Showing posts with label mentoring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mentoring. Show all posts

Thursday, December 11, 2014

The Unexpected Blessing of Reverse Mentoring - J. Lee Grady

Youth leaders
When mentoring youth, don't think for a second that they can't teach their mentors anything. (iStock photo)
These days, I spend lots of my time mentoring young leaders. I take them on ministry trips, speak in training schools and lead discipleship retreats. But I'm learning that mentorship does not work in just one direction. Even though I'm the "old guy," I benefit in amazing ways from the time I spend with younger Christians.
  • My friend Daniel is an associate pastor in North Carolina, a gifted preacher and a fitness buff. When I recently decided to get serious about exercise, he set me up with an easy-to-follow weight-training and cardio schedule as well as common sense advice on diet. Did you notice that the younger generation today tends to be avidly health-conscious? We could actually live longer if we took their advice.
  • My buddy Alex is on fire for God. He is also a budding entrepreneur in Philadelphia who knows as much about Mac computers as any salesman in an Apple store. Alex taught me most of what I know about modern technology, and every time I have a question he's eager to help. Hint: Churches could upgrade their effectiveness by inviting tech-savvy 20-somethings to staff meetings.
  • I have a spiritual son named Paul who is originally from Ukraine. He has traveled with me on 10 ministry trips, and he's like a sponge when it comes to soaking up any spiritual insight he can get from me. But our relationship is not just a one-way street. We have learned the importance of "processing" after ministry events, and he's been an excellent sounding board. Today's young leaders don't want to just carry out your orders; they want the freedom to give feedback.
  • My four daughters, who are all in their 20s, don't always agree with me about every social issue. But I've learned a lot from them about cultural sensitivity. They are painfully aware that the American church has turned off many people by being religious, racist, political or mean-spirited—and they aren't afraid to sound off when they think I'm being unnecessarily offensive. Their critiques have made me a better listener and, hopefully, a better communicator.
In the church, we often think of mentoring as a top-down arrangement. We think discipleship is basically saying: "Listen to me, watch me and do what I do." To make matters worse, some leaders who are bossy, self-absorbed or heavy-handed end up hurting those they mentor. Or they view mentoring as way to get cheap labor—by forcing their mentees to serve as "armor bearers," bodyguards, butlers or glorified valets.
We should scrap that horribly flawed model and recognize that Jesus calls mentors to serve. If we take a humbler approach to mentorship, we might actually learn something from younger people while we model Christ-like character and teach valuable skills.
The apostle Paul learned this lesson. Early in his ministry he and his colleague Barnabas parted ways because Paul didn't want to travel with John Mark (see Acts 15:36-39). Paul was upset that Mark had abandoned his missionary team. So he wrote Mark off.
Thankfully, this strategic relationship was restored. Many missionary journeys later, Paul wrote to Timothy: "Pick up Mark and bring him with you, for he is useful to me for service" (2 Tim. 4:11). "Useful" was putting it mildly! Mark was quite useful because he wrote the gospel of Mark, which he based on Peter's oral testimony.
I believe Paul had a paradigm shift about discipleship as he matured. In his early years he didn't have any use for Mark, and didn't want to waste his time training a young man who had dropped the ball. Later, Paul realized that Mark had spiritual gifts that the church needed. And Paul describes Mark as his "fellow worker" in Philemon 24.
Many young Christians today are like Mark. They have a message burning in their hearts and they sense a spiritual calling. But they lack training and may struggle with being consistent. They also may need healing ministry to overcome internal struggles.
In Mark's case, thankfully, Barnabas took him under his wing and nurtured him back to health. As a result of that mentoring—and Peter's fatherly influence (see 1 Pet. 5:13)—Mark became a spiritual giant.
The same will happen today when we invest in the Marks of our generation. The greatest blessing will come when we stop looking at them simply as cogs in our Sunday morning agendas and instead recognize that the Holy Spirit is working powerfully in them—and giving them creative ideas about how to do ministry in a more relevant and effective way.
More than 150 years ago, British preacher Charles Spurgeon wrote: "The church needs young blood in its veins. Our strength for holding the faith may lie in experienced saints but our zeal for propagating it must be found in the young." That means we can't allow generation gaps in ministry; the young and old must work together to reach the world for Jesus.
J. Lee Grady is the former editor of Charisma. You can follow him on Twitter: @leegrady. His newest book is The Truth Sets Women Free (Charisma House). You can learn more about his ministry, The Mordecai Project, at themordecaiproject.org.
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Sunday, March 16, 2014

