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***BLACK FRIDAY SUPER SALE: From now through Dec 1, when you join the Wild Wellness Women's Circle at full price, you get my lifetime access online course Rewild Your Wellness COMPLETELY FREE (normally priced at $333!) Just join the women's circle here and I will email you free access to Rewild Your Wellness.*** --- Today I'm bringing you a completely NEW way to think about balance that will bring you so much FREEDOM. You'll learn: Where is Love placing its finger in your life? What does it look like to move your heart in that direction? How does Love create pressure? How do you know where love is placing pressure? Please SHARE this episode with someone you know needs to hear it. Related Resources / Mentioned in this episode I first learned about the principle of your heart as the fulcrum from Wayne Cordeiro. If you'd like to watch a 6 minute clip of him explaining it and to see a helpful visual, you can watch it here. Let me introduce you to Human Design in my FREE Masterclass: Discover Your Spiritual Gifts Ep 182: What kind of Intuition do you have? (according to Human Design) Watch me get a Human Design Reading with Sam from Moonrise Community (FREE replay) Let's Go Deeper Together Join the Wild Wellness Women's Circle (monthly membership) Enroll in Rewild Your Wellness (lifetime access online course) Learn more about one-on-one coaching Free Resources Feel how you want to feel NOW with my Free Desire Map FREE Masterclass: Discover Your Spiritual Gifts Sign up for a FREE 1:1 coaching curiosity call Let's Connect! Instagram Facebook
Sunday, November 17th 2024 The post Sermon from New Hope Oahu with Pastor Wayne Cordeiro appeared first on New Hope Legacy.
In life there is one trait that is shared by all the world's most successful people, and that is resilience. Those that have accomplished great things have only done so because they bounced back after being knocked down. Great biblical figures like Joseph, David, Noah, and so many more were used by God to accomplish incredible things, despite all the setbacks they encountered every step of the way. Wayne speaks on the importance of resilience in our walk with Christ.
“Sometimes God says, ‘That was a nice idea, but it wasn't a divine vision.'” Meet Dr. Wayne Cordeiro, founding pastor of the New Hope International Ministry. With inspiring insight into the nuances and necessities of pivoting as leaders, Pastor Wayne gives helpful cues to build resiliency in a way that healthily impacts your church. Welcome to Episode 099 of the Leaders in Living Rooms Podcast with Sean Morgan.
Do you dread the darkness? While some slumber, others of us repeatedly wrestle with failure, worthlessness and deadly intents of a dark realm. Pastor Wayne Cordeiro has fought that battle. Creative, successful and driven, this author, leader and pastor radiates effective leadership, but came dangerously close to a fatal precipice in the dark. Cordeiro had survived cancer and a heart attack. He was passionate about “life”, but truly wondered if he could survive it. When your world expects you to “show up” Sunday morning, your family depends upon you, and staff, students and friends look to you for insight, where do you get help? Cordeiro has a unique, hard-earned understanding of depression. His response to it is not littered with platitudes, but marked by the soul-searching of a man dedicated to understanding a battle that God promised to see him through. Cordeiro's words bring a light to that darkness and demonstrate how God can take your ordeal and make it an adventure.For Show Notes & Episode Details: https://theinfluencerspodcast.orgGet more inspirational content all week…FACEBOOK: https://facebook.com/theinfluencerspodcastofficialINSTAGRAM: https://instagram.com/theinfluencerspodcastofficial/TWITTER: https://twitter.com/hearinfluencersYOUTUBE: https://youtube.com/@TheInfluencersPodcastLearn more about Wayne Cordeiro and the ministry of New Hope at https://newhopewest.com/
Dr. Wayne Cordeiro is the founding pastor of New Hope Christian Fellowship in Honolulu. New Hope is also listed as one of the top ten most innovative churches in America by Outreach Magazine, listing them as one of the 'top five churches to learn from.' New Hope has seen over 110,000 first time decisions in Hawaii since its inception in 1995. He is a church planter at heart with over 150 churches planted in the United States and around the world. Wayne has over 40 years of ministry leadership experience, authored twelve books, and is general editor for the Life Connect Bible. He is now Pastor at New Hope West & is President of New Hope Christian College based in Eugene, Oregon.Support the show: http://historymakersradio.com/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This is part four of a four-part podcast with deep interest to me. My friend John Honold and I interviewed Kenneth Makuakane, a third-generation Hope Chapel Kaneohe Bay pastor. He's an award-winning Waikiki entertainer concurrently leading the largest Hawaiian congregation in the state. The original missionaries planted the church. As the story unfolds, I discipled John Honold, who multiplied several churches and leads a string of micro churches today. John now coaches Ken, whom he discipled decades ago. And Ken is plowing ground that lay fallow until his arrival. The church is growing, and elderly people often engage with street kids. Most ethnic Hawaiians, whether they go to church or not, call Kawaiaha'o Church their home. This is significant as it links the first spiritual awakening in the Kingdom of Hawaii to the most recent in the State of Hawaii. The congregation is steeped in tradition as it became the church home to the kings and queens of ancient Hawaii. Beginning with the original New England-born missionaries in the early 1700s, Hawaii experienced four church-planting movements. In terms of per capita penetration, it remains the most successful awakening in human history. The second planted churches among Japanese Americans. Thousands of Japanese immigrated to Hawaii to work in sugar plantations, and many came to Christ. Takie Okamura, the innovator God used to drive that awakening planted what we would call microchurches in the sugar cane camps. He ran a Japanese-language newspaper and invented language schools for evangelism. He also planted Makiki Christian Church which prevails today. From the 1940s to the early 1980s or late 1970s, church multiplication centered on Olivet Baptist Church, which launched more than 40 congregations. My friends and I showed up in 1983, thirty of us including children. We planted and multiplied 69 churches in the Hope Chapel arena in about 27 years. Shortly after our arrival Wayne Cordeiro launched the New Hope movement, which is responsible for another 69 congregations during those same years. Theirs are often larger than ours, but we were privileged to send a little more than 100 people to help launch New Hope Oahu, including their long-serving first worship band. The greater excitement of the fourth awakening comes via hundreds of small churches planted after the example of the larger networks. These are mostly independent congregations. At one point, every public school in the state (650+) hosted at least one or more congregations. None started from the more noticeable movements. This podcast is significant because Ken's role links the original spiritual awakening with the most recent. I hope it blesses you as it has me. And I hope you'll join us for all four installments of this podcast. If you need more information, you can learn about the church at https://kawaiahaochurch.com or connect with Ken via email. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This is part three of a four-part podcast with deep interest to me. My friend John Honold and I interviewed Kenneth Makuakane, a third-generation Hope Chapel Kaneohe Bay pastor. He's an award-winning Waikiki entertainer concurrently leading the largest Hawaiian congregation in the state. The original missionaries planted the church. As the story unfolds, I discipled John Honold, who multiplied several churches and leads a string of micro churches today. John now coaches Ken, whom he discipled decades ago. And Ken is plowing ground that lay fallow until his arrival. The church is growing, and elderly people often engage with street kids. Most ethnic Hawaiians, whether they go to church or not, call Kawaiaha'o Church their home. This is significant as it links the first spiritual awakening in the Kingdom of Hawaii to the most recent in the State of Hawaii. The congregation is steeped in tradition as it became the church home to the kings and queens of ancient Hawaii. Beginning with the original New England-born missionaries in the early 1700s, Hawaii experienced four church-planting movements. In terms of per capita penetration, it remains the most successful awakening in human history. The second planted churches among Japanese Americans. Thousands of Japanese immigrated to Hawaii to work in sugar plantations, and many came to Christ. Takie Okamura, the innovator God used to drive that awakening planted what we would call microchurches in the sugar cane camps. He ran a Japanese-language newspaper and invented language schools for evangelism. He also planted Makiki Christian Church which prevails today. From the 1940s to the early 1980s or late 1970s, church multiplication centered on Olivet Baptist Church, which launched more than 40 congregations. My friends and I showed up in 1983, thirty of us including children. We planted and multiplied 69 churches in the Hope Chapel arena in about 27 years. Shortly after our arrival Wayne Cordeiro launched the New Hope movement, which is responsible for another 69 congregations during those same years. Theirs are often larger than ours, but we were privileged to send a little more than 100 people to help launch New Hope Oahu, including their long-serving first worship band. The greater excitement of the fourth awakening comes via hundreds of small churches planted after the example of the larger networks. These are mostly independent congregations. At one point, every public school in the state (650+) hosted at least one or more congregations. None started from the more noticeable movements. This podcast is significant because Ken's role links the original spiritual awakening with the most recent. I hope it blesses you as it has me. And I hope you'll join us for all four installments of this podcast. If you need more information, you can learn about the church at https://kawaiahaochurch.com or connect with Ken via email. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Today I'm bringing you a completely NEW way to think about balance that will bring you so much FREEDOM. You'll learn: Where is Love placing its finger in your life? What does it look like to move your heart in that direction? How does Love create pressure? How do you know where love is placing pressure? Mentioned in this episode: I first learned about the principle of your heart as the fulcrum from Wayne Cordeiro. If you'd like to watch a 6 minute clip of him explaining it and to see a helpful visual, you can watch it here. Please SHARE this episode with someone you know needs to hear it. Let's connect on social! Instagram Facebook TikTok LinkedIn Resources Feel how you want to feel NOW with my Free Desire Map Sign up for a FREE 1:1 coaching curiosity call Join the Wild Wellness Nutrition Support & Mentoring Group
