Jesus: Connections for Life

Jesus. All about Life – it has started and it’s gaining momentum. Later this week the month-long television campaign will begin. Christians in the Media have produced a study guide and accompanying DVD that “tackles Jesus’ answer to each of the issues raised by the TV commercial”.

Jesus: connections for life

Jesus: Connections for Life will prove to be a useful tool. Christians can be better equipped to know how to respond to questions their friends may have in response to the TV commercials. Likewise, the material could be used in a small group or lounge room of friends interested in hearing more about Jesus. The short responses in the booklet are readable and to the point. There are real life stories at the beginning of each session on the DVDs. The talks from Revelation are clear, engaging and effective in presenting Jesus as the one who offers everlasting life through his death and resurrection. Dominic Steele gives the following talks:

  • Talk 1: Jesus is the Living One
  • Talk 2: Jesus knows us and offers us life
  • Talk 3: Life is all about Jesus
  • Talk 4: Jesus All About Life

Get hold of this material – sooner rather than later – to make the most of JAAL campaign.

Who the heck is Jesus??? Start here: Saviour + King

Stay tuned for more JAAL coverage… Next: The 2nd best book to read

LOUD 2009 @ Sydney Entertainment Centre

I’ve been looking forward to announcing this event… it’s going to be BIG!! Tickets aren’t available yet, but lock it into your youth group calendar for term 4… LIVE OUT LOUD is a youth rally sponsored by Connect 09 and fervr.net on Friday 4th December 2009. Christian teenagers can bring their friends along to hear the good news of Jesus.

Live out LOUD 2009

Tickets available on the website soon…

Retweet with BackType and su.pr

I’ve recently installed BackType Tweetcount and Su.pr URL shortener on dmdc. What does this mean? 1) There is a number in the bottom right corner of each blog post displaying how many times it has been tweeted. 2) A button so you can easily retweet. 3) su.pr makes short web addresses for each post eg. davemiers.com/vCmV

this is a snowboarder

Interested in doing it on your site? Check out church crunch for the how-to (there’s one bit of code you need to change – see it in the comments on that post).

sxc pic

Strategic Leadership vs Cross-Centred Leadership

There are valuable and important lessons to be learnt from books on leadership, strategy and vision. In the quote below, Don Carson warns that insights from these fields must never replace the Cross of Jesus at the centre of Christian life and ministry.

look right

At the moment, books are pouring off the presses telling us how to plan for success, how “vision” consists in clearly articulated “ministry goals,” how the knowledge of detailed profiles of our communities constitutes the key to successful outreach. I am not for a moment suggesting that there is nothing to be learned from such studies. But after a while one may perhaps be excused for marvelling how many churches were planted by Paul and Whitefield and Wesley and Stanway and Judson without enjoying these advantages. Of course all of us need to understand the people to whom we minister, and all of us can benefit from small doses of such literature. But massive doses sooner or later dilute the gospel. Ever so subtly, we start to think that success more critically depends on thoughtful sociological analysis than on the gospel; Barna becomes more important than the Bible. We depend on plans, programs, vision statements – but somewhere along the way we have succumbed to the temptation to displace the foolishness of the cross with the wisdom of strategic planning. Again, I insist, my position is not a thinly veiled plea for obscurantism, for seat-of-the-pants ministry that plans nothing. Rather, I fear that the cross, without ever being disowned, is constantly in danger of being dismissed from the central place it must enjoy, by relatively peripheral insights that take on far too much weight. Whenever the periphery is in danger of displacing the center, we are not far removed from idolatry.

(taken from D.A. Carson The Cross and Christian Ministry: Leadership Lessons from 1 Corinthians – Baker Books p. 26)

The progression from preaching the gospel to denying the gospel is a dangerous slippery slope (preaching > assuming > neglecting > denying). Are you a Christian? Keep the main thing the main thing! Not a Christian? Go read about the main thing.