Browsing: Leading Ideas

Leading Ideas
Delivered every Wednesday, our free e-newsletter Leading Ideas offers articles by thoughtful, cutting-edge leaders on subjects you care about — navigating change, reaching younger people, financing your ministry, communicating effectively — to help you be the leader God is calling you to be.

The Lewis Center is committed to helping congregations and denominations thrive and grow by providing ideas, research, resources, and training for vital and fruitful leadership. Through Leading Ideas, we share vignettes of leaders and congregations, book reviews, leadership quotes, and helpful “right questions” built around the premise that leaders don’t need answers — they need to know the right questions.


Leading Ideas
0 How Full is Your Menu?

Occasionally I like to visit a local Mexican restaurant. As I scan the menu, I search for items I’ve never tasted. However, I often feel a little overwhelmed by the menu that gives me pages and pages of options. Don’t get me wrong; I love variety. I love the adventure of trying new foods, but even I feel overwhelmed by…

Leading Ideas
0 How to Make the Most of your Church Newsletter

Even in this day of instantaneous communications, the church newsletter is still an important part of a congregation’s overall communication strategy. Why? Because it is one mode of communication that regularly reaches 100 percent of members, including inactive members and infrequent worshipers. A carefully crafted newsletter can build community, reinforce connections, and encourage participation among those not often present at…

Leading Ideas
0 Getting Your Congregation’s Story Right

Congregations, particularly mainline and established congregations, commonly tell either safe or weak stories about themselves. In an earlier era, when identity and purpose were clearer for many congregations, stories could be bold and have the strength of pride: “We are the Methodist church in town.” “Our Unitarian church was founded by descendents of original Pilgrim families and has always been…

Leading Ideas
0 Two Myths Relevant to Reaching Younger and More Diverse People

Each Sunday The Washington Post has a feature in the opinion section dealing with common myths about a particular topic. Noted demographer William H. Frey wrote about myths related to the current census (“Five Myths about the 2010 Census and the U.S. Population,” February 14, 2010). Two of the myths he addressed speak directly to the imperative many churches are…

Leading Ideas
0 What’s Your Leadership Game?

Someone asked me recently if I preferred to play chess or tic-tac-toe? “Actually I’m not a big fan of either game,” I responded, “but if I had to choose, I would pick chess.” My friend wanted to know why. “Because it is more challenging, evokes more creative energy, and engages higher level thinking skills,” was my answer. Good leaders develop…

Leading Ideas
0 Leaders Need Holy Friendships

Many think of a leader as the lone figure who walks in front of the crowd. A far more healthy view would ask how a leader experiences the community of friendship. In friendship, true friendship, we experience true grace. Our true friends are ones we have allowed to know us. We have granted them the honor of transparency and truthfulness.…

Leading Ideas
0 Reasons Why People Give

In our U.S. Congregational Life Survey, worshipers rated the extent to which ten factors influence their decision to give to their congregation.  The most important is gratitude. About half said they give to the congregation because they feel a sense of gratitude for God’s love and goodness. (49% said this is a major influence on giving decisions.) More than one…

Leading Ideas
0 Leaders Learn the Art of Making Announcements

Making announcements? Whether it’s at your service, meeting, or event, there are things you should know about people if you want them to hear what you’re saying. This list may not make your job easier, but I guarantee it can help make you more effective. Prepare your announcement  by answering these questions: What is so special about this opportunity? Why…

Leading Ideas
0 Can We Learn from Toyota?

My Wesley faculty colleague Jessicah Duckworth called my attention to a National Public Radio story about the mistakes that led to the recall crisis Toyota is now facing. After listening to the “Morning Edition” segment on the web, I agreed with Jessicah that there was a lesson here for church leaders. Renewal does not come in the church by forgetting…

Leading Ideas
0 Credibility Essential for Leadership

Credibility is the foundation upon which all effective leadership builds. It is the “operating capital” from which leaders draw to advance the vision. There are different types of credibility. Prevenient Credibility Those from a Wesleyan theological tradition are likely to be familiar with John Wesley’s use of the concept of “prevenient grace,” by which Wesley referred to that basic love…

Leading Ideas
0 6 Steps Your Congregation Should Take in Response to the Coronavirus

Please view current information at https://www.churchleadership.com/leading-ideas/resources-for-church-leaders-about-the-covid-19-pandemic/ Tom Pruski outlines six steps congregations should take in response to the coronavirus in keeping with guidelines issued by the Centers for Disease Control. Pruski, a registered nurse, is director of Wesley Theological Seminary’s Heal the Sick…

