Change or Transition?

Church Relationships — admin on April 22, 2009 at 10:33 am

I recently read an incredible story of a church that went through the metamorphis of change and transition similar to Crossroads and I want to share it.  It’s the story of Orchard Valley Community Church in Aurora Illinois who’s lead pastor is a great guy I’ve been in contact with via Twitter.  Hey if your not on twitter you should sign up, several of us from Crossroads are tweeting now and its a great way for us to be connected throughout the week!  The Orchard’s Pastor is Scott Hodge and I think you’ll enjoy their story. 

Sharp Curve Ahead
When God began a painful and wonderful transformation in my father’s heart and church, I thought I was merely along for the ride.

Scott Hodge June 14, 2007

Three and a half years ago, our church began a journey of transition, but the journey was not really mine—it was my father’s. He invited me along for the ride. My dad, Larry Hodge, had been the senior pastor of Aurora First Assembly of God for 24 years. In late 2001 he began to sense the church needed to make some significant changes.

What I didn’t know at the time was that the journey to transform the church was really a reflection of the transforming work God was doing inside my dad. So I really can’t tell you my church’s story without telling you my dad’s—they are the same.

For that reason, throughout this account of our church’s transition, I’ve included entries from my father’s private journal to provide a glimpse inside his soul.

Internal illness

Two years earlier, in 2000, my father had just finished leading the church through a significant building campaign. To observers First Assembly appeared healthy and vibrant, blessed with a new 25,000 square foot building, a prime location with 16 acres, and tremendous opportunity to reach a largely unchurched area.

But there was a problem. Our church had become sick. Despite the new building, morale was down, attendance slipped, finances were rapidly declining, and, worst of all, the surrounding community was not being reached.

I discovered that our church genuinely wanted to reach out, but mostly on the church’s own terms.

As senior pastor, my dad was enduring a tremendously frustrating season in his life. The contrast between the external appearance and internal reality of the church wore heavily on him mentally, spiritually, even physically. He began calling me in Oklahoma, where I was serving on the staff of another church, to discuss his sense that the church needed a deeper change.

As Dad faced into the truth, he began devoting himself to books on change and transition. A few months into this journey, he reached a pivotal point. God challenged him with these words, One day, when you stand before me, I’m not going to ask you how comfortable your people were in their faith. My question will be, “What did you do with what I gave you?”

That question motivated Dad to make the biggest change of his pastoral career. He decided to abandon his comfort zone and risk everything to transform First Assembly—he just wasn’t sure what to transform the church into, or how to get there.

I am not sure what I am up to, or what lies ahead for me and this church. I want you God!! I am afraid—but this I know—I can never go back to what I was. I must have you. You must have me.
—Larry Hodge’s journal, February 27, 2002

The call for help

Through much prayer and study, my father realized he couldn’t turn the church around by himself. He had been doing ministry the same way for so long that he simply didn’t know where to begin, what questions to ask, or what changes to make first. He needed help.

The humility to admit his inadequacy for the task was evidence that something was changing inside my dad. As “Senior Pastor” he was used to doing everything himself. His focus had always been a top-down leadership model, and he was at the top. That was now changing. He began talking about team leadership and releasing control.

His first priority became surrounding himself with the right people. He wanted leaders who were in touch with the culture and willing to try new and innovative ways to reach the community. As he began to pray about who should come alongside him to help lead the turnaround, God did something completely unexpected.

Around this time I was transitioning out of my church in Oklahoma. I was contemplating where my next assignment might be when Dad called.

“Scott, why don’t you guys move back home and help me turn this church around?” he said. The invitation shocked me. I had grown up in that church. Dad had been the senior pastor since I was five years old. And frankly, it wasn’t exactly the type of church in which I envisioned myself.

