I’ve Hired an Apostolic Leader…Help!

chaos or information overload concept

 

[This is part of a series on “How Do I Develop an Apostolic Leader?” You can read the other posts here.]

“Passionate involvement can make you happy, sometimes, and miserable other times. You want people to be involved and engaged. Involved people can be quiet, loud, or anything in-between—what they have in common is a restless, probing nature: “I want to get to the problem. There’s something I want to do.” If you had thermal glasses, you could see heat coming off them.”  – Brad Bird, Director at Pixar 

OK, so as a leader you’ve committed to developing and hiring apostolic evangelists and they are now operating at full steam in your organization.  It creates an almost overwhelming level of energy and creativity is erupting everywhere.  It’s exciting but at the same time it begins to feel chaotic to the point that you wonder if it is sustainable.

How do you prevent the whole thing from careening off the road and crashing?

Here are some guidelines to help you focus the energy in the same direction and keep the movement pressing forward.

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The Laborers for the Harvest are in the Harvest!

harvest

The harvest is plentiful!

When Jesus sent out 72 of his followers to proclaim the Kingdom of God in the towns and villages where he was about to go, he commissioned them with the worst motivational speech of all time.

I’m sending you out as lambs among wolves.

You will certainly be rejected.

And you can’t take any of your stuff.

As un-motivating as those promises may have felt, Jesus promised something else as he commissioned his “sent ones” that should fill each of us with hope even 2,000 years later:

The harvest is plentiful!

That is the spiritual reality. The harvest is plentiful.

He may have sent his 72 followers into rejection, complete dependence and suffering, but he also sent them into a plentiful harvest. The fields are ready and an abundant harvest awaits laborers who follow the Lord of the harvest into his harvest fields.

Jesus identifies the one limiting factor to this harvest being reaped: laborers.

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Apostle as Sender

discover

[This is part of a series called “What is an Apostle?” Check the other post here]

“Again Jesus said, ‘Peace be with you! As the Father has sent me, I am sending you.'” – John 20:21

Brad wrote a week ago about the sending language in John, and I got message from someone saying,

“Isn’t this the primary message of all of scripture, not just John?”

It is a great point and I would say Yes! But John is clearly focused on this and you see Jesus most clearly concerned with the sending nature of the Father, himself and even the Holy Spirit that is to come in this gospel.

But the commenter makes a great point and one that flows perfectly into this article about apostle as “Sender”.

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YOU CAN START A MISSIONAL MOVEMENT!

exponential

[This post is part of the Start Something New series. Read the other posts here!]

You have everything it takes to start a missional movement.  Yes, you.  I’m not referring to someone else.  You!

My friend, Troy McMahon, is leading a network of reproducing churches while serving as the Lead Pastor of a large multi-site church in Kansas City.  But it all started 15 years ago while Troy was still working for General Mills and he was my apprentice in leading a small group.

My friend, Doug Leddon, is the Executive Pastor of our largest campus with over 3,000 attendees.  But four years ago Doug was working in the financial industry of Chicago and was my small group apprentice leader. I could give you a list of people who are impacting tens, hundreds and thousands of people in a variety of contexts and ministries who all got their start as an apprentice.

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Thankful!

orcas

Here is an awesome place I got to go to this last weekend in WA. Hard not to be thankful here!

[If you want to enter into the drawing for one of five free copies of Real Life, Jame’s Choung new book, you can do so here. I will keep the contest open till the end of the week.]

Hey Everyone!

This last weekend was a good time to stop and reflect on what we are thankful for and one of those things that came up for me was this blog and the A.P.E. community that is reading, contributing and commenting here.

I love that we have started this blog and that we have this space to talk about the apostolic, prophetic, and evangelistic vocations and their role in the church and mission of God.

Top Posts

We have had this blog up and running for about 2.5 months so it is still very new, but I thought I would share with you the top 5 posts so far. We can have a little bit of a look back moment and thank God for some good posts over this time. In order of popularity…

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“Real Life” released!

james book

My new book, Real Life: A Christianity Worth Living Out, has just been published by InterVarsity Press!

As for practical takeaways from Real Life, it offers generational insights — particularly the differences between Generation Xers, Boomers and Millennials — and how it shapes our disciple-making. It also offers a disciple-making model that attempts to incorporate many values into one helpful flow.

“Real Life turns disciplemaking on its head, fusing together elements that have normally been separate — evangelism, spiritual formation, community and mission — into one great model that could easily be applied and multiplied. To make disciples today, this book is a valuable resource to get us started,” – Alan Hirsch

Others have given similar, positive remarks as well.

