Simplifying Organizational Structures

Stan & Heidi

By Stan Rieb

Last month we noted James Emery White’s blog Ten Steps to Immediate Church Renewal and Growth (that most churches will refuse to take). As I said, I would like to highlight a couple of those points that I have seen in the churches I have been working with through Ministry Mappings, leadership trainings and pastor coaching.

Let’s take Pastor White’s first point –

Simplify your structure by putting the authority to make most decisions related to the practice of ministry in the hands of those with responsibility. Translation: let your leaders lead.”

Pastor White shared two important thoughts in that one point – simplifying structure and let leaders lead.

When I was the mayor of the very substantial community of Chugwater, Wyoming – what was not understood by some in the community, was that while their neighbor’s dog running loose may have seemed like a significant issue that I as Mayor was to address post haste, there were issues of greater significance.  We as a town had to invest in and maintain the infrastructure of the community – streets, water, sewage treatment, communication and power distribution.  You quickly learn the hazards of an aging infrastructure.

Many churches are built on an aging infrastructure.  They were designed, like the infrastructure of the town of Chugwater, for a past era or culture.  The infrastructure of Chugwater was built for a time when people had one bathroom in their house, water was relatively cheap to provide, galvanized pipe was the product of choice to deliver that water and streets were not paved because it was not that long ago that the framers and ranchers rode their horses to town.

Most church organizational structures and the documents that support them come out of the late 1940’s and early 1950’s. The post-World War II culture which highly valued nationalism and democracy, was transferred into the organizational structure of the church.  Congregationalism, business meetings, committees and board structure were valued as cultural, and then justified as Biblical norms.  To have lengthy and detailed governing documents that were iron clad and unchangeable was both Biblical and patriotic. But much has changed in the intervening years since the 50’s.  Each generation since has had differing values when it has come to such things as governance and polity.  And subsequently the application of each is justified as “the” biblical model.

The advancement of our consumer culture and the technological revolution have irreversibly altered the world, and more specifically our culture.   If our local communities are our church’s primary mission fields, with their unique cultures,  then Pastor White’s challenge is a crucial one: How can we simplify our structure so that we can “put the authority to make most decisions related to the practice of ministry in the hands of those with responsibility?” How can we embrace our identity as “sent ones?”

John Kaiser in his book, Winning on Purpose talks about policy governance, or as I call it, an Accountable Leadership Model.  It is the idea of implementing a structure that clearly defines responsibility, authority and accountability in relation to a ministries mission or purpose. The end of this is what Pastor White shared – “it lets leaders lead.”   This model includes simplifying your governing structures and documents, aligning ministries and assessing roles to fulfill the Great Commission mandate.

Here are a few questions to consider:

  • Do your organizational structures reinforce an Ephesians 4:11-13 ministry – leaders engaging the congregation in the gospel ministry?
  • Do they give ministry leaders a clear understanding of their responsibilities through job description and ministry goals aligned to the churches’ ministry goals?
  • Are those ministry leaders given the authority within the guidelines of those responsibilities?
  • Have you defined a means of accountability focused on producing effectiveness and success?

If any of this sounds interesting, I would love to talk with you and the leadership of your church about simplifying your structures to help you accomplish the purpose of reaching your community and building up the body of Christ. Contact me at stan.rieb@rmcn.org.

 

Sharing Christ with Halloween Costumes

On Saturday, October 17th of this year we sponsored a free kids Halloween Costume Exchange for our community. We had three goals in mind and all were met. First we desired to reach out to the needy in our community and of the nearly 100 people who participated, most were needy. One young mother told us, “If you had not done this, I would not have been able to have a Halloween with my daughter this year.” That was heart-warming.  And only three families were involved with any church.

Our second goal was to advertise our church. We are two miles west of town and few people pass by our church regularly, so this put us on the map for those who attended.  We gave each family a bag filled with church and children’s ministry information, a fun gospel tract about Halloween and provided cookies for the kids.

