CurtHarlow.com

April 28, 2009

Planting Without Planting Your Face p.1

All out sprinting combined with chest high obstacles make for one of the most  difficult events in all of sport, the hurdles.  Great hurdlers evoke wonder as they sail over these obstacles with split second precision. Less then great hurdlers, on the other hand, often evoke a grimace as they trip and plant their faces in the track.

The analogy is perfect for those of us starting new ministries. Some planting hurdles are smaller (”Which coffee shop become my de-facto office?”) and others are enormous (”It cost how much to start a children’s ministry?”). All seem to require that we run at full speed and for those of us who have face planted (and or watch a great friend do so) getting them right is very important.

As I have run at them, or cheered on friends who are racing, I have noticed that a very short list of hurdles repeat themselves over and over. Every planter will see these four obsticles as they run: Assessment, Funding Models, Initial Strategy and Joy in the Job.

Let me explain Assessment and in future posts I will deal with the other hurdles one by one.

Hurdle One: Team Leader Assessment.
In our race to advance the cause Team leaders are to often chosen before they are fully vetted. The demanding full speed leaps required for this job, including casting vision, raising funds, facilitating spiritual hunger, building relationships, negotiating conflict and risk management are  all behaviors that MUST be in place BEFORE the starting gun sounds.  If the planter is not  properly assessed the plant has literally an 80% chance of landing up in the dirt.

Too many missions and church planting organizations what to take short cuts here. The reasons for skipping or skimping on assessment seem to repeat themselves over and over again.

1. Rushed Promotion: To persevere an opportunity or quail a crisis someone is appointed as team leader too quickly and without assessment. Short cuts are never shorter and in planting they are a formula for major abrasions on both the planter and the mission field. Quality in leadership not calendar should drive ever plant. Whenever you hear someone say, “Get Jim in there quickly before this opportunity passes.” a hurdle getting ready to trip up the plant.

2. Old Faithful : Without being assessed, someone who has proven themselves faithful in a supporting role is made a team leader. The problem here is that faithfulness alone cannot determine whether or not the planter has the specific job experience and skill set needed to plant well.  Whenever you here, “Forget the regular process – by golly Jim has been the most loyal leader ever. It should be his turn to plant.” a hurdle is likely to trip up both Jim and his team.

3. The Buddy System: The unassessed leader is given the job of team leader based on their connections to top leaders in the oraganization, not based on their past behaviors and skill set. fail-hurdlesThis can often be a relative or former staff member of  someone powerful. Whenever you here: “The word came done from the big office that Jim gets the job and doesn’t have to go through the normal vetting process.” you are likely to be headed for a hurdle trip.

I am not the sort who advocates one method or tool often, but in the case of assessing team leaders I have becoem somewhat inflexible. There just is no better method of determining rediness for team leadership then  Dr. Charles Ridley’s Church Planter Profile Assessment.

Next: Funding Models and why planter fail.

Great Preaching

Filed under: News Items — Curt @ 8:44 am

I heard Jeff Lucus speak for the first time last night at the N. Cal/Nev. District Council. His amazing humor, careful treatment of the passage, knowledge of history and couragious humble exhortation really encouraged me. Check out his site: http://www.jefflucas.org/

April 23, 2009

Cornell Chi Alpha is Targeted for Protests

Filed under: Featured — Curt @ 11:36 am

cornell_clockThis Friday our group at Cornell will be the target of a anti-discrimination rally because of their stance on openly homosexual students serving in the leadership within the group. I know some of the leaders here personally. They are some of the most intelligent and kind leaders in our movement.

For the campus papers coverage see The Cornell Daily Sun’s coverage.

Freshmen Year Memories

Filed under: News Items — Tags: , , , — Curt @ 11:27 am

For a look at one students memories of Freshmen year on a major North East Campus read here: http://cornellsun.com/section/arts/content/2009/04/22/falling-apart-freshman-year-memories

April 22, 2009

RnB Jesusy Goodness

Filed under: News Items — Tags: , , , , — Curt @ 11:30 am

I hardly ever promote stuff but you have to check out my friend Jarret LeMaster. RnB/Worship. Very Jesusy cooool. http://cdbaby.com/cd/jarretlemaster

Jarrett LeMaster – The Picard of Next Generation Spiritual Leadership

jarretlemasterLet’s just all agree that Santa Barbra is where the Garden of Eden must have been. I spent the weekend there working with our Chi Alpha leaders to do a comedy night outreach and look at our long term strategy at UCSB. Very fun.

From Santa Barbra I spent a hurried 40 some hours on site in Covina CA with our Chi Alpha leaders at Cal Poly P. Lindsay Fudenna leads our group there and is amazing. Basically, she has done the impossible. On a major commuter campus, in a major urban area with little funding and lots of obstacles she has forged an amazing Chi Alpha group from scratch. An all this working with mostly engineering students. Amazing. She is a Commuter Campus Whisperer.

One of her partners in Chi Alpha-gineeering is the young adult/worship leader at Covina First, Jarrett LeMaster. Jarrett is a creative funnel cloud. Part time voice over artist, actor, song writter, producer and comedian. Full time worship pastor and young adult clairvoint. Oh and Jarrett does the best impression of Christopher Walkin reciting the Be Attitudes of any human alive. Put the mix in with the equally talend spouse Christina and cuteness manifest 6 mo. old Liam and you have a power packed leadership family.

Being around these leaders makes my cells divide faster and my hair follicles hang on for one more year. They are life giving in their commitment, skill, spiritual intimacy and humor.

I rarely promote things but to get a just a small taste of the talent at Cal Poly P check out Jarrett’s music here: http://cdbaby.com/cd/jarretlemaster. You’ll notice by the cover art the Jarrett is one of those guys who went bald at age 10. That is why I call him the “Jean Luke Picard of Next Generation Spiritual Leadership.” Enjoy.

April 15, 2009

Reach Stanford

Filed under: News Items — Curt @ 2:05 pm

Stanford University is of the utmost strategic importance!

Glen Rocks

Filed under: News Items — Curt @ 2:00 pm

without a doubt, Glen is the best person I know.

Powered by WordPress