Raising Interest in Servant Leadership

Dennis McCallum
Ephesians 4:11-12

Raising up leaders in the church started with the first church and is something we can do today. The members of the church are fully capable of becoming leaders. This is accomplished through discipleship and leadership promotion. There are seven conditions that help promote leadership: 1) setting vision; 2) insisting on Spirit-chosen people; 3) holding leaders in honor, accountability, and discipline; 4) replicating discipleship; 5) making the goal service; 6) having a clear pathway to leadership; 7) forming leaders into teams.

The Xenos Model for Equipping Leaders

Jim Leffel
Mike Sullivan
2 Timothy 2:2

In raising up leaders, the goal is to not undernourish or overwhelm. This presentation walks through Xenos' adult education program both inside and outside the classroom. Inside the classroom, there is a Biblical emphasis on in-depth training for significant ministry roles and cultivating a love for the Word. Based on 2 Timothy 2:2, Xenos trains people who will be faithful to train and teach others, and these classes are agile in order to balance the demands of ministry while providing an equipping program that successfully prepares leaders. Outside the classroom, discipleship is the catalyst and format through which leaders teach and train believers on biblical literacy, personal ministry, and character growth.

How to Lead When You're Not a Natural Leader

John Cleary
2 Timothy 1-4

While the Bible gives some examples of gifted leaders, Christians do not have to have the gift of leadership in order to hold the office of leadership. In 1st and 2nd Timothy, Paul describes important character qualities and actions that must be present in those who lead, while omitting the necessity for gifting. Paul presents six key things for the office of leadership. These include: being an example of godly character, explaining and applying God's Word, exercising one's own gifting in the context of one's own group, shepherding one's flock with high support and high challenge, staying focused on the mission, and developing future leaders.

The Art of Leadership (Part 2)

Jill Briscoe
Philippians 3:12-14

Through Paul's letter to the Philippians, we see Paul not let his circumstances dictate his mood. He allows God to put courage into him and accept the unacceptable. Paul demonstrates servant leadership, modeling Christ. He presses on and is obedient, leading to liberty. He shows us that if you want to be big, learn to be small. And that when we minister we must remember that we are dead to sin and to let God give us our throne.

Go Groups: How to Engage non-Christians in Your Community

Gary DeLashmutt
Philippians 3:12-14

Part of the problem in our churches may be that we are not abundantly sowing. If we never go out and surround ourselves with people who do not know Christ, our evangelism may dry up and wither. We need to invade secular space, to shift the emphasis from gathering people inside the church to dispersing ourselves out into the city. There are two main avenues through which we can create these "Go-Groups," through recreation and volunteering. Provided here are different examples, potential failures, and needed actions to make these groups fruitful.

The Art of Leadership (Part 1)

Jill Briscoe
Philippians 1:12-20

To understand the art of leadership, it is imperative to understand yourself and God. You can only lead people as far as you have gone yourself with the Lord. Opening up the book of Philippians we see Paul write down the art of the Christian life. Like Paul, we too can bring people along with us as we understand and relate to God in deeper ways.

A Leadership Crisis in the Church

Jim Leffel
Romans 1:16

Christian leadership is all about facilitating and having vision for the work that God is doing. For the church to move forward in God's work, their knowledge of what is going on in culture needs to be understood. Leaders must be able to maintain and spur the church on with the biblical mission, the biblical message, and the biblical means of communication.

The God Who Leads (Part 2)

Jim Leffel
Exodus 13:20-22

As the Israelites traveled through the wilderness, they were totally dependent on God's leading. God also desires to lead us. When we choose to let Him lead our life, we will inevitably be more satisfied than if we were to shut Him out. We can detect God's leadership for us through Scripture, listening in prayer, and through considering counsel from godly Christians.

Give us a king

Dennis McCallum
Matthew 20:25-28

Because Samuel was aging and his sons were not genuinely pursuing God, the Israelites demanded a king be appointed to govern and judge them just as the nations around them had. God had predicted this many years before, and Samuel warned the Israelites of the negative ways a king would treat them. They persisted in their demand, ignoring his warnings, so God chose Saul to be king over them.