This is part two of a four-part podcast with deep interest to me. My friend John Honold and I interviewed Kenneth Makuakane, a third-generation Hope Chapel Kaneohe Bay pastor. He's an award-winning Waikiki entertainer concurrently leading the largest Hawaiian congregation in the state. The original missionaries planted the church. As the story unfolds, I discipled John Honold, who multiplied several churches and leads a string of micro churches today. John now coaches Ken, whom he discipled decades ago. And Ken is plowing ground that lay fallow until his arrival. The church is growing, and elderly people often engage with street kids. Most ethnic Hawaiians, whether they go to church or not, call Kawaiaha'o Church their home. This is significant as it links the first spiritual awakening in the Kingdom of Hawaii to the most recent in the State of Hawaii. The congregation is steeped in tradition as it became the church home to the kings and queens of ancient Hawaii. Beginning with the original New England-born missionaries in the early 1700s, Hawaii experienced four church-planting movements. In terms of per capita penetration, it remains the most successful awakening in human history. The second planted churches among Japanese Americans. Thousands of Japanese immigrated to Hawaii to work in sugar plantations, and many came to Christ. Takie Okamura, the innovator God used to drive that awakening planted what we would call microchurches in the sugar cane camps. He ran a Japanese-language newspaper and invented language schools for evangelism. He also planted Makiki Christian Church which prevails today. From the 1940s to the early 1980s or late 1970s, church multiplication centered on Olivet Baptist Church, which launched more than 40 congregations. My friends and I showed up in 1983, thirty of us including children. We planted and multiplied 69 churches in the Hope Chapel arena in about 27 years. Shortly after our arrival Wayne Cordeiro launched the New Hope movement, which is responsible for another 69 congregations during those same years. Theirs are often larger than ours, but we were privileged to send a little more than 100 people to help launch New Hope Oahu, including their long-serving first worship band. The greater excitement of the fourth awakening comes via hundreds of small churches planted after the example of the larger networks. These are mostly independent congregations. At one point, every public school in the state (650+) hosted at least one or more congregations. None started from the more noticeable movements. This podcast is significant because Ken's role links the original spiritual awakening with the most recent. I hope it blesses you as it has me. And I hope you'll join us for all four installments of this podcast. If you need more information, you can learn about the church at https://kawaiahaochurch.com or connect with Ken via email. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This is part one of a four-part podcast with deep interest to me. My friend John Honold and I interviewed Kenneth Makuakane, a third-generation Hope Chapel Kaneohe Bay pastor. He's an award-winning Waikiki entertainer concurrently leading the largest Hawaiian congregation in the state. The original missionaries planted the church. As the story unfolds, I discipled John Honold, who multiplied several churches and leads a string of micro churches today. John now coaches Ken, whom he discipled decades ago. And Ken is plowing ground that lay fallow until his arrival. The church is growing, and elderly people often engage with street kids. Most ethnic Hawaiians, whether they go to church or not, call Kawaiaha'o Church their home. This is significant as it links the first spiritual awakening in the Kingdom of Hawaii to the most recent in the State of Hawaii. The congregation is steeped in tradition as it became the church home to the kings and queens of ancient Hawaii. Beginning with the original New England-born missionaries in the early 1700s, Hawaii experienced four church-planting movements. In terms of per capita penetration, it remains the most successful awakening in human history. The second planted churches among Japanese Americans. Thousands of Japanese immigrated to Hawaii to work in sugar plantations, and many came to Christ. Takie Okamura, the innovator God used to drive that awakening planted what we would call microchurches in the sugar cane camps. He ran a Japanese-language newspaper and invented language schools for evangelism. He also planted Makiki Christian Church which prevails today. From the 1940s to the early 1980s or late 1970s, church multiplication centered on Olivet Baptist Church, which launched more than 40 congregations. My friends and I showed up in 1983, thirty of us including children. We planted and multiplied 69 churches in the Hope Chapel arena in about 27 years. Shortly after our arrival Wayne Cordeiro launched the New Hope movement, which is responsible for another 69 congregations during those same years. Theirs are often larger than ours, but we were privileged to send a little more than 100 people to help launch New Hope Oahu, including their long-serving first worship band. The greater excitement of the fourth awakening comes via hundreds of small churches planted after the example of the larger networks. These are mostly independent congregations. At one point, every public school in the state (650+) hosted at least one or more congregations. None started from the more noticeable movements. This podcast is significant because Ken's role links the original spiritual awakening with the most recent. I hope it blesses you as it has me. And I hope you'll join us for all four installments of this podcast. If you need more information, you can learn about the church at https://kawaiahaochurch.com or connect with Ken via email. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode I share about the 5% that only I can do. My thoughts are based on reading Wayne Cordeiro's book “Leading in Empty”.
Dr. Wayne Cordeiro is the founding pastor of New Hope Christian Fellowship in Honolulu. New Hope is also listed as one of the top ten most innovative churches in America by Outreach Magazine, listing them as one of the "top five churches to learn from." New Hope has seen over 110,000 first time decisions in Hawaii since its inception in 1995. He is a church planter at heart with over 150 churches planted in the United States and around the world. Wayne has over 40 years of ministry leadership experience, authored twelve books, and is general editor for the Life Connect Bible. He is now Pastor at New Hope West and is President of New Hope Christian College based in Eugene, Oregon.
Dr. Wayne Cordeiro is the founding pastor of New Hope Christian Fellowship in Honolulu. New Hope is also listed as one of the top ten most innovative churches in America by Outreach Magazine, listing them as one of the 'top five churches to learn from.' New Hope has seen over 110,000 first time decisions in Hawaii since its inception in 1995. He is a church planter at heart with over 150 churches planted in the United States and around the world. Wayne has over 40 years of ministry leadership experience, authored twelve books, and is general editor for the Life Connect Bible. He is now Pastor at New Hope West & is President of New Hope Christian College based in Eugene, Oregon. Support the show: http://historymakersradio.com/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
You may have heard this phrase, or even used it in a message: “I'd rather burn out than rust out!” Let's be honest, many of us have worn that phrase as a badge of honor, as though it's an honorable thing to burn out for God. Today, that phrase is a painful one … far too many of our brothers-in-arms have opted out of ministry (“I'm done, this isn't what I signed up for!”), or have given up on ministry (due to discouragement or stress), or have been chased out of ministry due to their choices (ethical or moral failure. A recent Barna Group study found that 38% of pastors are seriously considering leaving full-time ministry. We see this trend as tragic, and as being part of much greater problems in today's church. There are the expectations that people put on their pastors — and that pastors put on themselves … these can be debilitating. “Everywhere pastors go they are expected to be ‘on' — ready to give stellar leadership, unending compassion, an inspiring message, anointed prayer, and words of encouragement.” Are there only two options? Is burnout in the ministry and in the life of a minister inevitable? And, if I don't experience burnout, does that mean that I'm rusting out? The answer is “no.” There are not only two options. There is a third option, which is to learn a life lived under grace, with the right pace, and for the correct race. In this episode, we're going to talking about the life-giving counsel of a book we've all read … written out of the true story of the author, Wayne Cordeiro. The book is entitled Leading on Empty: Refilling Your Tank and Renewing Your Passion. Two wonderful pastor-friends-teammates of mine will be helping me in this conversation … Trip Kimball and Terry McNabb. Trip is a long-time pastor-teacher, author, equipper, and discipler; Terry is also a long-time pastor-teacher, musician, and leadership coach. Terry and Trip have both been on our team of Poimen Ministries pastors, for years. You can learn more about them on our ministry website. to Trip and Terry: "Welcome to the program. I just finished reading Cordeiro's book. I've had it on my bookshelf for a couple of years. I'm so blessed by what Wayne Cordeiro has written. I wish I'd have had (and looked for) a resource like this when I started my ministry back in 1976. It taught me things, reminded me of other things, and motivated my in areas of my own life as well. So, we're gonna get into it, each of us. And this will explain why we're recommending reading it."
Episode Summary: In this episode of the L3 Leadership podcast, Doug Smith interviews Wayne Cordeiro, Founding Pastor of New Hope Christian Fellowship in Honolulu, Hawaii with over 11,500 in weekend attendance. In the episode, Doug and Wayne discuss leading on empty and the effects of burnout.About Wayne: Dr. Wayne Cordeiro is founding pastor of New Hope Christian Fellowship in Honolulu, Hawaii, and through New Hope International, over 152 churches have been planted worldwide. He is an author, songwriter, and highly sought-after speaker. He has authored 14 books, including The Divine Mentor and Leading on Empty. Wayne and Anna, his wife of nearly fifty years, have three children and nine grandchildren. They live in Eugene, Oregon. Dr. Cordeiro serves as the president of New Hope Christian College, which specializes in developing leaders for creative arts, theology, and leadership. He has recently planted New Hope West, a Doing Church as a Team congregation.5 Key Takeaways:1.Wayne and Doug discuss the importance of focusing on discipleship in ministry leadership. Church planting and success in the ministry is a result of proper discipleship. Character-development is crucial.2.Wayne talks about burnout and the telltale signs of depression in leadership. It's not something that you can plan for. Burnout is restored by healing, adjustment, and rescheduling.3.There's a difference between tiredness and burnout. Tiredness is resolved by better sleeping habits, burnout is not.4.Wayne discusses solitude's importance to our mental and spiritual health. Solitude is not isolation. Isolation is getting away from people. Solitude on the other hand is a planned away time with God.5.Suffering in leadership is actually okay. If you never suffer, you never grow and never learn. Typically our darkest moments in leadership are right before our brightest moments.Quotes from the Episode:"When you're going through burnout, a night or two of rest doesn't bounce you back.""Even though it's a tough season, don't be afraid of it"."Often, failure comes right before success."Resources Mentioned:Leading on Empty by Wayne CordeiroThe Divine Mentor by Wayne CordeiroSifted by Wanye CordeiroNew Hope Fellowship ChurchConnect with Wayne:Facebook | Linkedin | InstagramIf you want to 10x your growth next year, I want to challenge you to launch or join an L3 Mastermind Group. Mastermind groups are groups of 6-12 leaders that meet together for at least one year to help each other grow, hold each other accountable, and do life together. Interested? Go to http://l3leadership.org/masterminds or email me at dougsmith@l3leadership.org.
