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The Easter Invitation: Calling People to Decide What to Do With Jesus

As I write this, millions of Christians and church leaders are getting ready for Easter weekend, and it's a huge opportunity for the church to spring into action to invite and welcome lost people to hear the Gospel. And so as we, pastors, prepare to preach about the resurrection of Jesus Christ, we desperately need the power of Godthe same power that raised Jesus from the deadto be at work in and through us. The resurrection of Jesus was the greatest demonstration of the power of God in all of history. Let me explain why. After Jesus died they put his body in a tomb. But the tombs were different in those days than they are today. Today we put somebody in a coffin and put them in the ground and we cover them up with dirt. In those days they buried people in caves. They often would use it for many, many bodies. It was not just one burial; lots of people would be buried in the cave. So they’d find a cave and they’d build a trench in front of it and they’d put a giant millstone in front of the opening of the cave. Then when somebody died, they’d roll the stone wheel back, toss in another body and roll it back. A cave would often have many, many people who died in one burial ground. Jesus was buried in the tomb of Joseph of Arimathea, a wealthy man who had bought a cave for his own burial. It had never been used before. So they wrapped Jesus’ body in the burial clothing. They put him in the tomb and they rolled the stone in front of it. But the opponents of Jesus were worried about his claims that he would be raised from the dead. To stop the disciples from making it appear that this had happened, Pilate agreed to allow them to seal the tomb. Isn't it ironic that Jesus Christ is the only person in history whose grave was guarded to keep him from coming out? Notice what happened. Acts 1:3 says, “He [Jesus] showed Himself alive to them after His passion by appearing by many demonstrations.” Notice it wasn’t just a one-time shot like “Surprise! Here I am!” and then he’s never seen again. That could have just been a psychological vision. It could have been a dream. It could have been mustered up in the midst of people in deep grief. No, it says many, many demonstrations that he was alive. It says for 40 days he continued to appear to them and tell them about the kingdom of God. He didn’t just show up once. For forty days he’s walking around the streets of Jerusalem and all kinds of people are seeing him. Here’s the amazing thing, a little secret just for your benefit. The power that raised Jesus Christ from the dead is available to you to help you with your problems when you invite Jesus Christ into your life, and everyone whom you lead and to whom you speak can have that same power too. That's why preaching on Easter weekend ought to be powerful and positive and filled with hope. We have every reason to preach with a sense of victory. And as you preach, preach for a decision. That doesn't mean applying undue pressure. As I wrote last week, evangelism isn't a one-time shot but an ongoing relationship. As you preach, teach, and lead this weekend, allow the story of Jesus' death, burial, and resurrection to help you call people to three important decisions. 1. Invite people to love Christ. Even if God never did anything else for me, he purchased our salvation with his own blood and by giving his own life. He went all the way to death on the cross to purchase us out of the slavery of sin. He certainly deserves our love and our devotion. I should love Christ with all my heart. The Bible says, “We love because He first loved us.” 2. Invite people to hate sin. Why? Because it was my sin and your sin that put Jesus on the cross. So when I watch television and I laugh at sin or I watch a movie and laugh at somebody sinning, that is Satan’s way of getting me to lower my standards. Sin is not a laughing matter. Just look at the cross. It is a serious matter and I should hate sin and do everything I can to fight against injustice in the world. 3. Invite people to tell others. The Bible says in Ephesians 1, “God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself. No longer counting peoples’ sins against them. This is the wonderful message He has given us to tell others.” If somebody died for you, wouldn’t you want to know about it? I think so! Jesus Christ died for your next-door neighbor. Jesus Christ died for your mom and dad. Jesus Christ died for your brother and sister. He died for your best friends. Jesus Christ died for the people you work with and go to school with. This is why we do everything we do at Saddleback Church, why we build buildings, train leaders, direct traffic, love kids, and develop small groups. It’s so we can reach one more for Jesus. The typical person that you really want to reach is sitting at home right now totally oblivious to what Jesus has done for them and how much God loves them. To put it more simply, call on people to believe in Jesus, to grow deeper in him, to find their place in God's family, to discover their shape for ministry, and to live on mission with God telling others the Good News.

