Category Archives: Leadership

My Aha! Moment: Critic Judo

In the book Verbal Judo, George Thompson describes judo as the art of redirecting an opponent’s energy to achieve your own goal. The idea is that when an opponent attacks you “sidestep and try a move that would add to (their) momentum”, carrying them past you where you can then gain control.

The techniques in the book helped me greatly as a campus security guard but when it came to people criticizing my ministry or my character the lessons I learned went out the window.

In my first job as Campus Minister, I seemed to receive criticism daily for the way I was handling chapel services. Some were angry because I used movie clips during my teaching. Some didn’t like that students sometimes clapped during the singing. One critic took offense that I called Joseph, Joe. To some I was irreverent and to some I was heretical. There was a group of critics, that regardless of what I did or didn’t do, where bound and determined to crush me.

I’d love to tell you I handled everything perfectly but I didn’t. One morning it all came to a head with one of my fiercest and most unrelenting critics but in this moment I learned a valuable lesson in dealing with critics.

I was assigned a morning duty with this particular critic. That meant that for 30 minutes everyday (at the start of each day) I would have to sit and listen to every conceivable complaint about my job performance and my ministry. One morning I had reached a boiling point. This man had been going on and on about how “watered down” my teaching was and about how I was merely “entertaining” students in chapel services.

I slammed my hands down on the table, bluntly told him I could no longer work with him, and then marched straight into the superintendent’s office to demand to be reassigned to some other morning duty. After pouring my heart out (read: whining and crying) the superintendent told me to go back out, apologize, and then invite the critic to speak in chapel.

To say I was livid would be the understatement of the year. I respected the superintendent so I said “Yes sir” with my lips but my heart was saying “NO WAY!!!” To be completely honest I was angry at this instruction. I didn’t want to follow through on this advice because I thought it was ridiculous. However, I did what I was told. I went back to my station, apologized for my words and behavior, and then (gulp) I asked him to speak in chapel the following week.

“Um, well, uh, well I, uh, will have to look, um, at my schedule,” he stammered. He got visually uncomfortable. He shifted. He hemmed and hawed. He backed down.

I had called his bluff.

I couldn’t believe it! His attitude and demeanor completely changed. He was quick to criticize and stonewall and say that “something must be done to save the children from heresy” but was COMPLETELY unwilling to speak in chapel. Over the course of the year I asked him 2 more times to speak in chapel. He refused both times. He also never criticized me again. Not once.

My Aha! Moment came when I realized:

  1. I needed to have a coachable heart. I was angry at the superintendent. I didn’t want to do the hard work of apologizing and swallowing my pride.  Yet, when I obeyed the instructions from an older and wiser man- a man that knew loved me and only wanted the best for me- I learned something valuable. I learned that God is faithful to those who are faithful to Him. We are faithful when we do the right thing and approach any and every critic with humility.
  2. I needed to weigh my critics. Someone once said that you should weigh your critics not count them. I learned that lesson that day in spades. Criticism is not a bad thing. In fact I learn more from my critics than I do my encouragers. A critics weight comes from their love and concern for you. If they don’t care about your development as a person than they are just a jerk. My critic was a jerk. Not once did he show me any genuine concern. He just wanted to dump on me. The superintendent did care about my development. He straight up told me my mistakes and then challenged me to make it right. Both criticized me. One loved me.
  3. Doing the right thing… eventually becomes easy. I wish I had responded to that critic from day one with openness and an inviting nature. Instead, I took everything negative and internalized it. It took everything personally. After seeing how my critic reacted to my invitation I began using that technique with every critic I could. I took their raw emotions and used that momentum to propel conversations and issues to a place where we could rationally talk. Doing this once impossible task became second nature.

In 1 Tim 5:1-2, Paul instructs Timothy on dealing with older and young generations. Paul says, “Do not rebuke an older man harshly but exhort him as if he were your Father. Treat younger men as bothers…”

When we get fed up with criticism, especially harsh and unfair treatment from older people, our first reaction is to lash back at them. Paul says to talk with them as if they were your father. They may fail to treat you as a brother (fail to view you as equal) but their attitude isn’t your responsibility. You are responsible for YOUR attitude and reaction. I am responsible for MY attitude and reaction.

