Month: August 2017

Because of the GLS | Grander Vision Comes Back to One Idea – Souls in Heaven

How The GLS Came to Australia and Asia

When the leaders of Catalyst Church in Australia realized they needed to find ways to be more connected with their community, they reached out to a church in near Chicago named Willow Creek. The church held cultural relevance as one of its core values, which was exactly what Catalyst needed.

They began a long-term relationship that began 20 years ago and led to Catalyst Church becoming a site for The Global Leadership Summit in 2005. Australia was one of the first countries to host the GLS as a video conference.

“Guys! Do You See What’s Going on?”

“I freely admit now, I was one of the people who was fairly skeptical about how well it would go as a video conference,” said Larry Commons, a producer of the first GLS at Catalyst Church. “Ten minutes into the first message, I remember saying, ‘Guys! This is working! Do you see what’s going on?’ Everyone in the audience was engaged, listening to the speaker on video as if he were a live speaker. I was hooked from there, and recognized the value and the foundation, and what the GLS as an inspiration and leadership encouragement could do.”

Late in 2006, after the GLS launched in Australia, Larry received a call from Karen Wilson, another leader in the country who said calls were coming in from people in Manila, Jakarta and Singapore who wanted to bring the GLS to their areas. Larry become more involved with the GLS in Asia and in 2012, he stepped into the role of executive director of the Southeast Asian region.

Larry’s Grander Vision: Souls in Heaven

“It’s not necessarily about leadership on its own,” said Larry. “It’s not necessarily about the local church. I fully recognize how important and central those things are, and they’re important and central to me, but I always come back to the fact that this is the Kingdom of God. This is mission work. I’m a missionary for the Kingdom of God. The grander vision for me is that there would be souls won into the Kingdom of heaven through the GLS and through leaders who are inspired and encouraged, and challenged to stay and improve their leadership.

“For me it’s souls in heaven for eternity. That’s my grander vision. I always come back to that. That’s what Jesus was about.”

Encouragement to leaders around the world

Leadership is hard. It’s tough work. “There are some days, and hours of some days where I feel alone and discouraged. I feel like this is it. I’m done,” said Larry. “But then straight away, I turn back to God, and remember what He’s called me to.

“If I could say anything to leaders, I would say to remember your calling. Remember God’s Word. If you’re not in a place where you feel like you can keep going, find a place where you can receive the encouragement and inspiration you need…and keep going.

“Your calling is precious. Leadership is so important in the church, and in the world.”

 

6 Ways to Prepare and Lead Through Chaos: A Pastor’s Story During the 2016 Milwaukee Riots

One of the hardest things a leader will ever do is lead in the midst of chaos. Difficult seasons can pull out the best, or the worst in someone and their team.

Bishop Walter Harvey has led Parklawn Assembly of God Church in the heart of Milwaukee for the last 25 years. Little did he know how God would use the Summit to prepare him and his team before a series of events led to the August 13, 2016 Milwaukee riots.

Difficult seasons in leadership are unavoidable. So how do you prepare for it? And what are the outcomes in leading well through chaos?

Bishop Walter shares what he learned from leading his church through the Milwaukee riots, and how the Summit came at a strategic season in the church’s ministry.

Invest in your leadership and develop the leadership capacity of your team

One of our church values is investing in leadership. And the GLS provides a tangible and practical way to do that.

For example, I am committed to reading one book each week and listening to 5-10 podcasts or messages each week. My leadership team also signed on to read and listen to podcasts regularly. We each submit a summary of our takeaways at monthly gatherings. It is more than a task for us; it’s a journey and covenant to greater development. We know those we lead will benefit when our leadership bucket is full.

Clarify your mission

My biggest takeaway from the Summit has been around clarifying my mission. I have a personal mission statement: “Live Full—Die Empty.” It means I must maintain a full capacity of passionate leadership, which I am depositing into younger leaders, so when I pass, I have no regrets, nor do I cause the next generation to wish they had received more from me.

