Jeremy Jernigan Posts

Deploy to Church

Here’s your chance to add to the messages at Central each week as we employ open source sermon prep (or more accurately, “crowd sourcing”). In a couple weeks, we’ll be in our series, Now More Than Ever, where we’ll be celebrating 50 years as a church. The focus of this series will be on carrying our cross and how we can fulfill the third D of our strategy (discover, develop, deploy). We’ll be highlighting 50 ways in 50 days on how to serve others. Let’s brainstorm for the week where we’ll deploy to the Church.

So if you can take a moment, please leave a comment with any ideas you come up with concerning movie clips, quotes, scriptures, illustrations, stories, etc. for the topic of deploying (or serving) the Church. The sky is the limit, so think creatively and share some of your genius with us.

Is the Voice Enough?

Last Saturday as I picked up Gavin from children’s ministry in Mesa after our Third Format service, I was told about something interesting that he did during the service. Apparently he was pretty mellow and was cuddling in a lady’s arms in the nursery until she walked over to part of the room where they were playing the service live on a tv. I happened to be teaching at the time. Gavin immediately started looking around when he heard my voice and when he didn’t see me he started crying. They ended up turning the tv on mute.

Fast forward a day to Sunday night. I pick up Gavin from the children’s ministry in Gilbert and they tell me another story. They have a similar tv in their nursery as well. When I began teaching, Gavin quickly crawled across the room toward the tv (they compared it to a baby sprint) and when he didn’t actually find me but heard my voice, began to get fussy again. They ended up playing Baby Einstein DVDs until the service was over.

The odd thing about this is that he’s never done this before, and all of a sudden does it on back to back nights in two different places with two sets of people. So I’m enjoying being a dad and having a son who gets bothered when he hears my voice but can’t find me.

But I wonder how often we are content when it comes to our Heavenly Father to hear bits of His voice only. We don’t often long for more. We hear part of His voice in one moment, and we are content with that instead of looking around and longing for Him even more. I pray that our desire for His Spirit would grow and that we would be bothered whenever we can’t experience Him fully.

Repost: Bible Reading Plan

I have had numerous conversations with people about this 10 chapters a day Bible reading plan, so I wanted to repost it in case you wanted to give it a try but hadn’t yet. For those of you that have tried it, please leave a comment with your experience so far. Thanks!

If you’re like me, you want to read the Bible regularly but it often seems like a daunting challenge to pull it off with any amount of consistency and discipline. Through the years, I’ve heard of all sorts of reading plans and I’ve tried many of them myself. I will say that a reading plan significantly aids you in the process of reading Scripture regularly, but how do you know which one to try? The most common is the Bible in a year program, which many people eagerly launch into and keep it up for a few weeks until they get to Leviticus and then it ruins them. There is the Bible in 90 days, a difficult plan that only one of my friends has been able to follow through with. Or, you can just open it at random or randomly select a book and hope that it takes you somewhere.

I recently heard about a new plan and I’ve been trying it for a bit now and I love it. It was developed, or at least adapted to its current form, by Grant Horner, a professor at the Master’s College in LA.

Professor Horner's Bible Reading PlanHere’s the part that sounds scary: you read 10 chapters a day. Here’s the good news, you fly through it and are constantly building off your momentum without getting overwhelmed by any “difficult” part of the Bible. The plan divides the Bible into 10 lists, and you read a chapter out of each list a day. The first list includes the Gospels, so you’ll always read at least one chapter a day from them. Since each list is made up of a different amount of total chapters, you’ll never read the same 10 chapters in a day from the time you start. The benefit of this plan is that everyday you get an overall picture and feel of Scripture and it allows you to see how they connect together and how one verse sheds light into another verse. Because you are constantly moving from one book to another, it goes quickly and gives you the feeling of progress each day. Another benefit is that you don’t get as discouraged, or behind, if you don’t read a day. There’s no timeline to complete this so it becomes part of your routine and not a task to try and conquer. I’ve never promoted a particular Bible-reading plan before, but I’m officially encouraging you to try this if you are looking to energize your reading of the Bible.

