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New Series: RESET

NEW SERIES: RESET

Sunday, February 5, 2012 (8am or 10:30am)

Mars Hill Baptist Church

2012. It’s a new year filled with new and hopeful opportunity!

Yet for many…it will be another year of feeling stuck. Stuck in unhealthy relationships, dead-end careers, faulty finances, and a life filled with frustration. 

Reset. Sometimes you just need a fresh start.

Reset is all about fresh starts and APPLYING our second chances. It’s about opening ourselves to new and better ways of thinking, dreaming, and loving others, ourselves, and God.

This series will transform your life for the better, bringing you guaranteed financial results. But it will do more than that, it will change every area of your life: marriage, family health and relationships.

Why?  When God changes your heart from selfishness to generosity, every part of your life-journey is affected. If all believers followed the practical guidance of God’s Word, every church could be built, every nation would have an abundance of missionaries - and all would reap the benefits of having a generous heart.

With humor, passion and clarity, it’s my goal to share the keys to living a blessed life both financially and spiritually. 

Start well & finish well by joining us at Mars Hill for a new practical, yet hard-hitting series that will challenge us in some of the most important areas of our lives.

Join us & bring a friend on Sunday, February 5, 2012 (8am or 10:30am).


Mistakes Were Made: Greatest Mistake of Them All

1. KEEPING PEOPLE PAST THEIR EXPIRATION DATE.   

I’m what you call an eternal optimist.  My first instinct is to see the best in people and work to bring it out in the open.  I’ve sent people to conferences, personally mentored them, invested time and resources into their development only to be disappointed. 

Dismissing a person is never easy, sometimes it’s inevitable.  From experience, I’ve learned that the first person you fire is ALWAYS the most difficult.  Before I replace someone, I ask myself: “Does the person really need to be replaced?” 

A sharper focus can be gained by asking:

  1. Is the person’s ineffectiveness, poor leadership, or example blocking the progress of the ministry?
  2. How much harm is being done?
  3. What if the position goes vacant for a while (one of my favorite questions)?
  4. What standard am I using to measure job effectiveness?  Sometimes we measure people against impossible standards.  We must distinguish between someone who cannot do a job from someone who can but lacks the necessary skills.

The right people don’t need to be managed—they just need to be pointed in the right direction.  Jim Collins said, “If the person came to tell you that he or she is leaving to pursue an exciting new opportunity, would you feel terribly disappointed or secretly relieved?”  If you’d be relieved, it’s time for them to go.

Have you ever had to fire someone?

How was the experience?

Mistakes Were Made: My 2nd Mistake

2. PUTTING PROJECTS BEFORE PEOPLE. 

 Ecclesiastes 7:18 says, “The man who fears God will avoid all extremes.”

This is one of those areas where we need to embrace the tension between relating with people and accomplishing the mission/getting the job done.  

Ask specifically: “Is there anything I can do for you?” 

You communicate how much you value someone by simply asking the question. Sometimes it’s nice to do something for another person without them asking or surprising them.  But if you’re not a good guesser and you don’t have psychic abilities, just ask.

Often, when I get home from work, I know there are two things I can say that will encourage my wife: 

1) I’d really like to hear about your day,

2) Is there anything I can do for you?

Have you made this mistake lately?

Mistakes Were Made: My 3rd Mistake

3. TRYING TO FIX THE PROBLEM RATHER THAN THE PROCESS.  

problem is an obstacle which makes it difficult to achieve a desired goal, objective or purpose.  Furthermore, it refers to a situation, condition, or issue that is yet unresolved.  In a broad sense, a problem exists when an individual becomes aware of a significant difference between what actually is and what is desired.

Although pastoring has many positives, problems run parallel on twin tracks.  Trying to fix the problem rather than the process is like continuing to change diapers instead of potty-training your children. 

May I offer you a piece of unsolicited advice:

You can either continue to react to the problem, or you can fix the process. Ninety percent of the time it’s a systems-problem rather than a people-problem.

What’s your problem-solving method?

Mistakes Were Made: My 4th Mistake

4. DELEGATING TASKS INSTEAD OF RESPONSIBILITY.  

In my humble opinion, the most overused and overrated buzzword in ministry today is “excellence.” As a pastor of a thriving urban church, I am committed to excellence in my life and the life of Mars Hill.

Because of my commitment to excellence, I can become obsessed about every detail.  I’ve noticed how I’ve made my expectations clear to our team and now they tend to obsess about every detail. However, it didn’t take long for the team to realize that their interpretation of excellence might not be the same as mine.

Read More

Mistakes Were Made: My 5th Mistake

 5. ASSUMING THINGS ARE EITHER BLACK OR WHITE. 

According to Wikipedia, ”a grey area is a term for a border in-between two or more things that is unclearly defined, a border that is hard to define or even impossible to define, or a definition where the distinction border tends to move.”

Wow, that’s a mouthful isn’t it!

I often say when I’m preaching, “let me give you the Stowers translation:”  A grey area is a subject or problem that people do not know how to deal with because there are no clear rules. 

Yea, I like that definition!!!

For those involved ministry, experience has taught us that grey areas exist!  Following rules is easier than the messiness of relationships.  Following rules is easier than discerning God’s will. The policies or guidelines we establish should actually remove barriers and allow more freedom within our organizations.

Moreover, innovative organizations don’t value the rules over relationships, they don’t value rules over people, and they don’t value rules over the mission.  As we seek to minister to God’s people, remember black and white are not the only colors in the box.

What do you do when you encounter a grey area? 

Mistakes Were Made: My 6th Mistake

6. NOT FOLLOWING THE LEADING OF THE HOLY SPIRIT. 

The Spirit’s presence within us enables us to understand and interpret the Word.  Jesus told His disciples “when He, the Spirit of Truth, has come, He will guide you into all truth” (John 16:13). 

He reveals to our minds the whole counsel of God as it relates to worship, doctrine, and Christian living.  He is the ultimate guide, going before, leading the way, removing obstructions, opening the understanding, and making all things plain and clear. He leads in the way we should go in all spiritual things.  Without such a guide, we would be apt to fall into error. 

Sometimes when I’m facing a big decision, I try to acquire more information rather than seek God’s direction.  Here’s a fundamental principle to ponder: When we stop listening to God, He stops talking to us.  God stopped talking to Abraham for 13 years between the last verse of Genesis 16 and the first chapter of 17.  Sometimes, God requires us to take a step, in faith, before he reveals his plan.  Check out Joshua 3.

What happened in your life when you decided to yield to the Holy Spirit?

Mistakes Were Made: My 7th Mistake

7. DWELLING ON THE “WORST CASE” SCENARIO. 

As one who recognizes the validity and importance of spiritual gifts, one of my dominate gifts is discernment.  



It can be a positive gift when God’s in control of my life.  However, when I try to take control, discernment can lead me towards sin.  The sin I’m referring to is called worry or anxiety.  I’ve wasted way too much time worrying about challenges or problems that never happened.  It has been said that “85% of what we worry about never happens.”  Man, with odds like these who can loose.  Personally, this is an area of vulnerability.  What’s yours?

Do you dwell on the “worst case scenario?”