J. Lee Grady - 6 Mentors Who Can Help You Grow Spiritually

Men's Bible study

J. Lee Grady - 6 Mentors Who Can 
Help You Grow Spiritually

CHARISMA MAGAZINE March 2014
God doesn’t want us to live in isolation. I realized many years ago that I desperately need people in my life in order to fulfill my purpose. My parents invested in me, and so did teachers, coaches, employers, pastors, role models and good friends. I am not self-made, and neither are you. Any success we have achieved is the result of someone taking time to instruct, encourage or correct us. That’s humbling!
Mentorship is a basic biblical principle. The book of Proverbs opens with an exhortation to listen not only to parents but also to the “words of the wise” (Prov. 1:6, NASB). Moses mentored Joshua, Naomi mentored Ruth, and Elijah mentored Elisha. Jesus spent most of His time teaching a small group of disciples. One of those, Peter, discipled his spiritual son, Mark (1 Pet. 5:13), who in turn wrote the Gospel of Mark based on Peter’s testimony.
The message of Christ is best transmitted through the process of mentoring. But this art has been lost in today’s church—partly because of family breakdown and partly because our celebrity-obsessed culture values self-effort and instant results. Mentoring is too slow for most of us because we prefer the overnight sensation. God’s kingdom is built through a tedious process we don’t have the patience for.
Yet I believe we can reclaim biblical discipleship. In fact, I’m convinced the church is shifting radically back to God’s original plan as we reject the program-driven, impersonal, televangelistic one-man show of the past season. Everywhere I go I find people who are hungry for authentic relationships that can help them become team players and mature mentors.
I’ve found six types of mentors who have helped me in my spiritual journey:
1. Distant mentors. British author Charles Spurgeon died in 1892, but I consider him a mentor because I read his books often. The same is true of other dead authors such as Andrew Murray and A.W. Tozer. You don’t have to know a person to receive instruction from them. I’ve never met author Henry Blackaby, but his books, especially Experiencing God, have profoundly influenced me.
2. Occasional mentors. Brother Andrew, the founder of the Open Doors ministry, became a hero to me after I read his book God’s Smuggler in the 1970s. Then in 2004, I had the privilege of interviewing him in his home in Holland. Some of the things he said to me that day still ring in my ears. I may never visit him again, but he made an eternal investment in my life.
3. Supportive friends. A mentor does not have to be 20 years older than you. I have a close group of peers who sometimes gather from four states just to pray for each other. We call this group “the band of brothers.” I am constantly on the phone with a few of them. We share prayer requests and offer advice—and we aren’t afraid to step on each others’ toes if necessary. You need friends like that to survive life’s challenges.
4. Negative mentors. Not everyone you meet is a good example. I have sometimes encountered people in positions of leadership who had serious flaws. Some had prideful attitudes; others had poor people skills; a few had selfish agendas. Rather than allowing myself to become bitter or judgmental, I studied their behavior and determined to avoid doing the same things. I said to myself, “Let this be a lesson. That is not how to lead.”
5. Reverse mentors. You can also learn from younger people. I invest in a lot of Timothys, and they love to ask me for counsel. But I sometimes flip roles and pick their brains. One of the guys I’m mentoring, Alex, is a tech geek—so I know he will have the answer when I have a question about my computer, my smartphone or the latest app. I also get regular feedback from the guys I’m mentoring because I want to know if I’m communicating in a way that is relevant to their generation. Sometimes the best way to mentor is to ask questions!
6. Spiritual fathers and mothers. God has used many different mentors in my life, but there are some who invested in me in a very personal way for a long span of time. One of them, Barry St. Clair, invited me to a discipleship group when I was only 15. He taught me the basics of the Christian life during those Bible studies in his basement, and we have stayed connected for 40 years. This month the two of us are doing a conference together in Atlanta! Barry has been a role model, counselor and spiritual father most of my life, and his investment in me has now been passed on to dozens of others.
If you don’t have mentors, I urge you to find them. If you are fortunate to have been mentored, then pay forward what you have received—and invest in someone else.
J. Lee Grady is the former editor of Charisma. You can follow him on Twitter at@leegrady. He is the author of 10 Lies Men Believe and other books.
Did you enjoy this blog? Click here to receive CHARISMA MAGAZINE by email.