In this week's message, Pastor Wayne Cordeiro from New Hope West shares a message through Mark 9 verses 2 through 13 on what mountain-top faith looks like. “Mountaintop faith is not found at the mountaintops. Mountaintop faith will be found in the valleys below.”
This week we're sharing a replay of a candid conversation Jennie had with her husband, Zac, about his nine month season of depression that hit him in a sudden wave. Hear about the reasons we struggle with depression, the three phases of depression Zac went through, and helpful resources if you find yourself in a similar season. Our hope is that you or the people you love will not feel alone.HELPFUL LINKS:Join Made For This+ | jennieallen.supportingcast.fmThe Best of You by Dr. Alison Cook | a.co/d/3Ct40CILeading on Empty by Wayne Cordeiro | a.co/d/5dPlvMVChristians Get Depressed Too by David Murray | a.co/d/i9AQMiiJoin the Newsletter | jennieallen.com/newsletterWant to get texts from Jennie and our team? | Send PODCAST to 214-225-6267CONNECT ON SOCIALS:Instagram: instagram.com/jennieallenFacebook: facebook.com/jenniesallenTikTok: tiktok.com/@jenniesallenPinterest: pinterest.com/jenniesallenThanks Prose Hair Care! - Get 15% off your first order by visiting prose.com/MADEFORTHIS - your healthy hair regimen customized for YOU!
In this bonus episode, Ted & Rob talk in more detail about their respective board and church leadership structures. This conversation is a continuation of a previous episode with Wayne Cordeiro about the nuanced process of structuring and organizing a healthy church board, identifying toxic board behavior, prayerfully selecting board members, and organizing robust church leadership. ---- Rob Salvato -- Calvary Vista Ted Leavenworth -- Reliance Church
Today Adina & Mario begin discussing the book, Leading on Empty by Wayne Cordeiro. You can always see our book list and purchase books from our website by clicking HERE. In this book we are tackling burnout head on! In this first episode we want you to ask yourself these questions. Am I overwhelmed in multiple areas of my life? Am I overworking myself?How often do I practice solitude in my life? Is there a day to recharge, rest, and reflect? Do you have someone you can talk to if you are anxious or depressed? When are you going to talk to that person?If you or someone you know is suicidal please contact the national suicide hotline. 1-800-273-8255If you or someone is struggling with anxiety and depression please call1-800-950-6264 or text NAMI to 741741Remember you can always catch the video version of this podcast HERE on our YouTube channel!
This week, Michelle is joined by Melissa Kruger, the director of women's initiatives for The Gospel Coalition. They talk about her role and the mission of TGC, some of Michelle's favorite takeaways from Melissa's writing ministry, and discuss some practical ways of dealing with the pressure of being a working woman as a Christ-follower. You're probably going to want to grab a way to take notes because she makes some points you'll want to reflect on after you listen. If you take away nothing else, remember this: you have permission to lead an ordinary life. Connect with Melissa by following her on Instagram at @melissabryankruger. Resources Mentioned this Episode: Walking with God in the Season of Motherhood by Melissa Kruger: https://www.amazon.com/Walking-God-Season-Motherhood-Eleven-Week/dp/160142650X/ref=sr_1_1?crid=13JSBH72QOPAW&keywords=walking+with+god+in+the+season+of+motherhood&qid=1646329088&sprefix=walking+with+god+in+the+se%2Caps%2C145&sr=8-1 Sisters, You Have Permission to Lead an Ordinary Life by Melissa Kruger: https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/permission-lead-ordinary-life/ Reset by David Murray: https://www.amazon.com/Reset-Living-Grace-Paced-Burnout-Culture/dp/1433555182/ref=sr_1_2?crid=2T8Y19V0XY5FA&keywords=reset+and+refresh+books&qid=1646329204&sprefix=reset+and+refresh+books%2Caps%2C93&sr=8-2 Refresh by Shona and David Murray: https://www.amazon.com/Refresh-Embracing-Grace-Paced-Endless-Demands/dp/1433555220/ref=sr_1_4?crid=2T8Y19V0XY5FA&keywords=reset+and+refresh+books&qid=1646329265&sprefix=reset+and+refresh+books%2Caps%2C93&sr=8-4 Leading on Empty by Wayne Cordeiro: https://www.amazon.com/Leading-Empty-Refilling-Renewing-Passion/dp/0764207598/ref=sr_1_2?crid=212R9YI55NAFV&keywords=leading+on+empty+by+wayne+cordeiro&qid=1646329613&sprefix=leading+on+empty%2Caps%2C116&sr=8-2
Một thái độ đúng đắn sẽ mở ra một tương lại tươi sáng, khiến cho cuộc sống hiện tại tràn đầy sức sống và tin yêu. Đó chắc chắn không phải là cái đích quá xa so với khả năng của con người. Chỉ cần một vài điều chỉnh nhỏ, bạn hoàn toàn có thể xoay chuyển mọi việc theo chiều hướng tốt đẹp. Điều này cũng giống như khi một chiếc radio bị lạc sóng, bạn chỉ cần rà lại tần số là âm thanh sẽ trở nên trong trẻo; những tiếng lạo xạo sẽ bị loại bỏ, thay vào đó là những tin tức mới nhất, hoặc một bản nhạc êm dịu, du dương. Tải ứng dụng để nghe trọn bộ Sách nói : voiz.vn/download
For just over two years, you've been invited into the living rooms of over forty leaders; getting privileged insights into their life that few others have access to. Today's show is a podcast milestone, marking the fiftieth episode of Leaders in Living Rooms! To celebrate 50 episodes, we've compiled seven of the top highlights and learnings from our guests. We invite you to listen in on the “cliff notes” from topics like leading your board well with Jud Wilhite to leading on empty with Wayne Cordeiro. You will be encouraged by all seven of these leaders as they speak incredible words of wisdom over the next generation of church leaders. Welcome to Episode 050 of the Leaders in Living Rooms Podcast with Sean Morgan.
Speaker:Wayne CordeiroDate:January 2, 2022
Following Christ does not guarantee you'll be an overwhelming success . . . but it doesn't mean you'll always struggling to achieve material gain either.
Mother Theresa once said that, “You'll never know Jesus is all you need until Jesus is all you have.”
Discover how to enjoy a dynamic, vital, and intimate relationship with God. Join Wayne and embark on an adventure that will introduce you to His handpicked mentors, men and women who may save your ministry, your health, and your future.
Leadership in the 21st century that gains God's favor requires more than business savvy. Join Wayne as he addresses the four different levels of leadership and challenges you to the highest and most sustainable level.
In this episode, Ted & Rob talk candidly with Wayne Cordeiro about the nuanced process of structuring and organizing a healthy church board, identifying toxic board behavior, and prayerfully selecting board members. Episode Transcript References: Alliance Defending Freedom - adflegal.org Church Law Tax Report (Geographic Compensation Benchmarks) - churchlawandtax.com Leading With Questions by Michael J. Marquardt ---- New Hope Oahu -- enewhope.org
Looking to start or grow your online ministry? I created a FREE 5-day course for you at minitryfunnels.net plus access to an exclusive Facebook group to connect with others in ministryMy guest is Wayne Cordeiro. Wayne the founding pastor of New Hope Christian Fellowship in Honolulu, Hawaii. He is the author of multiple books such as Leading on Empty, Sifted, and The Divine Mentor. In this episode we discuss:When what looks like a demotion is actually a promotionObedience regardless of the resultsPractical steps for daily devotionsRecognizing signs of burnoutThe importance of being able to say no and delegateFinding your optimum speedWhen the road to success and the road to burnout become one and the sameHow personality plays into burnoutsThe importance of sabbaticalsDelegation and the five percentFor more information on Wayne Cordeiro:Go to the website https://enewhope.org/Follow Pastor Wayne on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/waynecordeiro/Get his book Leading on Empty here https://amzn.to/2VCzTWFFor more information on the ministry of Discerning Dad:Get all my links in one easy spot! https://linktr.ee/discerning_dadGet my FREE 14 day discernment devotional, Eyes on Jesus, by going to eyesonjesusdevotional.comYou can purchase my book this podcast is based on, Everyday Discernment: The Importance of Spirit-led decision making, on Amazon https://amzn.to/3dDGKVwBecome a patron supporter and get exclusive benefits such as my second podcast and much more https://www.patreon.com/Discerningdad
In this episode, Ted & Rob have a candid conversation with Wayne Cordeiro and Wesley Towne concerning, stress, burnout and a leader's mental health. If you need to contact Pastor Wayne or Wesley, you can reach them at waynecordeiro@newhope.edu & hello@wesleytowne.com ---- Bayside Church Davis -- davis.baysideonline.com New Hope Oahu -- enewhope.org
