Pastor, Make Easter Weekend Special for Your Church and Community
Once a year, we have an unprecedented opportunity to welcome some in our communities who would not normally attend church. I want to give you some things to consider as we move toward the final planning stages for Easter weekend.
1. Plan for Easter to be a Great Success
If you do not plan for success, it will not happen. What is success? You will have to pray about and define what you believe success looks like in your church. For us at Cross Church, success for Easter weekend looks like:
- God is present with us in great power
- Increased numbers of people present that exceed a regular Sunday
- People hear the gospel and place faith in Christ alone for salvation
- Extra services so more people have the opportunity to hear the Gospel
- Members and guests have a fabulous experience at Cross Church
The last several years we have had a major Passion Week emphasis each day leading up to Easter Weekend. Since our spring break occurs at the same time as Passion Week this year, we have decided not to do our Passion Week emphasis and will do other things to accelerate forward.
On a normal Sunday, we have eleven services on our five campuses. This Easter weekend, we will have sixteen services on our five campuses, offering Saturday services on three campuses.
We are saturating our community with the invitation to join us Easter weekend in several different ways. Our Communications Team has given us the tools to invite through social networking, newspapers, door hangers, and invitation cards our members can share with their friends.
Pastor, plan for success.
2. Let Your Church Become Their Church on Easter Sunday.
It is critical that you have a big, welcoming spirit from the pulpit and by the people of the church leading up to Easter weekend. About two decades ago, God put this phrase in my heart and we have used it almost annually: Let our church be your church this Easter Sunday.
Many people do not have a church family or a church home. Therefore, do all you can to demonstrate this big, welcoming spirit as pastor and challenge your people to resound it all over your community and region: Let our church be your church this Easter Sunday.
Take care not to make guests feel unwelcome by joking about some who may only come to church on or around Easter. A cynical spirit from the pulpit or in your people regarding guests is not productive. If we truly want to reach our community and region for Christ, we must welcome guests regardless of when they attend.
3. Preach the Gospel and sing recognizable songs.
Pastor, preach the Word of God and preach the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Unashamedly, call people to a relationship with Jesus Christ. Do not soft-sell in order to relate to the unchurched. Be who you are and proclaim the powerful gospel of Jesus Christ.
Attempt to sing at least one song that people who rarely or have never attended church may recognize. Possibly Amazing Grace, How Great Thou Art, It Is Well With My Soul, or something similar. You want them to experience your church and mostly, the presence of God.
Finally, pray like it matters. Lead your church to pray for a mighty and successful weekend. Saturate Easter with prayer.
I cannot wait to hear what God does in your church this Easter weekend. May God alone receive the glory!
Now is the Time to Lead,
Ronnie W. Floyd
My Last 100 Days as President of the Southern Baptist Convention
This week I am entering my last 100 days as president of the Southern Baptist Convention. Someone told me it would be a two-year sprint and unquestionably, it has been. Honestly, it seems like it was just yesterday this journey began, though my team may feel otherwise.
I am very committed to finishing strong. Please understand, I do not know how presidents before me led during their season relating to the topics below, or how the ones who follow me will. But I want to let you in on some of the inside “secrets” of my experiences over the last year and what I will do in my last 100 days.
In these last 100 days, what is left to do?
Seasons
There are seasons that are busier than others. Some seasons are more extensive with travel while others are heavier with preparations and convention responsibilities. I also have my own church to care for, writing assignments in leadership, and sermon preparations for both my church and Southern Baptist engagements.
I want to bring you along on a few of these tasks, even though what I will share is not exhaustive. This will help you have an inside look at things, but also build anticipation as we move toward the beginning of our convention on Tuesday, June 14, in St. Louis.
Preparing and Finalizing Preparations for #SBC16
Within days of the conclusion of the 2015 Southern Baptist Convention in Columbus, Ohio, I began working with the leadership and communications teams regarding our theme for the 2016 Southern Baptist Convention in St. Louis. Those were all determined within the thirty days following last year’s convention. It was exciting to see the vision come together so quickly.
This prepared us to go forward in some general details regarding what we wanted this year’s convention to look like in program and appearance. Email exchanges and conference calls began with our Order of Business Committee, moving us forward to prepare for our meeting in September. The same week in September, we met with our Order of Business Committee.
