
Name: Bill
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Medina United Methodist Church
Mark 1:14–15
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Medina United Methodist Church
Pastor Bill Stegemueller
Mark 1:12–13
Genesis 3:1–6
Matthew 4:1–10
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Here is an old Andy Stanley’s Podcast that’s no longer listed in his ANDY STANLEY’S LEADERSHIP PODCAST. (See Bottom of Post)
As a pastor, I subscribe to “The Andy Stanley’s Leadership Podcast,” in which Andy (Pastor of North Point Church in Atlanta) shares some leadership principles to church leaders. I can already hear what some of you might be thinking, “I’m no leader.” The fact is all of us are leaders. John Maxwell describes leadership as “INFLUENCE,” and in that sense ALL OF US ARE LEADERS because all of us have some influence.
The title of one particular podcast was, “Becoming a Student,” in which Andy talks about the need for all of us to become a student before we become a critic. That is, before we criticize a new idea we need to try at least try to understand it.
I know a lot of you think of me as a somewhat young pastor, but according to Andy Stanley the next great innovative way to reach people will not come from my generation. The next great thing that’s going to capture the attention and imagination of the next generation is going to come from the next generation. I’m not going to be able to figure out the next great way to reach the next generation. That’s the next generations’ job. My job is to get behind them and support them.
Now don’t misunderstand, the message (gospel) NEVER CHANGES, but the medium (how that message is conveyed) often does. When Peter made his incredible pronouncement to Jesus, “You are the Christ, the Son of the Living God,” Jesus commended him and said upon this rock He would build His church and the gates of Hell shall not prevail against it.” (Matthew 16:18) The message always needs to be centered upon Christ.
The fact is that this next generation’s twenty something year olds are not going to be content to be quiet and be talked to until they “earn” the right to speak. They are the one’s who often have the most passion and energy and the best thing I can do is to get behind them and to fuel their energy and to fund their new ideas understanding that some of them might fail.
Andy Stanley said that it’s possible for a church to be so careful that it’s behind in the game and that the church can be so cautious that it become irrelevant. Now I don’t think that describes Medina United Methodist Church. I believe in a lot of ways YOU are on the cutting edge. You have embraced a lot of change over the last ten years that I’ve been your pastor and it’s one of the reasons I LOVE being your pastor. You’re not afraid to try new things. I just want to make sure that we never lose that attitude.
Think about it, what’s happening in today’s student and college ministries is what is going to be happening in the church tomorrow. I remember when I was a student at the Texas Tech Wesley Foundation. That campus ministry flashed announcements and songs on a overhead projector. I specifically remember thinking how cool it would be to have that in church. Fast forward twenty years… now most growing churches today have multimedia in their services.
I have no idea what the church is going to be like twenty years from now, but I want to be a part of it! I want to get behind this younger generation and watch them soar with their new ideas and even though I might not completely understand a lot of them, be behind them.
May we continue to be forward thinking believers who are willing to risk failure for the sake of reaching the next generation for Jesus Christ.
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Mark 1:10–12
Bill Stegemueller
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Bill Stegemueller teaching on Mark 16:15
Ray Zirkel sharing what God is doing in Costa Rica.
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Medina United Methodist Church
Pastor Bill Stegemueller
Mark 1:9–11
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I just got through ready Andy Stanley’s ENEMIES OF THE HEART: Breaking Free from the Four Emotions That Control You and all I can say is, “WOW.” I never knew how ignorant about the four destructive emotions (Guilt, Anger, Greed, and Jealousy) and how they wreak havoc on our relationships.
The book is built around the Scripture, “Guard Your Heart, for everything you do flows from it.” (Proverbs 4:23)
Andy is very concise and organized in dealing with these four destructive emotions. The book is divided up into four parts:
Part 1: Where did that Come From?
This is where he illustrates how difficult it is to deal with heart issues. I agree with Stanley when he writes that we’ve all grown very good at deceiving ourselves to the point that most of us have no idea just how corrupt we really are. This book is an attempt to shed light on the subject. The Bible says, “The truth shall set you free.” (John 8:32)
Part 2: Deeper Debts
This is where he exposes the four destructive emotions in detail. (1) A Guilt: I Owe You (2) Anger: You Owe Me (3) Greed: I Owe Me and (4) Jealousy: God Owes Me.
Part 3: For True Change
This is where Andy discusses the antidote (habit) for each of one of these destructive emotions. Guilt says I OWE YOU so the solution is confession. Anger is fueled by the notion that YOU OWE ME, so that debt is remedied with forgiveness. Greed is kept alive by the assumption that I OWE ME –a twisted way of thinking that’s remedied through generous giving. Jealousy says, “GOD OWES ME and the answer is to CELEBRATE people’s successes.
This part was the best part of the book for me. The truths are so simple and yet so powerful which makes them easy to apply in your life and those around you. My favorite part of the section was one that dealt with anger and forgiveness… WOW! The book is worth ready just for that section!
Part 4: Moving Forward
This is where Andy touches on how we can teach our children how to guard their hearts?
The book is loaded at the end with great discussion questions for each of the chapters. Overall, I would give this book 5 stars because it has something that everyone can relate to and use. The four habits he lays out in response to the four destructive emotions are very practical and enable a person to love the way God would have us love. Well done, Andy!
This book was received free of charge in exchange of a bias free review of it’s contents.
As a pastor, I have probably heard every kind of excuse of why people don’t go to church. Probably one of the more common excuses is that the church is full of hypocrites, to which I immediately say, “Join us, there’s always room for one more. Almost three-quarters of Americans who haven’t darkened the door of a church in the last six months think it is “full of hypocrites.”
One clergyman using that same logic gave a list of reasons why he does not go anymore to athletic events.
Excuses are for wimps! I’m not saying that we (as Christians) don’t need to be intentionally about avoiding all pretenses of hypocrisy, (1 Thessalonians 5:22) but too often hypocrisy is just an excuse people throw out for not being involved in church and If you don’t want to do something, one excuse is as good as another. (Yiddish Proverb)
I heard of one church coming up with NO EXCUSE SUNDAY:
In Luke 14:16–24 Jesus tells the parable of the Great Supper.
“A certain man gave a great supper and invited many, and sent his servant at supper time to say to those who were invited, ‘Come, for all things are now ready.’ But they all with one accord began to make excuses. The first said to him, ‘I have bought a piece of ground, and I must go and see it. I ask you to have me excused.’ And another said, ‘I have bought five yoke of oxen, and I am going to test them. I ask you to have me excused.’ Still another said, ‘I have married a wife, and therefore I cannot come.’ So that servant came and reported these things to his master. Then the master of the house, being angry, said to his servant, ‘Go out quickly into the streets and lanes of the city, and bring in here the poor and the maimed and the lame and the blind.’ And the servant said, ‘Master, it is done as you commanded, and still there is room.’ Then the master said to the servant, ‘Go out into the highways and hedges, and compel them to come in, that my house may be filled. For I say to you that none of those men who were invited shall taste my supper.’ ””
When you boil it all down excuses are nothing more than a wimpy way of trying to escape responsibility. Yet Jesus tells us in Matthew 12:36–37 that we will be held accountable for every idle word on the day of judgement.
Survey: ‘Unchurched’ Americans say church is ‘full of hypocrites’