Fun and easy game ideas

We’re making final plans for a Children’s Ministry Appreciation Lunch and Training Workshop tomorrow afternoon and want to create a fun, relaxed atmosphere by playing a few games and handing out prizes.

Here are some free resources that might help you with your next Sunday School class or Teacher Training event:

  • Bingo cards. Make a word list and this site will randomize and print bingo cards.
  • Bible trivia. Try one of these Bible trivia games which can be printed in HTML format.
  • Word searches. Just type in all the words you want hidden. Or, if you own Logos Bible Software, you can make word searches from any Bible passage by using the Word Find tool.

Have fun, be creative, and try out some of the other games found at Puzzlemaker!

Photo credit: chipgriffin

Special offer from Modern Parables

Modern Parables is a great video series that retells the parables of Jesus through 21st century dramatizations. Each video is about 15 minutes long and is supplemented by Bible Study material. Their videos are creative and high-quality, and their curriculum is theologically conservative. It would be a great resource for any Sunday School or small group. You can view one of their trailers here.

The company has just announced a special offer for foreign missionaries and prison ministry directors:
As former missionaries ourselves, we realize these two groups are especially underfunded and under-resourced. For a limited time therefore we are donating to prison ministries and missionaries operating outside the U.S. a complete set of Modern Parables digital downloads for free. We have set up a page that enables ministries to request a free download of the $99 digital set. Please forward this email to friends you know who work in these important ministry areas. Or click here to request a set now.

Note: you will need a high-speed connection to download the videos.

A sermonless church

What would happen if we removed the sermon from our weekly order of service? We could add a couple more songs in its place, maybe throw in a skit or some other artistic demonstration, have more time for prayer and fellowship, and still get out early.

To many, a sermonless church may sound like a good idea. It would make the service shorter, more entertaining, and probably more appealing to unbelievers. It would give pastors more time during the week for planning, programs, and visitation. But in so doing, the church would kill itself. A sermonless church is like a rootless tree. It will eventually dry up and rot because it has lost its source of spiritual nourishment.

Of course, most churches do not omit the sermon, but rather shorten it, simplify it, or approach it in such a way that it has lost its centrality within our worship. Many church members have even learned to “tune out” at this point in the service.

My friend Bret Capranica offers a good list today of what happens when preaching loses its place of centrality within the life of the local church:

  • Personal intake of Scripture becomes tiresome
  • Personal prayer becomes little more than religious day-dreaming
  • An atmosphere of worship gives way to a craving for entertainment
  • Truth is replaced with preferences
  • Discipleship is dismissed by the cult of personal excitement
  • Culture becomes central
  • Creativity becomes a mantra
  • Personal desires become dominant
  • Tradition becomes foundational
  • Counseling becomes, at worst, psychological, and at best merely conservative Dr. Laura-type of advice or simply relational
  • Fellowship becomes superficial
  • Unity becomes merely relational
  • Missions becomes nothing more than temporal societal betterment
  • The gospel becomes self-help
  • Discipleship becomes nothing more than a mere decision

All this will be true because people, for people’s sake, become the focus and God becomes a servant to their own lust for centrality (2 Timothy 4:1-4) – our thoughts are no longer tethered to what God has systematically revealed to us about Himself. In the end, people are not best served where they are most prized.

When expository preaching is not central in our life:

  • We ultimately and over time won’t feel fed, satisfied, fulfilled
  • The grass will always look greener in another ministerial field

    …because ultimately, God, truth, and His glory is not what we crave. Or perhaps we are misinterpreting our cravings and feeding them with the wrong things.

When expository preaching is not central in the church’s life

  • It will give way to the whims of culture
  • It will be replaced by the mystical
  • It will be sapped of true spiritual power
  • It will be shallow in terms of spiritual depth
  • It will be empty of the Glory and majesty of God

The pastor or teacher who fails to feed his flock regularly is doing them a tremendous disservice, slowly starving them to death.

For a recent message I preached on How to Listen to a Sermon and get the most out of God’s word, you can listen to my podcast here.

Photo credit: ConspiracyofHappiness

Cautions for non-Calvinists

In the second half of an exchange between Southeastern Seminary faculty members, Nathan Finn offers some important cautions to our non-Calvinist brothers.

Here are three important warnings Finn gives to those who embrace a more Arminian understanding of matters such as freedom of the will and the extent of the atonement:

  1. First, be sure to articulate the gospel unambiguously in your preaching and evangelism…The gospel is not “God loves you and has a wonderful plan for your life” or “Jesus can straighted [sic] out your messed-up life.” This is just lingo…The gospel is the story of all that our Creator God has done through the perfect life, atoning death, and victorious resurrection of Jesus Christ to rescue sinners from destruction and redeem a fallen world…
  2. Second, be sure to never give the impression that the decision to become a Christian is a mere decision. Sometimes I hear non-Calvinists imply that “all you have to do” if you want to be a Christian is believe in Christ. This makes it sound like faith is a simple free will decision that can be made apart from the gracious work of the Holy Spirit…
  3. Finally, be careful not to turn your strategies into sacraments. I have in mind here two popular practices: altar calls and “sinner’s prayers.”… I am not so much concerned with either of these strategies as I am the way they are sometimes applied…

Finn concludes with a clarion call to Baptist unity around the gospel between both Calvinists and non-Calvinists:

In closing, let me say loud and clear that I am committed to linking arms with all Southern Baptist individuals and churches that love the gospel and want to see the good news proclaimed to all people. In my understanding, Calvinism is a secondary issue that should not preclude different churches from participating in the same network of churches. Our denominational unity should be around a common commitment to the theology of the Baptist Faith and Message, a commitment to the Baptist vision of the church, and a burden to see the gospel proclaimed in all parts of North America and to the ends of the earth. Insofar as we unite around these things and do not divide over Calvinism (or other secondary issues), we will press forward in a Great Commission Resurgence for the sake of the gospel and the glory of the living God.

If his readers heed the cautions Finn has set forth in this letter, I believe there will indeed be great room for unity and progress between Calvinist and non-Calvinist Southern Baptists in the years ahead.

Tom Ascol also called for gospel unity in a post this morning:

…Let’s work together to come to deeper understandings and applications of the gospel. We may disagree at points, but such disagreements, if handled with gospel grace, can work to strengthen our grasp of divine truth rather than to further divide us. That is my hope, and that is my prayer.

I also hope that my Baptist Identity brothers and sisters will see fit to join in the pursuit of this kind of vision. The concerns that some in this camp have rightly articulated can be served through a renewed emphasis on the Great Commission because the healthiest streams of our Baptist heritage have always been gospel-centered. We need not give up our distinctives to major on essentials. In fact, Baptists have never shined brighter than when they have majored on the gospel.

I really do believe that, despite our differences, Southern Baptists can work together if we can agree on the centrality and power of the gospel for all of life. I am convinced that a growing number of Southern Baptists believe this, too. Because of this, I anticipate better days ahead…

Happy Birthday, Heidi!

Dear Heidi,

One year ago today, God brought you into this world, and how fast you’ve grown!

You’ve brought so much joy and energy into our family. You’re playful and sneaky. You love to giggle and squeal. And you’re so close to walking all by yourself! You’ve got lots of teeth and are such a big girl eating finger foods. You’re a wonderful playmate for Dylan, and make your Mommy and Daddy so very proud. We’re pray you will some day know the Lord Jesus as your Savior and find new life in Him.

Heidi, we love you, and thank God for you! Happy Birthday!

Love,
Mommy & Daddy

Thoughts on Life and Leadership