I no longer try to fight against criticism. I use it’s momentum to turn a negative into a positive. When I can do that, everyone wins.

Aha! Moments from Aha!

The Aha! Conference took place yesterday. The conference speakers were asked to submit a video describing their Aha! moment in ministry- the moment they got it or the moment when something worked or a moment when everything changed or became clear. Needless to say the day was filled with some great stories, practical teaching, and plenty of Aha! moments for those participating in this unique web conference. Below I have complied a small list of some of my favorite moments or quotes from the day. In the comment section feel free to post your Aha! moment. I want to hear from you!

Leadership Network’s next FREE web seminar is on May 19, 2010. Sage will follow the same format with the themelooking like it will focus on older and wiser leaders teaching and advising younger leaders. Should be a great event. I am very much looking forward to it!

Enjoy these Aha! Moments from yesterday’s conference:

  • “Most ministers burn out in ministry because they started out walking WITH Jesus and ended up working FOR Jesus.” – Pete Briscoe (I tweeted this quote yesterday and it was ReTweeted close to 10 times by others. Apparently this struck a nerve with a handful of people.)
  • “Are you secure enough to lead from your own skin?” Looking at 1Samuel 17:38– David refused Saul’s armor. “We are trying to fight the battle of ministry wearing other people’s armor (their style, personality, talents)” -Shawn Lovejoy
  • My Aha! moment was proceeded my an Ouch! moment when I heard God say “Why don’t you do (mission work) here? What about your neighbor. “Who are people in your natural path that you can bless today?” -Shelly Juskiewicz
  • Shelly also mentioned that Craigslist has a NEEDS section for locals in your community. What if the church began reading these NEEDS postings to reach out and serve people in the community?
  • How to motivate people- Lowest level: guilt/shame -> duty/responsibility. Moving up to vision/opportunity then to love & privilege. “What is celebrated gets repeated!” -Scott Ridout

Jon Ferguson’s 6 Coaching Questions:

  1. How are you? – relationship
  2. What are you celebrating? Where are you winning?
  3. What challenges are you experiencing?
  4. What do you plan to do to solve these challenges?
  5. How can I help you?
  6. How can I pray for you?
  • How can a small church in the middle of nowhere do this? Jesus.” -Chad Hunt
  • “My AHA! moment happened when I realized I could be (myself).” Two reasons why I shouldn’t compare myself to anyone else: 1) I will find someone who is better than me and I will be discouraged. 2) I will always find someone who is not doing as well as me and I will become prideful.- Ben Daily
  • Jorge Molina’s entire talk entitled “You Are NOT Good Enough” was simply incredible. Jorge came across with humility and grace and I am better for having listened to his talk. I should post his entire teaching notes. I’ll do that this weekend.
  • “What is one area of ministry that with better execution could become a signature in your ministry?” – Glen Brechner
  • “If someone had come to me personally and asked me specifically– I think I would have responded personally. – Greg Lee (I have had this convo off and on with a friend of mine recently.)

Aha! Conference Rocked!

I had an excellent time participating in the Aha! Conference today. Aha was hosted by Leadership Network which puts out some incredibly cool and practical leadership resources. The online conference gathered about 40 different speakers, leaders, pastors, and teachers. These speakers were asked to describe in 6 minutes or less their “Aha” moment in ministry.

Some of the speakers talked about the moment they came to faith in Jesus. Some talked about a breakthrough in working with volunteers. Others talked about something they struggled with or something that they were able to overcome through the grace of Almighty God.

I took extensive notes on most of the speakers that I was able to hear (I had to take a break to have lunch with one of my leaders). I will post a few of the my favorite take-aways tomorrow here on the blog.

