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Email: pressed (aht) avoidingevil (doht) com
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Hometown: Sullivan, MO
DOB: January 25, 1979
Age: 28
Education: BA Religion. MA Divinity.
Languages: English
Work: Full-time Youth Ministry
Politics: On the Right
Marital Status:Married
My Wife: Screen Name: The Wife of Pressed
Hometown: Sullivan, MO
DOB: May 06, 1984
Age: 23
Education: Associate of Arts in education,
Bachelor of Science Elementary Education
Languages: English
Work:Full-time Mommy
Politics: On the Right
Marital Status:Married
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The Story of My Life
September 16, 2003 @ 10:13 am by Pressed

Permalink | Comments (5) | Filed under: File 13 (General Topics)

Church Growth: Is It Biblical?
September 13, 2003 @ 11:57 pm by Pressed
In a world flooded with common trends it is no a surprise to see the vast amount of self help books that have hit our shelves. There are self help books written for weight loss, self esteem, aging, computers, stress and almost every other problem that you could possibly face in life. It is not difficult to find a book that promises you an effective strategy and method to help you deal with your issues. If you happen to visit a Christian bookstore I believe you will notice the same trend.
I began looking for specific books with the purpose of understanding the biblical process of church growth. What I found was hundreds of books offering do-it-yourself strategies and methods to help churches effectively grow simply by implementing the techniques outlined in the books. Each book was different and offered tactics that have effectively worked in some churches, but of course there is no guarantee that it will work in yours. It seems as though we can easily get caught up in methods and quick growth strategies that pull us away from the true biblical process and cause us to settle for methods that often leave us high and dry.
I believe that God wants His church to grow and He has given clear direction as to how this will take place. Gene Mims provides an outline from scripture in his book, “Kingdom Principles for Church Growth” that does not focus on new methods or strategies but instead focuses on returning to the biblical principles of church growth. It is God who is adding to his kingdom which continues to grow. We must find our place in this growth by looking at the biblical process by which God increases his kingdom. Gene outlines this divinely inspired growth process in what he calls the 1•5•4 principle.
Just the other day I asked some of my students what the purpose of the church was and we all sat in silence. In Matthew 28:16-20 Jesus gave his disciples the great commission commanding them to make disciples. Mims states that, “The Great Commission has been the driving force of missions and evangelism for believers and churches in every generation since the New Testament times.” The Great Commission is God’s mission and should be the churches mission in the world as we follow Him. The fact is there are a lot of people that would never guess that the actual purpose of the church has anything to do with the great commission. Maybe the reason many of them do not know is because so few of them actually participate in fulfilling that purpose.
“All authority has been given to Me in heaven and on earth.” The premise behind many of these self help books is the idea that you have the ability to accomplish these things in your own power. Simply by implementing the strategies you can effectively conquer major issues in your life. We tend to get enamored with the idea that we can do things ourselves which begins to hinder our reliance upon God. When it comes to fulfilling the great commission however we have no authority or power, it has not been given to us. All authority has been given to Christ and it is only in Him that we can accomplish these things by His power and authority.
“Go, therefore.” Jesus has declared that we must go; this is not optional, it’s a command! Our purpose in God’s process of church growth is to go and make disciples. We are going under the authority that has been given to Jesus which means that we are not responsible for the reaction of those who hear the gospel; however we are responsible for sharing the message. Our responsibility is to make disciples and in the midst of that process God promises that he will not leave us or forsake us. The great commission is the one driving force for church growth.
News commentator Dan Rather has a good way of keeping his professional objective always in mind. He says he looks often at a question he’s written on three slips of paper. He keeps one in his billfold, one in his pocket, and one on his desk. The probing reminder asks, “Is what you are doing now helping the broadcast?” - Our Daily Bread. As Christians we should be asking the questions “Is what I am doing now helping to fulfill the Great Commission?”
In most self help books there is not only a goal in mind but there is a method that is given to help you reach that goal. The goal of the church is fulfillment of the Great Commission, but are we simply left with this command and no guidelines on how to accomplish this? Mims has come up with five biblical principles that the church must do in order to grow. The Great Commission is the 1 driving force behind kingdom growth commanded by God and there are 5 biblical principles that the church must corporately do to be obedient to the Lord. Mims reminds us that this is God’s way of growing churches and building His kingdom in this world.
