Pmkyker’s Weblog


In honor of my executive pastor and his wife
May 15, 2008, 1:15 pm
Filed under: All things Church

Our Exec Pastor had knee surgery last week. The stories of what is going on at the Morale’s household are hilarious. When I saw this video…I could just see PJ.

Brenda you are one awesome woman! That is why we all love you so much.

PJ we miss you man. :)



Some things to be thankful for…

I have become a church planting junkie. I have.

To be honest, my experience level with pastoring people and building leadership was decent, but when it came to planting a church…I really didn’t have a clue what I was doing.

A couple of weeks back, I read a study on church planting. This particular group did a study on 2800 church plants nationwide. Their criteria was this…

  • Must be between the age of 3yrs and 6yrs.
  • Must be total self-sufficient financially. (No outside financial support)
  • Must be in a city of more than 30,000 people.
  • Had an average active membership of more than 200.

Here is what they found…out of the 2800 churches that fit that criteria only 7% of them met those requirements. I mean really…7%? That is only 196 congregations…

That floored me.

God has been good to us. We struggled hard for our first year and a half. I wasn’t for sure if I had the juice to keep hitting the wall and getting up, but then something broke. The truth hurts sometimes and our services sucked when we first started. Now, we have mostly awesome Sundays, some decent ones, and every once in a while a few bad ones, however, God has been good to CFAN.

Here is what we have to be thankful for…

  • At ten months old, we bought property with only our church doing the heavy lifting. God made it happen.
  • We have millions in assets and we are only 31 months old. God made it happen.
  • Our active membership has finally inched over 200. This is the biggest miracle considering that I run off alot of people :)
  • We have some of the best, most loyal, and zealous leaders anywhere. I mean that. It is not just something that I say because it’s a blog or I have to…I mean it. He is the Lord of the harvest…He always knows just what we need.
  • We started out trying to reach people around my age (30s) but in the process we have truly become a multi-generational church. All ages worship alongside each other every Sunday.
  • 35 Salvations and 85 baptisms!
  • Our children’s programs is just amazing. This is a pretty big deal considering it is hard getting a solid kid’s ministry off the ground. The amount of volunteers it takes for all the services, classes, and age groups is amazing.
  • God has been so good to us and the best is yet to come!


Be in prayer for Forrest Pollack (updated)
May 13, 2008, 9:04 am
Filed under: My thoughts on current affairs | Tags: , , , , ,

*Edit at 1:35 pm Est time*

At 12:30pm EST the church released a statement that Pastor Forrest and his son did not survive the plane crash. Our hearts and prayers go out to the family, staff, and members of Bell Shoals Baptist. Pastor Forrest leaves behind a wife and five children. His son Preston was only 13 years old.

It all seems kinds surreal.

Let us now be the church and surround this family with all the love and prayer that we can.

*Original Post*

E-mails, phone calls, and texts have been coming in all morning.

For those that do not know he is the pastor for Bell Shoals Baptist Church here in town. So, this will have local ramifications.

Please, be in prayer that both him and his son are found. From what I understand the situation is dire. We need to pray for God’s miracle provision. You can follow all the updates from the search on the church site here.



I hate know it alls…

but then again….I like this guy…Tim Keller is the pastor of this church.

He is a great communicator, missiologists, church planter, and reformed in his theology. Very heady…and if you are into cotton candy sermons this guy is not for you.

But, for years one of my favorite quotes was by St. Francis of Assisi…”Preach always and if necessary use words.” He tore it up. Sad thing is he was right.

Want to know what I’m talking about…watch here.



Does He love us because we obey?
May 8, 2008, 9:47 am
Filed under: All things Leadership | Tags: , , , , ,

Have you ever messed up? I mean a whopper, a doozy…I mean got yourself in a real tight? How we respond after we mess up is crucial. There are only two responses in the life of the believer…to take the religious road or the gospel road. And, trust me, there is a big difference.

Here is the fundamental difference between religion and the Gospel.

Martin Luther’s fundamental insight was that the principle of ‘religion’ is the deep default mode of the human heart. The heart continues to work in that way even after conversion to Christ. Though we recognize and embrace the principle of the gospel, our hearts will always be trying to return to the mode of self-salvation, which leads to much spiritual deadness, pride and strife, and ministry ineffectiveness.

I can’t tell you how much I see this working in my own life at times and the lives of other believers. Why is it that still after knowing that God has called us by His love, His Grace, and His son….that we still try “do” things to please God?

Think about this statement for just a minute…

The gospel is “I am accepted through Christ, therefore I obey” while every other religion operates on the principle of “I obey, therefore I am accepted.”

Is it important to be obedient to the things of God…for sure…this is what Isaiah 1:19 says.

For us to become disobedient would speak to the lack of love or ever more so a lack of a regenerative heart. One true characteristic of someone in love with God is the constant regeneration taking place in the life of that believer. He shows us things on a consistent basis that need to change or be adjusted…however…it still does not mean that you are not accepted until you are fully obedient. It is true that your fulfillment as a Chrisitian is tied to your level of obedience, but you are accepted because He loves you.

I hear all the time…statements like “When I get my life straight I will”…It bothers me because when I hear a statement like this it means that we have taken the regenerative work of God out of His hands, and we have now become the driving force behind our own change. This is why we get stuck.

It is an acceptance issue.

We feel that we can’t be accepted by Him because we are not holy like Him, perfect like Him, worthy like Him…because we haven’t been fully obedient to Him. We dropped the ball…or so religion says. Paul talks about God’s acceptance here.

We are loved first, accepted second, and called to obedience third. (Gospel)

Not the other way around….obedient first, then accepted, and once accepted then loved. (Religion)

I thank God that He loves me even when I mess up, drop the ball, or disobey. My heart may break when I do…but it never causes me to question whether I am accepted by Him or not. That is the difference between being Gospel oriented in my response towards failure and being religious about it.