Archive for the 'Pastors' Category

Arkansas Baptist State Convention Meeting at Pinnacle Hills

ABSC-PastorsBlog

Our Cross Church Family has the privilege of hosting the churches of the Arkansas Baptist State Convention today through Wednesday at our Pinnacle Hills Campus. There are 1,400 plus churches that partner together to comprise the Arkansas Baptist State Convention. Of course, our state convention is in harmonious fellowship with the Southern Baptist Convention.

The Pastors Conference and Convention is Open to Everyone

The Pastors Conference and convention is open to everyone; therefore, if you desire, please come. You can find the schedule here. Dr. Nick Floyd, Teaching Pastor for Cross Church and Campus Pastor of our Fayetteville Campus, will be preaching at 11:30 a.m. on Monday. Pray for him. Ronnie Parrott, of our Fayetteville Staff Team, will be leading a luncheon called Baptist 21, where Pastor Nick and I will be on the panel. There are many other opportunities, and we hope you will engage in the morning, afternoon, or evening sessions. Again, the above link will help guide you in scheduling.

Our Volunteers and Staff Team

As these churches gather for inspiration, focus, and business, our incredible volunteers from our Cross Church Family will serve them. Whatever their needs are, our people will care for them. I have seen our volunteers serve for all kinds of groups, conferences, commissioning services, and faithfully each week. They care for and love people. Beside them will be our Staff Team. I am so thankful for each volunteer and Staff Team member.

Our Partnership

Cross Church partners with the 1,400 other Southern Baptist Churches in Arkansas as well as the 46,000 Southern Baptist Churches across our nation to be a part of the Southern Baptist Convention. Together, we join in the highest partnership of all: presenting the gospel globally and making disciples of all the nations. We must finish the task together.

Yours for the Great Commission,

Ronnie W. Floyd

When You are Casting Vision

Vision3.jpgCasting vision is one of my favorite things to do as a Pastor. It has also been a joy to do beyond my local church in some major settings. Each time, I find it a joy.

I love getting into the challenge of discerning the Lord’s will as I work through the process with others. I learned some years ago that the bigger the vision, the more important it is that you involve people from all walks of life, even in carving the final vision. Once that vision is done and written up specifically, the biggest challenge is communicating it effectively.

When you are casting vision, I think you need to filter it by ensuring the vision is:

Clear

Clarity around a vision is imperative. As the communicator, you have to be clear about your understanding of it. This is why writing the vision is also imperative. This written documentation is what you will return to again and again. Through a meticulous process, you learn how to communicate the vision clearly. When the vision is clear to you, you are more able to clearly communicate it to others.

Whether you are communicating the vision of the church or the vision for a new initiative, ensure you do so with absolute clarity. It is not about how much you share, but you must share enough for people to have complete clarity. Therefore, when you cast vision to God’s people, be sure it is clear.

Concrete

I think having a concrete vision means that you have a vision that is real and tangible. It is not about using language that no one understands or trying to impress others with great and extensive content. It is a vision that people can touch, feel, and become engaged in personally.

Pastors seem to spiritualize issues. We cannot always spiritualize an initiative and have it received by the people. We have to know God wants us to do it, even have it confirmed from His Word; however, we have to communicate the vision in a believable and tangible manner. Therefore, when casting a vision, be clear and concrete.

Concise

In today’s world it is really true: less is more. This is especially true when we cast a vision. It needs to be concise. It needs to be brief, free of too many details.

Yes, you have to go deep and comprehend the details so you know you understand the vision; however, when you cast it before others, they just need to know the work is already done. You need to be on top of it, but remember you are breaking it down, not only so others can grasp it, but also for them to be able to communicate it to others. I will state it again: It is not about how much you share, but share enough for the people to have complete clarity.

Therefore, when casting vision, be clear, concrete, and concise.

Compelling

A compelling vision moves the people to action. As a servant-leader, you are God’s instrument to rally the people to a better future. You are there to lead them into a future where they would not go on their own. The vision has to be clear enough for them to understand, concrete enough for them to believe it is real, concise enough for them to communicate, and compelling enough for them to own personally and enthusiastically.

As the communicator of the vision, do your very best to be strong, believable, and capable of moving people into owning the vision enthusiastically. If the vision is going to capture their imagination and heart, moving them into the vision personally and enthusiastically, then the vision must be compelling.

Leadership is a privilege

Leadership is such a privilege because you are able to cast vision to others. Steward this entrustment well. Do not get lost in it. Enjoy it. You have the privilege to take them where you believe God wants to go. Therefore, be clear. Be concrete. Be concise. Be compelling.

Yours for the Great Commission,

Ronnie W. Floyd