And our third goal was to use this as a bridge event into our trunk or treat outreach being held at the county fairgrounds on Halloween. This is an event where several churches combine resources to reach out to the community.  Caring believers load their trunks with candy and then give it away as children walk by.  Several use innovative object lessons to communicate the good news to the children. Last year there were an estimated 3000 kids participating in trunk or treat.

The preparation for the costume exchange was minimal and it cost us about $100 to purchase 30 Halloween costumes.  In fact, we had costumes left over.  Our children’s ministry staff did all the preparations and ran the event.  We are looking forward to doing it next year again, two Saturdays before Halloween.  We are grateful God blessed us with a successful event and an opportunity to meaningfully share Christ’s love with the participants.

Pastor Mike Lundberg
Church on the Hill
Montrose, Colorado

New Pastors

We would like to welcome two new pastors to churches in the Rocky Mountain Church Network.

Jeremiah Krieger and his wife, Samantha
Jeremiah Krieger and his wife, Samantha

In late June 2015, First Baptist Church welcomed Jeremiah Krieger as its new pastor. Jeremiah Krieger graduated from Dallas Theological Seminary in Spring 2012 with a Master’s in Theology (ThM) in Pastoral Ministries. He served for over two years as the pastoral intern for Lake Cities Community Church in Rowlett, TX, preaching and teaching God’s word and spearheading strategic outreach events.

Jeremiah is passionate about helping the Church apply God’s word and live on mission in their everyday lives. Prior to serving at Lake Cities, Jeremiah and his wife Samantha served in the marriage and outreach ministries at Watermark Community Church in Dallas. Jeremiah and Samantha have four children: John (7), Rebekah (5), and Hannah (3) and William (2).

 

Jeff Giles and his wife, Pam
Jeff Giles and his wife, Pam

Jeff Giles was installed as the Pastor at Golden Prairie Baptist Church, Burns, Wyoming on September 20th. Jeff is not a newcomer to the Rocky Mountain Church Network. Jeff served as the Associate Pastor at Calvary Church in Longmont for over 18 years.  He and his wife, Pam, then served with Pioneer Ministries as a Global Partnerships Resource Specialist for nearly two years before returning to Colorado.  Jeff was then asked to serve as the interim pastor at Golden Prairie Baptist Church before being called to serve as the permanent pastor.

 

 

 

Virtual Learning Community

Crucial ConversationsLeadership Learning Communities are a vital way of engaging in thoughtful and strategic conversations about church health, personal leadership skill development and effective Gospel ministry engagement.  The Virtual Leadership Learning Community (VLLC) breaks down the barriers of distance and time management that might make attending one of the area LLC’s difficult or impossible. The best way to experience the VLLC is to have a computer with a video camera, a headset and relatively high-speed internet connection.

Our next virtual meeting will take place on December 2 at 9:00am.  We will be covering a great book, Crucial Conversations: Tools for Talking When Stakes Are High by Kerry Patterson, Joseph Grenny, Ron McMillan, Al Switzler

When stakes are high, opinions vary, and emotions run strong, you have three choices: Avoid a crucial conversation and suffer the consequences; handle the conversation badly and suffer the consequences; or read Crucial Conversations and discover how to communicate best when it matters most. This wise and witty guide gives you the tools you need to step up to life’s most difficult and important conversations, say what’s on your mind, and achieve positive outcomes that will amaze you. You’ll learn how to:

  • Prepare for high-impact situations with a six-minute mastery technique
  • Make it safe to talk about almost anything
  • Be persuasive, not abrasive
  • Keep listening when others blow up or clam up
  • Turn crucial conversations into the action and results you want

Whether they take place at work or at home, with your neighbors or your spouse, crucial conversations can have a profound impact on your career, your happiness, and your future. With the skills you learn in this book, you’ll never have to worry about the outcome of a crucial conversation again.

Steps Toward Health that Most Churches Won’t be Willing to Take

Church healthBy Stan Rieb, Executive Director

James Emery White is one of my favorite authors/bloggers when it comes to connecting the church to the current culture, thus the name of his blog – Church and Culture (http://www.churchandculture.org). It is one of a few blogs and podcasts that I think every pastor should subscribe to or regularly review. I will share some of the other significant communicators in future blogs.

