Category: Uncategorized

  • Finding a Leadership Team

    Finding a Leadership Team

     

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

  • Financial Integrity

    Financial Integrity

     

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

  • Weight Loss Testimony

    Weight Loss Testimony

    YOU CAN DO IT!

     

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

     

    I recently met a friend who was looking SO much better than when I last saw her.  She just seemed a lot more energetic and happier than before.  It seemed to me that she had lost quite a lot of weight, so I asked her if that was the case—always a bit of a risk—and she said, “Yes, I have lost more than 25 pounds and I feel so much better!”

    People who know me know that I have generally stayed fit (That’s the English term.  In American-speak, I have stayed in good shape.), and I suspect most people think that I just got the “luck of the draw”, speaking genetically.  As a result, I have been hesitant to write about healthy living.  The truth is, I have had to be careful about eating and have kept up at least moderate exercise, even when I had heart arrhythmia problems.  With that combination, I have generally kept my weight at the level where I feel healthy.

    I figured my friend’s story was much more relevant and helpful than mine, so I asked her to please write a short account of how she did it and here it is:

    It started out as a simple Lenten Fast – determining to fast sugar during the Lenten Season for 40+ days.  In the past, I have always given up during a fast, and have never been able to complete one that I can ever remember.

    As I sought Abba about how to go about it to stay on course, I reflected on the purpose of giving up something for Lent – it is an expression of love towards and dependence upon Jesus out of gratitude for all He has done, and to prepare my heart for the glorious celebration of the cross and the resurrection!

    So a phrase came to me to repeat to myself throughout the fast to keep me on track – “I love You, Jesus, more than sugar!”

    That phrase and the heart behind it was the key for my successful completion of the fast.  And for the first time after many failed attempts, I finally was able to drink coffee without sugar from Day 1 of the fast, which started on Ash Wednesday.

    What was surprising to me was how much weight I began losing as a result of the fast!  It began to feel so good that I had to keep reminding myself that the fast was NOT a weight-loss program!  My purpose was to simply express my love for Jesus above and beyond sugar and processed carbs (which I also added to the fast). 

    After Easter, I felt so good from the weight loss that I decided to continue limiting sugar, processed carbs, and then I began logging calories consumed. The 40+ days of the fast had helped ‘kick-start’ a re-boot of my cravings, and I had begun consuming more nutrient rich calories, rather than craving the ‘empty calories’ of processed carbs and sugars.

    I didn’t really increase my daily exercise, but I did start more core-strengthening exercises, as well as squats and arm stretches.  Other than that, I didn’t do too much.

    For my 63rd birthday, my 4 children and their spouses gave me a FitBit to track my steps, which I actually do quite a bit around my home.

    Since June, we have the family of one of our children living with us for surgery with a lengthy recovery, giving me the responsibility, along with the father, as care-giver for their 2 children – a toddler and an infant.  With the stairs in our home, it is very taxing physically.  At the beginning of this year, it would have been very difficult for me to manage with the little ones.  But since I’ve lost all this weight, and have gotten in better shape with simple exercises, I am able to climb the stairs up to 35 times a day, and to care for the 2 little ones.  (At my age, it is a daunting task.) The 30-something parents are better suited. But God knew and helped me get into shape for just such a time as this.  I’m so grateful to Him for His help, grace and strength.  

    That is one of many success stories I have heard or read in the last two or three years.

    There has never been a time like this in the history of mankind, where the food industry provides us with tastes and textures that we enjoy, but do not nurture our bodies.  They can also be addictive.  Sugar, complex carbohydrates and processed foods can be incredibly appealing, but can also cost us dearly in the long run.

    If you know you are not stewarding the body God gave you as well as you think you should, perhaps this brief testimony can provide some encouragement to not give up!

    Lynn Green.

  • Team Leadership

    Team Leadership

    I USED TO THINK I WAS A GOOD LEADER

     

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

     

    We were pioneering a new YWAM base and it was growing fast.  My wife, Marti, had served as Loren’s secretary and had managed the YWAM office in California for a couple of years.  As I leaned into her administrative expertise, I thought we were a complete team.