I must admit that I am fearful when it comes to bringing Scott. I so want to do what you want—so help me God. Fear is never a reason to quit—it is only an excuse. The brave admit their fear and proceed anyway.
—March 1, 2002

At first I dismissed Dad’s offer, but as I thought and prayed more about the idea, I began to see it differently. Our phone conversations over the previous months convinced me that his view of leadership was indeed changing. His passion to see the church transformed was equally apparent. I also knew he needed help. At my age, and from my service in other churches, I had the ministry perspective and experience he felt the church needed. More important, I was someone Dad could trust.

The transformation that had occurred within my father was finally being reflected in the church.

In March 2002, with no talk of salary, no place to live, and with several more sensible offers on the table, my family and I packed up and moved back to Aurora, Illinois. I committed to take an advisory staff position alongside my father for 12 months. That was more than three years ago.

Those closest to you determine your level of success. O God, I want to be close to you. Thank you for Scott!
—March 8, 2002

Off and running

We began to define our transition strategy by asking some important questions about our community. Who were we called to reach? What kinds of challenges are these people facing in their lives? What is their typical attitude toward God, the Bible, and church? Having spent most of our lives in Aurora, we simply had to think missionally and remind ourselves how most our neighbors who don’t attend church think and live.

With a better understanding of our community, we began asking hard questions about our church. I discovered that our church genuinely wanted to reach out, but mostly on the church’s own terms. Unknowingly, we were sending signals that said: “We want to reach you, but you’d better like our music, dress how we dress, and already believe how we believe.”

Asking these questions helped us confirm the changes we wanted to make. Soon almost every area of our ministry was affected. We made obvious changes in our worship services, switching from traditional to contemporary music. We adopted a teaching style more relevant to our cultural setting. And we used a team approach where my father, myself, and another young staff member shared the load. This brought fresh energy and put a younger face on our church.

We also changed the church’s name. We dropped the denominational focus in order to highlight our connection to the community we hoped to serve and reach. It was a symbolic but powerful shift that made clear to everyone the church had indeed changed.

Give me a real heart for the lost, and help me to lead this church. O Lord, help me to create the environment that allows growth to happen in this church.
—April 25, 2002

Yesterday, the name change to Orchard Valley Community Church became official. Our new name reflects where we are located, who we are, and what we are all about. We are a community of faith reaching a community that needs You.
—July 29, 2002

Transition is harder than change

The external and programmatic changes were the easy part. But the lesson we learned was that change is not the same as transition. Change is what happens on the surface of the organization. Transition is what happens internally in people’s minds and hearts; and it’s what helps them cope with and accept change.

William Bridges, author of Managing Transitions: Making the Most of Change (Perseus, 2003), writes: “Change is what you need to bring about if you want your organization to continue to be successful. The transition management is the psychological process the people and the organization will need to manage in order to make that change stick.”

Although a lot of the externals at our church quickly changed, internally things were transitioning at a much slower rate. The difficult part was not changing the organization, it was trying to change people’s values. We realized we could make a lot of changes, but if we didn’t transform people’s minds we would never be able to accomplish the mission we believed God had for us.

It was obvious the congregation needed to experience the same internal transformation that was occurring in my dad. We cast vision for the church’s new direction, and we talked about the importance of being outwardly focused and intentionally open to our community. But despite our best efforts, we found internal transition in many of our people lacking.

Last night Scott read to me an e-mail from a volunteer saying he wished to resign from his ministry position because he does not agree with the new structure that we’ve asked for. It was just another sign of the subtle opposition I am receiving from longtime members about the changes taking place. God, I need some really big wins to take place real soon. Please help.
—July 19, 2002

Yesterday, Bill called to let us know that he and his family were leaving the church. How many more, Lord, will I lose?
—July 24, 2002

These were the hardest months for all of us, watching longtime members—people we had loved for years—leave the church. Financially the church was in the worst shape in Dad’s 24 years. We went many weeks without any paychecks. Had we known how difficult the transition was going to be, I’m not sure we would have undertaken it.