True Story

It’s been four and a half years since True Story: A Christianity Worth Believing In was released, and I’ve been humbled by the immense response to four hand-drawn circles. A huge thanks to everyone who helped to get that book out.

Here is a look at the four circle diagram if you haven’t seen it.

[tentblogger-youtube kCVcSiUUMhY]

I know that I might risk sounding a bit brazen, but I hope that you hear only my excitement about what God is doing through the book so far. We, in San Diego InterVarsity, created the material to reach Southern California college students, and I’ve been surprised by its international appeal. It’s been used to introduce people to Jesus and His message on every inhabited continent. (I don’t know, nor think it probably, that anyone has taken it to Antarctica.) And so far, it has been translated into Korean, Mongolian, Polish, Thai, Mandarin, German and Spanish.

It’s also spread to the evangelism curricula for denominations and national campus ministries, and has been reported on by Christian media outlets such as Christianity Today, Leadership Journal and JCTV. It’s been shared with seminary students in New England, lakeside villagers in Malawi, college students in Texas, house churches in China, youth in Australia, megachurches in Orange County, inmates in Fresno, slum dwellers in Thailand, and gang-bangers in Boston — one even tattooed the fourth circle on his bicep! One chaplain of a county jail thought it would help reduce the recidivism rate, giving inmates not only a vision of what they’re forgiven from, but what they’re forgiven for.

I’m thankful to God. It’s been His doing.

Now, four and a half years later, Real Life is finally out. From this vantage point, I see that both books are about disciple-making: if True Story communicated a vision of faith for people who don’t yet follow Jesus, then Real Life does the same with those who have already started. Real Life seeks to help people become like Jesus, as I learned from folks at 3DM,

“to do the things he did for the reasons he did them.”

True Story and Real Life actually share a common lineage: they are popularized versions of first and second halves of my dissertation on postmodern leadership development. True Story gave the theological ground for Real Life’s disciple-making model. So Real Life is a true follow-up, and I’m glad it’s finally in print!

It’s available for pre-order at Amazon — both in paperback and Kindle formats — but you can get it shipped to you immediately from InterVarsity Press if you can’t wait. And if you liked it, please consider offering a short review at Amazon. It might not seem like much, but every review was is enormously helpful in persuading others to see what this book is all about.

I hope that you enjoy reading Real Life, and that it gives you the tools necessary to help empower others to do what Jesus did for the reasons he did them.

Being Sent from the Gospel of John

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[This post is part of the A.P.E. Theology series. Read the rest of the posts here!]

When considering the theological and biblical underpinnings of the missional conversation I find the two most helpful topics to address include the concept of missio Dei, or mission of God, and the language of “sending” found throughout Scripture.

The chief element to grasp about the missio Dei is that the mission is God’s. We are not called to bring our mission into a local context; instead we are called to partner with God in His mission. We often wrongly assume that the primary activity of God is in the church, rather than recognizing that God’s primary activity is in the world, and the church is God’s instrument sent into the world to participate in His redemptive mission.

This leads to the second important topic, which is the theme of “sending” in Scripture. The reason it is important to recognize such language in Scripture is not only because it speaks to the missionary nature of the Triune God, but it also connects – particularly in the New Testament – God’s mission to ours. This is never truer than in the Gospel of John.

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What is an Oikos & how are you called to them?

Greeks at UCLA

Nick (lower right) a Greek InterVarsity Staff, with his Greek core team at UCLA

[This is part of a series called “What is an Apostle?” Check the other post here]

O = Oikos

Apostolic leaders are fascinated with oikos and empowering people to reach the many different ones in our world.

What is an oikos?

Oikos is the Greek term for “Family and Household” but it actually means much more than that. It refers to your family, co-workers, relationships and web of people that you regularly come into contact with.

It is a relational web of interconnected people.

Biblically we see oikos all over the place and this was the primary way for the gospel to spread in the New Testament. Two of my favorite times it is used are in these two passages

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Go Be A Gandalf

 

UNITED KINGDOM CIRCA 1998 A stamp printed in Great Britain shows image of The Hobbit by JRR Tolkien circa 1998.

A stamp printed in Great Britain shows image of The Hobbit by JRR Tolkien circa 1998.

[this is part of the series “A.P.E. in the Movies” read the other post here]

In three weeks time, the first of a new trilogy based on JRR Tolkien’s The Hobbit will be released in cinemas. If the film is anything like the book, then it will be a great movie to go see with an emerging leader you might be mentoring.

In the first chapter of the book, Bilbo Baggins is relaxing at his home and blowing smoke rings as he enjoys his pipe. He is completely unprepared for the arrival of the wizard Gandalf:

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