    After just two or three years, our staff numbers had grown to more than 50 and we were quickly outgrowing every property we could rent.  Then Ken Wright, a prophetic teacher from New Zealand came along with a message that mystified me.  He taught on the importance of team leadership.  He pointed out that Jesus left a team in place, not just one person.  When he ascended into heaven, there was no Director, no CEO, no Pope, no Archbishop.  So what was there?

    THE FIRST COUNCIL OF JERUSALEM

    I looked at Acts 15, one of the passages he was teaching from, and saw how the apostles worked together.  That chapter arrested me then and continues to amaze me.  Here’s the story.

    The fledgling Church was facing a crisis that threatened to tear it apart.  There were very influential Jewish leaders who had become part of the early Church in Jerusalem. They insisted that Jesus had come to create converts to Judaism.  But Paul and some others were deeply committed to oppose those leaders and their arguments.  They believed that, in Jesus, the good news was for everyone and did not require obedience to the Jewish law.  This was a very deep, difficult and emotional division.  Could salvation be independent of Jewishness?

    In the face of this crisis, they somehow knew that they had to get the whole team of leaders together and sort it out.  Paul and Barnabas made the long journey from Antioch to Jerusalem so they could meet with the team that Jesus had put together along with others, like themselves, whom the Holy Spirit had added since Jesus had ascended into heaven.

    How did they know who was on the team?  It must have been by noting the fruit of their ministry, the extent of their influence, and the quality of their lives.  So, though Jesus had not personally discipled Barnabas and Paul during his three years of ministry, they were given a place at the table when the team met together.

    HOW TO RUN A LEADERSHIP MEETING?

    As the debate and drama unfolded, James chaired the meeting, rather than Peter, even though he had a prominent role as the public voice of the apostles in Jerusalem.  Peter’s opinion carried a lot of weight but he had gained wisdom when compared to his earlier years.  He did not use his influence early in the meeting but stayed silent while both sides of the argument were thoroughly aired. He must have known that it was important that no one should go away thinking the issue was not fairly presented.  When he did speak, he reminded them of the history of how God had used him to first bring the gospel to non-Jews.  His clear opinion moved the group towards consensus, and then the stories from Paul and Barnabas underscored Peter’s opinion and brought the meeting to a decision.

    Finally James summed up what they all felt the Holy Spirit was saying. They had made a very difficult and historic decision—the Good News about Jesus is for the redemption of all peoples and is not about initiating converts into Jewish customs and law.  What an outstanding example of wise leadership!  And, as you read on, you can see how well they communicated and implemented their decision.

    CAN ONE LEADER GROW OTHERS?

    This was team leadership working well.  As I read it, those many years ago, I couldn’t miss the message.  But, at the time, I couldn’t see any other leaders in our growing community.  I began to pray that God would send me some leaders, rather than the “immature” people who were already with us.

    Eventually, I realized that God was sending me leaders—but they had to grow and learn.  I had to give them responsibilities, make room for them and support them.  Some years later I understood that I had lost a lot of very good people because I had so little pastoral ability and failed to support people when they needed it.  It was also because I was hesitant to give away any real authority.

    As the work of YWAM in England grew, I became aware of my many other weaknesses.  I was not very good at managing our base.  I couldn’t run the training base and pioneer other teams at the same time.  Others were better at evangelism than I was and I still was not very pastoral.  It became very obvious that our leadership was much stronger when we added people with strengths and gifts that were different than mine.

    TEAMS ARE BETTER

    Now I know that God has given me the ability to lead a good team, as long as I do so in humility and lean into the strengths of others.  I am still convinced that every team needs a person to “take point” in a given situation, but like in Acts 15, a really mature team might have different leaders for different situations.

    The tenth value of YWAM says, “YWAM is called to function in teams in all aspects of ministry and leadership. We believe that a combination of complementary gifts, callings, perspectives, ministries and generations working together in unity at all levels of our mission provides wisdom and safety. Seeking God’s will and making decisions in a team context allows accountability and contributes to greater relationship, motivation, responsibility and ownership of the vision.”   In the pioneering stages of a team or ministry, it might not be possible to have a leadership team, but any leader should pray and work to form a team as soon as possible.

    So, I used to think I was a good leader.  But no-one can lead well alone.  God made us so that we need others, so that we are incomplete without others to work alongside us.  We are a body.

    Happy team building!

    Lynn Green.