Rescue me.

Oct 03 2008 Published by under vision


When someone asks me what I love to do, or even what I do, I tell them I rescue people.  Not like a fireman or a police officer or even in the traditional sense of a pastor (rescuing someone from the judgment of eternal damnation). These rescuers aren’t wrong in what they do, but I just rescue people in a different way.  I’m gifted in other areas, therefore I do different things.
I rescue people from isolation.  Actually I’m attempting to rescue people from isolation.  Some don’t want to be rescued.  They like their privacy and their island, and that has to be okay with me to a point.  I just don’t think it’s healthy.
Let me put it this way, I don’t have to be with people every waking minute of every day, but there has to be people I’m pouring life into, people who are pouring life into me, and other people who are reaping the benefits of the aforementioned pouring.
For those of you who wonder what “pouring life into” means:

“Pouring life into” = Taking the best qualities of whoever is doing the pouring, and sharing it with others.

Some people have so many unbelievable qualities that could be used to help others grow, but tragically they choose to hide behind a wall of “I’m tired and my time is my time.”  What if instead they chose to take a night of their lives and give it to others?  To people who they could learn to love and who could learn to love them?

If you’re hiding, beware…

I’m here to help rescue you.

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Martin F. Holman

Sep 30 2008 Published by under Uncategorized

I wrote this recently in a topic discussion of a facebook group I’m in for those who attended the church/school in which I grew up.  The topic is my dad, who was the pastor of the church, and who now pastors a church in Indiana.  So here goes:

“It’s taken me quite a bit of thought to write what I’m thinking about my dad.

One of the things I’ve learned in my 10 years of ministry here at Fellowship Church in Massachusetts is that “everything rises and falls on leadership.” (thank you John Maxwell)  We have all learned this through examples like the office of the presidency or through what happened at TCA when it closed down, not to mention how close the church was to closing.  And the reason this was, was because of poor leadership at the top.

As a pastor, one thing I know now is that at the end of the day, there is a monstrous difference between being a part of something and being the leader of something.  Someone who is a part can quickly choose not to be a part.  Or even to undermine that which leads.  The person who leads must take the ultimate blame for each failure and give praise to others for the good things that have happened.  This is what makes a leader a person of character.

So here is my dad, a 23 year old man, who walks into a situation where everyone’s older than him, yet he must lead them.  Then years down the road he has three kids (who were all selfish if you ask me), and whose wife ends up having, what we now call “Bipolar disorder.“  Of course people in the Independent Baptist movement didn’t really believe in mental disorders at that point, so it was much easier to think of her having some sort of sin on her life.  (which by the way, they were told, more than once)

So running this home, and the church, and spending time with the kids, and going to every funeral, wedding, and church event, coupled with the way he was trained as a fundamentalist (Have I mentioned that I can’t believe these people get to call themselves “fundamentalists”?) was all certainly more than I could have handled.

Then there’s the pain of friends who turn their backs on you, typically because of someone else’s wrong doing (though not always).  They get mad.  They walk away.  And years of investment in the life of friends is wiped out by someone getting pissed off.  This too is leadership, and something which every leader must deal with.  I don’t speak of these things by the way, because they are what my dad told me.  My dad never said an unkind word of anyone in Fremont.  In 18 years of being there, he still feels like this was one of the greatest times of his life.

Then the truth is that my dad was at home who he was at church.

We hear stories all the time of pastor’s kids living badly because their parents were hypocrites.  This is absolutely not true of our household.  I’m sure that Amie and Brooke and I made some poor decisions in our lives, but none of them had anything to do with the character of my dad.   In fact, when I went into college, I wanted nothing more than to stay away from the church.  Not because of my dad, but because I knew the sacrifices it would lead to.  Later on,  the example of my dad was one of the big reasons I chose to go into ministry.  We saw at the house who you saw at the church.

The smile.

The occasional drifting away look like some big decision had to be made.

The immediate desire to help someone who needed his help.

As a pastor I’ve seen a dozen men in ministry run from their families if things weren’t going well.  But not my dad.  He was called to a ministry-at home, at church, in life-and he was going to accomplish those tasks.

He still is accomplishing those tasks.  And I’m proud to say that although I have a lot of pastoral mentors in my life, there is none more important to me than him.