Rest can be challenging in the fast pace of today's society, but it is an important and essential part of our faith. God demonstrated rest from the beginning. Reflecting and expanding upon this week's message Psalms 23 Week #2, "He Makes Me Lie Down in Green Pastures": https://youtu.be/-5iQKfCz1BM Psalms 23:2 NIV He makes me lie down in green pastures, he leads me beside quiet waters "Let us therefore come boldly to the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need." Hebrews 4:16 We don't work FOR rest, we work FROM rest. On the 6th day, God created man. On the 7th day, the first day God spent with man - He rested. If you're not producing, who are you? - Your identity has to come from God, because if what-you-do is removed, then who are you? Learn more about this topic: TJ's Message on rest and Sabbath, "Take a Break!": https://youtu.be/ISdjeafkELM Take the Day Off: Receiving God's Gift of Rest by Robert Morris https://www.amazon.com/Take-Day-Off-Receiving-Gods/dp/1546010165 Atomic Habits: an Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits and Break Bad Ones by James Clear https://www.amazon.com/Atomic-Habits-Proven-Build-Break/dp/0593189647/ Necessary Endings by Dr. Henry Cloud https://www.amazon.com/Necessary-Endings-Henry-Cloud/dp/0061777129 Leading on Empty: Refilling Your Tank and Renewing Your Passion by Wayne Cordeiro https://www.amazon.com/Leading-Empty-Refilling-Renewing-Passion/dp/0764207598/ We all have lots of things going on, but we have to make an intentional decision to cease. He has commanded us to take a break and sabbath. What are we teaching our kids in the process of our busy-ness? Are you teaching rest? We are not designed to go-go-go 7 days a week, 365 days a year. Going all of the time may actually be lessening our productivity. After all, most of us make our worst decisions when we're tired. What are you doing this week, month, year to build in rest to your calendar? When we work out of a place of rest, it can be transformational to your life. The cost of not resting is SO HIGH! What's one step you can take to replenish your soul with rest? --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/coastalchurch/message
Katy and Melanie are BACK for another episode of the #MakeChicHappen Podcast!Do you struggle with burnout? Do you know how to schedule your joy first? Friends, burning yourself out is NOT a badge of honor. Katy and Melanie will walk you through their tips to becoming a #HealthyCEO.Leading on Empty by Wayne Cordeiro: https://amzn.to/3mR3ULQChic Influencer's Time Blocking Resource: https://chicinfluencer.com/planner-resources/
Katy and Melanie are BACK for another episode of the #MakeChicHappen Podcast! Do you struggle with burnout? Do you know how to schedule your joy first? Friends, burning yourself out is NOT a badge of honor. Katy and Melanie will walk you through their tips to becoming a #HealthyCEO. Leading on Empty by Wayne Cordeiro: https://amzn.to/3mR3ULQ Chic Influencer's Time Blocking Resource: https://chicinfluencer.com/planner-resources/
The Prophet Amos foretells a day when there would be a famine in the land, not of food or water, but of hearing the words of the Lord. Listen as Pastor Wayne Cordeiro shares with us how we can prepare for and fight against this spiritual famine as we daily come to the word of God. Book Recommendation: The Divine Mentor by Wayne CordeiroNew Hope Christian College - www.newhope.edu Episode 22 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/brilliant.gaze.5 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brilliantgazepod/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/brilliantgaze
On this week's episode of #TheConversation, Pastor Wayne Cordeiro speaks to Roxanne Grace about the end times, what does God do with luke warm Christianity and can believers lose their salvation.Hosted by Roxanne Grace, The Conversation is an interview show discussing music, faith and issues of the day with influencers, artists, entertainers and more.► Sponsor an episode - http://www.dreamlabelgroup.com/theconversation► Subscribe here! - http://smarturl.it/SubscribeDLG► Mailing List - https://www.dreamlabelgroup.com/contact► Music - https://open.spotify.com/playlist/0qBefb9awGXq07NqzmV8iS?si=CVxaNZmgS4e73XUlDWzmgg&nd=1► Speaking Engagements - bookingroxgrace@gmail.com► The Conversation Guest Booking - dreamtheconversation@gmail.comMusic by @Chris Howland Official ►Click HERE to check out "Way Up":https://smarturl.it/ChrisHowlandWayUp#RoxanneGrace #TheConversation #WayneCordeiro @NewHopeOahu
Long-time minister at New Hope Church, Wayne Cordeiro has led through incredible circumstances over the years. Sharing wisdom from the heart, he recounts a long and inspiring trajectory of growth and multiplication. He also recalls a challenging time In his 50s when his multi-faceted ministry was interrupted by a heart attack that forced him to make significant changes to his health as a leader. Dr. Wayne Cordeiro is the founding minister of New Hope Church in Oahu, Hawaii. One of the fastest-growing churches in the nation, New Hope oversees 4 Bible colleges and has planted over 150 churches across the Pacific Rim and throughout the western United States. Wayne believes in investing in future leaders and releasing the God-given potential of the new generation. To this end, he serves as president of New Hope Christian College in Eugene, Oregon, which recently planted a lab church, New Hope West, to provide a venue for hands-on practicum for his ministerial students during the Covid pandemic. Wayne has authored 12 books including Leading on Empty, Doing Church as a Team, The Divine Mentor, and The Irresistible Church, and he is the general editor of the Life Connect Study Bible. Wayne and his wife Anna have 3 children and 9 grandchildren and split their time between Hawaii and Oregon, where they have a family ranch. Wayne’s hobbies include teaching the Word of God and discipling leaders for the Kingdom, and he enjoys music, reading, and horses. You can learn more at https://www3.enewhope.org.
In this episode of the L3 Leadership Podcast, Doug Smith interviews Wayne Cordeiro, Founding Pastor of New Hope Christian Fellowship in Honolulu, Hawaii with over 11,500 in weekend attendance. In the episode, Doug and Wayne discuss leading on empty and the effects of burnout.Wayne has led New Hope Christian Fellowship in Honolulu, Hawaii for 36 years and has planted 162 churches. His passion is raising up emerging leaders.Key TakeawaysWayne and Doug discuss the importance of focusing on discipleship in ministry leadership. Church planting and success in the ministry is a result of proper discipleship. Character-development is crucial. Wayne talks about burnout and the telltale signs of depression in leadership. It’s not something that you can plan for. Burnout is restored by healing, adjustment, and rescheduling.There’s a difference between tiredness and burnout. Tiredness is resolved by better sleeping habits, burnout is not.Wayne discusses solitude’s importance to our mental and spiritual health. Solitude is not isolation. Isolation is getting away from people. Solitude on the other hand is a planned away time with God.Suffering in leadership is actually okay. If you never suffer, you never grow and never learn. Typically our darkest moments in leadership are right before our brightest moments. Wayne gives advice for every season of life.Our Twenties are for gaining life experience. It’s a time to take advantage of opportunities and to be a servant leader seeking to serve. Our Thirties are for us to experiment with what God’s given us and to discover exactly what God has called us to do.Our Forties are for leadership development and for us to hone our craft and sharpen our skills. From our Fifties on, we are to be looking for successors and emerging leaders to pour our life and leadership into.Links:Leading on Empty by Wayne CordeiroThe Divine Mentor by Wayne CordeiroSifted by Wanye CordeiroNew Hope Fellowship ChurchSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/l3leadership)
This episode will explore Dr. Ro Schmidt's favorite books for the month of January, 2021. Each of these dynamic authors Dr. Tony Evans, Dr. Verna Price, Wayne Cordeiro, Dr. Seuss, Priscilla Shirer, Dr. James H. Cone, former First Lady Michelle Obama, and Simon Sinek, have a unique way of enhancing ones professional, spiritual, or personal lives. Please visit the blog on Dr. Ro's website and you will find the complete list of the titles mentioned alongside the author on Saturday, January 30th. https://drrolanda.com/ *This segment is not paid advertisement. I'm simply an avid reader and lifelong scholar. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
This week's episode is another conversation taken from an online meet-up. If you're not already, I'd love for you to be a part of our tribe over on Facebook at The Leading Second Collective, so you don't miss out on these. They are so fun and prove to always bring us conversations that leave a mark. We've had Kayla Stoecklein on the podcast before, so if you haven't heard that, I definitely recommend going back and listening to that episode as well (Ep. 054). Her story is truly incredible. Since her last time on the podcast, she has come out with a book! It's titled "Fear Gone Wild: A Story of Mental Illness, Suicide, and Hope Through Loss," and it is brilliant and has truly life-saving potential. We get to hear a bit about the book and her heart behind it. One of my favorite things about Kayla is how she prioritizes mental health and tries to break the shame associated with talking about it. She gives us permission to be human. In this season, I've had a reborn commitment that leadership health is far more critical than just leadership ability. In this season, we've seen that the lasting leaders are the ones who have committed to personal health. If anyone reading this has had moments or seasons of burnout, depression, challenges with your mental health, or you just want to stay healthy… this conversation is for you. Resources mentioned in this episode: Leading on Empty by Wayne Cordeiro
Beyond Our Boundaries - A Fundamental Transformation and Motivational Journey with Bob Galletta.
Contact me at www.BobGalletta.com/call Giving credit for the title of this podcast to “Leading on Empty” by Wayne Cordeiro. When you take on more than your usual daily load, it in itself can become a burden on who you need to be at that moment. “We won’t be held accountable for how much we have […]
On today's podcast episode, tune in for a rendition of "Solitude" by Irvin W. Underhill."Solitude is a chosen separation for the refining of your soul. Isolation is what you crave when you neglect the first."- Wayne Cordeiro
Tearing down crosses. It's not only in China. Antifa spreading threats of violence, destruction beyond Portland. Now they want to tear down a 56-year old cross at a college in Eugene.
