The expression “silver bullet” comes from folklore as a means by which to kill werewolves. It is also a metaphor for a powerful or simple answer to a complicated question. So when we refer to a silver bullets in church
Ministry Silver Bullets

The expression “silver bullet” comes from folklore as a means by which to kill werewolves. It is also a metaphor for a powerful or simple answer to a complicated question. So when we refer to a silver bullets in church
You are a professional communicator. You preach and you teach. You lead worship. You lead devotions. You spend a lot of time on the phone: calling, texting, emailing. You make visits. You sit on boards and committees. You are busy
It’s difficult to see what you aren’t looking at. If you aren’t looking at it, you certainly won’t change what needs to be addressed. That explains a lot of what we do or don’t do in church and ministry. The
We all face the reality at some point. Which is your reality? Church with few attending? Youth group with few or no participants? Parochial school enrollment barely meeting the break even point – or worse? The annual event didn’t happen?
In high school I worked on weekends and missed a lot of church, but I attended a Christian high school ministry where we gathered for Bible study once a week, then signing and a talk another night a week. It
Perhaps “professional clergy” is an immediate turn off for current society. Popular pastors come in skinny jeans and untucked shirts with beards. The “professional” designation used to imply suits and polished shoes and neatly trimmed hair, if not bare faces.
It can go by names like burnout, discouragement or exhaustion. So it’s no wonder that self awareness, self care and self management are hot topics these days. How are you doing with that? The old saying is true that if
You’ve heard it so many times before. You might even think it is annoying. Yet it is the perfect question for leaders to ask. Maybe it seems inappropriate for a leader to ask about helping. It might even imply that