This Week at Cross Church | 4 Challenges

4 Challenges Before Cross Church in December

Cross Church Family, I’d like to share four challenges that face our church in December.

Challenge #1: ENGAGE PEOPLE WITH OUR CHURCH IN DECEMBER

Each week, we have a responsibility to engage people in our community with our church. However, the month of December brings us special moments and additional opportunities. Let’s seize the moment:

  • EXPERIENCE CHRISTMAS, our church-wide Christmas worship service on Sunday, December 10, and Monday, December 11. You can find details here.
  • Participate in the Lord’s Supper with your family in all services on Sunday morning, December 17, as we conclude our Home for the Holidays series.
  • Christmas Eve Services on Sunday morning, December 24. We will have seven services. Find times and locations here.

Challenge #2: MAKE SURE YOU HAVE HONORED GOD WITH ALL HE HAS GIVEN TO YOU IN 2017

Do not minimize making sure you are honoring God with at least one tenth of all He has provided for you during 2017. This includes income from all resources, including salary, bonuses, stock, other gifts of kind, or ways He has provided for you. Begin to evaluate the ways God has blessed you and make sure you have honored Him with all He has given you in 2017.

Challenge #3: BECOME FAMILIAR WITH ALL THE OPPORTUNITIES GIVEN TO US ON CHRISTMAS EVE

Since Christmas Eve is on Sunday, we have determined to place all of our energies in our Sunday morning services that we will offer on December 24. We are offering seven services on our four campuses:

  • Springdale – 9:15 a.m. (Español – 10:55 a.m.)
  • Pinnacle Hills – 10:55 a.m.
  • Fayetteville – 9:00 & 10:30 a.m.
  • Neosho – 9:00 & 10:30 a.m.

I talked about these services this past Sunday via Cross Church Today, and you can watch it here.

Christmas Eve-video

Challenge #4: PRAY WITH ME THIS MONTH FOR AMERICA USING THESE THREE PRAYER PRIORITIES

3ThingstoPrayForOn Monday, I wrote about three prayer priorities for America for the month of December. You can find them here. Will you pray with us? And if you’d like to engage in prayer for Cross Church as well, join our Cross Church Circle and pray along with thousands of our Cross Church Family.

See You Sunday,

Ronnie W. Floyd

 

Guest Post | 10 Reminders for Every Pastor, by Jeff Crawford

Jeff Crawford-podcastToday, RonnieFloyd.com welcomes guest writer, Dr. Jeff Crawford. Dr. Crawford is Lead Pastor of Ministries and Teaching Pastor at Cross Church.

Three weeks ago, I had the privilege to serve on the ordination council of four young men here at Cross Church that we were considering for Ordination to the Ministry.  The council was the culmination of a long process. All four men had clear testimonies of salvation and a later call of God on their lives to the ministry. All four had been previously Licensed to the Ministry by either our church or another church. And all four had been under the supervision and watch care of our staff for a season as we considered their readiness for ordination.

And so, in a meeting room of Cross Church, along with seven fellow pastors, we spent two hours with this group of four going deep, deep, deep, into their readiness for ministry, their commitment to their calling, their theological anchoring to orthodoxy, and much more. I am happy to report that all four were unanimously recommended for ordination by the council and all four will be formally ordained this Sunday morning on the Cross Church campus where they serve.

The whole experience for me was a real throwback to my own ordination council, now over 20 years ago. It really took me back to the roots of my own calling and all the reasons why I do everything I do on a day-in and day-out basis. Ministry is hard. Ministry is wonderful. Ministry will take all you have and then some. And ministry will add more to the life of a pastor than could ever be counted. But one thing is certain… in order to survive and thrive in ministry, you must be called. And that is the purpose of the ordination council, to discern the true calling and readiness of the candidate.

With that said, allow me to steer your thoughts today, pastor, back to the moment of your own calling and ordination. As the years progress, it is easy to drift. Not necessarily morally or ethically, but drift by way of why you are doing what you do. And in that vein, allow me to share some of those most basic of basics that I shared with our candidates three weeks ago, that I once again reminded myself of, and of which we all need to never drift.

  • Keep your focus on Jesus.  Don’t become so focused on ministry that you forget who it’s all about.
  • Love the Church.  The Church is people, and this can be hard to do at times, but loving people is the essence of ministry.
  • Uphold the Bible as God’s inerrant, infallible Word. Study it, learn to preach it / teach it. It is amazing that some of those who carry the title today of “clergy” deny the truth of God’s Word. The Bible IS the standard of all Truth and this can never be forgotten.
  • Get the best preparation you can (education). Degrees are like keys on a key chain – the more you have, the more doors you can open. God forbid that there be some door you want to walk through one day but don’t have the key to open. At this point your ability to minister and lead is limited.
  • Be a lifelong learner. Read, read, read. NEVER believe that you’ve learned it all.
  • Marry a woman called to be the wife of a pastor. Who a pastor marries will determine the level of ministry effectiveness he will have. Yes, God calls women to be pastor’s wives just as He calls pastors. For those already married, lead and cultivate health with your wife as a pastor’s wife. Just as it can be lonely for the pastor, it can be lonely for the pastor’s wife. You are in it together.
  • Be sensitive to other people. Sensitive of the previous generation(s) and the next generation. This balance is extremely difficult, but necessary.
  • Be willing to go anywhere God wants you to go. “The earth is the Lord’s and the fullness thereof,” Psalm 24:1. Don’t limit God.
  • Be willing to do anything God wants you to do. Count on it – God will call you to do things that you believe are too big for you. And God will call you to do things you believe you are too small for you.
  • Teach your children to love Jesus and love the Church. Family first, ministry second. Don’t let your children hate God and the Church because they stole Daddy from them. Remember, if you lose your family, you will lose your ministry.

Remember your calling, pastor. Remember those who believed in you when you were ordained. And remember the God who equips you for every good work.

In the words of the steward of this blog, now is the time lead.

Blessings,
Jeff Crawford
Lead Pastor of Ministries, Teaching Pastor, Cross Church