By John Holm on Jul 18, 2021
based on 7 ratings
| 19,682 views
"I've rarely coached someone who decided that more knowledge or more skill would help them become a successful leader. Instead, what they needed to learn was more about themselves."
Tags:
By Ray Hollenbach on May 7, 2020
based on 6 ratings
| 20,158 views
Gordon MacDonald: "I think we probably need to totally re-define what pastors do in leading our contemporary 21st century church."
Tags:
By Peter Mead on Feb 4, 2021
based on 1 rating
| 13,770 views
Defining legalism carefully is vitally important. It is important for each follower of Christ. It is a serious business to discount a restriction as legalism when it actually is displeasing to the One who loved us and gave Himself for us.
Tags:
By Lance Witt on Jun 25, 2023
based on 2 ratings
| 14,442 views
Culture is one of things that is hard to define but easy to feel. You certainly feel it when you visit a foreign country and you bump up against different customs and ways of doing things, but you also feel it when you enter a business or a church. There is a certain style or personality of an organization that is an expression of culture. I sometimes think of culture as the organization’s “way” of doing what they do. There is a Ritz Carlton “way” of doing customer service. There is a Starbucks “way” of doing business. There is a Crossroads Church “way” of doing ministry.
Tags:
By Charles Stone on Sep 27, 2022
based on 1 rating
| 17,714 views
"Discouragement is a universal experience for ministry leaders and the word actually self-defines itself…dis-courage meaning no courage. Some of the Bible’s greatest characters faced it: Moses, David, Paul, Mary the mother of Jesus, and the apostles. Nehemiah, the great Old Testament leader faced it when he led the Jews to rebuild the wall. Yet, his response offers us hope when we face it."
Scripture:
Tags:
By Duncan Hamilton on Mar 27, 2024
Liddell wasn’t for sale at any price. He told one congregation that ‘the greatest danger was victory,’ which he further defined as ‘bringing a man up to a level above the strength of his character’. He appealed to another to ‘keep sport free from anything that tends to lower its purity and value’ and to ‘engage in it’ for ‘the sport’s sake alone’. He revealed to a third that no cheering from an athletics crowd had given as much pleasure as his religion.
Scripture: