Log in

goodpods headphones icon

To access all our features

Open the Goodpods app
Close icon
The Courageous Pastors Podcast - Don’t take it personal, but make it personal (w/ Pastor Quovadis Marshall)

Don’t take it personal, but make it personal (w/ Pastor Quovadis Marshall)

03/24/22 • 35 min

The Courageous Pastors Podcast
Pastor Q always knew— since he was first called— he would plant a church in his hometown. The church has just completed its sixth year.

In his own words, “It’s been both better than I thought AND harder than I thought...”

++

Read more at www.CourageousPastors.com/blog/017

plus icon
bookmark
Pastor Q always knew— since he was first called— he would plant a church in his hometown. The church has just completed its sixth year.

In his own words, “It’s been both better than I thought AND harder than I thought...”

++

Read more at www.CourageousPastors.com/blog/017

Previous Episode

undefined - Look back + live forward (w/ Jeff Leake)

Look back + live forward (w/ Jeff Leake)

Jeff Leake has been pastoring a long time. He was the pastoral assistant 30 years ago. Two years in, the lead pastor moved to CA to work at another church...

Jeff stepped into the interim role, then became the lead pastor.

Today, he leads the same church— now a multi-site congregation, spanning 6 physical locations, in the PIttsburgh area.

During this season he enjoys looking back and serving young leaders, pastors who stand in the position he found himself three decades ago. More so, he especially likes serving young leaders who want to plant a church.

In this episode Jeff mentions “the good ol’ days.”

It’s easy to look back and live nostalgically. But that’s not what he refers to at all. He doesn’t suggest we should just look back in order to complain about the present, either.

Rather, looking back is a way to remind us of God’s goodness, His faithfulness...

Recently, Jeff rode through a nearby area with the leader of one of their first church plants outside the Pittsburgh area.

“We drove through the streets,” he said, “and I remembered our drive years before— when the church didn’t exist, when it was just an idea, a dream...”

He adds, “As I sat on the front row of that church, celebrating that first decade, I was moved to tears. None of this was here just years before.”

(We can also learn lesson when we glance in the rear view mirror. People say that experience is a great teacher, but mere experience isn’t. EVALUATED experience, on the other hand, truly is.)

“Looking back,” Jeff says, “offers the opportunity to celebrate the faithfulness you can easily forget.”

Many pastors faced a “crisis of faith” coming through the pandemic.

(Some are still feeling it, in fact.)

Jeff refers this to “pruning in the pandemic.” And, he reminds us that “God’s pruning is always for our good AND for future fruit” (see John 15:1f.). “Even when it comes in odd ways,” he adds. “Even then we can look back and see his past faithfulness...”

What does this pruning include?

Jeff refers to something MANY of the guest on the podcast have referenced: “We’ve been measuring the wrong things.” Or— “We’ve measured the right things in the wrong ways...”

Jeff endeavors to transform his church into a “Barnabas house,” that is, a place of encouragement— sacred space which launches people into their calling.

Barnabas is the Apostle who sold a plot of land and gave the proceeds to the early church. He’s the leader who stood by Paul, effectively endorsing him when everyone else was still nervous about his recent conversion. He’s the sage who believed in Mark, also, even though he’d bailed on Paul and Barnabas amidst their first mission venture.

You know the outputs of these actions...

  • The church had resources to feed the widows and expand its footprint.
  • Paul led mission trips, planted churches, and penned the letters which became the Scriptures we often read.
  • Mark wrote what many believe to be the first Gospel.

At each beginning of each of these stories stands that character Barnabas, the one who breathed life into people and pushed them— in a healthy way— towards their call.

++++++++

Links:

Allison Park Church

Allison Park Leadership Network = AllisonParkLeadershipNetwork.com

Gears of Growth = www.CourageousPastors.com/ogg

Schedule a free Strategy Session = www.CourageousPastors.com/strategy

Next Episode

undefined - Focus on where you are, not where you were (w/ Adam Weber)

Focus on where you are, not where you were (w/ Adam Weber)

Adam Weber shares words of wisdom with us in this episode of The Courageous Pastors Podcast.

“Control what you can control,” he says, “and trust God with the rest.”

We often do the exact opposite. We fret about the things outside our reach, but don’t handle the things we can truly manage.

Adam has been using words, like these, to encourage pastors as he speaks with them. More than any other time, he reminds them to take care of themselves, and to acknowledge their limits.

One leader recently told him, “In 18 years of ministry, I’ve never wanted to quit... until now.”

“Focus on where you ARE, not where you were,” he says.

Again, you can control things in the past. You can only live in the present.

+++

Read more + find the links to the show notes at www.CourageousPastors.com/blog/014

Episode Comments

Generate a badge

Get a badge for your website that links back to this episode

Select type & size
Open dropdown icon
share badge image

<a href="https://goodpods.com/podcasts/the-courageous-pastors-podcast-293654/dont-take-it-personal-but-make-it-personal-w-pastor-quovadis-marshall-38389669"> <img src="https://storage.googleapis.com/goodpods-images-bucket/badges/generic-badge-1.svg" alt="listen to don’t take it personal, but make it personal (w/ pastor quovadis marshall) on goodpods" style="width: 225px" /> </a>

Copy