This morning’s blog – Ten Steps to Immediate Church Renewal and Growth (that most churches will refuse to take) – speaks to the issues that I see in many churches I work with.

Here are those steps Ten Steps to Immediate Church Renewal and Growth (that most churches will refuse to take):

  1. Simplify your structure by putting the authority to make most decisions related to the practice of ministry in the hands of those with responsibility. Translation: let your leaders lead.
  2. Hire young, platform young, program young. Why? You attract who you platform, and most churches are growing old.
  3. Become more contemporary in terms of music and graphics, décor and topics, website and signage. It’s 2015. Really. You can check.
  4. Stop preaching and start communicating. There’s a difference.
  5. Shift the outreach focus away from the already convinced toward those who are not. It’s called the Great Commission.
  6. Prioritize your children’s ministry in terms of money and staffing, square footage and resources. Do you really not know, after all this time, that the children’s ministry is your most important ministry for outreach and growth?
  7. “It’s the weekend,
  8. Help everyone find their spiritual gifts and then help them channel those gifts toward ministry.
  9. Target men. Get the man, you tend to get the family.
  10. Proclaim the full counsel of God without compromise or dilution. All you get with a watered-down message is a watered-down church. And a watered-down church has nothing to offer the world it does not already have.

The question is why do so many churches refuse to address the fact that they are plateaued and declining in attendance. More significant than the attendance numbers is the fact that there are very few indicators that many of these churches are interested in being obedient to the Great Commission.

After looking over these 10 steps:

  • Which steps resonate with you in your current ministry environment?
  • Which steps touch a nerve, causing you concern?
  • Can you think of other steps that a church in need of renewal and growth might want to consider?

Over the next couple of blogs I would like to address my understanding of some of the points that Pastor White addresses in this post.

Oikos Seminar September 24

OikosWe are excited to announce that something new is on the horizon with “OIKOS” and we can’t wait to tell you about it.  We are going to “let the cat out of the bag” on Thursday, September 24th at 10:30 am (Eastern) during a FREE Online Training by Tom Mercer.

REGISTER NOW!

Tom introduces The NEW Oikos Strategy for Church Growth and will teach us the 7-Steps to turning your members into promoters to assist your church in growing exponentially. These steps will give your congregation the tools needed to become raving promoters of the gospel and your church.

His guest Chad Thibodeaux, President of RadiusImpact Consulting will be on hand to give us some insight on how churches that are plateaued and declining can see an increase in attendance, giving, and salvations this fall and holiday season as well.

FREE BONUSES:

BONUS #1: Just for signing up we are going to give you Tom and Chad’s eBook, “The Common Sense Guide to World Change.”  This resource will explain the principle that brought 95% of all believers to Christ and give you a tool to assist people in creating their “God story.”

BONUS #2: Be sure to show up on time on September 24th as you will receive an assessment tool that you can use to evaluate your membership and learn whether they are merely “consumers” or “promoters.”

During the webinar there are 2 other “Surprise Bonuses” we are going to roll out as well because we want to adequately resource you and your church to reach more people.  Can you tell we are excited??  We hope you are as well!

This is a FREE Webinar so feel free to invite your entire staff and ministry team to join us.

REGISTER NOW!

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

Make it a great day and we’ll see you on September 24th at 10:30 am Eastern Time.

Stan Rieb and the entire RMCN Team

Calvary’s 60th Anniversary

Cc-F7ccrobmax8D2aZv92E09e4jdIMkDA8prikxKNTgCalvary Church is celebrating their 60th anniversary this year.  Their big celebration was on August 23 at the church at their annual Fam Fest picnic, where they welcomed over 450 people.  Doris Ballard attended as the only person who has been a part of the Calvary family since it started in 1955.  It was a wonderful time of fellowship and excitement to remember all that the church has done in the name of Christ and looking forward to what God has in store for Calvary in the future.  At Fam Fest, 10 people were baptized surrounded by their friends and family.  Since it began, 910 people have publically dedicated their life to Christ through baptism at the church.  Following the baptisms, all of Calvary’s pastoral and worship staff took a turn in the dunk tank and the kids enjoyed playing in bouncy houses and on water slides.  Fam Fest proved to be a great time for people to relax and have fun before the start of a new school year.