Leading Ideas
0 New Ways of Viewing Faith and Money

Many Christians tend to oversimplify the essence of scripture’s teaching with regard to money in such statements as “Christians must tithe” or “the faithful will prosper.” In Jesus and Money: A Guide for Times of Financial Crisis (Brazos Press, 2010), New Testament scholar Ben Witherington suggests that neither maxim accurately reflects the Bible’s message. His thoughtful biblical analysis seeks a…

Leading Ideas
0 Yours for the Asking

Recently I talked with a pastor about how to fund a $6,000 need beyond the resources of the church budget. I felt he had an excellent case for the funds. The ministry sounded important. I asked, “Do you have a layperson or two who are passionate about this need?” He answered, “Yes, I can think of a couple of leaders…

Leading Ideas
0 How Do New People See Your Church?

With all the strengths of a church, the challenge is always to think of everything from arrival through departure from the perspective of someone who has never been to your church before. In fact, the new person may have never been to church at all or at least not for many years. New guests at worship can help us see…

Leading Ideas
0 Multicultural Fluency and the Discipline of Dialogue

The Bible has much to say about community. In the very act of creating humanity, God initiated community. For community to have the equality that God expects, everyone must have a voice. This means those who have power in society (or the church), and thereby already have a voice, will need to listen more. Those who have been voiceless in…

Leading Ideas
0 Don’t Go It Alone When Changing Worship

When I arrived two years ago at Redondo Beach, I was told that there were three very different worship services: one informal, one contemporary, and one traditional. Bringing my own assumptions about what these definitions meant, I immediately diagnosed what was clearly wrong with the traditional worship service and implemented what I felt were the appropriate changes. While there were…

Leading Ideas
0 A God Corrected Vision

“Where there is no vision, the people will perish,” Proverbs reminds us. Vision is one of the five human senses, but is also one of the guiding forces in the lives of believers and congregations. Without vision and insight, people would easily drift aimlessly with little purpose. There are times when vision appears less perfect. Often, when vision is limited…

Leading Ideas
0 Retirement Best Practices for Pastor and Congregation

The retirement of a pastor from his or her ministry is a unique and critical transition involving the pastor, his or her family, the staff, and the congregation. Planning together for this transition offers the pastor and congregational leadership the opportunity to manage the transition. It also serves as the first step toward working together to do their best in…

Leading Ideas
0 The Wisdom of Ants

I was struck recently by an article that begins with a statement about ants by Stanford biologist Deborah Gordon. “Ants aren’t smart,” she wrote in a National Geographic article; “ant colonies are.” Today more and more people are recognizing the “wisdom of crowds” in which collective thought and action by groups are superior to the individual ability of even their…

Leading Ideas
0 Facing Our Losses, Finding Our Future

Church leadership literature often seems lacking in psychological depth. It feels Machiavellian in its world view and behaviorist in its focus, particularly if your seminary preparation and your daily practice of ministry focus on the care of souls. Does the Jerusalem of your education and practice really have nothing to do with the Athens of the pressing contemporary call to…

Leading Ideas
0 Leading with Energy, Intelligence, Imagination, and Love

Will you seek to serve the people with energy, intelligence, imagination, and love? This question is asked in the service of ordination and installation of church officers in the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). But there is nothing uniquely Presbyterian about this question or the identification of church leadership as servant leadership. Leadership demands multiple intelligences to see the opportunities, challenges, and…

Leading Ideas
0 Ways to Improve Attendance of Current Members

At least once or twice each year, perhaps in the New Year’s resolution season, teach and preach the importance of faithful worship attendance. Invite church members to make a written commitment to grow one step toward faithful attendance. Include a commitment to faithful worship attendance as part of a holistic annual stewardship commitment. Keep a record of attendance and monitor…

Leading Ideas
0 Planning for Attendance Seasons in the Church Year

We are used to thinking of the seasons of the Christian year such as Advent, Christmastide, Epiphany, Lent. There are also attendance seasons that follow common patterns across congregations. It is important to understand these in order to plan for them and maximize their potential for reaching more persons through worship. Staying attentive to the seasons of the year as…

Leading Ideas
0 Parking Lot Hospitality

Most churches give attention to welcoming newcomers to church once they reach the church doors. Often they will be welcomed by both greeters and ushers. An information booth is now common in many churches. “But the impression has already been made before visitors enter the building,” according to leaders at Impact Church in Atlanta, which gives external hospitality a high…

Leading Ideas
0 Rewarding Leadership

How do congregations celebrate persons who point toward the achievement of the congregation’s mission? And how do these celebrations occur consistently and frequently, rather than as standard “lifetime achievement” awards? One of our most important tasks as leaders is to find ways to reward leadership that points us in the right direction and adds momentum to our mission and purpose…

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