• Fred's Blog

    Influence – Not What It Used To Be

    I grew up in a time in publishing where getting Billy Graham’s endorsement on a book was not exactly a guarantee of respectable sales but it was key.  While his was probably not the first example of the importance of endorsement (Arthur Godfrey and Art Linkletter had already blazed the trail there) it was certainly one of the first in the evangelical world.  As everyone knows after that the power of imprimatur moved from Billy Graham to Chuck Colson Bill Hybels Rick Warren and now Tim Keller. In fact many books published today have several pages of endorsements from a wide variety of influential pastors thought leaders consultants artists celebrities…

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  • Fred's Blog

    This Much and No More

      I love Jason Russell and the work of Invisible Children.  I love the work of Scott Harrison and Charity:Water.  I love the work of Gary Haugen and IJM; Jena Nardella and Blood:Water; Peter Greer and HOPE International; and (increasingly) many, many others.  I especially like that my younger friends care about these issues and I support their work in whatever way I can.  I read about the ravages of malaria, poverty, and sex-trafficking. I read daily of the atrocities inflicted on defenseless women and children.  I have seen them first-hand.  I have taught Bonhoeffer and the words he speaks and the willing sacrifice of his life more than challenge…

  • Bible Studies

    Caesar Augustus and Jesus

    When I taught the book Eric Metaxas wrote on Bonhoeffer, I looked at it through the lens of the story of two men who collide without ever having met. Had there not been an Adolph Hitler we would have probably never heard of Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Had there never been a Dietrich Bonhoeffer things might have turned out differently in Germany. Their lives were joined together. This is the same kind of story – but it’s not two men exactly. It is a story of a man who becomes a god and God who becomes a child. It is a story of two people who shape the balance of history in…

  • Fred's Blog

    Collaboration – Count The Cost

      I have been part of a number of conversations in the last few weeks about the possibility of donors collaborating on projects – both locally and internationally.  While we often encourage our grantees to collaborate it’s too often true that neither we nor they know what that means or what is expected.  Like many words, it means something different in the mind of everyone involved and we often start working on collaborations without taking the time to define it and to get on the same page.  Years ago I read a paper by the Council on Foundations about the several levels of the continuum of collaboration – from the…

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  • Fred's Blog

    The Harvest Is Plentiful But The Workers Are Few(er)

      I read with interest the news of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association laying off 50 of their staff – or 10% of their total.  In the announcement was their plan to focus more of their resources on internet evangelism and by implication away from the more traditional activities of the association.  I’m assuming that means crusades and the retreat/conference ministry of the Cove among other things. This is the second time in three years they have reduced their staff.  It’s not a reflection of hard times financially as the BGEA is probably one of the best funded ministries in the world with a 2010 budget of almost $128 million…

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  • Bible Studies

    Luke 1:1-80

    1.  Luke has been called the writer who most presents Jesus through the eyes of women and the Gospel starts from the beginning with two women – Elizabeth and Mary. Not just two women but women in very difficult circumstances. One with no child late in life and the other with a child early in life but unmarried. There are several miracles in the Bible related to a woman not having a child. Sarah and Abraham, Rebekah and Isaac, Hannah, the mother of Samuel, Samson’s mother, and the Shunammite woman and her elderly husband. To be without a child is not only to be without a family or security for…

  • Fred's Blog

    How to Speak at The Gathering

      Every year I get about 200 inquiries from ministries and Gathering participants asking to talk about the possibility of their organization or their favorite ministry making a presentation at The Gathering.  While The Gathering is not a grant making foundation it does have one asset that is valuable to ministry leaders: exposure to present and potential funders.  The opportunity to be visible with those who attend the annual conference is a rare one and I understand that.  As well if a ministry is doing it’s development job right ” it will have Gathering participants asking me and the program committee to invite them to speak – whether it is…

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  • Fred's Blog

    Long Time Coming

    My family and friends give me grief for watching public television because they think I’m just watching book reviews and documentaries. In fact I’m also downloading blues classics like Albert King and Stevie Ray Vaughan together on “In Session” or B.B. King and Eric Clapton on “Riding With The King.” Of course the list of white artists whose music and careers has been built on the work of black musicians like Muddy Waters Buddy Guy Bessie Smith Koko Taylor Willie Dixon Blind Lemon Jefferson and T-Bone Walker is long. Most of those men and women played the Southern “chitlin circuit” for years with little or no recognition by the mainstream.…

  • Bible Studies

    Deuteronomy 31-34

    1.  The final chapters in the book and the final chapter in the life of Moses. What are some of the major points of the book? The importance of remembering: What are we to remember? Remember is not simply reminiscing about the past and how good it was. That is living in a world that probably never existed. Remembering is not melancholy or living in regrets. Remembering is not an anchor that keeps us from moving ahead but a keel that keeps us balanced and steady. It is something Moses calls the people together to do before they move ahead into the future. The right kind of remembering prepares us…

  • Fred's Blog

    Half-Time For Church Staff – Part Two

    Years ago I was part of an organization – Leadership Network – that convened senior pastors and staff of large churches.  While they were used to hearing from their peers they told us they wanted to hear from non-pastors about issues of management and leadership because the seminaries and conferences they attended did not address those issues for large churches.  We began to seed our conferences with management speakers business professionals secular authors and other “non-church” resources.  While the emphasis was still on church professionals learning from other church professionals about the “business” of the church the introduction of outside resources was welcomed with enthusiasm.  A couple of weeks ago…

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