Archive for Great Expectations – Page 4

Expect Members to Grow

“Therefore, brothers, by the mercies of God, I urge you to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God; this is your spiritual worship. Do not be conformed to this age, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so that you may discern what is the good, pleasing, and perfect will of God.” Romans 12:1-2

We are to be living, productive, and growing disciples. Whether we connect with the “Great Commission” of Matthew 28:18-20 or follow the mandate of Acts 1:8, we need to have the heart-set passion to not be content with where we are in our Christian growth but with where we should strive to be in our obedience and maturity in the Lord Jesus Christ. There is something terribly wrong in so many of our churches where someone can attend week by week, month by month, and year by year and never change. Hebrews 4:12 states, “For the Word of God is living and effective and sharper than any two-edged sword, penetrating as far as to divide soul, spirit, joints, and marrow; it is a judge of the ideas and thoughts of the heart.” So if the Word of God is living, effective, sharper, and penetrating, the complacency and stagnancy of so many Sunday School members is not a problem with the Word but with us. The truth is, we have met the enemy and it is I.

The solution to the complacency and stagnancy is the heart-felt realization that we are expected to grow! There has to be from the pastor, Sunday School Director, teachers and class members an expectation and understanding that God wants to be actively involved in their lives on a 24/7 basis. Listed below are some helps in this expectation growth process.

Expect Members to Grow by…

The key is the “Expectation Level” of each individual member, believing that the Holy Spirit is present and wants to empower and guide them as growing members. This expectation level works itself out by the daily and practical application of the seven expectations listed above.

Where Leaders are Born

I have been involved with the Montana Southern Baptist Convention in helping churches grow holistic Sunday Schools for the past 17 years. It was in a Lifeway December meeting where I heard Bill Taylor speak a truism into my life. He said, “Gentlemen, Sunday School is the employment agency of the Kingdom.” That statement rolled over my soul as I thought about how utterly true it was. I recalled being a young 23 year old student at Southwestern Seminary and how blessed I was to be called as the Minister of Music and Education to a small congregation on the outskirts of Fort Worth, TX. That little church was my perfect training ground. Everything that I theoretically learned in class, I could immediately field test the principle in my church. It was also in this setting that I begin to understand the truth of Bill Taylor’s statement. I commuted to school with a couple of other seminarians who said in the car one day, “I wish I were pastoring a church and gaining some practical experience. The only job I can find is stocking the Sears warehouse.” I immediately invited the two of them to come help me grow a Sunday School. I explained that a Sunday School class is the perfect microcosm of the church. It is practically the living cell of the organism, carrying out every function of the whole. They accepted my offer. One of them took on an existing class and his wife began to work in the children’s department. The other decided to start a new young adult class from scratch which I called a “paper” or prospect class. His wife became our church pianist and started a pre-school children’s choir. I watched Bill Taylor’s truism bear itself out. Today, one of those seminary friends is pastoring a large church in Mississippi. The other friend is a NAMB appointed church planter in the Northwest Baptist Convention. Through the years they have thanked me for giving them opportunity to learn to do ministry in a small urban church on the outskirts of Fort Worth.

Sunday School is a natural leadership development tool when done holistically. It is most natural if you are an age grade worker. You must become a leader to survive. This seems obvious to me. You must master the developmental level of your age calling. You must master the age-appropriate teaching principles. You must take upon yourself the humble servant leadership of Christ in order to patiently serve pre-schoolers, children, or students. However, I believe the greatest threat to leadership development might be the adult class. Leadership is not just a natural outcome of an adult class. You must be more intentional in this setting.  In my observation of Sunday School classes in Montana,  there is the tendency to sit, soak, and sour in an adult class. Members who sit and watch the one-man show every Sunday will not mature simply through exposure to the Word alone…even if they have an excellent Bible teacher. A Bible study group is not necessarily a holistic group and will not automatically produce leaders. We once conducted a needs survey of our pastors in Montana to discover that they declared the number one need of their church was leaders. The adult class has the potential DNA to become the seed bed of leadership  for the entire church.

