Andy Stanley, Senior Pastor of North Point Ministries
- Theology is what you believe. Ministry is what you do as a result of what you believe.
- Ministry should change all the time, but not theology.
- If you have bad theology, it will narrow what you minister to.
- Jesus had perfect theology, and yet there is no one He wouldn’t minister to.
- Churches who get this, and Christians will always be attractive to people.
- To awaken the wonder of the world to the wonder of the church, we should take our cues from: Something Jesus said, something said about Jesus, something Jesus said without saying it, and something Jesus didn’t say.
- Something said about Jesus: He embodied grace and truth. (John 1:14, 17)
- Jesus never dumbed down the truth and never turned down the grace.
- The grace/truth tension requires that we present the ideal while embracing what’s real.
- Something Jesus said without saying it: Distinguish theology from ministry. (Matthew 9: 9-13)
- Distinguishing between theology and ministry liberates ministry without compromising theology.
- When churches fail to distinguish between theology and ministry, ministry becomes rigid and idealistic.
- Something Jesus didn’t say: Never give up influence unnecessarily. (Luke 20:1-8)
- Never make a point at the expense of making a difference.
- Think twice before answering a question that has the potential to burn a bridge or close a door.
- Something Jesus actually said: Love your enemies. (Matthew 5:43-45)
- Objection: But didn’t Jesus say we should be concerned about people speaking well of us? No, of Jesus.
- Think about the groups that would usually push back against your local church. How can you love them?
- Conclusion:
- Teach the ideal and embrace what’s real.
- Teach your teams to distinguish between theology and ministry.
- Never give up influence unnecessarily.
- Identify your potential enemies and love them.
Dr. Brene Brown, Best-Selling Author
- Leaders, know that you will fall a some point.
- 3 ways to manage shame: move away, move toward and move against
- When something hard happens to us, emotion gets the first crack at handling it and making sense of it.
- As much as we think we are thinking beings, we are emotional beings.
- The brain is hard-wired for survival.
- The brain wants a story to make sense.
- Both brains and hearts respond to stories – logically and emotionally.
- The brain rewards us even if the truth is ambiguous. It just needs the logic of a narrative. Vulnerability and uncertainty are the enemy.
- Getting through hard emotions well:
- Try to recognize when they’re triggered by emotion.
- You can’t create an innovative, loving landscape without understanding emotion.
- You must have a high capacity for discomfort.
- You need an understanding of your own emotional landscape, as well as the landscape of your people.
- Good leaders are mindful and breathing.
- Mindfullness = paying attention, pray
- We are better at inflicting pain than dealing with our own.
- Rumble with the story we’re making up.
- SFD (Shitty First Draft) – We don’t need shame about being human.
- Consider writing immediate thoughts to help you deal. it’s telling what comes to mind first. It helps you deal.
- In the absence of data, we make up a story, but we need to get the facts straight!
- When you own your story, you get to write the ending. If you don’t, it owns you.
- “The story I’m telling myself right now…” is the conversation you have with a person you have a conflict with. Let them clarify.
- If you’re not falling, you’re not being brave enough.
- Try to recognize when they’re triggered by emotion.
Trip Lee, Award-winning Hip Hop Recording Artist and Author
- Use music to celebrate God. (Exodus 18)
- We are always standing on the other side of the Red Sea.
- Use music to express pain and frustration.
- We do not have a cold, dead Bible that doesn’t understand human experience.
- We do not have a God that can’t handle our pain and suffering.
- Use music to teach and encourage.
- Use music for joy.
Margaret Feinberg, Author
- Religious familiarity breeds unholy cynicism.
- Isaiah 29: 13-14
- Joy is the weapon we use to fight life’s battles. How will you respond to bad situations?
- Rejoice when it makes no sense.
- Rejoice in the Lord always, and again, I say rejoice.
- Do it one square inch at a time.
- Proclaim to the darkness that it will not win!
- Remain suspicious that God is up to something good.
- Joseph’s story.
- Good things still came from Margaret’s cancer.
- When we search for the goodness of God, we will find it.
Erwin McManus, Founder of Mosaic Church and Author
- What makes us uniquely human? Hebrews 11
- Faith restores our humanity.
- We are only species that can live beneath our intention.