This entire time, we have been preparing and moving toward final details for the upcoming convention. I have prayed daily 1 Chronicles 28:19,
David concluded, ‘By the Lord’s hand on me, He enabled me to understand everything in writing, all the details of the plan.’
How strongly I desire for God to do this with our preparations. While we have to plan ahead generally, we want the Lord to give us insight along the way, projecting what will be most relevant for Southern Baptists in June of 2016.
Last year, in the month before the convention, I spent no less than sixty hours preparing my 2015 Presidential Address. This is still before me for our 2016 meeting; so please pray for me.
Baptists need to know the president’s team is not only in his own church, but way beyond in our convention. Highly gifted persons on our Order of Business Committee and leaders on our Executive Committee walk with me through this process, giving input and helping us chart the vision together. I am thankful for all of these dear people who love our Lord and want to forward our work together in agreement, unity, and prayer.
Appointment of the Committee on Committees
Beginning last September, we started working on our Committee on Committees for 2016. The president appoints sixty-eight people to serve on this committee, which in turn appoints our Committee on Nominations. The Committee on Nominations will eventually nominate the trustees of our eleven national entities and our Executive Committee.
This process begins with receiving nominations. Then we move to determining the members, appointing the chairman, and the most difficult step, recruiting the members. Since the first of the year, we have been securing the members for this committee, and we will finish this week. It takes a tremendous amount of time to correspond with each potential member and secure a firm commitment. Next Monday, I will release the members of our 2016 Committee on Committees to the convention via my weekly blog.
Appointment of the Committee on Resolutions
At the first of this year, I began to work through the persons I would appoint to the Committee on Resolutions. This ten-member committee is critical in Baptist life because their work goes beyond the convention itself. As well, there are various restrictions and guidelines that are imperative to put the pieces of this puzzle together. Before the end of March, I will release the names of our 2016 Committee on Resolution via this weekly article.
Appointment of Parliamentarians, Credentials Committee and Tellers Committee
In these last 100 days, I will spend much time on appointments of Parliamentarians, the Credentials Committee and the Tellers Committee. Before the convention, these appointments will be completed and released via this weekly blog. Both the Credentials Committee and Tellers Committee will have an estimated twenty persons each. This year, besides appointing our Chief Parliamentarian, Barry McCarty, who has served Southern Baptists for thirty consecutive years this June, I will also appoint up to five assistant parliamentarians.
Media Requests and Correspondence
This past Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday up until the final few hours of Super Tuesday, I did nine different radio interviews and an in-studio television interview with the Dallas-Fort Worth NBC affiliate prior to preaching in Texas on Tuesday night. As well, I gave several statements for print media. I am honored to be able to represent Southern Baptists in the media during a time when Evangelicals may not be presented in the best light.
Daily, we receive emails and other correspondence. Some are related to basic questions about our convention, while others are sharing concerns. Regardless, I am firmly committed to responding. We have made every effort to answer each one and never take anyone for granted.
Weekly SBC Article Released Each Monday
Each president of the Southern Baptist Convention has to fulfill their vision as God leads them, but I have chosen to write articles related to our convention weekly. These are published on my blog each Monday.
My team informed me that by the time I finish my term at the conclusion of our 2016 Convention in St. Louis, I will have written no less than 110 articles related to the Southern Baptist Convention. Yes, I have written a lot about our work together as Southern Baptists.
I have done this because I believe in the power of Habakkuk 2:2,
The Lord answered me: Write down this vision; clearly inscribe it on tablets so one may easily read it.
God has used many of these weekly articles to forward the vision not only within our convention, but way beyond. Therefore, in these last 100 days, I will continue to write. God uses the written word.
How Will This Get Done in The Last 100 Days?
Only by the grace of God and the prayers of God’s people will all of this be accomplished by June 14. I am often asked if I am looking forward to this being over. I can honestly say, not at all. I have enjoyed it thoroughly and will miss it greatly. God has sustained me because He called me to do this in this season of my life. My vision is clear, my passion is alive, and my focus is forward to St. Louis. Pray for me and with me about #SBC16.
Now is the Time to Lead,
Ronnie W. Floyd
Senior Pastor, Cross Church
President, Southern Baptist Convention
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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.
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