#32 (S5) Horizontal Leadership & Gary Hamel's The Future of Management
Text within this block will maintain its original spacing when publishedMinistry moves at the speed of relationships.Ten years into his church planting journey, Oscar Perez* talks with me about a leadership philosophy that is informed by the concept of “horizontal leadership,” the opposite of hierarchy. Our conversation is inspired by Gary Hamel’s The Future of Management, published by the Harvard Business Review. Oscar makes a compelling argument that horizontal and collaborative leadership can lead to flourishing churches, ministries, and ministers. Resources Mentioned & Affiliate Links:**The Future of Management by Gary HamelThriving in Ministry*Oscar is the lead pastor and church planter of VividLife church in Plano, Texas. He also coaches pastors with Thriving in Ministry. Follow him on FB and IG..Your Pastor Reads Books is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support the podcast, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber to get notifications delivered to your inbox.YPRB host Heather Weber is a book-obsessed pastor, seminarian, and author. She is the author of Dear Boy,: An Epistolary Memoir. Find out more about her writing and creative projects at www.heatherweber.org. And, subscribe to her Dear Exiles newsletter at heatherweber.substack.com.**YPRB may receive a small commission on purchases made through the links on this page, which helps support the podcast!
#31 (S5) Microchurch, Family Crisis & Henri Nouwen’s Clowning in Rome
Text within this block will maintain its original spacing when published“My growing love for the clowns in Rome made me desire to clown around a little myself and to speak about such foolish things as being alone, treasuring emptiness, standing naked before God, and simply seeing things for what they are. I came to feel that in this full, imposing, venerable, and busy city there must be a very deep desire to live out the other side of our being, the side that wants to play, dance, smile, and do many other useless things." -Henri NouwenOn this episode, my guest Rebecca Johnston* talks about making the adjustment to pastoring solo during a crisis in her family. When trouble hits, we all need to remember what is most important and return to the grounding and sometimes “foolish” practices that help us stay anchored in the life of faith. Our discussion of Henri Nouwen’s book Clowning in Rome: Reflections on Solitude, Celibacy, Prayer and Contemplation provided a great frame for our conversation. 01:30 Planting Microchurches12:30 What is “dinner church”?17:20 Pastoring through a spouse’s mental health crisis27:29 About Henri Nouwen and Clowning in Rome31:45 Four “clown-like elements for the spiritual life. 33:00 What does celibacy as “embracing emptiness” mean for single and married folks?34:45 How celibacy teaches the church about God’s nature.Resources Mentioned & Affiliate Links:**Clowning in Rome: Reflections on Solitude, Celibacy, Prayer and Contemplation *Rebecca is an intentionally co-vocational church pastor, ordained minister, grad student, mom of two, and proud midwesterner. You can follow her house-church renovations on IG..Your Pastor Reads Books is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support the podcast, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber to get notifications delivered to your inbox.YPRB host Heather Weber is a book-obsessed pastor, seminarian, and author. She is the author of Dear Boy,: An Epistolary Memoir. Find out more about her writing and creative projects at www.heatherweber.org. And, subscribe to her Dear Exiles newsletter at heatherweber.substack.com.**YPRB may receive a small commission on purchases made through the links on this page, which helps support the podcast!
#30 (S5) Enchanted Ministry, Confessions for Pastors & John Hendrix's The Mythmakers
Text within this block will maintain its original spacing when published"If I find in myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world." -C.S. LewisSometimes ministry seems absolutely impossible. And it is, when we rely on our own strength and skillsets. What does it look like to keep coming back to the transcendent Source at work in our lives—God who wants to bring resurrection and new life to the world?I explore this question with my guest, Mandy Smith, a pastor and award-winning author and speaker. Our conversation is inspired by two books. First, Mandy’s own Confessions of an Amateur Saint: The Christian Leader’s Journey from Self-Sufficiency to Reliance on God and John Hendrix’s graphic novel, The Mythmakers: The Remarkable Fellowship between C.S. Lewis and JRR Tolkien.Resources Mentioned & Affiliate Links:**Confessions of an Amateur Saint: The Christian Leader’s Journey from Self-Sufficiency to Reliance on God by Mandy SmithThe Vulnerable Pastor: How Human Limitations Empower Our Ministry by Mandy SmithUnfettered: Imagining a Childlike Faith beyond the Baggage of Western Culture by Mandy SmithThe Mythmakers: The Remarkable Fellowship of C.S. Lewis & J.R.R. Tolkien (A Graphic Novel) by John HendrixThe Faithful Spy: Dietrich Bonhoeffer and the Plot to Kill Hitler by John HendrixThe Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. LewisTolkien On Fairy-Stories by J.R.R. TolkienThe Lord of the Rings Trilogy by J.R.R. TolkienHow (Not) to Be Secular: Reading Charles Taylor by James K.A. SmithA Secular Age by Charles TaylorRe-Enchanting the Text by Cheryl Bridges Johns*Follow Mandy on IG and learn more about her ministry at https://thewayistheway.org..Your Pastor Reads Books is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.YPRB host Heather Weber is a book-obsessed pastor, seminarian, and author. She is the author of Dear Boy,: An Epistolary Memoir. Find out more about her writing and creative projects at www.heatherweber.org. And, subscribe to her Dear Exiles newsletter at heatherweber.substack.com.**YPRB may receive a small commission on purchases made through the links on this page, which helps support the podcast!
