Posts in Life
VALUE OVER VULTURES

Maybe you’ve seen a circle of vultures hovering above the carcass of a dead animal. Once they’ve identified their prey, they pluck at it till it’s picked clean. A couple of weeks ago I drove past a dead deer on the side of the road, with the ugly black birds perched on its flank. Two days later the remains weren’t recognizable. The vultures had completely destroyed it.

This started me thinking about the fact that too many churches harbor a small flock of vultures, those who find a fault or a weakness and pick at it till the damage they inflict is complete. Their number may not be large, but their harm can be huge in a relatively short amount of time. If left unchecked, they can pick a pastor clean till he just decides to give up and walk away.

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3 TRENDS THE CHURCH MUST NOT IGNORE IN 2020

This is the time when writers and websites everywhere are giving space to a look at the year just past. It’s a good thing. I joined them with my reflection last week on the five most popular posts on this blog in 2019. But now it’s time to look ahead. I’m not bold enough to make predictions, but I do want to talk about three trends the church must not ignore as we begin a new decade.

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TOP 5 POSTS OF 2019

“If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?” As interesting as that question has been to some, my concern is more personal: If a pastor posts a blog entry and no one reads it, does it make any difference? Thankfully, due to 16,900 unique visitors to this blog this year, I haven’t yet posted something no one has read. But several of this year’s posts were more popular than all the rest, and I want to list them here. Maybe you missed one of these. Maybe you’d like to look at one of them again.

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BOOM GOES THE MILLENNIAL

In case you haven’t noticed it, there’s a feud going on these days between baby boomers and millennials. One website perfectly summarizes the accusations those in the two generations have been throwing at each other:

For a long time now, the cross-generational dialogue between baby boomers and millennials has been built atop several recurring themes. Boomers — the generation born roughly between 1946 and 1965 — scoff that millennials expect “participation trophies” for doing the bare minimum. Millennials say boomers are “out of touch.” Millennials (born roughly between 1980 and 1996) are “killing” once-stable industries like cereal by saving money, spending less, and “eating avocados.” Boomers have “mortgaged the future” in exchange for hoarding wealth while also voting to end necessary social programs. Millennials would rather complain about student debt than buckle down, work hard, and “get a job.”

I believe the church should step into this fray with a simple solution that would help both the older and the younger accusers. My proposal? Mentoring.

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