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Pastors Are People-Builders

Pastors Are People-Builders

For 12 years the Green Bay Packers won only 30 percent of their games. By 1958 they were 1 in 10. They were terrible. Then came Vince Lombardi. He was a people-builder. During the next nine years with the Packers, he had nine winning seasons. They beat their opponents 75 percent of the time and won five championships, including the first two Super Bowls. That’s the resume of a people-builder. A people-builder makes people better.Pastor, you’re a people-builder, too. God is using you to help people be all that he has made them to be. But more than likely, you’ve never been trained to do that. How do you bring out the best in people? Whether it’s the average layperson in your congregation, a leader you’re mentoring, or a staff person you’re helping to grow, your ability to build people is essential to what you do. In fact, your need to be a people-builder isn’t limited to your ministry role. You also need to be a builder of your family and friends.These four steps will help you build people more effectively:Give people a personal challenge. Paul does this in Ephesians 4:1: “Therefore I, the prisoner in the Lord, urge you to walk worthy of the calling you have received” (CSB). He challenges readers to make their lives count. Why? We all need a cause, a project, or a dream that calls forth the best in our lives. Your people need a cause or dream to strive for, too.God wants you and your congregation to use your strengths and abilities for him. In the secular world, career planning, temperament analysis, and competency tests are big business. Why? We all need someone who will give us a personal challenge, help us discover what we’re good at, and urge us to do it well.    The Bible teaches us that’s what the church should do. We should be people-builders. That’s always been the idea around the CLASS system developed at Saddleback. In each of those classes, we challenge people to live out God’s purposes. What’s your church doing to challenge people to fulfill God’s purposes?Give them complete confidence. Paul says in Romans 15:2, “We should all be concerned about our neighbor and the good things that will build his faith” (GWT). Paul tells us to build up others in the faith. Pastor, to bring out the best in others, we need to give them complete confidence in what God can do through them. Jesus did this with Peter. Peter’s name Petros meant “pebble.” But Jesus, in effect, said, “Pebble, you’re going to be a rock. I’m giving you a new name.” When Jesus said that to Peter, he was anything but a rock. He was Mr. Impulsive, Mr. Foot-in-Mouth, Mr. Let’s Do It! But Jesus said he was going to be a rock. Jesus didn’t tell him what he was; he told him what he could be.Whenever you label somebody, you reinforce what they are. Label the people you lead as “lazy,” “unorganized,” or “a temper problem,” and that’s what you’ll get. Build them up instead. God did this to Gideon. He called him a “mighty man of courage” when he was the biggest wimp out there. God called him a man of courage, and he became one.    1 Thessalonians 5:11 says, “So encourage each other and give each other strength, just as you are doing now” (NCV). If you’re going to be a people-builder, you’ve got to be good at encouragement. How do you do that? Here are three tips:It needs to be real—not insincere manipulation. It needs to be regular. Express it frequently.It needs to be recognizable or precise. Tell the person exactly what you’re encouraging in him or her.Sometimes you’ll hear people say, “Whenever something is wrong, I hear it from my boss!” Don’t be that kind of boss; it’s poor leadership.  Give them wise counsel. You’ll see no progress without learning, and no learning without feedback. Since none of us is perfect, our perceptions get off base. We need people in our lives who will lay it out on the line and be honest with us.Proverbs 27:17, says, “People learn from one another, just as iron sharpens iron” (GNT). We bring out the best in others when we’re willing to be honest with them. People-builders care enough to correct and confront.   Remember, though, correction is very powerful and can be dangerous. Correction done the right way builds people up; correction done the wrong way can scar a person for life. What is the difference between the right and wrong way to correct? It’s your attitude in correcting. If your attitude is: “I’m going to point out this weakness in your life just to point it out,” that’s wrong. People don’t need to have their faults pointed out. Most of us are well aware of our faults. Your purpose must be to change their behavior, not to condemn them. Ephesians 4:1 says, “We will speak the truth in love” (NLT).Give them full credit. To be a people-builder, you need to praise the growth and the changes you see in the lives of others. I used to have a sign in my office that said, “God can do great things through the person who doesn’t care who gets the credit.” That’s part of people-building. Usually we like to share the blame and keep the credit. The Bible says we’re to do just the opposite. Romans 12:10 says, “Let us have real warm affection for one another . . . and a willingness to let the other man have the credit” (PHILLIPS). As a pastor, you’ll get a lot of the credit when things go well (and a lot of the blame when they don’t). That’s natural. But next time someone showers you with praise for something going well at the church (recent growth, a new event that’s making an impact, or something like that), find out who should share the credit and give it to them. That’s leadership. It’s also how you build the leaders you have. If you’re always taking the credit for what’s happening in your church, it shouldn’t surprise you when you have trouble keeping leaders.  Applying these four principles will take a lot of work. I won’t sugar-coat it. There’s always a price tag to being a people-builder. It may take your time, your effort, your money, your energy—and it may lead to losing your privacy. Most of all, it’ll cost you selfishness. You can’t be selfish and be a people-builder.So why should you do it? Because of what God has done for you. God has been good to you, so you should be good to others. Do it out of a response to all God has done in your life. I want to challenge you to spend the rest of your ministry—the rest of your life, for that matter—as a people-builder. Focus your ministry around helping others be all that God has called them to be. That’s what a shepherd does; that’s what a pastor does.I can't think of a better way to spend my life.
Joy Returns When Christ Is First