#29 (S4) Glass Ceilings, Gendered Socialization & Susan Harris Howell's Buried Talents
Text within this block will maintain its original spacing when publishedThe stereotype of gender differences in natural ability in math and science persists despite evidence to the contrary. Boys are often told in subtle ways that success in these areas reflects their essence and will continue; girls, that theirs is due to effort and is, therefore, less certain. Girls often receive less attention and instruction even though their success equals that of boys. Since girls’ self-confidence is buoyed by feedback, the relative absence of it diminishes their self-perception as talented in these “masculine” subjects and decreases the likelihood they will continue in them. Textbooks confirm that women rarely rank among the achievers. -Susan Harris HowellMy conversation with Crystal Martin is inspired by Susan Harris Howell’s Buried Talents: Overcoming Gendered Socialization to Answer God’s Call. Crystal, who led a national network for women in ministry, helps unpack Howell’s assessment of how we arrived at a gender “gap” between men and women in church leadership roles and responsibilities. Crystal also helps us consider the kind of flourishing that could be achieved for both women and men if only the church can overcome the limiting effects of gendered socialization. 01:49 State of women in ministry in the church15:55 on Crystal’s reading life18:41 Buried Talents conversationResources Mentioned & Affiliate Links:**Buried Talents: Overcoming Gendered Socialization to Answer God’s Call by Susan Harris HowellUp Home by Ruth J. SimmonsYour Vocational Credo by Deborah Koehn LoydNorthern Seminary*Follow Crystal on IG.Your Pastor Reads Books is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.YPRB host Heather Weber is a book-obsessed pastor, seminarian, and author. She is the author of Dear Boy,: An Epistolary Memoir. Find out more about her writing and creative projects at www.heatherweber.org. And, subscribe to her Dear Exiles newsletter at heatherweber.substack.com.**YPRB may receive a small commission on purchases made through the links on this page, which helps support the podcast!
#28 (S4) Campus Ministry, Driving in the Dark, & Tish Harrison Warren's Prayer in the Night
Text within this block will maintain its original spacing when publishedGod isn’t a sadist who delights in using agony to teach us a lesson. But in the alchemy of redemption, God can take what is only sorrow and transform it into the very path by which we learn to love God and let ourselves be loved. This is the strange (and usually unwanted) way of the abundant life–the dying necessary to bring resurrection. -Tish Harrison Warren, Prayer in the NightIn seasons of grief, confusion, or overwhelm when we don’t know how or what to pray, the centuries-old prayers of the Church can comfort and anchor us in hope.My conversation with Jennie Crumpler* is inspired by her life as a campus minister serving on the collegiate staff of New Life Christian Fellowship in Blacksburg, Virginia, and by Tish Harrison Warren’s Prayer in the Night: For Those Who Work or Watch or Weep. Jennie and I reflect on what it means survive dark seasons and walk with others as they do the same.01:00 Campus ministry conversation14:57 Prayer in the Night conversationResources Mentioned & Affiliate Links:**Prayer in the Night: For Those Who Work or Watch or Weep by Tish Harrison WarrenCommon Prayer: A Liturgy for Ordinary Radicals by Shane Claiborne and Jonathan Wison-HartgroveNorthern Seminary*Follow Jennie on IG.Your Pastor Reads Books is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.YPRB host Heather Weber is a book-obsessed pastor, seminarian, and author. She is the author of Dear Boy,: An Epistolary Memoir. Find out more about her coaching, pastoral direction, and creative projects at www.heatherweber.org. And, subscribe to her Dear Exiles newsletter at heatherweber.substack.com.**YPRB may receive a small commission on purchases made through the links on this page, which helps support the podcast!