Lord, I feel I will drown in a sea of RED INK. But, I know my feelings are not reliable. When I think of you—when I look to you—I can walk on water. Give me the courage to face this thing and look it in the eyes.
—April 24, 2002

I feel like I want to give up, crawl in a hole and let the world pass by till all my problems go away. What am I to do?
—April 30, 2002

Is there hope for me? Will this church go under? This is the hardest struggle of my life!
—May 26, 2002

These were scary months. It felt like every Sunday would be our last, and the failure monster was stalking us everywhere we went. Yet, there was something more real to us than the fear of failure: the mission of reaching our community with the relevant message of God’s love.

It was evident that God had given us resilience that drove us to stay strong and push forward even when failure seemed just inches away. Undoubtedly, this is the supernatural dimension of doing God’s work.

I sense a work deep in my heart being done—I feel your love!! It is a good feeling.
—July 13, 2002

It may not look like it or feel like it, but this church is not just going to survive, it is going to THRIVE. It may not look or feel like it, but this church has all its needs met and more. We have more than enough through Him.
—November 13, 2002

Signs of hope

About two years into the transition, something changed. It was like the clouds lifted and we were on the other side of the storm. We were finally seeing the growth we had asked God for, our finances were slowly stabilizing, and we were beginning to recognize signs that our church was on its way to health and vitality. It wasn’t obvious to everyone, but we knew something was different.

We noticed unchurched people regularly walking into the church each Sunday. E-mails and letters arrived declaring the good things that God was doing in people’s lives. The transformation that had occurred within my father was finally being reflected in his church.

I do not know how to describe what has happened to me. I only know that deep within me, I mean really deep, it seems that something, connected to an understanding of God’s love, has changed me.

I have been captured by His love. It is something that I must admit, I never knew existed like I am now experiencing.

I am consumed with a passion to tell people about what I have experienced for the sole purpose of helping them to know that they can have it too … I have a glimpse of what the institutional church has allowed to happen. It has presented a picture of God and Christ that is inconsistent with who they are. As a product of that church, I desire to liberate those who are caught up in that; to save others from it.
—November 23, 2003

Bittersweet celebration

On Sunday morning, October 9, 2004, I shared a simple but sweet moment with my dad. While one of the members of our teaching team was giving the morning’s message, I pulled my dad into a room at the back of the auditorium and said to him, “Do you see what’s happening here? Can you believe it? Look at all these people! We are reaching our community!”

Together from the back, we looked over the congregation that had doubled in size since the transition began. It was filled with people who were encountering Christ for the first time in their lives.

I was grateful, despite all the struggles, that Dad had invited me to share this journey with him. I was grateful to witness the transformation of his relationship with God, and then help him bring that same transformation to the church. I was grateful for the quiet moment of celebration we shared in the back of the auditorium that October morning.

Three days later my dad died of a sudden heart attack.

Amid the shock and grief, I found comfort from the hundreds of people who shared how Larry Hodge had touched their lives. I also knew that my dad left this world at the happiest time in his ministry, and at the end of a personal transition that filled him with more joy and passion than I had ever seen in him before.

A few months after my dad’s death, I accepted Orchard Valley Community Church’s invitation to become their next lead pastor. I am still amazed at how God works. My father’s journey is over, but at the same time, it isn’t. His desire to see the church reach out with the love of Christ goes on, and I have the privilege of continuing his legacy in the community he so dearly loved.

God is helping Orchard go forward. Lives are being changed positively for God. I am so glad to be a part of it.—Larry Hodge’s journal, final entry, September 8, 2004

Scott Hodge serves at Orchard Valley Community Church in Aurora, Illinois.

 

Isn’t that powerful?  I know in my heart that we  cannot just continue to change but that we have to transition our thinking with that change.  I relate so strongly with the Orchard story because that’s the Crossroads story too.
I thank God for the change and transition that has taken place and I hope we all will continue to share Jesus in this community in a relevant and powerful way!

The Power of the Resurrection

Church Relationships — admin on April 10, 2009 at 9:33 am

For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ all shall be made alive.

1 Corinthians 15:22

What does the resurrection of Jesus mean to you? What does it mean to me?

