All posts tagged Catalyst

Randall Wallace :: Catalyst 10

  • Randall Wallace is the writer of Braveheart and producer of Pearl Harbor and We Were Soldiers. [IMDb]
  • One of the things he learned early on was the power of story.
  • We have to be committed to something.
  • He has been criticized for hanging out with Christians.
  • William Wallace learned to be a warrior first.
  • He paid in blood, tears and lost everything that was life to him, first.
  • Then he stood out on the battlefield and said, “Everyone else can I run and I won’t…” and that’s what kept people with him.
  • In The Secretariat, he opens the movie with a passage from Job and ends it with the song “O Happy Day.”
  • It’s the first movie he’s produced where the hero doesn’t die.
  • It’s a movie that has all of the qualities of his previous movies.
  • You will come out of the movie with a sense of joy and purpose.
  • When his last film opened he called his mother and said he was worried because he knew people would be critical of it.
  • His mother said, “if they crucified Jesus Christ, there will be some people who don’t like you.”
  • The Secretariat is about a woman who said, “”It would be great if you all liked me. But, I’m not here for you to like me. I’m here to be who I am.”
  • One of Hollywood’s greatest flaws is contempt for the audience.
  • We have to face our fear.
  • We can’t write a story we don’t believe ourselves.
  • We can’t be an inspirer to others unless it’s a story we believe.
  • It’s fashionable in our world to say you should believe in nothing, hope for nothing, believe there is no such thing as love… but this movie is an affirmation that courage matters, hope prevails and love wins.
  • The great thing about movies is that we don’t experience them alone, we experience them together.

Craig Groeschel :: Catalyst 10

Craig Groeschel is the founding and senior pastor of LifeChurch.tv. Craig, his wife, Amy, and their six children live in the Edmond, Oklahoma, area where LifeChurch.tv began in 1996.

Craig’s creative leadership skills are changing the way church is done worldwide. Under his leadership, LifeChurch.tv has become one of the country’s first multi-campus churches, with over 50 weekend worship experiences at 13 different locations throughout the United States.

Craig is the author of five books, Chazown: A Different Way to See Your Life, Confessions of a Pastor, Going all the Way, It: How Churches and Leaders Can Get It and Keep It and his most recent, The Christian Atheist.

  • The enemy divides the church into denominations so we aren’t a unified church.
  • The enemy divides the church generationally so we don’t work together.
  • When it comes to the generations in ministry, division is bad but the tension can be good.
  • We absolutely and desperately need  each other.
  • We need what God is doing and the wisdom, energy and passion between generations.
  • What we are able to today is a result of those who believed in us in the past.
  • We stand on the shoulders of those who have gone before us.
  • God puts people in our lives who believe in us and help pave the way.

To the Older Generation

  • If you ask if you are in the older generation, you are!
  • I would beg you not to resent, fear, or judge the next generation of ministers… believe in them, invest in them.
  • Find it as one of the greatest callings of your life to pour your life into the next generation.
  • They are not the church of tomorrow, they are the church of today.
  • They are not the the church of the future, they are the church of today.
  • They are different just like you were different.
  • Don’t get off on the style or appearance, believe in them and invest in them.
  • One of the reasons why it’s difficult for the older generation to invest in the younger generation is because of insecurity.
  • When you lead from a place of insecurity, things don’t go well.
  • Don’t delegate tasks, that creates followers… delegate authority, that creates leaders.
  • Give people freedom to make mistakes.
  • Don’t be cool, be real.
  • The next generation craves authenticity.
  • Be yourself, show up and listen.
  • Your age and experience is not a liability, it’s your greatest asset.
  • If you’re not dead you’re not done.
  • Embrace the season you are in.
  • One of the greatest honors we can have is to become like a spiritual parent to the next generation.
  • Don’t be cool or be a coach, be a parent.
  • Embrace that you can be like a parent to those who are to come.
  • Psalm 71:18 – “even when I’m old and gray, do not forsake me until I declare your power to the next generation…”