Sometime this weekend I think I’ll post one of my Aha! moments. There was a time when I faced a fierce critic. Through some tough love from one of my bosses I learned an invaluable lesson on working with, approaching, and overcoming critical voices in my ministry. I had a Aha! moment when I was able to see clearly, act boldly, and overcome. It just took listening to voices that mattered and putting a little faith in God’s control. That’s all. Simple right? Hardly. I look forward to sharing this with you guys.

Until then, have a great night. Get some rest. God has amazing things in store for us tomorrow.

1 Corinthians 9:24-27

“Do you not know that in a race all the runners run, but only one gets the prize? Run in such a way as to get the prize. Everyone who competes in the games goes into strict training. They do it to get a crown that will not last; but we do it to get a crown that will last forever. Therefore I do not run like someone running aimlessly; I do not fight like a boxer beating the air. No, I strike a blow to my body and make it my slave so that after I have preached to others, I myself will not be disqualified for the prize.” (1Corinthians 9:24-27 TNIV)

There is not another scripture about living and serving as a minister that speaks as powerfully to me as as 1 Corinthians 9:24-27.

Everyday there is another story about a minister packing it in or leaving full-time ministry. That’s not the story I want to tell my grandkids. I plan to be in this for the long haul and this passage gives me a workable game plan to run the race to completion.

Run in such a way as to get the prize. Ministry is a marathon and not a sprint. Long nights, little encouragement, and aimlessness is a great way to get burned out and off course. Understanding that the journey is long and listening to those who are running ahead of me allow for me to pace myself. I am thankful to the coaches in my life- those ministers and teachers who have given me the tools and taught me habits to help me minister to the best of my ability from the healthiest place in my heart and mind that I can.

Everyone who competes in the games goes into strict training. Just as an Olympic athlete trains for the games I have to train for my ministry. Spending time in God’s word gives me the endurance and the focus of purpose that will help me fall deeper in love with Jesus and his ways.

I strike a blow to my body and make it my slave so that after I have preached to others, I myself will not be disqualified for the prize. I want to leave a legacy for Jesus Christ to the generation I leave behind but not at the expense of my own soul. Soul training makes sure that I am growing in my faith and my reliance on Jesus.

What are you doing to prepare for the ministry God has given you? I want to put forth the same challenge that Paul gives us in 1 Corinthians:

Run Your Race- be the best minister you can.
Get Fit- Work out those spiritual muscles. Allow the Holy Spirit to be your personal trainer and dive deep into the Word of God. Get you lungs in shape and pray boldly to your Heaven Father.
Stay Strong- Don’t minister out of your leftovers. Give God your best, don’t forget about your own soul, and finish the race!

Mid-Week Thoughts

This is my 890th post! I’m trying to get back into the swing of posting and updating regularly. Here is what I’ve been thinking about and working through this week:

1. Major design update here at the blog. We are about to kick of the 5th year here at Kicking at the Darkness and I am trying to lay the groundwork for some great stuff to come. If you subscribe to the RSS feed, click over to the site proper and let me know what you think.

2. I’ve been listening to Kutless’ latest worship album It Is Well. Kutless puts their unique spin on It Is Well, God of Wonders, and Give Us Clean Hands. Driving guitars, tight vocals, awesome lyrics. Good stuff.

3. Very excited about class with my teens tonight. In our curriculum arc we have begun a New Testament Survey class on Sunday mornings. To supplement that I’m teaching through a handful of the epistles on Wednesday nights. We are typically very laid back on Wednesdays – couches, open bibles, lots of discussion. Tonight we keep digging in to 1Corinthians. Can’t wait!

4. Did you know that I have a Twitter account? I’ve been @michealfelker since 2007. Follow me & I’ll follow you!

5. I was sooooo disappointed with Brian McLaren’s latest book, A New Kind of Christianity. Totally lost me. Felt like I completely wasted my money. There I said it.

6. Why does listening to Led Zeppelin perk me up or make me drive faster? Whole Lotta Love is better than a dozen Coca-Colas.