In this episode, Eric Bryant interviews Wayne Cordeiro, the founding pastor of New Hope Christian Fellowship in Honolulu, Hawaii and author of many books including Doing Church as a Team. Our goal with The Post-Christian Podcast is to reframe, simplify, and focus on our mission to make disciples in a post Christian culture. We discuss reaching new people and raising up leaders while removing the barriers of churchianity. Eric Bryant is one of the executive pastors at Gateway Church in Austin, author of Not Like Me, and resource provider at ericbryant.org. (This interview originally was part of The Church Growth Summit in 2017). --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/eric-bryant1/support
If you are wise and understand God's ways…—James 3:13 So give me the wisdom I need to rule your people with justice and to know the difference between good and evil. Otherwise, how would I ever be able to rule this great people of yours?”—1 Kings 3:9“I will do what you have asked. I will give you more wisdom and understanding than anyone has ever had before or will ever have again. 13 I will also give you what you have not asked for: all your life you will have wealth and honor, more than that of any other king. 14 And if you obey me and keep my laws and commands, as your father David did, I will give you a long life.”—1 Kings 3:12-14*The Fruit of Godly Wisdom: *1. Godly Wisdom Produces an Honorable LifeIf you are wise and understand God's ways, prove it by living an honorable life…—James 3:13Wisdom is “skill in living righteously.”“Knowledge—even biblical knowledge—is like sodium in raw form. Sodium can be destructive to humans…until it gets converted into a higher form: sodium chloride, or table salt. In the same way, knowledge is never an end in itself. It must be converted into a higher form—wisdom—for it to become useful and beneficial to us.”—Wayne CordeiroAnyone who listens to my teaching and follows it is wise, like a person who builds a house on solid rock.—Matthew 7:24“When truth comes to the wise person, they adjust themselves to the truth, but when truth comes to the fool, they adjust the truth.”—Dr. Henry CloudSo don't bother correcting mockers; they will only hate you. But correct the wise, and they will love you.—Proverbs 9:82. Godly Wisdom Produces Humble ServiceJames 3:13 (NLT) – If you are wise and understand God's ways, prove it by living an honorable life, doing good works with the humility that comes from wisdom.James 3:14-15a (NLT) – But if you are bitterly jealous and there is selfish ambition in your heart, don't cover up the truth with boasting and lying. 15 For jealousy and selfishness are not God's kind of wisdom.James 3:15-16 (NLT) – For jealousy and selfishness are not God's kind of wisdom. Such things are earthly, unspiritual, and demonic. 16 For wherever there is jealousy and selfish ambition, there you will find disorder and evil of every kind.Godly Wisdom Cultivates Healthy RelationshipsBut the wisdom from above is first of all pure. It is also peace loving, gentle at all times, and willing to yield to others. It is full of mercy and the fruit of good deeds. It shows no favoritism and is always sincere.—James 3:17When you talk to or respond to a friend, a family member, or even a stranger, are the words you speak…Peace-lovingGentleYielding to othersFull of mercyFull of good deedsWithout favoritismAlways sincere
Following Christ does not guarantee you’ll be an overwhelming success . . . but it doesn’t mean you’ll always struggling to achieve material gain either.
Mother Theresa once said that, “You’ll never know Jesus is all you need until Jesus is all you have.”
Cynthia Marquez: "Sometimes to begin a new story, you have to let the old one go." Author unknown. I am Cynthia Marquez and I am a Tri-City influencer. Paul Casey: But really this is the core philosophy of what I teach in time management, and that is manage your time around your values and vision. This is your foundation for everything else in time management. Speaker 3: Raising the water level of leadership in the Tri-Cities of Eastern Washington, it's The Tri-Cities Influencer Podcast. Welcome to the TCI Podcast, where local leadership and self leadership expert Paul Casey interviews local CEOs, entrepreneurs and nonprofit executives, to hear how they lead themselves and their teams so we can all benefit from their wisdom and experience. Here's your host, Paul Casey of Growing Forward Services, coaching and equipping individuals and teams to spark breakthrough success. Paul Casey: Hey, thanks for joining me for today's episode. It's going to be a bonus episode. I'm going to do a little teaching today on work-life balance and hopefully it'll be beneficial to you if you struggle with having a hard time drawing that healthy line between your work and personal life. So we'll dive in after checking in with our Tri-City Influencer sponsors. Speaker 4: The C12 Group is a national organization focused on spiritual and professional development of Christian CEOs and business owners. Members participate in professionally facilitated monthly meetings during which 12 experienced Christian CEOs exchange ideas to solve business issues biblically. Additionally, members receive a 90-minute personal coaching session each month. Information is available from Tom Walther at 715-459-9611 or online at c12easternwa.com. Paul Casey: Thank you for your support of leadership development in the Tri-Cities. Nathan Margalit is a rabbi and Jewish scholar. In a recent blog he said, "Humans are unique. We can choose to ignore rhythm. We can and do keep our factories running day and night. We try to fool hens into laying more eggs by keeping the lights on 24 hours at a time. With every new pad, pod and phone, we push ourselves into 24/7 connectedness. We have created a culture that is built on the metaphor of a machine impervious to any rhythm other than the drone of production. In the name of progress, convenience and even freedom, but most of all profits, we have lost the music of life." Paul Casey: It's sort of a sad reflection that oftentimes we just keep pushing, pushing, pushing and we don't take the time to rest. We don't take the time for those other priorities in our life that we really need. So, instead of achieving balance in your life, which I sort of believe doesn't really exist. I mean, work-life balance is sort of this thing that if you really went after it, you probably would achieve it for five minutes and then you'd be out of balance again. I like the phrase work-life rhythm a lot better, or now one that's more in vogue is work-life integration. Paul Casey: So you can think to yourself, when do you feel like you are ever in a good rhythm? Can you just reflect on that for a moment? When do you feel like you're in a good rhythm? What's going on in your life? Maybe what's not going on in your life during that time? That would be a good place to connect with as we go into this podcast episode. Paul Casey: I went to a seminar years ago by a guy named Wayne Cordeiro and he was discussing a terrible time in his life where he was completely burned out. If you've ever been burned out before, you know it's a rotten time where you just barely can get out of bed, you have trouble with even remembering what your favorite color is. I mean, it's just sort of a dead time. He actually checked himself into a monastery and had to put away all of his technology, he couldn't check his cell phone or his laptop and it almost drove him insane. He said he only snuck out one night from the monastery, but it was a real healing time for him after this burnout time. And he said work-life balance is not a thing. That's where I've sort of gotten this from. Paul Casey: And so I have actually developed a tool for time management, my framework for time management as a result of this seminar by Wayne Cordeiro, because he drew a picture of a teeter totter, if you remember that playground implement, which now is probably considered illegal. It seems like all the things we grew up with on the playground are now considered unsafe, but the teeter totter, the classic thing where you put one person and one on the other side and you go up and down. Paul Casey: If you put work on one side and you put balance on the other side of that teeter totter and you're really working for that balance, you're probably not going to get to it or just for a little bit, you might get to it. But he said instead of thinking work and life and trying to balance those two instead, think of just the fulcrum part. Fulcrum is like that triangle that separates the two sides of the teeter totter. If you decide to shift the fulcrum left or right towards work or towards life, instead of thinking about balancing it, it's going to be a lot more fluid in your life. So sometimes based on the urgency or importance of what's going on in the arena, on your life, you have to move that fulcrum fluidly to direct your energy appropriately. Sometimes when you have to spend more time in your life area because you've had a parent who might have to go into assisted living or maybe your child has the flu and because of that you've got to spend more time at home dealing with the personal issues. Paul Casey: Other times you have to spend more time in the work area of your life. You've got a deadline for a key client or that your ramped up season of the year and you've got to work some overtime. Now, you just push that fulcrum left or right and that's going to help you more with that work-life rhythm, that work-life integration instead of balance. Now, if you spend too much time of course on that one area of your life for too long, then of course you know what's going to happen. It's going to dry up the other area of your life. That's going to get empty and decay would set in. If your spouse is forgotten for too long and a rift becomes evident, you're not putting enough time there, or maybe you're not putting enough time in at work, you're not following up with your customers and they start to slip away as a consequence. Paul Casey: Basically, you can't stay in overdrive mode for too long or you will burn out. So what is one of the main practical solutions to achieve work-life balance or work-life rhythm? I think one where I'd like to talk about today is the word boundaries. Boundaries allow you to move the fulcrum where you determine what needs to be moved right now, to have a hard stop at the end of a quality and a productive workday so that you can be fully present at home. So that you can give 100% at work knowing that your tank and your family's tank, your energy tank has been filled up at home. To be able to embrace this time block or this season of life that you're in without longing for the other time block or the other season of life. I want to give you some tips today on how to set up boundaries so you can move the fulcrum intentionally. Paul Casey: The first one is to figure out what's most important to you. Figure out what's most important to you. So you've got to reconnect with who you are and who you're not of course. What you have to offer and what you really want. That's the key coaching question, is, what do you want? So that you're crystal clear and you can live that out day after day. I recommend you do a personal retreat to get to solitude and reflection in order to really wrestle with this. You're like, "Well, I know who I am." Yeah, but really do you? Have you lost touch with that over time? Have you changed over time and it's like, "Now I've got to get back to grounded-ness. Who am I really? What do I really stand for?" What you could do is this time of solitude, whether it's a couple hours or a half day, or maybe go off to the mountains or the beach so you've got a whole day or two to think about this, is you can try to come up with a personal mission statement. Paul Casey: I have a personal mission statement and it's to add value to people through equipping, encouraging words, servant leader actions and a contagious passion to honor God with my life. So I've said that enough times that it's memorized and I use it as a filter for my life and how I came up with that mission statement. It's sort of a combination of some exercises that I went through. Can't remember if they were with a coach or just, I did these on