Thanks Martin F. Holman

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A New Age, part 1

Jul 09 2008 Published by under Life

It happened in October 2007.  Two things actually that rocked my world.  I might be a late bloomer, but I finally got why Myspace and facebook was so compelling, and why RSS feeds were going to change the world, and why the connectivity of the new web was literally transforming as we know it.
Then I had a conversation with this guy who confirmed a lot of the questions that I had with his thoughts of what was happening and walaa…

Then I read this book called “Wikinomics” that explained it to me step by step.

And now, I’d like to share  4 thoughts over the next 3 or 4 days that I’ve learned about the way life is moving in the future.  These thoughts are mainly for me, and Of course you can ignore them, but it won’t change the fact that they are happening, with or without us, like a train that cannot be stopped, save for a run-in with Hancock.

My thoughts are as follows:
1.  Go Public
2.  Open Sourcing
3.  Get rid of your junk
4.  Create content

Going public is the first thing I’m learning.  Going public is not so much about narcissism, as it is about being an open book.  My new refusal to hide everything about myself because “I deserve privacy.”  There is a price for this of course, specifically in my profession of clerical duties, but I think this is vitally important.  Personally I’ve always felt this way.  Some call this immaturity, because “pastors shouldn’t act that way”, but I prefer to call it “being real.”  Sometimes me being real is good, and sometimes I make mistakes, but I believe the end result is health.

Consider this proverb:  “Better is open rebuke than hidden love.”

This is one of the reasons I blog and twitter - not because I want people to hang on every word I have to say, but because I literally want to share the things that are on my heart and mind.  Open, not hidden.  Sharing, and not stifling.

So I continue to work at going public, sharing who I am and what I believe all the while attempting to grow the fruits of the spirit Paul speaks of in the book of Galatians.  What about you?

By the way, two things I still believe in:  Confidentiality & Tact

This post was written with the Watercooler Wednesday in mind

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How I connect

Jun 19 2008 Published by under Life

Sometime in 2005 I took a test to find out what my strengths were.  I found that my top 5 were as follows: 1.  Ideator, 2.  Positivity, 3.  Connectedness, 4.  Competition, 5.  Developer

I noticed as several of my friends took the same test that several of us had one of those in common.  Out of the 7 people I know that took the test, 5 of them had connectedness as a strength.
Some qualitites of someone with this strength – “That I gain confidence from knowing that we are not isolated from one another or from the earth and the life on it;  I am part of a larger picture, and I must not harm others because I will harm myself;  and I am a bridge builder between people of different cultures.”

Enter the beauty of web 2.0 to people like me. 
I’m not a fan of compartmentalizing my life.  I like things, whether it’s people in my life or web sites I go to, to all be connected to one another.  This makes my mom and google both very happy.

How does this affect me?
I like it when my family and my friends and all the people in my life meet.  What makes this interesting is when they don’t get along.  I think everyone should get along.  Not like each other, just get along.

I like using google and itunes.  My friend Clay swears against itunes, and probably rightfully so, but I like when things connect together easily, so I use it.  I know, I know Clay, I sacrifice things to use itunes.  Google connects a lot of things in my web life, like my Calendar, my way to find where I might be going, my blog reader, my connect with Fellowship Church podcasts, and even my weather, not to mention my documents (I don’t have to pay for Microsoft office again!)

Weather

58°F
Cloudy
Wind: N at 0 mph
Humidity: 84%
Today
Thunderstorm
74° | 54
Fri
Chance of Storm
74° | 58°
Sat
Chance of Storm
79° | 61°
Sun
Chance of Storm
76° | 61°
I like learning from anything or anyone.  Whether it’s a great pastor, a marketing expert,
or a book that gets me thinking.  This is probably why I fare better in New England than I
might have in the midwest.
I don’t like to keep people that are an important part of my life apart from each other. 

I think that there is a terrific connection between Don Miller’s “Blue like Jazz”, Vince Antonucci’s
I became a Christian and all I got was this lousy T-shirt“, and Gregg Easterbrook’s “The
Progress Paradox”

This has been a cultural post with Randy Elrod’s Watercooler Wednesday in mind.
 
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