Joy Returns When Christ Is First

Pastor, a lot of people—including those of us in ministry—are looking for joy in all the wrong places. We chase after bigger churches, more effective programs, or the applause of peers and congregants. But joy never shows up there.Misplaced priorities can eliminate your ministry joy.Paul explained this in his letter to the Philippians: “But whatever was to my profit I now consider loss for the sake of Christ. What is more, I consider everything a loss compared to the surpassing greatness of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whose sake I have lost all things. I consider them rubbish, that I may gain Christ.” (Philippians 3:7–8, NIV)That was Paul’s “profit and loss statement.” Everything that once seemed like a gain now counted as loss compared to knowing Christ. Even while sitting in a prison cell, Paul could rejoice because his priorities were centered on Jesus.Notice the word “rubbish.” The translators were being polite. The original word means dung, manure. Paul wasn’t mincing words. Without Jesus, everything else—fame, money, or power—is worthless garbage. Only Christ brings lasting joy.You will lose your joy in ministry if you let lesser things distract you. People will let you down. Plans won’t always work out. Attendance will fluctuate. If you keep your focus there, joy will evaporate.Paul reminds us that life is about tradeoffs. He surrendered everything so that he could be found “in Christ.” Jesus said the same thing: “No one can serve two masters.” (Matthew 6:24, NIV) Many of us want Jesus plus something else. But you can’t have two #1s.Here’s the reality: When we come to Christ, we give up everything. That may feel restrictive at first, but it’s really the doorway to joy. When we surrender, Jesus reshapes our gifts, reforms our goals, and gives them back with greater purpose than before.Missionary Jim Elliot, who gave his life in Ecuador, put it this way: “He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose.”So what are you holding on to that keeps stealing your joy? Has your ministry—even your goals for it—taken the place of Christ?It’s time to reorder your priorities. Put Jesus back in the center. When you do, you’ll discover again the joy you’ve been missing.
Faith Before the Miracle

Faith Before the Miracle

Ministry often feels like standing on the edge of a fast-moving river—uncertain, overwhelming, and too deep to cross. You know what God has called you to do, but the next step still feels risky.That’s where Joshua found himself as he prepared to lead Israel into the Promised Land. God had given him the assignment, but it required courage. That’s why God said not once, but three times: “Be strong and courageous. . . . Be strong and very courageous. . . . Be strong and courageous!” (Joshua 1:6-7, 9 NLT).Fear can keep you from starting.Discouragement can keep you from continuing.But God has already given you what you need to move forward:God is with you. No matter what meetings, hospital visits, hard conversations, or leadership decisions await you this week, you won’t face them alone. “No one will be able to stand against you as long as you live. I will be with you as I was with Moses. I will not fail you or abandon you” (Joshua 1:5 NLT). God keeps his promises. He hasn’t brought you this far to abandon his work in you or through you. “Be strong and courageous, for you will distribute the land I swore to their ancestors to give them as an inheritance” (Joshua 1:6 CSB).God has called you to this. This isn’t a job you picked for yourself. You’re not in ministry by accident. “Haven’t I commanded you: be strong and courageous? Do not be afraid or discouraged, for the LORD your God is with you wherever you go” (Joshua 1:9 CSB).When the priests arrived at the Jordan River, God didn’t stop the water in advance. He told them to step into it—and then the waters would stop. He asked them to trust him, not the circumstances.Sometimes the miracle happens after the step, not before.Pastor, is there something you’re hesitating to do because you’re waiting for God to clear the path first? Is there a conversation you’re avoiding, a change you’re delaying, a vision you’ve shelved?Be strong. Be courageous. God has not changed. He is with you.And he’s still parting rivers when his people step forward in faith.
Is God Waiting on You?

Is God Waiting on You?

Pastor, as you step into another week of shepherding God’s people, remember this: God wants to bless you and your ministry. But he ties his blessings to a condition—obedience.The Bible contains over 7,000 promises where God essentially says, “If you do this, I will do this.”If you confess your sins, I will forgive you.If you call upon me, I will save you.If you obey me, I will bless you.When it feels like you’re waiting on God to move in your church, he may actually be waiting on you—to trust him more deeply, to walk in obedience, and to follow his lead in your ministry.Take Deuteronomy 28:2-6 as an example. Notice the blessings and the condition: “You will experience all these blessings if you obey the LORD your God: Your towns and your fields will be blessed. Your children and your crops will be blessed. The offspring of your herds and flocks will be blessed. Your fruit baskets and breadboards will be blessed. Wherever you go and whatever you do, you will be blessed” (NLT).You may not tend fields or flocks, but you do tend the flock of God. This promise still applies. God will bless your family and the work of your ministry. He will sustain you in preaching, in counseling, in leadership, and in carrying the unseen burdens of your congregation.God not only wants to bless everything you do in service to him—he also wants those blessings to be visible to others. His goodness in your life becomes a testimony to his faithfulness.Psalm 31:19 reminds us: “How great is your goodness, which you have stored up for those who fear you. In the presence of everyone you have acted for those who take refuge in you” (CSB).God already has blessings stored up for you as a pastor—encouragements, provisions, fruitfulness—that he intends to pour out as you walk in obedience.As Ezekiel 34:26 says: “I will make them and the places surrounding my hill a blessing. I will send down showers in season; there will be showers of blessing” (NIV).That’s what God wants for your life and ministry: showers of blessing.So don’t miss what he wants to do this week. Lean into obedience. Follow his directions. Trust that he is faithful—and watch him fulfill his promises in your life and your church.
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