my own, sort of self-life coaching here. It's a combination of the values and by the way, I can send a sheet of values to you if you'd like to go through some of these exercises, just email me at growingforward@paulcasey.org and I'd be happy to send you that value sheet. Paul Casey: What you do is you go through this whole activity where you narrow it down to the things that are totally you and then you get down to the top 10 and then you get down to the top five that you'd practically die for those. I mean, they are so important to you and everybody around you would know it from watching your life that those five things, it could be family, it could be your faith, it could be growth, it could be happiness or trust. Some people have written in other words on the chart like accountability, love and affection. These are your DNA and you must live in congruence with those values in order to be successful in life. So that's a worthwhile exercise even if you're not doing a personal mission statement. A second exercise you could do is some type of strengths assessment. Paul Casey: I recommend StrengthsFinder, which I think is now called CliftonStrengths and you can either buy the book StrengthsFinder 2.0 and there's a link in the book, a code that you put in online to take the online assessment or you can just go to the CliftonStrengths website and you can take the 20 minute strengths assessment. I think it costs about 20 bucks and it's worth doing that because it's going to spit out your top five strengths and you're just going to go, "Whoa, that's like someone's reading my mail." I mean they're usually totally you because there's 34 of them and it's not just like four. There's 34 and when they narrow it down to your top five, it usually hits right on. You don't have to spend the money on that. You could just simply think about as you go through your day. Paul Casey: Marcus Buckingham, who's sort of the father of the strengths' movement, he uses the acronym sign SIGN. S is success, what do you feel effective at most of the time? And other people around you validate that they're saying, "You're so good at that." You've probably been told that for many, many years and that would meet the first criteria of a strength. The I stands for instinct. There's just something inside of you that naturally leans toward it and you look forward to it. So, I might be good at math, so I might say I'm pretty good at math, but I don't like math. So that's not something I actually look forward to. So in this criterion it would be ruled out. So, success, then instinct is the I, G is growth. Growth means time speeds by while you're doing it. Like you're doing it for a while and you start getting engrossed in and you get in that state called flow and you look up two hours later and like, Oh my goodness, the day just slipped away from me cause I like it so much. Paul Casey: And then the N in sign is needs. That means you're tired when you're done with it but you're not drained. For instance, when I do speaking or coaching, I'm tired at the end of the day because I've given it all that I have, but I'm not drained because I love doing this. I feel like I'm put on this planet to fulfill that role. And hopefully you do too with your job. So really be mindful of what you love doing and since Buckingham, as a Brit, he says what you loathe doing. So, the things that make you feel strong throughout the day, the things that make you feel weak or drained or bored, you can just track these things. Just have a piece of paper by your desk and then you'll have a list after a couple of weeks of writing these specific things down and I encourage you to tell that, debrief that with somebody else. Paul Casey: The third thing that would go into your personal mission statement would be your vision for your life and it can be the ultimate vision for your life or it could be just like the one year vision out, like how do you want to be different than one year from now? It could be your big dream that you've always had and it just, you try to shake it off but it still sticks to you and it's like you find yourself talking about it when you're out for coffee with friends or when somebody says, "What do you want to be when you grow up?" You just keep uttering the same dream. It's something you're really passionate about and a passion actually as part of the root word of passion is you would suffer for it. So, maybe there's a degree that you would suffer for that cause if you were to pursue it. Paul Casey: So you've got, in order to put a mission statement together, you've got values, your strengths and your vision for your life. Another thing to think about when you're in solitude, maybe on a personal retreat, is the amount of margin you have to have to function optimally. We don't want you to burn out, right? That's what this whole work-life rhythm is about. And so we have to have enough margin or cushion of time in our life to keep our energy level up. So, margin is a concept that was developed by a guy named Richard Swenson. He was a doctor and he defines margin as your load minus your limits. So all the things that are on your plate versus the amount of energy and time that you have. And some of us have actually more load than limits. And so we can actually be a negative margin and that's when we really get irritated and we get close to burnout. We can have like zero sum margin where they're equal. But hopefully we have enough margin where there's some cushion time to absorb the unexpected in our life. Paul Casey: Part of boundaries is acknowledging that you have limited time, that you have limited energy and you have to determine how accessible you want to and how you actually can be. So we have to say yes, we have to say no on a daily basis to all the things that are clamoring for our time. Choose carefully who not if you will disappoint on an average day. I'll say that again. Choose carefully who, not if, you will disappoint on a given day because you're always going to disappoint someone when you're saying no, but oftentimes that no is worth it because of the other priorities you're going to be able to give time to. Paul Casey: One more thing you could do on that personal retreat is to really get clear with your priorities. Stephen Covey calls those your big rocks, those big things that you put in your schedule first. Not just what you are conditioned to do, not just what's urgent and yelling at you to do, but those things that are so core to you, so important to you and they're often not urgent, but you know that if you don't give them attention, it's going to bite you later. And you know if you do do those things, you're going to move the needle on those relationships or on those projects. So you're sort of setting what normal is for you because when you're on the verge of burnout, you've lost touch with what that is. Hey, before we head into more teaching on work-life balance, let's shout out to our sponsors. Speaker 4: If you could trade one day each month for targeted application of biblical business practices, purposeful accountability and godly pure counsel, would you consider it a wise investment? The C12 group is a national organization focused on spiritual and professional development of Christian CEOs and business owners. Members participate in professionally facilitated monthly meetings where 12 experienced Christian CEOs exchange ideas to solve business issues biblically. Information is available from Tom Walther at 715-459-9611 or online at c12easternwa.com. Paul Casey: A second tip for you in work-life balance is to watch your gauges. Watch your gauges, so, your dashboard of your car has gauges or an airplane has gauges. Gauges are really important to see if we are in trouble, if anything is running a little bit hot or needs attention. Henry Cloud and John Townsend said in their boundaries book, "God wants us to take care of ourselves so that we can help others without moving into crisis ourselves." One speaker says, "Take care of your body like you're on a space shuttle headed on a long journey." Paul Casey: So, a gauge is something that runs a little bit hot, that's not you. Like you think when you do this thing you say, "Boy, that's not even me. Why did I do that?" It's things that get triggered in your life. Like for me, a trigger for me if I'm on the edge of burnout is when I start losing creativity. I've got ideas all the time. As an entrepreneur, I just love creating, coming up with new ideas and if I slowly, slowly go dark in my brain, have no ideas, I'm thinking, Uh-oh, something's wrong. That's a gauge for me when I don't have any ideas. That means, wow, I must be fried. Or another one of my triggers is balls getting dropped. Like someone's in a coffee shop and they texted me and go like, "Hey, so Paul, are you coming? I thought we were meeting over there at Barracuda's." I'm like, "Oh no. I didn't even get that into my calendar cause I was running so fast." So that tells me that I'm on the edge of burnout. Paul Casey: Maybe for you, you have consistently high energy and all of a sudden you're in this consistently low energy weather pattern in your life. Maybe you typically are a peaceful person and now you seem to be freaking out and having panic attacks or just anxiety way more often than you used to. That could be a signal that your gauge is running hot. Maybe you're typically a peaceful person and you can roll with the punches, but you've gotten angry and irritable more often than usual. Like, how quick is your trigger versus how much grace that you give or how much laughs that you share with people? Stress is informational. So when you're experiencing these things, it's your body and your spirit telling you that, Whoa, you've got to check those gauges. Paul Casey: You've got to get back and move that fulcrum over into the life side and pour back into yourself. So think about what is your gauge. You want to be able to be response-able, sort of like that word responsible, but put a hyphen between a response and able. We need to be able to respond to things without freaking out or without just going into the tank and going dark. So if you're redlining, redlining's a term that my trainer taught me many years ago, that's when I can barely breathe. For the next exercise she said, "You're redlining, go get some air outside." So if you're red lining in life, get back into a self care program, move that fulcrum urgently over to the life side or you will burn out and then you'll be no good for anyone because then you're just going to bleed all over everybody. And that's not going to help, especially if you're in leadership because leaders, they just don't have that privilege to be able to come into work and wreck everybody else's day. Paul Casey: Prolonged stress can become chronic unless steps are taken to eliminate the source or effectively manage that stress. Let me give you two more points. The third one is to filter each request for your time and every interaction through the boundary lens. Filter each request for your time and interaction through the boundary lens. Paul Casey: In other words, if you're strong and you're feeling strong in your life, you can offer it, but if you're depleted, you don't because then it might put you over the edge and like I said, then you'll bleed all over everybody. So you think about like is this a strong place that I can say yes to it, but if I'm feeling like I haven't taken care of myself for a while, then I would say no. One way you can do that is to truly say that you will think about it. So somebody says, 'Hey, Hey Paul, can you do this for me?' And everything inside me wants to yell out "Yes!" because I'm an opportunity person and I like to say yes to things, but I have to teach myself to insert the pause. Paul Casey: So there's stimulus instead of response. You go stimulus, you insert the pause and then you respond with, "Hey, can I think about that for a while?" Or maybe you ask a little bit more about their commitment level before I say yes and if safe, you know somebody might go like, "Well why? Why do you have to think about that?" Then you're going to say, "Because I need to run that through my filter. I need to see if I have enough margin." Most decisions are not urgent so if that person won't allow me