I work in a church, so talking about faith in the workplace seems irrelevant. But is it?
If your joy in ministry depends on everything going your way, you’ll be miserable for much of your ministry.
Paul Borden’s Hit the Bullseye: How Denominations Can Aim the Congregation at the Mission Field, is even more timely now than when the author penned it.
To help our churches grow in the most ways possible, it helps to understand how we can journey toward reconciliation.
Here are reasons great pain often precedes restoration.
The next time you schedule a leadership meeting, try using these simple techniques to increase attention and thus improve learning.
Where is your focus?
Sometimes, the solution to facilitating change is found in these simple questions.
Who is doing great ministry in your community and how can you join them?
Jim Barber’s confidence in God has sustained him through leadership roles both in the marketplace and in ministry.
Yes, the times they are a-changing. And these five developments are among the most dramatic.
Don’t forget these when you find yourself doing something great.
Kenny Luck’s Dangerous Good: A Coming Revolution of Men Who Care challenges men to step into their God-given potential.
God is a God of order. He’s also a God who likes to break the rules, especially with leaders.
Do you treat “conflict” as a bad word?
Here is why innovation is difficult for most pastors.
If God made your people creative, why are you still deciding everything?
Leadership means you have to say things that not everyone is ready to hear.
At times, as a transitional pastor, I am granted a surprising amount of leadership capital with which to lead churches through healing, change and reconciliation.
There are many ideas about how to lead. However, this is the primary one.





