Calvary’s 60th anniversary celebration continues through December with a big Thanksgiving meal in November and a performance of Handel’s Messiah on December 18 and 20.  Those from other churches and the community are invited to join the Worship Choir and participate in the Messiah performance as a way to bring the whole community together to be centered on Christ for the Christmas season.  As the year continues, Calvary will continue to celebrate their diamond anniversary and 60 years of engagement as they prayerfully and earnestly look forward to what’s next for the Calvary Church family in the coming years.  As the church continues to grow in the future, their goal is to remain a Bible-centered community of believers who believe they are broken people being made new in Jesus, overflowing with gratitude, and poured out for others.

Bible Jeopardy

I am a Jeopardy junkie!  Like many, I enjoy watching to see if I can get the response before the contestant on TV.  I am amazed with the trivia that is stored away in my brain. Mind you I may not be able to recall where I left my cell phone ten minutes ago, but tell me  “From Middle English for “to chop”, it means to bargain over a price” and instantly I know “What is haggle?”

I remember in the early 80’s the board game Trivial Pursuit swept the country turning Saturday night social gatherings into intellectual battle grounds to crown queens and kings of trivia. I loved that game because I seem to be full trivial thoughts.

Hey here is some trivia from Wikipedia to occupy some your dormant brain cells: “The ancient Romans used the word ‘trivia’ to describe where one road split or forked into two roads. Trivia was formed from tri (three) and via (road); therefore, literally meaning ‘three roads’. It is speculated that road splits or ‘trivia’ were resting places where travelers paused to have small talk before continuing on their separate ways. Hence, the modern word ‘trivia’ evolved from a literal meaning.”

The title of a book by Logan Pearsall Smith –Trivialities, bits of information of little consequencecaptures the concern for trivia.  Trivia is information or knowledge of little consequence or difference.  It is information that does little to “form” or change the person. I would think that few would argue with the thought that Jesus intended the Gospel to be transformational, not merely informational.

Let’s do a little math – let’s say the average sermon lasts 30 minutes (I know many of you want to go to that church), and the really spiritual Christians make sure they go to a 45 minute Sunday School class (so that they can get to the deep truths of the Word of God discussing the real meaning of Greek and Hebrew words that the pastor refuses to get to in his milk toast 30 minute sermon).  Add to this another 15 minutes of teaching or discussion that we might get in our small group study – we don’t have high expectations here because we all understand that these groups are focused on relationships.  So in the average week we might have as high as one and half hours of bible study. In a year that would be 73 hours gathering information, and this does not account for the time spent in personal bible study. Multiply this by the 20, 30 or 40 years of following Jesus and being a faithful church member. That is 1,460, 2,190  and 2,820 hours … you get the idea – that is a lot of information.

Listen to the words from one of the best Sunday School teachers ever:

“If I speak in the tongues of men and of angels, but have not love, I am only a resounding gong or a clanging cymbal. If I have the gift of prophecy and can fathom all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have a faith that can move mountains, but have not love, I am nothing.” 1 Corinthians 13:1–2 (NIV84)

Another version puts it this way…  “If as a child I was always the first to raise my Bible during the Bible drill and give the right answer, but have not love for others, I deserved the disdain of all the other students and the title Bible nerd. If I have the gift of superior knowledge and get giddy when I hear someone mention the imperfect aorist tense of the Greek verb, but have not love, I might win at Bible Jeopardy but I am nothing like Jesus.” SRV – the Stan’s Revised Version which I admit is not very scholarly.