7. As a leader, everything I am and everything I do needs to be anchored in my identity with Christ. Leadership begins and ends with a clear understanding of the gospel and being rotted in the grace of Jesus Christ as a free gift.” (Dave Kraft, Leaders Who Last)

8. “I must settle once and for all: Am I going to live my life concerned with who is for me or who is against me or Am I going to be consumed with WHO I AM FOR?(Andy Staney) I’m choosing he latter! How about you?

Youth Ministry Tip #4: You Gotta Have Friends

This week’s Youth Ministry Tip could be one of the keys to ministry longevity. You MUST surround yourself with people who love you, care for you, have fun with you, and who develop you. You need friends.

Close Friends
We live in a society that isn’t big on deep, meaningful relationships. Find ways to buck that trend. Be intentional about gather a group of people around you that you can call friends. Friends help ease burdens, are there to encourage you, and help you build margin into your life. Who are your closest friends?

Ministry Friends
I am privileged to work amongst a great set of men in an area-wide ministry circle. We genuinely care for one another and enjoy each other’s company. Over the years we have moved from just planning events together to really getting to know one another. We share triumphs and heartaches, frustrations and practical advice. I love these men and I know they care for me and my family. Do you have a group like this around you? If not, what can you do to begin building this type of group in your area? If you are going to stay in ministry long-term you must surround yourself with people who are like-minded and who are in the trenches right alongside you. Who are your Band of Brothers or Sisters?

3 in the Morning Friends
Back in high school I had a group of my buddies that I knew were my 3am friends. These are the guys I could call at any hour on any day. In fact, I still consider these guys close enough to take my call at anytime. Life and situations have changed us (Babies and kids are asleep at 3am) but I am glad I have people like this in my life. Who can you count on to be there for you whenever you need them?

Ministry is not designed to be a solo journey. Get you some friends to help share the burden. Encourage one another and lean on one another.

Choice Cuts from Linchpin

I have been reading Linchpin: Are You Indispensable? by Seth Godin this week and I have just been soaking in the leadership goodness that overflows from this book. This book is one part field training manual and one part kick in the pants to help you get out and make a difference right now. Here are a few of the gold nuggets I’ve highlighted so far:

You Are a Genius If a genius is someone with exceptional abilities and the insight to find the not so obvious solution to a problem, you don’t need to win a Nobel Prize to be one. A genius looks at something that others are stuck on and gets the world unstuck.

The tragedy is that society (your school, your boss, your government, your family) keeps drumming the genius part out. The problem is that our culture has engaged in a Faustian bargain, in which we trade our genius and artistry for apparent stability.

This book is about love and art and change and fear. It’s about overcoming a multigenerational conspiracy designed to sap your creativity and restlessness. It’s about leading and making a difference and it’s about succeeding. I couldn’t have written this book ten years ago, because ten years ago, our economy wanted you to fit in, it paid you well to fit in, and it took care of you if you fit in. Now, like it or not, the world wants something different from you. We need to think hard about what reality looks like now. What if you could learn a different way of seeing, a different way of giving, a different way of making a living? And what if you could do that without leaving your job? This is not a book for the wild-haired crazies your company keeps in a corner. It’s a book for you, your boss, and your employees, because the best future available to us is a future where you contribute your true self and your best work. Are you up for that? One promise: the world to come (and this book) is neither small nor flat.

It’s time to stop complying with the system and draw your own map. Stop settling for what’s good enough and start creating art that matters. Stop asking what’s in it for you and start giving gifts that change people. Then, and only then, will you have achieved your potential.

After years of being taught that you have to be an average worker for an average organization, that society would support you for sticking it out, you discover that the rules have changed. The only way to succeed is to be remarkable, to be talked about. But when it comes to a person, what do we talk about? People are not products with features, benefits, and viral marketing campaigns; they are individuals. If we’re going to talk about them, we’re going to discuss what they do, not who they are. You don’t become indispensable merely because you are different. But the only way to be indispensable is to be different. That’s because if you’re the same, so are plenty of other people. The only way to get what you’re worth is to stand out, to exert emotional labor, to be seen as indispensable, and to produce interactions that organizations and people care deeply about.

