Tuesday, April 19, 2011

SYNC: Easter 2011

At the same time, pray also for us, that God may open to us a door for the word, to declare the mystery of Christ…’ Colossians 4:3

We are calling the 1100 members of CTDRT (www.CTDRT.com) and CTANonline (www.CTANonline.com) and anyone else to set their alarm or reminder for Wednesday, April 20th at 12:00pm (noon) Central Daylight Time (CDT) to SYNC together and pray for our fellow TD's, leaders and churches as we head into Easter.

Let us know you will be in SYNC http://bit.ly/SYNCEaster2011

It doesn't have to be a long drawn out prayer as I know all of our weeks are pretty insane, just a few minutes of talking to God.
1. Ask God to give our fellow TD’s, families and ourselves margin to remember Him this Easter and be ministered to by the services we are going to have to "work" this week.


2. Pray that God protect our fellow TD’s, families, teams, leaders and ourselves over the next week that the enemy’s attacks would not affect our focus, health, people, systems and spiritual health.


3. Pray for the hearts that will come, so that they will be fertile soil for the word to be spread upon, and that our productions would go unhindered, and technological issues would not arise so that people may engage with the Gospel and begin their journey or move further in their journey with Christ.


Now to Him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to His power that is at work within us, to Him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, for ever and ever! Amen.’ Ephesians 3:20-21


Let us know you will be in SYNC http://bit.ly/SYNCEaster2011

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Friday, April 8, 2011

The annoying orange....

....only because this is awesome

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Thursday, April 7, 2011

TechArts Staffing Structure….part 2, what it’s really all about

In the previous post I said that having technical directors serving in the traditional job description (jack- of- all- trades) was spreading each of my staff very thin. We were handling many responsibilities that seemed to keep us tied up in systems and tasks leaving very little room to really invest in our people. We found very little time to do quality training or even do some quality one on one time with volunteers. I knew I had to change that. I also came to the realization that we had to do much more than make some time to talk to volunteers. It all may sound very familiar to you if you do technical ministry.

But I wasn’t about to let us continue to keep going like we were. Not only were we devaluing our volunteers but the frustration level and exhaustion we had amongst the tech staff because of it was not healthy. Change had to happen. God was challenging me and I was developing and processing my thoughts. Conversations with my staff moved those thoughts along. And conversations with good friend Anthony Coppedge helped connect some dots. Bottom line, it was really all about people.

That process has brought me, and I’m it will continue to stretch me, to developing two staff teams. One team, we call them specialists, are the true techies. They will be designing, installing maintaining our technical systems across all campuses. They will also be training volunteers across all campuses and maintaining that standard.

The other team, we call them leaders, are ‘people monsters’. They will be leading and developing communities of volunteers serving on their campus. The leaders will have tech knowledge and know their systems and how to operate it but system maintenance and training is not their main focus. Outside of executing details for the weekend services and other classes/events they will be pouring into volunteers. Again, it’s really all about people.

In the next post in this series we will take a closer look at the structure that we are currently evolving into.

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Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Mr Miyagi was wrong

If you know me well you know that I am a huge Karate Kid fan. I love the movie actually, I'm into the whole series of movies. And yes, I did like the new Karate Kid movie with Jackie Chan and Jaden Smith. Anyway, there are some good life lessons in the original Karate Kid movie. Wisdom from the old mentor Mr. Miyagi is worth considering and I have had one quote stick with me.

You remember the scene where Mr. Miyagi reminds Daniel about balance in life?


I use to think balance in life was key. I have to balance family and work and ministry and take care of myself. And all of those areas have areas that have to be balanced. It is difficult and many times a number of those areas would topple over because I could not balance any of them properly. But in my head balance in life is key. I had to make sure ‘all the plates kept spinning’ in order to accomplish what needed to happen.

Then it happened. I realized Mr. Miyagi was wrong. Balance in life is a myth.

I was in a great conversation a few weeks ago with a friend that opened my eyes to this. Looking at everything I am responsible for as a husband, father, technical director, let alone just my person. I would never be able to find balance. Balance by definition is equal distribution of amount to each area. No wonder I never felt like I was ‘winning’.

I had a lot of things I was consistently juggling but was trying to believe I was balancing them. Trying to both balance and juggle made me fail at both. Once I realized that I should have been juggling, I found freedom. I had to focus time where needed and constantly shift priorities to let that happen.

Juggling by definition is keep (two or more objects) in the air at one time by alternately tossing and catching them. Juggling is simply the manipulation of time and space to create the necessary patterns during a routine, or anything else in life for that matter.

Around The Crossing we call that ‘ebb and flow’, shifting our time and priorities around seasons of our ministry calendar and personal life. To be successful at this you have to have a good grip on your calendar and know what the day and week have ahead of you hold, and focus on one day at a time while you constantly reshuffle and reprioritize. You have to make sure that your ability to set boundaries is also up to par.

That may mean, in the tech world, if we have a long week of installing a system or have an event or seasonal worship experience coming up, we may have to drop some other responsibilities at work and even spend some long hours away from home to accomplish the goal. But then after that goal has been met, you must shift and reprioritize so you spend some extra time at home with the family and taking time to rest up the week after.

This is a biblical concept. Going all the way back to Genesis where on the seventh day God rested. He refocused his priorities. Consider Jesus, you see him pull himself away from people and ministry to grab time by himself…shifting his time and refocusing his priorities.

This whole juggling concept is freeing but you must figure out what your priorities are. For me it should look like this: God, wife, children, work and ministry. It is much more about spending quality time than the quantity of time. This forces you to be more disciplined and intentional about the time focused on each.

I would love to hear how you are putting this into practice in your life….or are you just realizing that Mr Miyagi was wrong too?

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