Archive for May, 2016

Pastors, Lead Wisely

LeadWise

Wisdom is seeing and living life from God’s perspective. Pastors need to live and lead wisely. How?

Today, I want to challenge you to take these four actions to lead wisely:

1. Live in the Word of God Personally

If you do not live in, read, and study the Bible personally, you cannot lead wisely. I am astounded at how many pastors do not have a consistent time with God, reading His Word. I am even more astounded how many have never read through the entire Bible.

When I am talking about living, reading, and studying the Bible personally, I am not referring to sermon preparation. This is secondary compared to your own personal pilgrimage in the Word of God.

One of the wisest decisions I ever made was reading through the entire Bible at least one time annually. I have done so since 1990.

A pastor cannot and will not lead wisely without living in the Word of God personally. Wisdom is seeing and living life from God’s perspective. You cannot lead people by something you do not do personally.

2. Develop Your Prayer Life Intentionally

Prayer should never be neglected in the life of a spiritual leader. Your prayer life needs to be intentional.

This demands the discipline to organize your personal life and your prayer life. If you do not plan to pray, you will not pray.

This means you must prioritize your daily schedule. Allocate the time. I do not see how one can do this without beginning their day with God. Ministry is too challenging not to.

Pastor, organize your prayer life. I organize my prayer life in the Notes section of my iPad. This leads to easy change, depending on need.

A pastor who is crying out to God in prayer daily will be much more likely to lead his church or ministry wisely.

3. Know Your People Individually

The larger the church and ministry, the more this becomes an impossibility. I do not think this prohibits a pastor or his leadership, but he must counteract this challenge by making himself available to people.

How do you do this?

  • Walk through the room slowly.
  • Refuse to just appear to be friendly; be truly friendly.
  • Smile while you walk.
  • Pray for people right there when they share a need.
  • Offer opportunities like receptions or other entrees for people to say hello to you personally.

Knowing your people is challenging, but after all these years of pastoring along with other positions, it still comes down to one thing overall: relating to people effectively.

4. Build Leaders Intentionally

While tenure in ministry is no longer the friend it used to be, it is irreplaceable relating to building leaders. In my twenty-nine years of leading people in this church and building leaders, I have realized it takes intentionality.

One of the craziest things I ever did here was what we called Midnight Madness. When we were getting ready for the fall kick-off season, hundreds of our leaders came, had dinner, and sat with me for hours, letting me invest in them. As I poured into them the Word of God, prayer, vision, and actions to build the church, they responded. When midnight came and dismissal occurred, we celebrated.

This not only led to me doing this more than one year, but eventually into having a direct line to our leaders. We also established a quarterly time where I personally invested in our leaders on a Sunday afternoon for an hour.

Now with five campuses, multiple staff members, and thousands of people attending weekly, I do not do these kinds of things any longer. I help develop our staff and key leaders, and our staff leads and develops our people.

Regardless of the method you use, we need to build leaders intentionally.

A Closing Observation 

Most pastors never lose their church or ministry due to bad theology, but over their leadership. So many times leadership is ineffective because it is not done wisely. Pastors, lead wisely.

Now is the Time to Lead,

Ronnie W. Floyd

Unity is One of Our Greatest Needs in the Southern Baptist Convention

UnityUnity demands we accept one another in love. Unity requires work — hard work. Unity is an act of humility.

In a convention of over 51,000 churches and congregations, eleven national entities and our Executive Committee, forty-two state conventions, and over one thousand associations, unity does not happen without intentionality.

A Brief Look Back

As a young pastor in seminary, I remember some of the beginning days of the conservative resurgence. These were very difficult and tumultuous times. When the movement was declared successful, most were hopeful we could enter into more peaceful days together as a convention.

Unknown to us then, we were entering one of our most challenging seasons as a convention of churches.

A Present Reality

Southern Baptists are no longer in a battle for the Bible, but in a battle with one another. The very soul of our convention is at stake.

Almost two years ago when I became president, I was determined I would do all I could to bring us together. I have given myself to this task, not just in words, but also in deed. I have gathered groups from all sizes of congregations, groups of church leaders and convention leaders, state leaders and national leaders, and members from different ethnicities and generations. Yet, we find ourselves in a continual struggle to come together in unity. Why?