Every successful organization has at least one linchpin; some have dozens or even thousands. The linchpin is the essential element, the person who holds part of the operation together. Without the linchpin, the thing falls apart.

If your boss won’t raise your bar, you should.

Fearless doesn’t really mean “without fear.” What it means in practice is, “unafraid of things that one shouldn’t be afraid of.” Being fearless means giving a presentation to an important customer without losing a night’s sleep. It means being willing to take intellectual risks and to forge a new path. The fear is about an imagined threat, so avoiding the fear allows you to actually accomplish something. Reckless, on the other hand, means rushing into places that only a fool would go. Reckless leads to huge problems, usually on the boss’s dime. Reckless is what led us to the mortgage and liquidity crisis. Reckless is way out of style. Feckless? Feckless is the worst of all. Ineffective, indifferent, and lazy.

You are not your résumé. You are your work.

Bob Dylan & Leadership

I have been devouring Seth Godin’s Linchpin: Are You Indispensable? Godin’s aim is to enlighten, encourage, and equip people to become an indispensable leader in their organization rather than a nameless, faceless cog that can be replaced anytime.

One of the things that keeps people from standing out and excelling at work is because they believe that they have to become perfect in order to become great. That is not the case. Godin uses Bob Dylan as the perfect example.

“Bob Dylan knows a little about becoming indispensable, being an artist, and living on the edge:

Daltrey, Townshend, McCartney, the Beach Boys, Elton, Billy Joel. They made perfect records, so they have to play them perfectly . . . exactly the way people remember them. My records were never perfect. So there is no point in trying to duplicate them. Anyway, I’m no mainstream artist. . . . I guess most of my influences could be thought of as eccentric. Mass media had no overwhelming reach so I was drawn to the traveling performers passing through. The side show performers—bluegrass singers, the black cowboy with chaps and a lariat doing rope tricks. Miss Europe, Quasimodo, the Bearded Lady, the half-man half-woman, the deformed and the bent, Atlas the Dwarf, the fire-eaters, the teachers and preachers, the blues singers. I remember it like it was yesterday. I got close to some of these people. I learned about dignity from them. Freedom too. Civil rights, human rights. How to stay within yourself. Most others were into the rides like the tilt-a-whirl and the roller-coaster. To me that was the nightmare. All the giddiness. The artificiality of it . . .

The interviewer then reminded Dylan, “But you’ve sold over a hundred million records.”

Dylan’s answer gets to the heart of what it means to be an artist: “Yeah I know. It’s a mystery to me too.”

Avoiding the treadmill of defect-free is not easy to sell to someone who’s been trained in the perfection worldview since first grade (which is most of us). But artists embrace the mystery of our genius instead. They understand that there is no map, no step-by-step plan, and no way to avoid blame now and then. If it wasn’t a mystery, it would be easy. If it were easy, it wouldn’t be worth much.”

I am about halfway through Linchpin and I am ready to declare this a must for you to read- regardless of your job and regardless of your position. Come back tomorrow for some more choice quotes from this incredible read.

YMT #3: Give Credit Where Credit Is Due

This week’s Youth Ministry Tip is dedicated to all of those ministry spouses out there. My wife is a huge part of my life and my ministry- and one of the big reasons that I am of any success. I want to proclaim a great big THANK YOU to her. Here are four ways that Sandy helps me be a better minister:

She is my biggest fan and fiercest critic
No one gives me more encouragement than Sandy. She is quick to tell me that I’ve done good and she is always there to cheer me along. On the flip side, she can be brutally honest. She minces no words when she tells me I could have approached something better. She doesn’t beat around the bush when I’ve messed up either. So whether it is praise or criticism, she is honest with me and that helps me stand firm or to move forward and get better.