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

MorningStar/CM Missions "Going Into All The Earth"

Let the Wind take you...into all the world! 
- Jorge Parrott MorningStar/CM Missions

Let's go around the world in 3 minutes to see what the Lord is up to at MS/CM Missions. Hear the Moravian Trumpet call to reach the nations for Jesus Christ. Contact us at missions@morningstarministries.org or visit to learn more at www.eaglemissions.org 

In the video below, Don Potter plays "Come, come, come!"



Jorge Parrot with Barzilians

Anna Marie & Jorge Parrot, Nancy G Daniel


Touching lives in the nations



Using Skype and all means available 
-for the reach of the Gospel

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

More wagons coming...

Steve & Laurie Martin

Dear readers of our Love For His People Blog:

This word was shared with us this past Saturday by a good friend in the Dallas, Texas area. Encouragement comes for all of us, and so I share it with you too. May it speak to your heart, if you have been waiting, wondering, and wanting to see Him move even more on your behalf too! 

True and good leadership is coming to His people. He is the Good Shepherd, and puts in place those with His pure shepherding heart. 

And if there are  "wrongs" that happened along your path, He will take care of those too, for they need to be righted in certain areas of your life.

Steve Martin
Founder/President

P.S. My third book, "Leadership Through Love" will be out in February 2014. I am so grateful for the many who have already endorsed it, knowing that it can bring healing and light into the leadership vacuum that exists in many areas in business and church leadership realms.



Nov. 16, 2013

I saw you and Laurie driving a covered wagon.  The kind we would see on the very old westerns like "Wagon-Train".   This wagon was pulled by 12 horses, teamed up two by two. There were "treasures" inside the covered wagon area, and resources that were very esteemed by the Lord and very valuable also to people. 

It seems there are some things He has kept 'under cover' / hidden...until the right time, which may be now / soon since He is speaking about it now.   I did see a "wagon-train" behind you.  Your leading the others. 

Holy Spirit highlighted the word "train"....."training".....you guys mentoring/teaching /training others in areas of personal obedience, stewardship, nuggets of wisdom, etc.

He is highlighting this also: "self-restraint"...that you two teach the truths of how a believer lays aside His "self" desires for the desire of our Father...and that you have a special gift and anointing somehow to teach important truths about self-restraint.   I am understanding this to be in short supply, even in  church leadership. 

Okay.....and FYI…

I prayed for His justice / restitution on your behalf....for His blessing to manifest upon you two, your family, the books you've just published, etc.   I believe He is very happy to make the enemy pay-back what was stolen...and I am standing in agreement for it to manifest in all areas, not only spiritually, but pragmatically. 

I am seeing Jacob, and Laban dealing with him in a dishonest and ungodly manner....but God did a supernatural thing and caused Jacob / Israel....to increase and increase and finally set him completely free. 
  
I remember I shared that with you years ago...He brought that back to my remembrance just now.  Not only 7 fold must the thief repay, but also 100 fold....according to Mark 10:29....which I believe you all qualify for.   

Yes, yes and Y-E-S!!!   yes and amen!!   And we will celebrate much as your flocks and herds increase and as He opens doors for you two that no man can close!!


(The following was added on 11.19.13 in a subsequent e-mail)

Another part of this the word for you and Laurie that I overlooked mentioning the other day.....obviously that is a classic picture of "pioneers & pioneering".....As you two looked just like they must have looked 150 - 200 years ago traveling across America.   Discovering new lands and horizons and being forerunners of 'the new'.    Yes and amen. That is you and Laurie. 


After listening to the word that Robin McMillan shared on the MorningStar Prophetic Perspective episode on Monday, Nov. 18, 2013, I am further encouraged by these words above! (You can see that video link also on this blog, entitled "The Five Wagons - Robin McMillan." Please use the Search box in the top right hand corner of this blog if needed to find it.)

Steve Martin