Click here to go to Professor Horner’s page to read the details about the plan and download tools to make it easy for you to read it yourself.

There are a couple of distinctions I would make to his philosophy:

1. I’m less concerned about knowing where passages are on each page than he is. I think it is beneficial every year or so to change the version that you’re reading so that you don’t get locked into one English translation only. The KJV used to be considered the only “holy” version, recently it has become the NIV. If you change it up it allows you to see how different versions offer helpful perspective and is another way to keep it fresh year after year. I recommend the NIV, TNIV, NASB, NLT, and NRSV.

2. It takes me about 30 minutes a day to read my chapters, but that is because I like to go a little slower than he recommends. I’m a believer in journaling about your Bible reading, so I would encourage you to allow time for notes and questions as you go.

Deploy to Friends

Here’s your chance to add to the messages at Central each week as we employ open source sermon prep (or more accurately, “crowd sourcing”). In a couple weeks, we’ll be in our series, Now More Than Ever, where we’ll be celebrating 50 years as a church. The focus of this series will be on carrying our cross and how we can fulfill the third D of our strategy (discover, develop, deploy). We’ll be highlighting 50 ways in 50 days on how to serve others. Let’s brainstorm for the week where we’ll deploy to our friends.

So if you can take a moment, please leave a comment with any ideas you come up with concerning movie clips, quotes, scriptures, illustrations, stories, etc. for the topic of deploying (or serving) to friends. The sky is the limit, so think creatively and share some of your genius with us.

The Nines

There was a free online conference today called the Nines. A bunch of influential church leaders are given only 9 minutes to communicate a leadership lesson. Here ares some ideas that stood out to me:

“The outcomes of ministry don’t belong to us, they belong to God. Our identity comes from being a child of God.” Skye Jethani

“The Church doesn’t have a mission, the mission has a Church.” Reggie McNeal

“When you delegate tasks, you create followers. When you delegate authority, you create leaders.” Craig Groeschel

“Innovation grows out of desperation. Big ideas grow out of big failures.” Greg Surrat

“We’ve shrunk Jesus to the size where he can save our souls, but not where He can change the world.” Jenni Catron

“You will only grow to the threshold of your pain. View pain as a teacher. Don’t drug it. Don’t have leadership leprosy.” Sam Chand

“In the church, tradition should never get in the way of mission, or it is sin.” Dan Kimball

“Success by default: be the last person standing. God will use that.” Jud Wilhite

“The Gospel is not an evacuation plan, it is a transformation plan.” Brian McLaren

“We look at people like a mission field and not a community.” Bob Roberts

The greatest church you pastor is the one you call home.” Brad Bell

“Disciples are handcrafted, not mass produced.” John Ortberg

What people are longing for is access to our own hearts, stories and journey. Do I have a faith journey worth sharing about?” Rick McKinley

Goodbye TNIV

It was announced recently that they will be working on a new version of the hugely popular NIV (New International Version) translation of the Bible. You may be aware that they did this a few years ago and produced the TNIV (Today’s New International Version). That version was met with very mixed results. As a recent article in Forbes explained: “Whatever its strengths, the TNIV has become an emblem of division in the evangelical Christian world.”

So what exactly does that mean for the TNIV now? It will “cease publication once the new-look NIV is released, said Moe Girkins, president of Zondervan, its North American publisher.” Even though the TNIV has the support of established names such as Andy Stanley, John Ortberg, Bill Hybels, and Philip Yancey, it still isn’t enough to keep it alive.

This makes me sad. I was one of the apparently small minority of people that really enjoyed the TNIV. In fact, I primarily teach from my own copy. As my friend Zach stated, “so owning a TNIV will be kinda like owning a mac cube? Great product, here for just a little while.”

I’m interested to see the latest revisions on the NIV, set to be published in 2011. Will it suffer the same fate as the TNIV, or rise above its original and surpass it?