to think about, then it's definitely a no. And I've had people call like, "Oh, hey okay. Well then you just think about it for a while." Paul Casey: So separate yourself a bit. Buy yourself some space and during this break, stop, look and listen. Here's the three parts of stop, look and listen. So stop and think, do I want to do this or am I trying to please somebody else? Because pleasers, we struggle with that. What will I receive from my participation in this? Am I going to get, is this going to build my confidence level if I do that? If I agree to do this, will it continue to be rewarding or do I think over time it's going to become oppressive and then I'm going to start getting resentful? So the stop part is to stop and think. Paul Casey: The look part is to look at your commitments, all the other things that are on your plate and count the cost for this commitment. This one that's staring you in the face right now. Ask for clarification, like what really is the time commitment to this? Ask for more information so you can answer these other questions. So you stop and think, look at your commitments and count the cost and the listen part is to listen to your feelings. So oftentimes we're running so fast that we skip this step and if you're not a big feelings person, you're like, yeah, you sort of laugh this one off. But do you find yourself hesitating or hedging when you're thinking about saying yes to this? That could be your body saying like, Nope, don't go there. Paul Casey: Do you feel cornered or trapped into making a decision? That's probably another thing that you need to say no to. Do I feel a tightness somewhere in my body because often stress, there's biofeedback in your body that you feel a tightness in your shoulders or that sick feeling in your stomach or do you feel at your temples? That's probably a sign to say no. Do you feel a nervous reaction? Like you start tapping your pencil or you got your legs crossed and it's just going a mile a minute? That could be a warning signal that's coming from inside you that says you might need to rethink this decision. Paul Casey: Remember that you must take full responsibility for the choice once you make it. So you can't play the blame game once you say yes, because as it's been said, blame is to be lame. Put a hyphen between the B and the L. so to blame is to b-lame and nobody wants to be lame and there's a shortage of people who own their own issues, you've probably noticed that. So the quote for you to remember on this one is "Don't let your mouth overload your back." In other words, by saying yes too much, don't let it overload your capacity that you have available to you. So once you've done that, then you can make the decision without regrets. See, you've run it through all these filters that you have and then you can say yes or no. Mahatma Gandhi says, "A no uttered from the deepest conviction is better than a yes merely uttered to please or what is worse just to avoid trouble." Paul Casey: One more step. The fourth step of achieving work-life balance or rhythm is to have accountability partners who keep you true to yourself and your stated work-life balance. Have accountability partners. We need to draw on a power higher than ourselves to maintain good boundaries because if we just try to have that willpower, it's usually going to become won't power after a while. So we really need accountability partners. Have them ask you specific questions, where are you are the weakest and sometimes we want to avoid those questions because it's like, Oh, I don't want to answer that, but usually that's a really great question for us to rebuild that resolve to have boundaries. Check in regularly with that person or those people, rejoice together when you succeed and fail forward when you screw up. In other words, we're going to fail but we're going to fail in the right direction by saying, 'All right, I screwed up this time but I am not going to say yes to that next time." Paul Casey: So, good points here. Remembering to figure out what's most important to you, to watch your gauges, to filter each request through the boundary lens, and to have accountability partners who keep you true to yourself. What do you get as a result of this? Hey, there's some really good work-life payoffs and benefits. One is you're going to live with joy and not anxiety and who doesn't want more joy? Second is being good stewards of your time and your money. Third is working with excellence, not sideways energy. Fourth is to experience true community with people you care about and you're not just giving them the leftovers. Paul Casey: And fifth is you get to model this work-life balance for your children, for your friends and for your followers. Whether that's on social media or people that are following you at work and I'd be happy to email you these slides or my speaker notes, if you want to reach out to me at growingforward@paulcasey.org. But, I really hope that you will, we'll wrestle this down because, work-life rhythm is huge. Don't try to achieve balance, really try to move that fulcrum back or forth into seasons where it makes the most sense. Paul Casey: Let me wrap up our podcast today with a resource I'd like to offer you. And it is a goal setting tool. It's a pad of paper that has got 25 sheets and on the front it has you setting one very important goal for yourself and really making that both smart goal and a hard goal, which it says what those mean on there. You could even sketch the goal out on that front page. On the back page of each sheet is a storyboard tool, which breaks that big goal into six small steps. And you can put a deadline by that. You could put the resources needed by each one and it's amazing how by doing that storyboard, you're not going to get stuck along the way because you're going to know what the next step is and it's going to be in a bite size for you to tackle it and get more goals done this year than you ever had before. Paul Casey: So that goal setting tool is on my website, paulcasey.org or again, you can reach out to me through email. Again, this is Paul Casey and I have been happy to share with you about work-life rhythm today and we want to thank our TCI sponsors and invite you to support them. We appreciate you making this possible so we can collaborate to help inspire leaders in our community. Finally, one more tidbit for the road to help you make a difference in your circle of influence and it is a quote by Dorothea Brande and she says, "Envisioning the end is enough to put the means in motion." Until next time, KGF, keep growing forward. Speaker 3: Thank you to our listeners for tuning in to today's show. Paul Casey is on a mission to add value to leaders by providing practical tools and strategies that reduce stress in their lives and on their teams so that they can enjoy life and leadership and experience their key desired results. If you'd like more help from Paul in your leadership development, connect with him at growingforward@paulcasey.org for consultation that can help you move past your current challenges and create a strategy for growing your life or your team forward. Paul would also like to help you restore sanity to your crazy schedule and get your priorities done every day by offering you his free control my calendar checklist. Go to www.takebackmycalendar.com for that productivity tool or open a text message to seven two zero zero zero and type the word growing. Speaker 4: The Tri-Cities influencer podcast was recorded at Fuse SPC by Bill Wagner of Safe Strategies.
This week, I sat down with my sister (quite literally) and had a good 'ol fashioned heart to heart about her journey of being adopted, her healing from childhood sexual abuse, marriage, motherhood, being raised in a ministry family, and how God has used all of this to write her story and birth a full blown ministry! No doubt about it, Lindsey has come nose to nose with some heavy hitters .. and she has taken each trial and used it to bring glory to God, healing to others, and strength for herself.She is a wife, a mother, a preacher, an author, a podcaster (YES! She also has a podcast) and a survivor. She is a real Get Up Girl! I hope you find encouragement here today. Enjoy! Connect with Lindsey! IG: lindseycbusseyFB: Lindsey Carr BusseyPodcast: Lindsey Bussey Podcast Church: https://www.lifeunited.church/ True Image:IG: my_trueimage Website: https://www.thisismytrueimage.com/Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUzkQQjhE7J_eXNtisKNnEQ Mercy Multiplied:IG: mercymultipliedPodcast: Mercy Talk Website: https://mercymultiplied.com/ Books:Sacred Rest by Dr. Dalton SmithDivine Mentor by Wayne Cordeiro
Main Passage: Matthew 8:18-22 Supporting Passages: Romans 10:9-10; Hebrews 12:1-2 Supporting Literature: "Culture Shift: Transforming Your Church from the Inside Out" by Robert Lewis, Wayne Cordeiro, and Warren Bird
In this episode, Tim Madeira, Dan Nichols, and special guest Ben Rudolph talk about the why, what & how of SOUL CARE! Check out the flow of discussion below along with links to resources that they highlight throughout the conversation. 0:00 - Intro & Ben’s Story The Front Pew Podcast: https://thefrontpew.libsyn.com/ 8:00 - What is Soul Care? 12:20 - What is Soul Care NOT? 15:00 - The NEED for Soul Care 17:10 - Finishing Strong by Steve Farrar https://www.amazon.com/Finishing-Strong-Going-Distance-Family/dp/1576737268/ 18:00 - How Do You Coach Leaders in Soul Care? 21:30 - Personal Impact of Soul Care 25:15 - The Divine Mentor by Wayne Cordeiro https://www.amazon.com/Divine-Mentor-Growing-Faith-Savior/dp/076420579X Leading on Empty by Wayne Cordeiro https://www.amazon.com/Leading-Empty-Refilling-Renewing-Passion/dp/0764207598 26:25 - Replenish by Lance Witt https://www.amazon.com/Replenish-Leading-Healthy-Lance-Witt/dp/0801013542 27:10 - Rescuing Ambition by Dave Harvey https://www.amazon.com/Rescuing-Ambition-Dave-Harvey/dp/1433514915 27:30 - Face to Face by Ken Boa - Praying the Scriptures https://www.amazon.com/Face-Praying-Scriptures-Intimate-Worship/dp/0310925509 27:50 - Experiencing God by Henry Blackaby https://www.amazon.com/Experiencing-God-Knowing-Revised-Expanded/dp/0805447539 28:40 - How Will NEC Prioritize Soul Care? 30:00 - How Do I Pick a Good Soul Care Coach? Who can I be vulnerable with? 31:30 - The Emotionally Healthy Leader by Pete Scazzero https://www.amazon.com/Emotionally-Healthy-Leader-Transforming-Transform/dp/0310494575 Other Authors: Dallas Willard, Paul David Tripp, Eugene Peterson
1 Peter 4:8 8 Above all, love each other deeply, because love covers over a multitude of sins.
“It’s not that we forget we are Christians. We forget that we are human. This one oversight alone can debilitate the potential of our future.” - Wayne Cordeiro; Pastor & Author Today’s Text: 1 Kings 19 God’s healing and restorative work today often comes in the form of simple things, like food, shelter, & rest. God doesn’t work DESPITE our human limitations, but THROUGH them. As Christ-followers, self-care is not an indulgent or selfish act, but the healthy habits that allow us to better pour into others. The power of self-care is not in the habits themselves, but the One you encounter in the habits. For Further Discussion When was the last time you felt stress or burnt out? How did it affect your moods, actions, or relationships? As a Christ-follower, how do you balance self-care with serving others? Do you feel tension when taking time for yourself? What are some habits of self-care you could implement in your own life?
Preaching and testimony go together like bread and butter. It’s a powerful combination. In Episode 003 you will hear how a testimony is used as an introduction to the sermon. The testimony was included in…Continue Reading003: Preaching and Testimony
Great message from Pastor Wayne Cordeiro on how the way we think affects the spirit which lives inside us.
A friend of mine recommended Wayne Cordeiro’s book Leading on Empty, which talks about the important topic of pastor burnout. The title really grabbed me. I wonder: is a pastor you know running on empty . . . or maybe even walking (or crawling!) on empty? My friends Jan and Craig Hoffman are retired pastors. […] The post Is Your Pastor Running on Empty? appeared first on Wisdom of the Wounded.