She is my sounding board
I often feel sorry for Sandy when she is sitting in one of my classes or participating in something I’m leading because she has had to hear about the content, the teaching, the stories, and the jokes over the course of the last week. I run ideas by her. I ask her if the transitions make sense. I gauge her reaction to a story. She is very familiar with something before I deliver it to the public… and yet… she never seems to mind. Thanks for the input babe!

She participates and leads in my ministry
There is an old joke that says that churches will often get a “two-for-one” deal when hiring youth ministers. That is most definitely the case with Sandy. Sandy participates in classes, bible studies, camps, mission trips, you name it. She cooks meals on Sunday nights, bakes brownies for Wednesdays, and opens our home for Bible studies and movie nights. She prays with girls, encourages the guys, and hangs out with them both. She is not a passive participant in the youth ministry. She is a leader.

She takes care of our home and family
IMG_4815 THE MOST IMPORTANT WAY SANDY HELPS MY MINISTRY IS BY TAKING CARE OF OUR FAMILY. No joke. Sandy does everything within her power to take care of Hewson and I. She is selfless and she is tireless in her efforts to create a quiet, loving, peaceful home. Everything gets clean, everything gets put away, everything gets taken care of. If this were the only thing Sandy did for me it would be more than enough to satisfy. Instead she takes care of our home and much, much more. Nobody does it better than Sandy. She is the greatest wife, mother, and partner in the world. I can’t thank her enough.

Thank you for every single thing that you do for us Sandy. Hewson loves you. The teens and their families love you. I love you. You are the greatest!

Now, who deserves the credit for your success in life? Give them a call. Send them a text. Tell them how much you appreciate them.

YMT #2: Desire

You want to avoid burnout or irrelevance? Then you must find the desire to move forward. Everyday is another chance for you to improve, grow, & stretch yourself and the influence of your ministry. Yesterday is over. Take what you can learn- the good AND the bad- and use it as fuel for your journey today.

Rolling Stone just posted an article from The Edge asking him what the future looks like for U2. Truth be told, while Bono may be the face of the band the heart, soul, and mind of U2 is The Edge. (Check out the doc “It Might Get Loud” for a glimpse into The Edge’s work ethic) U2’s last album was one of the best selling albums of 2009, they are currently touring the planet on the world’s largest concert stage, and they are undoubtedly the world’s biggest band. And yet, the desire to move forward, develop, and excel is pronounced.

Rolling Stone: What do you foresee for U2 in the next decade?
The Edge: I can’t think that things will change radically for us, because we are already enjoying being in the band. It matters to us that we still make music that connects, and we are still capable of potentially doing our best-ever album. It’s not a foregone conclusion that our best work is behind us. That still makes it really exciting.

Remember, U2 has experienced unprecedented sustained success for 30 years. There have been missteps and mistakes, hubris and humiliations. Does this sound like a man that is burned out and ready to give up? No. This is a man on fire! In fact, that’s a big joke in the U2 fan community. Anytime a journalist asks Bono about the upcoming album he says (without fail) that “The Edge is on fire.” That fire must come from a desire to learn and move on.

What makes ministry exciting is that your best days are not behind you. Find that desire to move forward.

At what may seem like the apex of success or at what may seem like the pit of despair there is a choice. You can get bitter or you can get better. The choice is yours. Getting bitter is the easy choice. You get to complain and people will stroke your hair and sing “Soft Kitty” over you. And you will die inside a little each day.

But.. you choose to get better and there is hope. “Therefore we do not lose heart. Though outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being renewed day by day.” (2Corinthians 4:16) There’s your promise. We serve a God that takes our dark yesterdays and gives us bright tomorrows.

Do not lose heart. Your best day is not behind you because God’s best day is not behind Him!

“Do you not know that in a race all the runners run, but only one gets the prize? Run in such a way as to get the prize. Everyone who competes in the games goes into strict training. They do it to get a crown that will not last; but we do it to get a crown that will last forever. Therefore I do not run like someone running aimlessly; I do not fight like a boxer beating the air. No, I strike a blow to my body and make it my slave so that after I have preached to others, I myself will not be disqualified for the prize.” (1Corinthians 9:24-27)