on church health, leadership development, and church growth tend to find their way to the bottom of the stack. With that reality in mind, Mark has written discussion summaries on several books that have helped him to personally grow in Christ and that tend to find themselves on the bottom of most pastor’s stack. Many pastors have found them helpful as they are able to more quickly process great insights from other pastors and authors.

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