What does it mean to pastor, serve and lead people in a growing consumerist culture?
As I listen to leaders talk about their organizations, there seems to be a shift from an overemphasis on vision to a neglected emphasis on leadership performance.
Fear. Disillusion. Depression. When applied to a seasoned leader, those words bring one thing to my mind: Fatigue.
The next time you take a photo with an actual camera (and not your phone), ponder that automatic and manual button and take inventory of your leadership focus.
How do you manage to be at peace under pressure?
Are you using this success secret in your leadership?
Here are eight questions a leadership team can ask to discover their target group.
How do you bring spiritual attention to your work?
Some of the most powerful acts of leadership happen in the smallest acts of kindness.
Do you ever think about the past, maybe even more than you dream about future opportunities?
If we aren’t equipped to see these blind spots on our own, then how are we supposed to address and work on them?
Great leaders have the courage to act!
Ironically, often what we deem as a weakness is the thing God will choose to use in our lives for His glory.
If you serve in any leadership capacity for very long, you’re going to have to grow in maturity over time to be able to handle all of the new challenges and changing seasons of leadership.
It’s easy to neglect such vital conversations for several reasons: fear, they’ve gone sour in the past, we don’t know how, etc. But to lead well, we must not avoid those talks.
Do you think you ought to pray more? Do you have trouble finding time for prayer? Here are nine time-saving ways to develop spiritually.
Karl Vaters begins his new book, Small Church Essentials with three facts that may change your perspective on small-church pastoring.
What is your mindset when it comes to servant leadership? Does it look more like the world's definition or a biblical definition?
Here are four of Jesus' promises that are sure to impact your leadership.
Are spiritual disciplines focusing Christianity into a checklist of rules? Are these tasks weighing down Christians with unnecessary guilt?





















