How Portable is Your Ministry? || The Picnic As A New Metaphor for Ministry
For a number of years now I’ve been operating off of a metaphor for ministry that is no longer working. It may […]
For a number of years now I’ve been operating off of a metaphor for ministry that is no longer working. It may […]
A former female student of mine recently shared this TED talk on Facebook with the comment, “this sucks!”
I agree.
I’m just becoming familiar with TED talks, so this video may have already “made the rounds,” but if you haven’t seen it, I encourage you to watch it (it’s under 5 minutes in length) and then share your thoughts about how we might better assist the guys on our campus.
While at a conference last summer I had the chance to sit in on a session led by Creighton Alexander, Campus Pastor at the University of Alabama Wesley Foundation, where he talked about coming up with a strategy for ministry on campus.
He shared a lot of good stuff, but there was one idea in particular that seemed to jump out at me — and has stuck with me ever since — and it’s the idea of “mapping our campus.”
There’s a good chance that many of you already do this — in fact, we all do to a certain extent because we all have “strategic relationships” across campus (and if we don’t, we should!) — but Creighton’s idea, while simple, was profound to me.
Is it just me, or does it often feel like there aren’t enough hours in the day to do all of the things that we want (or need) to do?
As pastors we can find ourselves sought out for a variety of reasons.
And we can give ourselves to a lot of different ministry-related tasks and to-do’s.
Some of this happens for good reasons, some for the wrong reasons and some due to no decision of our own.
But I find myself wondering how frequently many of us get sidetracked, or even sidelined, by giving too much of our time and attention to the wrong things.
This year has been a difficult year for me. It has been a season of transition and growth – personally and professionally. […]
Why do 80% of freshman punt their faith? Why do so many graduates enter the “real world” with the best of intentions […]
Do we have to be friends? It reminds me of when I was about 7 and my older sister was about 9. […]
Walking alone.
Far too many of our students are doing it these days…
I’m not talking about walking alone late at night (although too many are doing that as well), but I’m talking about their approach to life during their formative college years.
Sure, they have friends.
Well, kind of.
They’ve made acquaintances that are often based off of similar tastes in music, class schedules, fashion sense, hometown, housing arrangement, etc… and while some of these relationships have the potential to drift into deeper waters — most never will.
I was one of those college freshmen who asked a million questions before I moved on campus. I read every piece […]
“We have a choice. We can minister in the world we wish we had. Or, we can minister in the world we […]