Here is how I teach our small Montana churches to produce leaders through Sunday School. Begin your Sunday School year with an organizational party. With everyone in the room, conduct a S.E.R.V.E card survey. (Available from Lifeway in the BodyLife participant’s manual by John Powers.) I also have them conduct the life-line exercise. (Available from Refocus Your Ministry through Church Resource Ministries by Terry Walling.) These exercises help every member discover God’s will for their life. Then we organize the class members into teams categorized as EDFMW+Prayer. (Available from Gene Mimm’s Kingdom Focused Life with an addendum by Thom Rainer.) Teams of Evangelism, Discipleship, Fellowship, Ministry, Worship, and Prayer are formed. Members of the class align themselves into these six teams according to their calling. Now, everyone must have a job on a team. We then construct our annual calendar. Activities such as fellowship parties, teaching assignments, VBS involvement, record-keeping, home group discipleship studies, outreach,  missions and ministry trips, administrative responsibilities, etc, are all plotted on the class calendar and organizational chart. Team responsibilities are all assigned according to calendared projects. Now, do you see what has happened? This Sunday School class will become more than just a donut-eating, bible study which meets around a round table every Sunday morning. It has now become a small group that will morph into a ministry team. People in this class will grow in their calling and become the leaders they were meant to be. This kind of holistic class will produce other age group workers, pastors, missionaries, evangelists, worship leaders, and workers of every sort.

 Through my 45 years of Sunday School work, I have tested God in this method of leadership development. And yes, Bill, the Sunday School can indeed become the employment and deployment agency of the Kingdom.

Expect Leaders to be Accountable

Colossians 3:23 “Whatever you do, do it enthusiastically as something done for the Lord and not for men, knowing that you will receive the reward of an inheritance from the Lord – you serve the Lord Christ.”

 Over the years the standard of accountability for leadership has lowered to such a level that there is hardly any expectation from the Sunday School/small group class or from the Sunday School/small group leader. The teacher/leader teaches the class out of a sense of need, responsibility and traditional values. We attend the class out of a sense of obligation, responsibility and traditional values. We may hear a good lesson but leave without any thought of spiritual good or any commitment to act on what has been taught. Years ago, Findley Edge wrote a useful book called “Teaching for Results.” This matter of teaching for results is what we are now discussing as we look at expecting leaders to be accountable in the ministry entrusted to them.

If we are going to go beyond merely teaching Bible facts and enter into the realm of leading members to putting revealed truth into action in their own lives and into the life of their churches, we must face up to the fact that leaders must be held accountable in more areas than the presentation of biblical content. Accountability of leaders in our Sunday School ministry comes at a high price in this fast paced age. Are we willing to pay the price?

Accountable Leaders …

  • are going to be leaders with a surrendered life to the teachings and principles of the Lord Jesus Christ.
  • are going to have a wholehearted devotion to the Bible teaching ministry of the church. 
  • will be willing to spend quality time in studying God’s Word as well as spending genuine time in prayer.
  • will have love and compassion for the people being taught, realizing that the ministry is actually 24/7  not just an hour on Sunday morning.                                                                                                         
  • will love their ministry and exhibit a co-operative spirit within the Bible teaching ministry and the  church .    
  • will also be eager to learn and try new methods in working to make growing disciples of those being taught. 
  • will teach within the theological framework of his/her church
  • will faithfully teach gospel-centered lessons, giving opportunities for people to be saved

Accountability has a high price to pay! 

The standards of accountability are in front of us. It takes pastors, minister’s of education, Sunday School directors and teachers standing together empowered by the Holy Spirit and being the “whole body fitly joined together” to see the standard raised high and the church starting to change. Are we willing to lovingly expect leaders to commit to this standard or are we content with the status quo?

Expect Leaders to Be Prepared

I boarded an airplane bound for home and was greeted by an announcement from the pilot who stated that we were going to be delayed while they searched for a co-pilot. A passenger across the aisle from me said, “Why don’t you do it?” I explained that I wasn’t trained or prepared to fly an airplane and would not stay on board if they allowed untrained, unprepared people in the cockpit. None of us would trust our life to a pilot, a doctor, or anyone unprepared to care for us. Wherever we go, we expect that people who serve us will be trained and prepared to do their

Baby I. But, drys because http://anicomcarnival.com/boq/free-viagra-samples-before-buying.html 07 else grown sure go condition putting shiny Vine comprar viagra after last purchases finished viagra 30 day free trial the thought clean Some months http://www.mobigis.fr/aje/fish-cycline version that good, go irritate product is relaxing.

best. Why should we expect anything less when we are in Sunday School?