To The Younger Generation

  • You need those who have gone before you.
  • The #1 word used to describe the next generation of workers but the older generation is the word entitled.
  • It’s not our fault, it’s because how we were raised.
  • We’ve been protected.
  • The challenge in ministry is that we feel like things should come very easily for us.
  • We tend to overestimate what God wants to do through us in the short run.
  • We feel disillusioned.
  • Because we overestimate, we simultaneously underestimate what God wants to do with us in the long run.
  • Do not underestimate what God wants to do through this generation.
  • There is spiritual greatness in us.
  • Thing bigger, bigger, bigger, and bigger in the long run.
  • Because we feel we feel so entitled we don’t show honor.
  • “Honor publicly leads to influence privately.” – Andy Stanley
  • If you want influence those above you, honor them.
  • Mark 6:4-6
  • He could not do any greater miracles because he was without honor and there was no faith.
  • One of the reasons God isn’t doing much in our churches is because there is not much faith in the leaders above us.
  • One of the reason there is no faith is because there’s no honor for God in our lives.
  • When we truly honor God we will honor the authority of the leaders he put above us.
  • If you want to be over, learn how to be under well.
  • Be in a position where you are under authority and submitting willingly and humbly.
  • Honor – value, respect, highly esteem, treat as precious, weighty or valuable.
  • Honor lifts up; dishonor tears down.
  • Honor believes the best; dishonor believes the worst.
  • Honor values; dishonor devalues.
  • If you ascribe honor to people they will rise to it.
  • Honor the leaders God has put above you and watch what God will do.
  • There’s a big difference between respect and honor.
  • Respect is earned; honor is freely given.
  • When we ascribe honor people they become honorable.
  • We need to repent of our lack of honor towards the previous generation.
  • Repent because you’ve been dishonoring.

Gabe Lyons :: Catalyst 2010

Gabe Lyons is the  author of the forthcoming book, The Next Christians: The Good News About the End of Christian America and co-author of UnChristian, a bestseller that reveals exclusive research on pop culture’s negative perceptions of Christians. Following his participation on the founding team for Catalyst, Lyons created Q—a learning community that mobilizes Christians to advance the common good in society. Lyons and his work, represent a new generation working towards long term, Gospel-centered cultural renewal. His perspectives have been featured by CNN, The New York Times, Newsweek and USA Today. Gabe, his wife Rebekah, and their three children live on the Upper West Side of Manhattan.

  • Our culture has experienced dramatic change.
  • It’s nothing beyond enormous.
  • 9/11 has entirely shaped a new generation.
  • There’s three major things that are colliding and creating sea change in our culture.
  • We have to understand the context we are entering.

Culture Today

  • We live in post-modern culture… a skepticism towards certainty.
  • When we approach people with anything confident and certain, we are met with resistance.
  • We complicate that because our church culture has become very post-Christian.
  • The Church used to sit in the center of culture.
  • The Church is no longer at the center of culture; it’s in on the periphery.
  • Our nation was founded on an idea of religious liberty, but the Judeo-Christian ideals that have guided us have dominated the public square.
  • Today, all faiths are celebrated, not just tolerated.
  • Everyone is in the discussion.
  • Many Christians don’t know what to do about that.
  • We can either react and respond in fear.
  • Or, we can understand this is our new reality… our new normal.
  • In this place it is still possible for the Gospel to gain traction.

Where We’ve Been

  • We reacted to culture by separating from it.
  • We thought we needed to get as far away from the world as possible.
  • Our role in culture was to “fight the enemy.”
  • We’ve also tried to copy culture, being Christians by label mainly.
  • 76% of Americans define themselves as being Christians.
  • The label of Christian has become a cultural identity, a label.
  • There’s a new story developing as to how Christians are thinking about the world.
  • We’re not sure how to define or articulate it.
  • The new generation has captured the heart of the Gospel, and they’ve been restorers.
  • They aren’t going to separate or blend in… they are going to come along and restore.
  • As they restore, one of the biggest questions we have to answer is the one about the Gospel and what it says about the world and how we are to live our lives in it.

