Archives For Small Group

Going Wild with Wonderstruck: 5 Tips to Get the Most Out of Your Bible Study (and a Wonderstruck Wednesday Challenge)

Thousands of new friends from around the world have begun Wonderstruck 7-Session DVD Bible study from Lifeway. We’ve been blown away at the response! Non-believers coming to Jesus, friendships reconciling, marriages healing, and more—God truly is busting at the seams to display his power, glory, and might in our lives.

Here are some fresh ways to make the most out of your Wonderstruck Bible Study: Continue Reading…

Tips to Building a Small group

Organizing a small group can be daunting and discouraging, especially as you gaze with longing upon other great groups and wonder how yours can ever look like theirs. Building a life-changing small group doesn’t need to be overwhelming. With a little push in the right direction, you too can create a group that makes an impact. Here are 5 tips to help you build a small group you can be proud of:
Continue Reading…

Which Bible study is Right for Your Small Group?If you haven’t heard, The Winter Sale is taking place in our store through Friday where you’ll find Bible studies up to 40% off.

But which Bible study is right for your and your group?

We wanted to provide an easy breakdown of these Bible studies and highlight the focus of each study as you prayerfully consider which of the studies are best for your group during the upcoming year. Continue Reading…

Why is Church So Messy?

Margaret —  November 17, 2012 — 85 Comments

Community is Messy

My friend, Heather Zempel, is a stellar communicator, a gifted leader, and the discipleship pastor at National Community Church in D.C., where she serves on the teaching team and regularly preaches at weekend services. She’s also author of Community is Messy: The Perils and Promise of Small Group MinistryI recently had the opportunity to ask Heather about what it takes to navigate the messiness of community
Q. Why did you write Community is Messy?

A. Anyone who has led a small group for more than two weeks has discovered that mess happens. For those who serve as small group directors, discipleship pastors, and volunteers who champion group life in their churches, navigating mess is often the unlisted but most demanding part of their portfolio. I wrote Community is Messy to encourage those group leaders and group ministry leaders that mess may not be a hindrance to community but a catalyst to the cultivation of deeper community. My prayer is that leaders can embrace the mess and the promise that God can write his story of redemption through the mess. 

Q. You had an unorthodox path going from engineering to ministry. How does your background inform your understanding of community?

A. I have two degrees in environmental engineering—not a very traditional path into ministry. But small group leaders and environmental engineers have a lot in common. Both strive to engineer environments where growth happens. When I think about community, I picture treatment lagoons and pig farms. When I think about spiritual growth, I consider the differences between static friction and kinetic friction and remember the diversity of strengths in physical properties reflected in the modulus of elasticity. That’s all in the book.

Q. You talk in the book about valuing people over programs. Why is this important?

A. In the church, we tend to invest lots of time, energy, and resources into developing and maintain programs. I think we do that because programs are easy to measure. The problem is that people aren’t discipled by programs. They are discipled by relationship. I would much rather pastor people than manage programs, but that takes focus and regular examination of priorities

Q. What’s a story of mess from your own life that reveals God’s redemptive work?

A. There’s always mess in my life, and I think it gets especially messy when we wear multiple hats with people—pastor, mentor, leader, boss, friend, etc. Here’s one that happened just a couple months ago. I was talking to a young leader about her calling, and I sincerely thought I was building her up with encouragement. When I came to the end of everything I knew to affirm her, I said, “I don’t know what else to say.” She responded with a look that seemed to be a mix of anger and hurt and said, “You’ve said enough.” At that moment, I didn’t know whether to jump across the table to strangle her or to hug her. Everything in me wanted to strangle her, but the little pastoral instinct I possess informed me that the words I had intended for good had been received negatively. That situation led to a number of productive conversations about how I lead, how she grows, how I grow, and where God is at work polishing off the rough spots in both of us. Many times, messes that are navigated with prayer, honesty, and a commitment to honoring the other lead to growth on all sides.

Be sure to follow her on twitter, @HeatherZempel, here.

 

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Grace Community ChurchColleen Davis sent in this photo of her precious group of ladies from Grace Community Church in Tyler, Texas. Abounding with creativity, this Woman’s Bible Study group, while reading Scouting the Divine, made lemon cakes in the shape of beehives! They also made honeybee scones and drizzled local honey on top–yummy!

“The study has been a blessing to me and the women in our group as pages of scripture have come to life, as we follow you through them.  It has been interesting and very meaningful as we have looked at some fairly familiar passages in a whole new way.  God revealed some really fresh and timely truths. I don’t know about the other women because I don’t know them very well, but for myself, in the first week, I was asked to share how God had been speaking to me in a particular situation.cakes

How had I heard His voice?  I had the opportunity to share a very personal situation and reveal God’s character and working through it – at least that which I am allowed to know right now.  I was thankful God had kind of pushed me into opening up and being transparent, which has allowed others to share their struggles and give God glory in the midst.”

Thank you, Colleen for sharing your heart and group and the delicious looking photos!

Are you or your small group going through one of our studies? Take a picture and send the photo to Jessica(at)margaretfeinberg(dot)com and we’ll post it on the blog!