First, it assures our future resurrection. Because Jesus both died and rose again, we will be raised like Him.

1 Corinthians 15:20 says, “But now Christ is risen from the dead, and has become the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep.”

The word “firstfruits” speaks of a sampling, a foretaste, a glimpse. Jesus is the firstfruit.

Jesus has died and has risen, so we know that our resurrected bodies in some way will resemble His resurrection body. To what extent, we cannot be certain. But if they were completely like His, it would mean that we would be clearly recognizable.

Second, the resurrection of Jesus is a proof of future judgment. Now that may not sound all that exciting. But it’s something we need to know.

We live in a society, and indeed a world, in which justice is often perverted and neglected. We look at things that happen and say, “How can that be? How could that happen?”

The Resurrection means, among other things, that God’s justice will ultimately prevail.

Third, the resurrection of Christ gives us power to live the Christian life (see Romans 8:11). Certainly the Bible does not teach that we will be sinless in this physical body we now live in. On the other hand, we can sin less, not by our own abilities, but by the power of the Spirit.

Christ can make us altogether different kinds of people. We must believe that. “Old things have passed away . . . all things have become new” (2 Corinthians 5:17).

God can give you the power to live this Christian life.

Check up from the neck up

Thought Life — admin on April 1, 2009 at 7:18 am

What we think about is really important.

In Philippians 4:8, the apostle Paul wrote, “Finally, brethren, whatever things are true, whatever things are noble, whatever things are just, whatever things are pure, whatever things are lovely, whatever things are of good report, if there is any virtue and if there is anything praiseworthy–meditate on these things” (NKJV).

Another translation puts it this way: “Summing it all up, friends, I’d say you’ll do best by filling your minds and meditating on things true, noble, reputable, authentic, compelling, gracious—the best, not the worst; the beautiful, not the ugly; things to praise, not things to curse” (THE MESSAGE).

What we think about ultimately affects what we do

Therefore, we must nip in the bud any thoughts that are impure, spiritually harmful, or that feed the beast of worry. This means refusing to play the “What If” game, driving yourself to despair.

You remember the first temptation, when Satan came to Eve in the Garden of Eden. Genesis 3:1 says, “Now the Serpent was more Cunning than any beast of the field which the LORD God had made. And he said to the woman, ‘Has God indeed said, ‘You shall not eat of every tree of the garden’?” (NKJV)

He did not introduce himself by saying, “Hi, I’m the Devil, the enemy of God, and I have come to ruin, destroy, and pull you into hell with me and my demons!” He may be wicked,but he isn’t stupid!

The Devil is like a snake

When the Devil comes to us, he comes with subtlety, snake-like, slithering in when you least expect it. People don’t always keep their guard up for him either.

I read about a large python that ate a family’s dog, a silky terrier-chihuahua crossbreed. The children, ages 5 and 7,  watched as the snake finished his meal.

This is sad, but also odd. The local zoo owner, who eventually came and picked up the snake, said, “The family that owned the dog had actually seen it in the dog’s bed, which was a sign it was out to get it.”

“They should have called me then,  but (the snake) got away . . . and came back,” he added. 

We can be like that with the Devil

He has essentially plopped himself right in our bed, and we pay him no mind. “Oh, he won’t be back,” we think to ourselves.

But just like that python, he is stalking you! Don’t underestimate his power, and don’t leave your mind open to his attack.

As a snake, Satan attacked Eve’s mind. Paul wrote in 2 Corinthians 11:3, “I am afraid, lest as the serpent deceived Eve by his craftiness, your minds should be led astray from the simplicity and purity of devotion to Christ” (NASB).

Why?  Because it is here in “command central” that we reason, contemplate, and fantasize. Your mind can reach into the past through memories, and into the future through imagination.

Train your brain!

You need to train your mind to think properly and biblically. We read in 2 Corinthians 10:5 that we should cast down “arguments and every high thing that exalts itself against the knowledge of God, bringing every thought into captivity to the obedience of Christ.”

Just some food for thought!