These five principles are found in Acts 2:38-47. As you are turning in your bibles to Acts chapter 2 listen to what the Word of the Lord says in verses 38-41, “’Repent,’ Peter said to them, ‘and be baptized’ each of you, in the name of Jesus the Messiah for the forgiveness of your sins, and you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. For the promise is for you and your children and for all who are far off, as many as the Lord our God will call.’ And with many other words he testified and strongly urged them, saying, ‘Be saved from this corrupt generation!’ So those who accepted his message were baptized, and that day about three thousand people were added to them”
I believe it is safe to say that a church will not experience kingdom growth if it is not active in evangelism. According to Mims New Testament evangelism is defined as “the process of sharing the gospel with lost persons and winning people to Christ enabling them to enter the kingdom of God.” If the greatest thing that has ever happened to us is the day we experienced salvation, then the greatest thing we could do for someone else is share the gospel with them! It is evident in the early church that the believers evangelized. Acts says “they urged others to be saved from this corrupt generation” and the result was church growth, “three thousand people were added to them.” We know that God is in the business of saving people and we must join in Him in that process as we share the gospel. God has chosen to redeem lost sinners and we are the method for evangelizing the world. God has called us to go and our obedience to Him will guarantee growth in His kingdom!
The second principle is discipleship. Acts 2:42-43 says, “And they devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching, to fellowship, to the breaking of bread, and to prayers. Then fear came over everyone, and many wonders and signs were being performed through the apostles.” Discipleship is defined as a “lifelong journey of obedience to Christ that transforms a person’s values and behavior and results in ministry in one’s home, church, and the world” (Mims). The Great Commissions says we are to “teach them to obey all that I have commanded” and Acts says that the people “devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching…” Once again we are commanded to teach them, discipleship is not an option.
Three pastors got together for coffee one day and found all their churches had bat-infestation problems. “I got so mad,” said one, “I took a shotgun and fired at them. It made holes in the ceiling, but did nothing to the bats.” “I tried trapping them alive,” said the second. “Then I drove 50 miles before releasing them, but they beat me back to the church.” “I haven’t had any more problems,” said the third. “What did you do?” asked the others, amazed. “I simply baptized them,” he replied. “I haven’t seen them since.” This is a funny story and yet it sadly resembles our churches. We baptize a large number of people who don’t come back. It is very easy to forget what it was like when we were first saved, especially if we did not have a background in a church. When I was saved at 17 years old I knew nothing about church or how to be a Christian. It took a lot of teaching and guidance from others to get me to where I am today. This is the same thing we must do in the lives of others who have come to Christ. We must teach them to love, trust, and obey God instead of leaving them to figure it out on their own as baby Christians. I do not believe that it is in God’s plan for Christians to mature on their own, instead Christians mature as they experience discipleship and practice discipleship with others.
The third principle for kingdom growth is fellowship. Acts 2:42, 46-47 says, “And they devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching, to fellowship, to the breaking of bread, and to prayers. And every day they devoted themselves to meeting together in the temple complex, and broke bread from house to house. They ate their food with gladness and simplicity of heart, praising God and having favor with all the people. And every day the Lord added those being saved to them.” The believers evangelized, practiced discipleship, and devoted themselves to fellowship and God continued to add to their number daily.
It is by God’s design that we have fellowship with one another. I constantly hear the excuse that you don’t have to be at church in order to worship God. I would not necessarily disagree with that statement, but I would add that you do have to meet with the fellowship of believers to be obedient to God. I know that in our church many of the believers would define fellowship as having a big meal. We are Baptists and we love our food! However, fellowship is far more than simply eating or spending time together. Mims describes it as, “an essential function of the church. Fellowship is the way members of a church express the “oneness” they share in Christ.” Fellowship with God and each other is a key to kingdom growth as seen in Acts as the people devote themselves to it. “The desire for fellowship is the mark of a mature believer and a mature congregation” (Mims).
Ministry is the fourth kingdom principle. Acts 2:44-45 says, “Now all the believers were together and had everything in common. So they sold their possessions and property and distributed the proceeds to all, as anyone had a need.” Ministry is defined as “meeting another person’s need in the name of Jesus, expressed as service to persons inside the church family and expressed as missions to persons outside the church.” (Mims) I believe that as we evangelize and disciple others and as we devote our time to the fellowship we will begin to have compassion and concern for others that allows ministry to flow naturally in our lives. I was talking to a fellow believer today about the church and he mentioned that he did not have a ministry. As I thought about what he said I realized that this is a man who spends the greater part of his life devoted to the fellowship of believers. He gives of himself sacrificially to anyone who has a need and is sensitive to others who need help. He not only spends time meeting needs of those inside the church but he also takes time to meet needs outside of the church as he participates in missions. I believe that this person has a ministry that God has entrusted him with in the church, but he simply didn’t recognize it. God provides the means by which we can minister and every single believer is gifted to minister both inside and outside of the church. If believers are not participating in ministry then they fail to obey the Lords command and stunt the growth of the church. Kingdom growth occurs as people follow God’s divine process of evangelism, discipleship, fellowship, and worship.