Dr. Wayne Cordeiro tells a story in his book, Dream Releasers: Over the years I have closely watched several world-class tennis players, as well as many Olympic figure skaters. In nearly every case, I have seen a common practice: they always travel with a coach. ...A Dream Releaser is a kind of coach. Coaches can make the difference between winning and losing. Often, the greatest ideas, the most monumental thoughts and the most creative answers lay suffocating beneath the rubble of mistakes, character flaw, the fear of failure, a history of rejection, the fear of accountability or personality quirks. These are dream killers. (2002, p. 98)
There's plenty of talk on radio, but with 20twenty you'll find Life, Culture & Current events from a Biblical perspective. Interviews, stories and insight you definately won't hear in the mainstream media. This feed contains selected content from 20twenty, heard every weekday morning. See www.vision.org.au for more details Help Vision to keep 'Connecting Faith to Life': https://vision.org.au/donate See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
INTRO: Part 2 of interviewing Bryan Reynolds from Anthem Coffee and Tea in Tacoma Washington. Last episode we talked about how you personally need to cast a vision for your employees to learn and model back to your customers. We also left off with a quote from a visual artist who worked with Bryan, talking about the great ambiance in the cafe, here is Bryan's response to that quote. TIME 0:50 Levi: how did you build this culture? Bryan: it stems from his parents modeling this to him growing up, there was never a stranger to his parents, everyone was a guest. I wanted to make a cafe that had a different focus on customer service because my own first experience in coffee as a customer was an uncomfortable one. You can walk someone through the ordering process in a loving way, giving undivided attention and serve them well. Make the product worth coming back. TIME 3:05 Levi: “We wont be held accountable for how much we have done, but for how much we have done of what he asks us to do” the take away from that in a cafe would be if we want to make something cool like a fancy wall, how is that really going to improve the customer and employee experience? Do you have a lesson to share? Bryan: the first time we adopted a virtual punch-card system to ‘bring people back' but it ultimately it created an entitled customer for a number of reasons. We learned from that and changed it to a pre-load punch-card which has worked even better. We have had many other things that we wanted to do but never even launched. But as long as we learn from this and ‘fail forward' then we are being made stronger. Its far more of a risk to not try than it is to take a risk. TIME 8:15 Levi: “I know God will not give me anything I cannot handle, I just with He didn't trust me so much” your first big fear must have been starting Anthem, but what is the next biggest fear that is around the corner for Anthem? Bryan: success can lead to failure just as much as remaining dormant can, what scares me is if we coast if we let off the gas pedal. I'm constantly keeping myself tethered to the core values helps from becoming distracted. There's 60 of us on this team, there's a lot of moving parts. Which is why we focus on “Better before bigger.” And it leads to ‘how do we make little things like waiting in line better?' that question led to them creating a Anthem Coffee IOS app. A [customer] line is a good sign because it means there's something worth waiting for, but finding a way to skip the line ads value to some customers. TIME 13:05 Levi: what is your 85/10/5 rule? Bryan: in the book Leading on Empty, the author unpacks this idea, there is 85% of what other people should be doing for you, 10% that you can train leaders to do, and 5% that only you can do. If you don't take care of you then you can't take care of others. I love conflict because what's on the other side of it, which is unity. From the book “Leading on Empty: Refilling Your Tank and Renewing You Passion, by Wayne Cordeiro. TIME 17:40 Levi: who introduced you to coffee? Bryan: I was saving money for an engagement ring, so I started working at Cutters Point. I used to drink sweet sweet beverages (Black and White Hot Chocolate with Toasted Marshmallow) then a barista accidentally threw some shots into the drink (turning it into a mocha) and it was game-over, I loved the way it balanced the flavor and I was hooked from then on. TIME 19:05 Levi: the White Chocolate Mocha is the ‘Gateway Mocha.' What did you think of that first sip? Bryan: I don't drink sweet drinks as much, but I love an Espresso Macchiato, its like a mini-vacation for me. I love tasting different black coffees. TIME 19:50 Levi: decaf or tea? Bryan: I would go decaf. There's something about the smell of coffee, it takes you away. My wife will brew a pot of coffee just for the smell in the house. OUTRO Glad you listened to these 2 episodes, some topics we covered that I enjoyed learning were: giving employees light responsibilities to free your time up teaching them lower risk tasks and testing to see where they're sweet spot is. The small tasks is really part of setting up the “85/10/5% rule” and finding others to help handle 95% of that your workload. Do you remember that story of a customer loyalty program that had outstanding usage but went bust? Well its time to say goodbye, I'll let Bryan send us off with this inspiration and challenge “Better before bigger.” Music in this episode by The Dirty Moogs, via https://starfrosch.com/hot-100/artist/the+dirty+moogs
Nationally recognized leader and Global Leadership Summit speaker Wayne Cordeiro speaks to us about the best ways to gain wisdom from God’s Word, our personal experiences, and the experiences of others.
Sunday sermons from Church Unlimited.
Chris’ conversation w/Wayne is centered on Wayne’s book titled, Leading On Empty: Refilling Your Tank And Renewing Your Passion. In it Wayne shares with us the tools to recognize and overcome burnout, and provides for us greater levels of both rest and productivity.
Do you ever feel like you're being pulled in a million directions? Like you're overwhelmed with life, work, parenting, or with your family? These are all good things, but even good things can sometimes take us away from our number one responsibility--knowing Jesus better. Pastor Stephen A. Füssle will be sharing nuggets found in Wayne Cordeiro's book Jesus: Pure and Simple where we will discover how to focus on the One who matters most and take part in the joy and fulfillment that He brings. We will learn how this leads to selflessness, a true love for others, and effective ministry. It will, in fact, change how you see the world around you. When you focus on Christ, everything else falls into place. Your relationships. Your job. Your church. Your mission. It's all placed in the hands of Jesus, pure and simple.
Quick shoot out to all my listeners - Take time today to give me some feedback here on the website and then pick up your copy of The Divine Mentor by Wayne Cordeiro. Listen On!
1 Chronicles 28:9 King David gives word to Solomon his son essentially telling Solomon to remain true the the one True God; that if you seek Him, He will be found by you, but if you forsake Him, He will cast you off forever. It is so important to remain attached to the vine, to seek God each day, wouldn't you agree? For me the SOAP method boils down to exactly what I discovered when reading 'The Divine Mentor' by Wayne Cordeiro. In the book he spoke of allowing the individuals in the Bible to become mentors in your life, and I have done just this, it is amazing! And when you stop to consider these are people placed in the Bible for our benefit today ...why wouldn't God use their lives to mentor us? Listen to today's message and get a better idea of how this 'SOAP method' works.
Jesus warns his disciples that Satan has plans to put their faith to the test through a process called “sifting.” We all can go through major life trials where God allows suffering to sift away the things in our life that hold us back from growing stronger. Pastor Stephen applies lessons learned from Wayne Cordeiro's book Sifted, and applies it to your everyday person in a three-week series. Join us live, on our app, or online, for this powerful new series. Your not going to want to miss it!
Usurper to the right of us, usurpers to the left of us!" Derelict Watchmen on the Wall Warrenite Collaborators: Dr. Daniel Akin , Wayne Cordeiro, John Piper, Mark Dever, and Joel Osteen. My guest is author, James Sundquist. James has authored "Who's Driving the Purpose Driven Church" He has done extensive research into the false teachings of Rick Warren. Why has the church world fallen for this diabolical plan? Why are Warren and Osteen appearing on Oprah's New Age Life Class? http://global.christianpost.com/news/joel-osteen-and-rick-warren-to-appear-on-oprahs-lifeclass-82705 We will also talk about "The Harbinger" the next big thing that has hit Charismania, and Joel Osteen's latest false teaching "Possessing Your Promised Land" http://www.perfectpeaceplan.com/ http://rock-to-salt.cephasministry.com/
Usurper to the right of us, usurpers to the left of us!" Derelict Watchmen on the Wall Warrenite Collaborators: Dr. Daniel Akin , Wayne Cordeiro, John Piper, Mark Dever, and Joel Osteen. My guest is author, James Sundquist. James has authored "Who's Driving the Purpose Driven Church"He has done extensive research into the false teachings of Rick Warren. Why has the church world fallen for this diabolical plan?Why are Warren and Osteen appearing on Oprah's New Age Life Class?http://global.christianpost.com/news/joel-osteen-and-rick-warren-to-appear-on-oprahs-lifeclass-82705We will also talk about "The Harbinger" the next big thing that has hit Charismania, and Joel Osteen's latest false teaching "Possessing Your Promised Land"http://www.perfectpeaceplan.com/ http://rock-to-salt.cephasministry.com/
In this Exponential Podcast interview, Wayne Cordeiro and Dave Ferguson discuss Wayne's new book "Sifted." Wayne candidly discusses his own journey of sifting.
Guest Speaker - Wayne Cordeiro - 17 September 2011
Wayne Cordeiro is Senior Pastor of New Hope Church in Hawaii and is now President of New Hope Bible College in Eugene Oregon. I can honestly say Pastor Wayne is one of my heroes, and this has been one of the most inspiring and funny interviews I have done.
Wayne Cordeiro is Senior Pastor of New Hope Church in Hawaii and is now President of New Hope Bible College in Eugene Oregon. I can honestly say Pastor Wayne is one of my heroes, and this has been one of the most inspiring and funny interviews I have done.
Matt Prater has worked in Radio for over 15 years, working as an announcer, in sales, training staff and copywriting. He has also been a youth pastor, DJ, a Children's entertainer. Matt is currently the Pastor of New Hope Brisbane a church plant from New Hope Oahu Hawaii where Wayne Cordeiro is the Senior Pastor. Matt has recently been to Cambodia on a mission trip this is some of his story from that trip. More than anything Matt is passionate about sharing his faith with business people, students, churches and anyone who'll listen.
Awaken Conference 2008 Speaker Interview with Wayne Cordeiro
Wayne Cordeiro presents "Team DNA" in Session 2 of the Post Launch Track at the 2007 National New Church Conference in Orlando, FL on April 24th, 2007
Plenary Session 1 featuring Wayne Cordeiro on April 25th at the 2007 Exponential Conference (National New Church Conference) in Orlando, FL.
Wayne is the Senior Pastor at New Hope Oahu, a church with over 15,000 attendees. Apart from being a funny guy, his insights on leadership and "doing" church as a team are very powerful.