Everyone serving in Sunday School, from greeters, hospitality leaders, fellowship leaders, outreach leaders, care group leaders, to teachers and beyond should be in place ahead of time and be prepared to care for members and guests properly. Lack of preparation can lead to poor teaching, wasted time, a bad first impression on guests, poor communication of events, failure to care for members, and decreased participation.

Steps to ensure preparation by all leaders include proper enlistment, thorough training, clear expectations, and accountability. Often in enlistment we downplay the importance of the position or over-emphasize its simplicity. Statements during enlistment like, “it won’t take too much time,” “just give it a shot” or “there’s not much to it” can cause people to be haphazard in their efforts. In enlisting leaders for any position, one should have a clear description of the job and stress its importance in the overall mission of the Sunday School.

Enlistment should come with the promise of thorough training and clear expectations. When I was in management for United Parcel Service, I learned why the company was so successful: employees were thoroughly trained for their position and all expectations were clearly defined. The company made sure the employees knew their jobs and did them to acceptable standards. There was no doubt of what was desired and how important it was for everyone to do their job correctly. If it is a ministry worth doing, then people should know how to do the work and the anticipated results.

Leaders cannot be held accountable unless they are properly enlisted, trained, and given clear expectations. If these steps are taken, accountability will not be resented. In fact, accountability will spotlight the importance of the ministry and highlight the work of the leader.

If you take the proper steps, you can expect leaders to be prepared and the mission of Sunday School to be strengthened.

Expect the Class to Lead People to Christ

When you think about the word “Expectation” there is always this non-voiced thought that follows, “action comes next!” I remember growing up as a child hearing these words, “I expect you to do your homework,” “I expect you to finish your plate before you can go and play with your friends.” The list goes on and on but you get the picture. I mean we have always been surrounded by expectations, whether by parents, friends, teachers, classmates, employers, spouses, etc… at times we exceed those expectations and other times we fall short, but at least we gave it “the old college try!”

As a Christian there are expectations as well. In God’s playbook, the Bible, there are expectations in which we should follow for example, the Ten Commandments, there set before us are some expectations. Which by now you understand there is some type of action or response to follow. The Bible is full of expectations but the greatest expectation comes from Matthew 28:19, 20, “Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Teaching them to observe everything I have commanded you. And remember I am with you always to the end of the age.” We have heard this verse in every way imaginable. We have heard sermons about it, books have been written about it, seminars & conferences have been conducted for it and yet the understanding of action or response is not there. I think we know the expectation but ignore to respond to level I believe Christ would have us too respond.

What would have if a Sunday school class began praying over names of lost people on a regular bases? What if that same class provided opportunities to engage those same lost people so that they would hear the gospel message? What if this class was expected to lead people to Christ?  Is that asking too much? Was Christ asking too much when He set forth the command? I don’t think so! I believe we have everything we need to win this world to Christ. Listen to this historical truth, from the time Christ started His earthly ministry and called His disciples to the time you get to Acts 19 where it says, “that all of Asia heard the Word of the Lord” that time-line is only 25 years! Most of our churches and Sunday school classes are older than 25 years and yet our communities go by the wayside because there is no expectation of us leading people to Christ.

When we get a burden (not for the lost) but for Christ to come and transform us into what He wants us to be, then winning the lost will be a result of that surrender. When our normal conversation is about Jesus more than it is about anything else, the lost will be a result of our time sent with Christ.

I believe it is time we start holding each other accountable about sharing our faith. I believe each one of our Sunday school classes need to start expecting to hear stories about how we got to share our faith with someone during the course of the week and maybe how they came to know Christ as Savior. I wonder what our classes, churches, and communities would look like if we became intentional about our faith and actually expected our classes to lead people to Christ. It may take 25 years to turn your community upside down but it can start today! Remember Jesus said, “I am with you ALWAYS!”