Do You Experience God While You Work?

Many leaders and churches fail to do this—and suffer for it.
Blogging is a powerful tool in any spiritually minded leader's hand. Learn to maximize your blog's power to reach people.
Church greeters are a wonderful thing—except in these circumstances.
For the past 40 years, the ride for Gary Carnahan certainly hasn't been uninteresting.
Barnhart Crane and Rigging shows how significantly business can impact the church.
Are you speaking the same language as your audience?
Many visitors will know in the first 10 minutes of their arrival if they will return to your church. What are you doing to make them want to come back?
Here are some proven tips for limiting technology distractions and working smarter for your ministry.
Paul spoke about being “all things to all men” (see 1 Cor. 9:22). His missionary journeys proved his ability to understand different people groups and adapt his message to meet them where they lived.
On the other hand, Paul considered himself called to be an "apostle to the Gentiles” (see Rom. 11:13). Sounds slightly targeted doesn’t it? How do we reconcile these two pursuits: to reach all and yet focus on only a segment?
Paul understood his strengths and his calling. Every church has strengths at reaching a “type” of people in its community. Though that might strike some as unjust, its truth defines both our strengths and the areas we need to grow.
Whether you are a church that is known for young families, old money, the upper class, the working class or the struggling class—whether you are known for deep followers, surface seekers, empty nesters or down-and-outers—there are tendencies as to whom you draw.