One Way to Evaluate a Conference like Q
Categories: Church, Culture, Living our faithAs most of you know, I’m still processing all that I heard at Q last week. If you missed them, you can find my Q posts further down in April. Q is an amazing conference in that it brings together people from all backgrounds, cultures and persuasions. As my husband David said several times, during the course of Q he wanted to stand up and cheer for the person on stage and at other times he wanted to stand up and throw something. That has become the definition of a worthwhile conversation to us. Why in the world would you want to pay good money to go to a conference where everyone thinks exactly the same way you do? Not a problem at Q: you name it, you can find it.
That kind of openness to dialogue, however, can lead to an opposite reaction than intended. We have the desire, ability and even responsibility to discuss what we are hearing and evaluate it. The conversations started this way are valuable. But we can’t cross the line into the territory where we are cutting down another follower of Christ simply because we don’t agree with him, or maligning the motives of a teacher or pastor simply because he seems wrong to us. We need to develop the conversation based on a mutual understanding that we all want to know God truer and deeper because of our association with each other.
I read a blog by one of my favorite preachers that captures this thought best for me. Take a few minutes to click over to Stephen Furtick’s blog. He is the lead pastor of Elevation church. Read this post, and then resolve with me that we will be humbled by the others around us who are striving to put their faith into action.
April 18th, 2008 at 12:15 pm
Marla,
Have you read the article from Rev Magazine that forecasts church trends in ten years from now?
http://www.rev.org/article.asp?ID=2820
Paste this into your browswer and take a look. It is probably much of the same information you heard at the Q conference I would imagine.
April 18th, 2008 at 12:51 pm
Wow - Great article Sandy! There’s a lot of food for thought in that one. I’m not sure I agree with all of their predictions (how often does it all turn out the way we think?) but if even half of their trends emerge, then we all need to be planning new ways of ministering now.
One idea that I really like is the idea of decentralized training. And that’s one that will directly impact your area of expertise. Imagine if your people took an online strengths finder, followed by a certain amount of training. THEN you got together in person to flesh that out and plug in to specific church ministries.