Unquestionably, we are affected by the culture we live in today. Narcissism and independence infects us just like it does others and challenges our paradigm of working together. Transition within our national entities and state conventions is occurring, and adjusting to change can be uncomfortable.

If this was not enough, America is in an election for the office of President of the United States. Way beyond the normal, opinions on the election are not just felt, but are being expressed publicly and demonstratively.

Each of these things, and so much more I could share, challenge the very soul of our unity together.

5 Intentional Actions for Unity

The amazing thing through this season is we are still seeing so many wonderful things occurring. Yet, the threats relating to our unity are undeniable. If the enemy cannot destroy us from the outside, he will attack us from the inside.

I want to challenge each of us to take five intentional actions relating to unity within our convention:

1. Accept one another in love

None of us are alike. The Divine imprint upon us causes us to be unique. Unity is not uniformity, but intentionality. Unity will not happen without accepting one another in love.

God wants us to accept one another in love. We need to love people like Jesus does: willfully, sacrificially, and unconditionally. None of this is possible without personal humility, gentleness of spirit, and patience with one another.

Accepting one another is holding on to each other, enduring our differences, and bearing up under the relationship to seeing it through and sustained for the glory of God. This takes the discipline of intentionality.

The next time you are challenged to love a brother or sister in Christ, ask God at that very moment, Lord, give me the power to love them willfully, sacrificially, and unconditionally.

2. Work Toward Unity

We need to earnestly and promptly take the needed actions to guard our unity. This may require each of us to take action – conduct a phone call or visit, write a genuine email, letter, or text to someone or a group of people. Unity is work!

Refuse disunity within our ranks! There is nothing biblical or godly relating to creating disunity.

In this social media world, we need to cease writing or saying things that can be misunderstood easily. We need to understand that one day we will answer to God for every blog, article, tweet, and conversation we have with one another.

Romans 14:12-13, “So then, each of us will give an account of himself to God. Therefore, let us no longer criticize one another. Instead decide never to put a stumbling block or pitfall in your brother’s way.”

We need to denounce the personal temptation to be motivated by the praise of others, their comments, and retweets rather than being motivated to live holy, because one day we will answer to God Himself. Yes, unity is work. Work takes discipline. Every day.

3. Be humble before God and others

A runaway, unaccountable church lay leader, pastor, or a leader in our convention poses a major threat to unity among us. Humility is not just a description we should have, but the prescription for us to become what God wants us to be as Christians and Southern Baptists.

A lowliness of mind about ourselves is hard to find in a world where we think more about ourselves than we should. Remember these words: A person who is not humble before others is a person who is not humble before God.

Humility before God demands He is first every day of our lives. Humility before God is a voluntary and willing action, surrendering to Him even in seasons of prayer and fasting periodically. Personally, I am convinced more than ever before, church leaders and convention leaders need to spend time praying and fasting.

4. Pray for Unity

The walls come down between people and groups when we pray for and work together toward unity. Prayer crosses over the perceived barriers of ethnicity, race, and generations, bringing down the walls that divide us.

Regardless of your political party or personal feelings, we need to navigate through these turbulent times together. Regardless of what you think about someone, a certain entity, or who should become the next president, it is incumbent on us to pray for and work together toward unity.

5. Come to St. Louis in the Spirit of Unity

I have said this over and over again across this nation: I am bringing people together so we will start talking to each other and praying for each other rather than talking about each other. The Southern Baptist Convention is your family. We are family.

On June 14-15, our family will reunite in St. Louis. It may not be convenient for you to attend, but we need you there. Our family is meeting.

For the sake of unity, come to St. Louis. Nothing brings us together more than when we gather, pray together, and leave on mission together.

Now is the Time to Lead,

Ronnie W. Floyd

Senior Pastor, Cross Church
President, Southern Baptist Convention

*******

Dr. Ronnie Floyd is currently serving as the President of the Southern Baptist Convention. The Southern Baptist Convention is America’s largest Protestant denomination with more than 15.7 million members in over 51,094 churches nationwide.

To request an interview with Dr. Ronnie Floyd
contact Gayla Oldham at (479) 751-4523 or email gaylao@crosschurch.com.

Visit our website at http://ronniefloyd.com
Follow Dr. Floyd on Twitter and Instagram @ronniefloyd