The fifth principle that a church must do in order to experience kingdom growth and fulfill the great commission is worship. This is found in Acts 2:46-47 as the early church “devoted themselves to meeting together in the temple complex, and broke bread from house to house. They ate their food with gladness and simplicity of heart, praising God and having favor with all the people. And every day the Lord added those being saved to them.” Worship is one of the most vital functions of the church. It is “the response of believers to the presence, holiness, and revelation of Almighty God.” (Mims) Often true worship is sacrificed for schedules, traditions, and misleading focuses in our church services. Though different styles of worship can help lead us in worship true worship is less of a form and more of an experience. We worship God when we experience Him in a meaningful, spiritually transforming way. (Mims) When a church member can walk out of a service and simply say “well that was nice” untransformed then worship probably did not occur. On the other hand, when people leave a worship service with no doubt that they have been in the presence of the Lord and they are spiritually transformed leaving the building different than when they came in you can rest assured worship took place in their lives. This encounter with God is essential in the church, worship must take place in order for kingdom growth to occur. I believe we spend an inordinate amount of time attempting to create worship when in fact it is God who begins and controls worship. True worship isn’t how we like it, it is how God likes it. God is in control of worship and we should seek His leadership in worship instead of seeking new methods and strategies that are supposed to bring about worship. Worship is not an option in the believer’s life, it is obedience! It is always an experience with God that creates a response in His children.
If we fulfill the 1 driving force behind church growth by doing the 5 functions of church growth we will experience 4 results. If we actively fulfill the divine process that God has given to his church these four results will take place. God has written the ultimate self help book since His plans, methods, and results do not fail.
The first result is numerical growth. In the book of Acts the early church evangelized, devoted themselves to teaching (discipleship), devoted themselves to fellowship, ministered to one another, and worshiped God and the bible says that God added to their number daily! We can be assured that numerical growth will happen when we peruse God’s process of church growth. Numerical growth is a sign of God’s work being accomplished in His church.
The second result is spiritual transformation. Mims recognizes that if numerical growth is all a church strives for, the outcome will be the creation of something “a mile wide and a half-inch deep.” I don’t believe that God ever intended his people to be shallow. God is in the process of making his children more like Christ. As we evangelize, disciple, fellowship, minister, and worship I do not believer there is anyway we can remain unchanged ourselves. Spiritual transformation will take place as we are obedient to God.
A third result is ministry expansion. When the church begins to grow in number and those people begin to be transformed they become more spiritually mature. As this maturity increases new doors are opened for new ministry that was impossible beforehand. New ministries will form continually as God’s process for church growth is carried out within a body of believers.
The fourth result is kingdom advance. If a church is growing, its members are becoming more spiritually mature, and new ministries are opening up it is obvious that more and more people will be reached with the gospel. As the growing fellowship of believers evangelizes they have the ability to reach more and more people.
This is the 1•5•4 principle that Mims discusses in his book which is taken directly from the word of God. It isn’t some man made strategy to get more people in church it is a God designed process to advance His kingdom. As we return to the biblical principles for church growth the results are guaranteed. A church that is fulfilling the commission of Christ by actively perusing evangelism, discipleship, fellowship, ministry, and worship will experience numerical growth, spiritual transformation, ministry expansion, and kingdom advance. These things permeated the early church and these are the things you will essentially find in a church that is being obedient to God by following His divine process.
Permalink | Comments (3) | Filed under: Life Of A Youth Pastor

Beauty
September 2, 2003 @ 10:23 pm by Jim Shultz
Hello all. This is Jim. I know I have been non-existent for a while, but I am hoping that is now changing. Ok, my post is more of a discussion topic more than anything. Lately I have been toiling over whether beauty is subjective or objective. The majority of people I talk to believe it to be subjective, but I am beginning to think otherwise. I would like to hear any intelligent thoughts on the subject. Please post!
Jim
Permalink | Comments (7) | Filed under: Christianity & Theology

Settling for a low quality of sleep? Then you settle for a low quality of life!
September 1, 2003 @ 10:51 pm by Pressed
I have been reading a lot about sleep technology and the importance of sleep on the website for kingsdown matresses. It is said that without sleep you are less efficient and more irratable throughout the day. In fact, in many sleep deprived individuals it has been found that they lose some of their short term memory and bodily functions. Walk around sleep deprived and you will be living a much lower quality life than those who get enough sleep. I find myself getting less and less sleep which has actually changed the way I feel when I wake up in the morning. I used to be fine and happy when I woke up, but not anymore. When that alarm goes off I am groggy, irritable, and half the time I can hardly function for at least thirty minutes to an hour after I wake up. This has certainly been problimatic for those who have to put up with me for prayer meetings on Wednesday mornings at the church.