- we seem to have more confidence is what we have, than what we hope for.
- Hope only exists in the future. We are created for the future.
- we need to move beyond enlightenment to living in the Light.
- The question is not if you will create, but what kind of future you will create.
- You are living in a future someone else dreamed of.
- You can only create outside of you what is reflected inside of you.
- The imagination is the playground of God.
- What fear is God trying to eat away in your soul?
- Dream. Risk. Create.
Louie Giglio, Pastor of Passion City Church and Lead Visionary of Passion Movement
- God doesn’t call people to job descriptions. He calls them to Himself and His purpose in the world.
- “Here am I, send me.” (main scripture reference)
John Maxwell, Leadership Expert
- Success is about us, significance is about others.
- To live a significant life, you must be intentional.
- value people, believe in people and unconditionally love people.
- You’re going to either read or write your own story. Be intentional, or something will write yours for you.
- Move from good intentions to good actions.
- Once you’ve listed significance, success will never satisfy.
- Everyday:
- Value people
- Are we going to connect with people, or correct them?
- Think of ways to add value to people.
- Think on the front end, not on the back end.
- Prepare or repair.
- Look for ways to add value to people
- Then evaluate your day, every day.
- Do things that add value to people
- You must act on your good intentions.
- Encourage others to add value to people
- Start a movement.
- Value people
Christine Caine, Founder of The A21 Campaign, Propel and Author
- It’s easy to ignore suffering when its nameless and faceless. (Genesis 50:20)
- Numbers 13:1 (Sending spies to Canaan)
- How you seem in your own eyes can also be how you look to others. (grasshoppers)
- You can miss the miracles of God because of your perspective, even when you’re in the midst of it.
- 10 people delayed a generation’s destiny.
- Your perspective can shape the destiny of others.
- God’s not obligated to finish what you start.
- God wants to do amazing things. If you don’t want to be a part of it, get out of the way.
- Joshua and Caleb weren’t any more gifted than the others, they just had more perspective and faith.
- We need a world of hope and purpose, and that only comes through Christ.
- The question is “how” we’ll take the land, not “if.”
- Impossible is where God starts.
- Do not limit God’s power by the size of your giant. They were holding the fruit, but focused on the giant.
- If you are good enough, smart enough, or talented enough, you don’t need God anyway.
- Some of you are praying for miracles, but refuse to put yourself in a situation where God will perform one.
- We ask God for signs, wonders and miracles, but refuse to go into circumstances where we need them.
- God’s promises are bigger than the problems.
Chris Brown, Nationally Syndicated Radio Host
- Wonder often gets chucked out by familiarity, and distraction.
- Gratitude is the key that unlocks wonder. We keep it with generosity.
- As leaders, we should proactively create wonder in others.
- “We make a living by what we get. We make a life by what we give.” – Winston Churchill
Guy Kawasaki, Author, Chief Evangelist of Canva
- Great innovation occurs when people decide to make meaning.
- Make a mantra.
- Jump the next curve.
- Most orgs define themselves by what they currently do, it’s forward thinking we need.
- Roll the dice.
- Anticipate.
- The best products are deep (multi-faceted) and intelligent and complete and empowering and elegant.
- Don’t worry, be crappy.
- It doesn’t have to be perfect. You’ll never finish.
- Let 100 flowers blossom.
- In the beginning, you can’t predict everything, including your audience.
- Polarize people.
- Great causes, churches, people, etc, polarize people. Not everyone’s going t like it. The worst case is that people don’t care.
- Church, baby, churn.
- There has to be a next version.
- Then listen to the feedback.
- Niche thyself (the key to marketing)
- Be unique and add value
- Perfect your pitch.
- You have to sell it.
- Customize your intro.
- 10 slides is enough, 20 minutes, 30 point font with a black background
- Don’t let the bozos grind you down.
Neil Blumenthal, Co-Founder and CEO of Warby Parker
- Innovation often comes out of constraint.
- Fail first.
- De-risk the process in small steps.
- Details are important.
- Incremental progress.
- Help others find their passion.
- Help others identify their strengths.
- Spur their creativity by setting expectations and constraints.
- Innovation requires a deep examination of the problem
- A million small steps lead to a big solution.
For my notes on Labs, click here.