God has placed on my heart the dream of a place where streets are safe, neighborhoods are clean, families are united and resourced, employment and entrepreneurship are fair and free-flowing, children are educated and held in high esteem, government (police and elected officials) are taking leadership from and in partnership with the citizens in an environment that is not antagonistic or partisan, churches are building people holistically and the young adult generation is positioned to regenerate this dream to the next group of emerging leaders.

Without a clear mission and vision, we cannot accomplish this dream.

Be present and show up, even in your imperfection

Despite poverty and a sense of hopelessness inside the city, I am not discouraged. I’m actually encouraged, and I try to see my city through spiritual eyes.

The August 2016 riots erupted a few blocks from our church, revealing our scars and imperfections. They highlighted the deep sense of frustration and disenfranchisement of many poor and spiritually impoverished people in our city.

They also highlighted the church in both its broken and healthy states. At our worst, we are segregated, in competition with one another, too committed to our denominations and prideful doctrines than we are to the people in our communities. At our best, we came together in our imperfections and displayed our scars to each other.

Scars tell a story! We walked among the people who gathered around the scene of the riot. We talked with them, prayed and began to develop relationships with them. We loved, listened, learned and then we were allowed to lead many of them to light. The light meant taking them to church, inviting them into our homes and lives, connecting some with educational opportunities and jobs. It was definitely not a one-way transaction. We, the local church received just as much. We received

  • Rebuke for not being there before the riot occurred.
  • Guarded trust that had to be stewarded to gain more.
  • Acknowledgment that we did come, in spite of our imperfections. Our scars were revealed and not covered up.

My prayer is that many would declare a personal faith in Jesus as their Lord and their God.

Open your heart and your doors for God to work in and through you

Prior to the riots, our church had been led to create space in our hearts and schedules for what we called a “surge” of souls—our church theme in 2016. We introduced people to Christ, welcomed them into discipleship programs and invited them to serve in the church and community. A year earlier, God had whispered to me to “to prepare for the surge.”

And on August 13, the surge was outside our doors.

The greatest outcome was seeing many other churches follow our lead, and join us. These relationships are still intact and growing stronger. Together, we continue to provide leadership and partnership with the government. We provide mentoring and assistance to the public schools we adopted.

Most of all, we continue to provide the gift of presence where previously there was pain and anger.

Look outside your walls, and realign your focus

If I had not attended the GLS, I would have been an observer during this time of crisis, rather than being an instrument in God’s hand, rewriting human and heavenly history. The church I lead would have continued to focus on the inside condition rather than on the surge outside.

Our church has realigned our focus outside our walls. We don’t want to be churches that only draw attention during moments of crisis and then fade away. Here are the ways we realigned our focus:

  • We developed an “adopt a block” program that continues to clean the neighborhoods as well as provide the gift of presence in the park where children play.
  • We organize a pastors group to partner with us in adopting neighborhoods, schools and connect people spiritually to God.
  • We realigned our church budget, strategy, staff and programs to facilitate youth and community outreach.
  • We sponsor community events, youth game nights and sporting events.
  • We even changed our midweek service from being church-focused to being community focused.
  • We are re-purposing our church kitchen into a food incubation space for entrepreneurs.
  • Finally, we have strategized for economic development in order to sustain these changes with financial resources.

Don’t wait. Don’t stop. Dance!

Don’t wait until crisis happens. But if it does, go among the people safely and wisely. Lead by serving in a way that honors God and is consistent with Scripture.

Finally, don’t stop loving, listening and learning. Be consistent. That is the place where the Holy Spirit is dancing. Since August 13, we have been following His lead as He takes us in His arms to dance. Let Him lead you, spin you, dip you, toss you—even catch you. He won’t drop you!

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We are grateful for leaders like Bishop Walter Harvey who lead churches that bring healing and hope to broken communities through restoration, and showing the servant heart of Jesus in tangible ways. May difficult seasons in your life bring out your best leadership.

To donate to the GLS,
and provide leadership resources to more influencers like Bishop Walter Harvey,
go to give.willowcreek.com today!