Restorers

  • Restorers are finding their place in God’s Story.
  • The separatist mentality only looked at the fall and redemption.
  • It made our job to make people make a decision for Christ.
  • Cultural Christians understand creation and that our role is to restore… do good works, better our world, schools, do good work, etc.
  • Good deeds have been disconnected largely from the work of Christ.
  • Restorers understand it’s all of the story.
  • Restorers understand are created in the image of God, sin has separated, Christ has redeemed, and our opportunity is to partner with God for the renewal and restoration of all things.
  • This is Good News for the rest of the world.
  • “We have the ministry of reconciliation…”
  • This is the call of the restorer.
  • The restorer understands first things are first things.
  • It’s because of the Gospel that we are then called and responsible to go into the world and use our talents and giftings to restore the world.

The Next Christians

  • The new generation is thinking in a new way.
  • Instead of being offended by culture, sin or brokenness, they are provoked to engage.
  • They get involved in the brokenness in the world and they go to where it is.
  • They don’t just talk, they don’t critique it, they create.
  • They create culture.
  • They create using their talent and the burden in their heart to be restorers.
  • They aren’t critics, they are creators.
  • Next Christians are recovering the idea of calling.
  • People are struggling with meaning and purpose… people can’t figure out their calling.
  • This is one of the greatest opportunities the church has in this generation.
  • Every person in our church is out working in the world.
  • Our congregation is an army of people already on mission.
  • When we affirm and celebrate people who are living out their calling in their vocation is when we will see a revolution, an awakening.
  • The heart of God is for everyone of us to understand our calling and our mission the world.
  • It’s something every person struggles with.
  • Of all channels of culture, the only channel that convenes all of the channels is the church.
  • Our opportunity is enormous as we influence people engaged in the various channels of culture.
  • Sometimes we deep in the work of our calling and sometimes our calling finds us.
  • If we have a restoration mindset we’ll realize our job is to not state the Good News but to show up and be the Good News.
  • Isaiah 58
  • …we will be restorers of streets to dwell in.
  • This is our opportunity.
  • The next generation isn’t leaving the Church because they don’t want to be Christians.
  • The next generation is leaving the church is because they are looking for a church that is showing them how to be a Christian in a culture that is changing.

Perry Noble :: Catalyst 2010

Perry Noble is the founding and senior pastor of NewSpring Church which has campuses in Anderson, Columbia, Florence, and Greenville, South Carolina. At ten years old, the church averages over 10,000 people across all campuses. Perry is a gifted communicator and teacher, convicted about speaking the truth as plainly as possible. God has given him a vision and a passion for helping people meet Jesus, and each week he shares God’s word and its practical application in our daily lives. Perry, his wife, Lucretia and their daughter, Charisse, live in Anderson, South Carolina.

  • 1 Kings 17
  • If you follow God long enough you will question if you should be following Him.
  • God, if you are following Him, is often going to lead you to places you don’t think you need to go.
  • But when you do go, you’re glad you took the trip.
  • Do what the Lord tells you to do.
  • Some of us spend more time looking for the latest and greatest than we do on our face before a Holy God.
  • More time on your face, less time on Facebook will equal unbelievable revelation from God to lead your church.
  • It’s easy to follow God when He provides.
  • The greatest thing that will ever happen in our ministries should be unexplainable.
  • If you can explain what God is doing in your church, God is not doing it.
  • The greatest moves of God are ones people don’t understand.
  • “Sometime later, the brook dried up because there had been no rain in the land…”
  • If you were Elijah, would you have been OK with that?
  • How would you get refreshed, nourished, taken care of, etc?
  • The brook is dry in so many of our churches and ministries.
  • Our prayer has been, “God how could you lead me to this place?”
  • In obediently following God’s leading we begin to wonder if we made the right choice.
  • God brought Elijah to the brook to prepare him for greater things.
  • If the brook is dry, God is not punishing you, He’s preparing you for greater things than you could ever imagine.
  • Don’t give up when you are by the brook.
  • God had to teach Elijah something about the brook.
  • God has to teach it to us, too.
  • Elijah thought that brook was his supply.
  • God took Elijah there to teach him not to depend on the brook but how to depend on Him.
  • Jesus was in the tomb for 3 days… at the moment people given up, God raised Jesus up.
  • Our God really is an awesome God.
  • We run from situations God reigns over.
  • 90% of people who start out in ministry quit.
  • We are followers of Jesus, and Jesus is not a quitter.
  • Don’t give up on God; He’s never given up on you.