“Sleep deprivation is estimated to cost $150 billion a year in higher stress and reduced workplace productivity.” –The National Commission on Sleep Disorders
Another thing that I often do is fragment my sleep. I never go to sleep or get up at the same time daily. I often find myself getting up late some days and early other days. The problem with that is, ” Normal, healthy sleep follows a particular cycle of stages. If you break that cycle, sleep is disturbed, which means you will spend less time in the stages of sleep most responsible for the important repair work your body requires.” With all of the requirements I have for seminary and work I find myself staying up late in order to accomplish everything. This means that days I do not have to get up early I sleep late, but then days that I have to get up early I only get 3 to 5 hours of sleep those days which means I do not have a normal sleeping pattern. This has caused me to be less efficient in what I do, it has caused me to be drowsy and sometimes even drift off at work, it causes me to be grumpy and even angry in the mornings, and it has certainly caused me to be late for work and actually makes me accomplish less than if I would have went to bed earlier.
“Fragmented sleep can be as devastating as no sleep.” –Dr. William C. Dement Stanford University, Sleep Research Center
I know that I do not get enough sleep. Yes a lot of it does have to do with my schedule, but it also has to do with my poor sleeping conditions as well. The bed I used to have finally broke down and I could begin to feel the springs in my back. I woke up with back and neck pain every single morning and I would toss and turn a lot. I then traded that bed for a different one, but it isn’t much better. I wake up in pain in the mornings and I do not feel rested at all.
“Most adults get less sleep than they need. Nearly one in three Americans sleep as little as six hours or less during the work week.” –The National Sleep Foundation
According to the Kingsdown sleep technology website the vast majority of human beings all over the world, and in every culture, requires 7 ˝ to 8 ˝ hours of sleep each night to work at peak performance each day. I certainly do not get that much sleep each day, but I am beginning to think that it may be important to my health, my job, and even school. It seems to me I will get a lot more done and with a better quailty if I can get into a sleep cycle and get decent sleep.
To start the process of getting better, healthier sleep I went and spend $800 on a new bed tonight. I have to go pick it up sometime this week and get new sheets and stuff, but I hope that it will help improve the quality of sleep that I get each night. When I get my new bed, and I get into a better sleep cycle I am hoping that it will change how I feel in the mornings and throughout the day. I guess you could call this a little experiment I am doing… it is an expensive one though.
“America’s sleep problems have reached epidemic proportions, and may be the country’s number one health problem. “ –CNN Health Story Page
Here are some tips from the kingsdown website that can help you get a good nights sleep:
1. Keep regular hours. The best way to ensure quality sleep every night is to stick to a regular schedule. To keep your body clock in sync, try to get up at the same time every morning. Try to keep your usual sleep schedule on weekends and holidays.
2. Exercise regularly. Exercise enhances sleep by allowing both the body and mind to unwind. A 20-30 minute walk, jog, swim, or bicycle ride at least 3 days a week can help your body relax so you can fall asleep faster.
3. Try to cut down on stimulants. Have your last cup of coffee no later than six to eight hours before your bedtime. Late evening caffeine can make it harder for you to fall asleep, diminish your deep sleep, and increase nighttime awakenings.
4. Reconsider smoking. Nicotine is an even stronger stimulant than coffee. According to several studies, heavy smokers take longer to fall asleep and awaken more often.
5. Don’t drink Alcohol. Alcohol is the oldest, most popular sleep aid known. However, alcohol late in the evening may mean problems throughout the night. You end up sleeping in fragments and waking often in the early morning hours. Besides it is nasty and can destroy lives anyway so give it up now to get better sleep and improve your quality of life for not only yourself but those around you. - me
6. Sleep in a good bed. You are less likely to get deep, solid, restful sleep on a bed that is too small, too soft, too hard, or just plain too old.
7. Go for quality, not quantity. Six hours of good solid sleep can make you feel more rested than eight hours of light or disturbed sleep.
8. Do not go to bed stuffed or starved. A big meal late at night forces your digestive system to work overtime. While you may feel drowsy initially, you will probably toss and turn in the night. Avoid snacks that are high in fat as they take longer to digest. If you are dieting, don’t go to bed hungry. Have a light snack such as fruit.
9. Try to unwind and relax before going to bed. Establish a better time in the day for worrying or planning your time.
10, Develop a sleep ritual. Your sleep ritual can be as simple or as elaborate as you choose. A warm bath, reading, or listening to soothing music may ready your body to settle down for the night.
Pressed
Permalink | Comments (7) | Filed under: File 13 (General Topics)









