Pastor Steven Furtick"/>

Archive for August, 2010

Calling out greatness

A few weeks ago I tweeted a challenge to leaders that received a lot of positive feedback:

Leaders: Don’t apologize for expecting excellence. God deserves it, and people are capable of it. Call it out.

The impetus for it came from my observation that some leaders are afraid or embarrassed to expect excellence as a normal product from the people they lead. Usually it’s because they don’t want to appear to be demanding or demeaning. Apparently it’s an affront to expect a lot out of a person.

But it’s actually just the opposite. It honors them.

The highest compliment you can give to those you lead is to demand the best from them. Low standards do not communicate appreciation. They communicate contempt for someone’s ability and potential. Once you have stopped challenging someone to do more, you have stopped believing in them. And you have effectively stunted their ability to grow in their God-given gifts and calling.

It’s the responsibility of the leader not only to cast vision, but also to make sure that those serving under the vision are maximizing their gifts in support of it. An indispensable tool that every leader must learn to develop then is the ability to speak life into potential. Call it out. And the best way to call it out is by maintaining a high standard. People don’t grow by being allowed to live in mediocrity.

So leaders: Don’t apologize for expecting excellence. God deserves it, and people are capable of it. Call it out.

You’re not being demeaning by holding your people to a high standard. The real affront would be to allow someone to work at a level that doesn’t correspond to the potential for greatness that God has put in them.

PXGAQ4JCHP86

The stories behind the numbers

This past weekend we saw one of the most powerful moves of God at Elevation yet. 581 people saved in just two days. We celebrate and stand in awe of a massive outpouring of God’s power and salvation. But 581 is more than just a big number for us. What makes that number really incredible is that behind it are 581 names. And behind every name there’s a story of a person whose life was redeemed and changed forever.

A foreign exchange student from France who happened to come and was saved.
Six students who found life together after a couple of their friends invited them to church.
A couple in their 60s who both accepted Christ.

I think of the greatest temptations any church faces is depersonalizing the miracles it so desperately longs to see. There is nothing wrong with praying for God to move in unprecedented ways. We shouldn’t settle for small goals when we have a God who is capable of the impossible. But we do not need to forget that God’s miracles involve people. And these are real people with real needs and real situations.

When you look through the gospels, the amount and character of the miracles of Jesus is staggering. But what may be more staggering is that when you look at each one in its context, Jesus’ concern is not with the grandeur of the miracle itself. But with the fact that His power is impacting and transforming the life of an individual.

Jesus sees a woman in a funeral procession who has just lost her only son. So He raises him from the dead. Jesus sees a bent over, ostracized woman while preaching in a synagogue. So he straightens her up. A blind man asks for his sight. And so Jesus restores it. It wasn’t just about the miracle itself. It was about the life that was impacted because of the miracle.

We’re never going to stop praying that God’s power will demonstrate itself in ways we’ve never seen before. We will always pray that God would continue to save hundreds and thousands during our weekend worship experiences. But that’s because we know that there are hundreds and thousands of unique people with unique stories and unique needs who need the same power of Jesus to flow through their lives.

We’re ultimately praying for God to save the life of an individual. To heal one person. To meet the needs of one man. To transform the life of one woman.

And then repeat this event hundreds of times.

PXGAQ4JCHP86

The Invitation

The Invitation

Last weekend at Elevation I strongly urged our people to invite people who are close to them but far from God to church this coming weekend. We believe very strongly in the power of a simple invite to church. We’ve seen thousands of people place their faith in Christ through our weekend worship experiences. And the reason most of those people came was because someone invited them.

So I wanted to issue one final challenge to our Elevators: don’t come alone this weekend. God has been setting the stage for an incredible finish to the Invitation. And all you have to do is say a simple sentence that could have a profound impact: Will you come to church with me this weekend?

We’ve made all the preparations. Now you just have to come and bring as many people as you can. God wants His house to be full. And He’s asked us to invite people in to fill it.

Below I’ve included a tool to help you. Take a moment and send an e-vite. Or send 20. We have ten worship experiences spread out over three locations. Find one they can go to, and accommodate to their schedule if you have to.

To show you the kind of impact you have the potential to make, I’ve also included a very compelling testimony detailing how Kat Crawford, one of our volunteers, received a simple invitation to church that changed her life forever.

We’re partners in the Gospel. You give your invitation. I’ll give mine. And we’ll see hundreds of people be filled with life in Christ.

Click here to send an evite.

Detours to the destination

The LORD blessed the latter part of Job’s life more than the first. After this, Job lived a hundred and forty years; he saw his children and their children to the fourth generation. And so he died, old and full of years.
Job 42:12, 16-17

When most people think of Job, the first picture that enters into their minds is of a man marked by misery. That’s natural, considering it’s the theme of Job 1-41. But it’s also misguided because it doesn’t take into account Job 42.

Job’s story doesn’t end on a note of misery. The final word on Job is not on his pain. His loss. His questioning. Or really anything on the forty-one chapters that precede. It’s an affirmation that Job lived a full life. An affirmation that despite appearances, God never for a second abandoned Job or changed His mind about Job’s final destination.

The story of Job is more than a story about a guy who lost everything he cared about. It’s also about a man who regained it. A man who ended up dying the way he wanted. The way any of us would want.

But not the way he or any of us would have planned.

He died surrounded by family. But it was a family that God had to recreate after he lost his first.
He regained all of his possessions, and even had them doubled. But not before he had to lose everything he had worked his whole life for.

Job’s final destination did not come without detours. And it’s the detours that have the chance to derail our lives more than anything else. Not because God is incapable of handling them or can’t see them coming. But because we cling so tightly onto the path we think we’re supposed to take to get to where God wants us to be.

The single greatest thing standing in-between you and God’s plan for your life is not just your preconceived notion of what that life itself should be. It’s also your preconceived notion of the road you should take to get there.

And it’s a notion you have to let go of.

You might lose your job. You may go through a period of marital unrest where it looks like everything is going to unravel. You may have to move to a place you hate for a season. And you may even have to face an unforeseen illness that threatens your life or the life of someone you love.

Whatever it is, detours are inevitable.

But just because God takes you on a detour, it doesn’t mean He’s changed His mind about your destination. The final word on your life is not going to be the detours you experience. It’s going to be the destination God uses them to take you to.