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Books, videos, exercises, & more designed to equip you for fruitful, gospel-infused mission and ministry.
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SELF-PACED COURSES
Our courses are designed to go through it alone at your own pace, or we have pricing plans to incorporate anywere from a small group to a whole church. We hope you’ll pursue these courses in the context of a close community, and of course, our “pay-what-you-can” policy applies to each self-paced course.
Each session includes an ebook with information on two related concepts, followed by reflection questions. The goal is to help you implement and apply principles in a contextualized way, as you and your team take next steps into sending for God’s mission.
Alan Briggs gives reflection questions and an assignment to make the content personal and tangible. These punchy, practical axioms, gleaned from Alan’s years of leading multiple different organizations and coaching dozens of leaders, will offer the practical wisdom many leaders need.
Bill Clem helps us consider four aspects of thriving in ministry. Bill has worked for multiple churches, academic institutions, and organizations. Through his own trial and heart-ache, Bill is still pouring himself into ministry, and giving this season of his life to help other’s soul thrive for decades in ministry.
PAST WORKSHOPS
Online workshops are held on Zoom with an experienced trainer and viewers are able to ask questions throughout the workshop with a Q&A at the end of the sessions.
FREE EXERCISES
Free exercises are downloadable content that will help you on your journey of gospel-infused mission and ministry by providing everyday practices, rhythms, and diagnostic questions.
ARTICLES
Creating A Culture That Supports Your Vision
This exercise asks you to define a certain area of your church’s vision, then invites you into an honest assessment of what aspects of your culture promote that area of your vision, vs. what aspects of your culture work against it.
DTR: Understanding Relationships in Mission and Ministry
Biblically and experientially, “discipleship” and “mission” at their best are relational pursuits. In this exercise, define your relationships in your mission and ministry with categorized roles and then prayerfully bring balance to them.
Asking the 5 Questions of Each Passage
It is easy, in nearly every realm of ministry & mission, to rely on our ways: our strength, our plans, our strategy. This exercise is designed to help you take a tangible step in fighting that temptation and reversing that trend to dependence on God.
Jesus as the True and Better: Biblical Types
Work through the theological concept of “types” by discovering what is true about the original biblical element or character and then learn how Jesus is the true and better version.
Seeing the Story of God in the Stories of God
The whole Bible tells the one overarching meta-story of God. Each story, command, and passage in the Bible also tell God’s story, over and over in “micro-” ways. Think through some micro-stories from the Bible and how they reflect the various parts of the story of God.
Rediscovering the True Story
This exercise invites you into God’s one true story, which he tells in the Bible and our lives. Part 1 helps us see the story in the Bible and in our lives. Part 2 helps us remember the story's truths in times of of disbelief and temptation.
Knowing Your Mission Field
This exercise invites you to study your neighborhood, city, workplace or community to start to know the ins and outs of your missional sphere.
Living Your Calling
This exercise invites you to ask what it would look like for your primary calling — your identity in Christ — to show up in your secondary callings — your “station in life” (the various situations that make up your everyday existence: your job or school, your relationships, your neighborhoods, your hobbies, etc.).
Coaching, Consulting, & Counseling
There are many ways that an organization's leaders can equip, train, and support other members of the body in their giftings. One of the primary distinctions is knowing what others need, and how we can best meet that need. Often, leaders need to define the difference between three postures to take, to help see others in our organizations thrive.
A Culture of Everyday Discipleship
Many churches, groups, and organizations say they want to equip others to participate in discipleship and disciplemaking. But to make that aspiration a reality, a culture must be created that bolsters your vision. The questions in this exercise can help you assess your current culture, and take a tangible next step toward becoming a disciple-making group.
Sharing Your Story
A helpful “first step” to take in getting to know others more deeply is intentionally learning each other’s stories. This is true whether you have walked with people for a long while or whether you just formed a new group.
Reflecting Your Story in the Story of God
This exercise invites you to look at the things that shape and form you, either in light of or instead of the story God says is most true of you.
Biblical Lament
The practice of lament is lost in our modern world. Most people will distract or steel themselves rather than enter into a process of lament. Often misunderstood, lament is seen as a synonym for grief or venting anger, and what good does that do? The Bible teaches us a way to lament that leads to hope even amidst suffering. This exercise will help dig into what Scripture has to say about this lost art.
Speaking the Good New Into Our Stories
This exercise invites you to reflect on how the gospel might sound like good news in tangible ways, into real life scenarios people face. The “four movements” of the Story of God show us how Jesus gives us a true and better vision for different aspects of peoples’ worldview and common perceptions.
Engaging Shared Mission
It can be difficult to define a shared mission — but such definition is often less about creating something brand new, and more about discerning and discovering what God is already doing among your community, together.
Displaying the Gospel
The Gospel is the “good news” of Jesus Christ, the story of God’s redemption and restoration of a fallen world. As we follow Jesus, our lives will begin to model his holy and loving ways. This exercise is provided to help make the connection between God’s commands to our daily lives.
Jesus as the True Armor of God
We will work through each piece of the armor of God, reflecting on God’s power and my weakness, what can’t I do through him who gives me strength.
Discovering Areas of Unbelief
Walk through this activity as a group being honest, prayerful, and loving as you make truths about Jesus personal together.