Partners in Ministry


Book Description

"Roy and Jackie Trueblood have written this book to offer solutions to this problem. Drawing on their extensive experience leading the Partners in Ministry program, they provide direct, practical guidance on how the ministry of laity and clergy can complement and strengthen each other. The basic building block in their approach is the ministry team, in which one's status as clergy or laity does not matter, but rather one's sense of God's call and gifts for ministry."--BOOK JACKET. "Partners in Ministry will be an invaluable tool for the leaders of congregations seeking to enhance the ministry effectiveness of their church."--BOOK JACKET.




Partners in Marriage and Ministry


Book Description

Does the Bible prescribe gender roles for men and women? Are men uniquely called to exercise authority in marriage and church ministry? Is submission a one-way street, for women only? Or, has God created us—and called us—to live together in a partnership of yielding in love to each other? Partners in Marriage and Ministry addresses these frequently asked questions.




Together in Ministry


Book Description

Is it possible for churches and organizations to foster healthy mixed-gender ministry collaboration? Longtime ministry leader Rob Dixon casts a compelling—and encouraging—vision for flourishing partnerships between women and men. With research findings, biblical examples, real-life stories, and practical next steps, this roadmap equips teams and individuals with next steps for making that vision a reality.




Partnering in Ministry


Book Description




Partners in Ministry


Book Description




Choosing Partnership, Sharing Ministry


Book Description

Like many clergy, Marcia Barnes Bailey began her work as an ordained leader with a vision of the pastor as leader extraordinaire, empowered by education, authority, position, and resources. She soon found herself thinking: "There has to be another way." In this book, Bailey invites pastors and congregations to a new understanding of ministry, leadership, and the church that challenges hierarchy by fully sharing responsibilities, risks, and rewards in mutual ministry. This model took shape over 10 years as Bailey, pastoral colleague Marcus Pomeroy, and the congregation they served began writing their own definition of partnership--creating their own map, trusting their own instincts, making their own mistakes. For Bailey, this kind of partnership began when she discovered the courage to listen to herself and to the Spirit for the inklings of another way--to incarnate Jesus's example, a ministry that was widely inclusive, delegated power, shared authority, and thrived with the multiplication of gifts. Partnership invites us on a journey that can transform us as leaders, as human beings, and as the church. It is challenging and exciting, and it requires hard work. It is also energizing, engaging, and empowering. Partnership unleashes the Spirit to create a new vision and reality among us, moving us one step closer to living into God's reign.







Resilient Ministry


Book Description

Why does one well-equipped, well-meaning person in ministry succeed while another fails? Bob Burns, Tasha Chapman and Donald Guthrie undertook a five-year intensive research project on the frontlines of pastoral ministry to answer that question. What they found was nothing less than the DNA of thriving ministry today.




The Power of Ministry Partnership


Book Description

The Apostle Paul taught his ministry partners in Philippi their privileges as the people of God endeavoring to work with God and for God. He opened their understanding to how God rewards those who partner with Him. He thanked the Philippians for their financial gifts, letting them know how much he appreciated them. He taught them how to access their "heavenly bank account" to receive back from God financially and other ways when they needed something from God. You may not have heard a teaching like the one you are going to read about on the following pages, but listen with your heart and believe what the man of God (Paul) has to say about prosperity and the will of God for every believer to be a ministry partner. You are about to embark on a whole new journey - ministry partnership.




Partnership in Ministry


Book Description

What type of relationship did New Testament churches have with one another? Was it a relationship of conflict and competition? Or was it a loose aggregation of individual churches scattered across the Roman Empire? Or can it be described as a cohesive partnership for the common cause of the gospel of Christ? Most New Testament church activities are recorded in connection with Paul’s ministry. In this sense, the present study started on the premise that close attention to Paul’s partnership ministry would offer a richer understanding of New Testament church relationships. By exploring some ministry areas—such as Paul’s coworkers, financial assistance, and communicative activities—this book demonstrates that Paul’s churches, occasioned and mediated by Paul’s partnership ministry, were engaged in networking and collaboration far more closely than has generally been assumed, not only among themselves but also with non-Pauline churches. Paul’s partnership ministry significantly contributed to the relationship of New Testament churches.