As we work with churches that are plateaued or declining one of the most fundamental and foundational missing ingredients is a love for the lost in their own communities. Matthew wrote of Jesus, “When he saw the crowds, he had compassion on them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd.” Matthew 9:36 (NIV84)

So how can we move away from preparing the people of our churches for Bible Trivia?

First, pray, seek and plead for the Spirit of God to do His work of leveraging information into transformation in your and others’ lives (John 16).

Second, recognize that information and longevity do not always equal discipleship (John 14:9).

Challenge your own (it is that log-in-your-eye thing) and other professing believers’ un-Christ-like behaviors, conversation and attitudes, of course in love (Hebrews 10:24, Gal 6:1).

Let’s begin with these, but can you think of others?

Oh and by the way, what is the Jeopardy question to this answer: Category: Names that are verbs. The Answer: Mr. Martindale, or what he might do if he likes you.

 

Wow, am I glad June 2015 is done and over with!

Stan Updated Photo

I spent nearly two weeks in the Northeast seeing how God is working through churches and church leaders to make a greater Gospel impact. It was truly exciting.   Although to experience that joy not only was I away from home and family, driving nearly 2,000 miles (for which you get double points since it is the congested Northeast), but I also endured an undiagnosed gallbladder attack.

I returned to Colorado anticipating a quick trip to Wyoming to work with First Baptist of Basin as they navigate a pastoral transition. Kent Dempsey has had a great ministry in Basin and the church is healthy, but due to his desire to care for aging parents, Kent is stepping into an associate role.

While staying in Powell, WY with our son and family, preparing for the meeting with the leaders and Pastoral Search Committee on Friday night, I experienced a full on gallbladder attack. Our son, a surgeon, recognized the seriousness of the situation so with a swig of whiskey and knives from the kitchen we cleared off the dining room table and he cut that sucker out! Ok, maybe it was not quite like that, but I did get to enjoy the accommodations and care of the staff at the local hospital. And yes, my son did end up removing the gallbladder.

Unfortunately, due to the surgery, I was not able to speak at Good News Community Church on Sunday as was planned. My apologies to their pastor, Matthew Fite, who was on a month long sabbatical. I trust he received the rest and refreshment that was so well deserved. Thanks to Lorrie Schroeder for assuring me that they would cover for my human frailty.

We just finished two days of meeting with the other directors of the CBAmerica missional network. Very valuable time spent bringing clarity of mission and vision. Please note the statement published by the CBA Board with regard to the Supreme Court ruling on same-sex marriage. There are several resources there that each church needs to process as soon as possible.

I would love to hear from you. What is going on in your church? How can we as a region best assist you in the days ahead? I would love to come share with you, your leadership or your congregation what God is doing through the region to increase Kingdom impact and ministry vitality in these challenging days.

Blessings,
Stan Rieb
Executive Director

 

Rev. Stan Rieb Becomes New Executive Director

Stan & HeidiIt is an honor to have been appointed as the Executive Director by the board of the Rocky Mountain Church Network. I want to thank Dr. Paul Borden for the partnership in ministry we have shared and will continue to share as he stays connected with the RMCN in church and associational coaching role.

Having served in RMCN churches in Colorado and Wyoming for nearly all of my 35 year ministry career, and having now served both the regional and national association for the last 10 years, I have a passion to see the local church thrive in the Gospel ministry to which it has been called.

In the days ahead we will continue to focus on the core values that both the regional and national office share of Church Health, Leadership Development and Church Multiplication. Over the next couple of months we will be revealing new strategies for helping churches fulfill their mission.

I would love to connect with you, the pastor, and your church to discuss how we might best serve you. Please feel free to shoot me an email – Stan.Rieb@RMCN.org, send a text (303) 746-8844 or even give me an old fashioned phone call to set up a time to connect. Additionally, you can follow the happenings of the RMCN on multiple platforms such as our recently updated website at www.RMCN.org. You may also Like our Facebook page, join our Google+ page and follow us on Twitter @connect_rmcn.

I look forward to hearing from you on ways we might connect.

Blessings,

Stan Rieb

Executive Director