Themes: Leadership, Productivity, Social Media, Bible, Church..... Purpose: To Journey together interacting as we experience a relationship with God.

Friday, October 26, 2012

We're Moving!

We have changed The Journey Experience to the Journey X to give you a more enhanced experience. In self-hosting we able able to add new features.

Yes our new Self-hosting site is:

www.TheJourneyX.org


Disclaimer: Our new site is up but we are still working on it so Please excuse our dust as complete the construction of our new site.

This site for a while still be live for a while but we will be posting on our new site. We have to figure how to transfer our post to the Journey X.

Thank you so much for your support! 

You are a outstanding group and we really enjoy sharing with you. And look forward to continuing our conversation on our new site at www.theJourneyX.org .

God Bless!

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Christ Is Risen

Christ Is Risen - Matt Maher - LifeChurch.tv Church Online 

No matter where you are spiritually as Christians we believe in resurrection. God can take what has died and bring it back to life again. He promises to do it for His Bride...the Church! 

 

What does it mean to be the risen Church?

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Red Letter Revolution: a Review

by Philana Crouch

Red Letter Revolution: What if Jesus Really Meant what He Said is a new book by Tony Campolo and Shane Claiborne. I have read books by both men in the past which I have really enjoyed. So I was excited about the prospect of a book co-authored by both. Red Letter Revolution did not disappoint.

The format is a bit different than most books. It's almost like a screenplay or transcript with both Campolo and Claiborne in a dialogue. I really liked the format, it allows you accurately see what each is saying. I've read books in the past by more than one author where it was difficult to tell the difference.

The book covers a variety of topics that are being discussed within Christianity today and across denominational lines. But the basic premise on addressing each of these issues is what should a follower of Christ do in light of the words He spoke. They desire to be Red Letter Christians, a reference to some editions of the Bible where the words of Christ are printed in red ink. Its a reaction to the negative connotations of the label evangelical. They adopted this because they wanted "to emphasize that we are Christians who take the radical teachings of Jesus seriously and who are committed to living them out in our everyday lives." They do not ignore the rest of the Bible, but believe everything in Scripture must be filtered and interpreted through the life and teachings of Jesus.

I think Shane Claiborne expresses well what the goal of being a Red Letter Christian is and what questions each person can ask themselves:

We read the Bible again, without all the commentaries, and ask, What if he did really mean this stuff? I’m not as concerned with figuring out every minute theological question as much as I am reading the simple words of Jesus and trying to live my life as if he meant them. If I can be a little more faithful today than yesterday to love my neighbor, pray for my enemies, and live like the lilies and the sparrows, I’m doing well.

Do Campolo and Claiborne succeed? At times yes and at times no. This would be true of any book. No author will ever get it all right. But what they succeeded in doing in Red Letter Revolution is to get me to think and ask questions. I think that's a good place to start.

Both seek to get beyond the labels of Right or Left, liberal or conservative, and focus on Jesus and what He taught. They point out that their are things both sides get wrong and right. That to truly be a voice for truth in our world, we need to take a page from the Hebrew prophets. By boldly speaking truth to power, just like Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, or Daniel did. To imitate the lives of the "holy troublemakers" of the Bible and history of the church. They want the focus to be on Jesus!

I think the authors were attempting to look at different issues in light of what Jesus said and did in the Bible. In much of the book I think they accurately reflected what we read in Scripture. The areas where I think they fell short have nothing to do with salvation, but are differences in biblical interpretation that exist within the Body of Christ. My purpose in writing this review is not to get specific, that's something each reader must consider in light of what Scripture teaches.

You will not agree with everything in this book. But it will get you to step back and seriously consider how Jesus said we should live. This would be a great resource to use in a group study.

Let me give a few suggestions on how this book might be used profitably. Take a chapter and consider what Tony and Shane have to say. Discuss it with a group. Spend some time studying what Scripture says on that topic.

Readers will find at times that they disagree with them. At other places readers will think they missed something, or failed to look at all sides. But they will also find that Tony or Shane will also point at some things that have been missed or overlooked by Christians. They challenge us to take seriously what Jesus had to say and then to go and live it out.

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from the publisher through the BookSneeze®.com book review bloggers program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255 : “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.

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Monday, October 8, 2012

5 Ways Leaders Can Kill a Team

by Daryl Crouch (crouchdk)

Enable others to slack off

As a church leader it is easy to jump in to get the job done. After all you want it done right. As a pastor I have noticed that in the church you have an 80/20 scenario. 80% doing little or nothing and 20% doing most of the work. Now be careful, it is not because the 80% doesn’t want to do anything. The 20% is usually doing so much that they are enabling 80% to do little or nothing.
Morguefile  http://www.morguefile.com/archive/display/694504

It is crucial for a healthy church to empower its people. As Leaders in the church we need to permit people to learn and grow. This is scary to most because we want everything to be just right. The how to’s will be another blog later on. We are going to do a series on discipleship. Getting back to the point. By allowing individuals to move forward and even fail we are allowing them to grow.

Try and Second Guess  

I have done this myself. You are working together with a team and make the assumptions that you know what the thoughts, agendas, and motivations are. When this happens you are in trouble. The trust and ability to work together begins to breakdown. The malfunctioning disintegrates slowly and before long you have team members bailing out.

Don’t Listening to others

Communication is essential to the health and welfare of Leadership. An important principle that is paramount to the cohesiveness of the church is good listening skills. To communicate well we simply need to listen!

Look out for your own interest

The best example is to look at Jesus’ life. Do we have the best interest of others at heart? Christ whole life was for others. He laid aside Himself to do for others. Read Isaiah 53.

Lack of Community

A Church needs to have a sense of community. With community you are not forcing work on each other but working together for a common good. A community sets up a situation that invites everyone to be involved.

Though this list is not exhaustive it represents some of the killers that is prevalent in our churches.

What else can you add to the list? What do you think can be the main killer in church leadership?


Monday, October 1, 2012

"With: Reimagining the Way you Relate to God" by Skye Jethani

Reviewed by Philana Crouch

Many Christians desire a closer relationship with God, but feel like they are missing something. They follow the formulas and read the Christian Living books found at their local Christian bookstore. They read their Bibles and pray their prayers and know something's missing. But what? Skye Jethani proposes in his book With that what's missing is how we relate to God.

Four Postures

Jethani delves into four postures or ways we relate to God that are unhealthy and definitely unbiblical.

  • Life From God - people desire things from God, but have no interest in God Himself.
  • Life Over God - if you do the "right things" God will have to do what you want.
  • Life For God - the focus is on doing lots of things for God.
  • Life Under God - live a righteous life and everything is supposed to go well.

A Fifth Way

Jethani proposes that what is missing is Life With God, where the focus is on desiring and treasuring God. He describes it powerfully by connecting it the Book of John.

The opening verse of John’s gospel is one of many texts in the Scriptures that support the Christian belief in a trinitarian God. The Trinity, the notion of one eternal God existing in three persons (God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit) is a foundational, and admittedly mind-twisting, doctrine of Christianity. But it is also where LIFE WITH GOD finds its origin. The Trinity reveals that we worship a relational and personal God. He is not an impersonal force as some Eastern philosophies teach, nor is he a disinterested creator as Enlightenment deism has advocated. The Christian God is a personal deity who exists in eternal community with himself. (pg. 13)
Life With God is based on desiring that personal relationship with the Creator...a return to the Begininng...to Eden! It's a journey worth taking!

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