Friday, December 29, 2006

Lake County Network of Congregations

When the story of the Church of Lake County is told in the annals of time, 2006 will be described as a dramatic year! The vision of revival and spiritual awakening, owned by a few revolutionary pastors at the beginning of 2006, began to spread across Lake County in tangible ways.

- ShareFest grew to nearly 40 churches putting more than 10,000 volunteers serving our communities in the name of Jesus beyond the walls of our congregations.

- Hundreds of people are coming together in corporate prayer across denominational, cultural, economic, and geographical barriers through When We Pray quarterly concerts of prayer.

- We have 29 Catalyst churches; 20 have committed to financially support Catalyst from their annual budgets in the next year. (You can make church or individual contributions to Catalyst, 1200 American Way, Libertyville, IL. 60048. Individual contributions are tax-deductible.)

- Church leaders began to meet locally in our 10 Lake County Districts to forge relationships of trust, to take hills together locally, and prayerfully depend upon God together.

- Numerous local initiatives are emerging to renew the hearts of God’s people, reposition local congregations to run with God, restore the reputation of Christ, and reconcile people to God across Lake County in 2007.

- Over 300 people representing 70+ churches attended the Catalyst Forum ’06 in November. John Perkins’ words inspired and encouraged us forward in the dream that he never thought he would see in his lifetime.

Because the work of Catalyst has grown so dramatically this past year, I am delighted to announce that Bill Yaccino will be joining the Catalyst team as Executive Director January 1, 2007. I will continue to give the overall leadership of Catalyst as the Senior Director.

Bill comes as a seasoned pastor and veteran in church collaboration movements. Before joining Willow Creek as an Area Pastor three years ago, Bill was involved in the Fresno One By One leadership movement in Fresno, California. Fresno was an early pioneer and continues to be a model for community transformation through church collaboration.

Originally from Chicagoland, a graduate of Purdue University with Masters Degrees from Creighton University and Mennonite Brethren Biblical Seminary, a former Air Force officer, a social entrepreneur, husband and father—I am delighted to have Bill join me in this great work of God in Lake County.

2007 is going to be a dynamic year as we fan the spark of spiritual revolution that was ignited in 2006!

Text Box:

Hand me another match,

Jim

Senior Director, Catalyst


“This Message of salvation spread like wildfire all through the region.” Acts 13:49 (The Message)

Catalyst
One Church. Many Congregations.

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Northern Suburbs Declare "One Church; Many Congregations"

NPPN interviewed Jim Tomberlin (bio below) . . .

NPPN: Jim, you've recently moved from leading/serving on a pastoral team to leading a collaborative effort among a variety of congregations and ministries - What drew you to this position?

JT: As a senior pastor of an emerging mega-church in Colorado Springs in the 90’s, I came to believe that God had given me influence in the community that should be used beyond the walls of my congregation. I came to understand that God had given me gifts of leadership with an entrepreneurial bent that could be used to mobilize the Body of Christ for church growth and community transformation on a regional level. I saw the impact of working with other churches to serve our community together and the positive effect it had on my own congregation and on me as a leader. It was a win-win situation. We were doing good things together in the community and that was also good for our congregations.

I am convinced that if the Body of Christ in a local community can come together in unity and mobilize around its common redemptive mission, it could become an irresistible force for good that could revolutionize an entire region. When I came to Chicagoland to pioneer the multi-site church strategy for Willow Creek Community Church, I worked on forging networks of church leaders across Chicagoland to serve and impact the region together. Catalyst is one of those networks.

NPPN: Explain the vision of Catalyst. . .

JT: The vision of Catalyst is to mobilize the Body of Christ for a spiritual revolution in Lake County, Illinois. We believe that when the Church is revived and the lost are spiritually awakened in Christ community transformation takes place. Acts 2 provides our biblical model for a unified Church working together for a spiritual revolution that results in community transformation.

At Catalyst we believe we have been called to renew the hearts of God’s people, reposition the Church for revival, restore the reputation of Christ in our community, and reconcile people to God in our region. Our desire is to be a “catalyst” for renewal and spiritual awakening all across Chicagoland—mobilizing tools, resources, and events and most of all the body of Christ to help bring a spiritual revolution to our region, beginning with Lake County.


NPPN: Describe the difference in perspective; how does a congregational leader think differently than a county-wide leader?

JT: Congregational leaders tend to focus primarily on their local church. County-wide leaders think about their congregations in context of the larger Church—the Body of Christ in their region. They see the Church the way God sees the Church—One Church, many congregations. County-wide leaders see themselves as part of the larger Body of Christ and value the unique contributions of other local congregations, ministries and organizations in the community to the greater Kingdom effort.

NPPN: What does "One Church, Many Congregations" mean and, maybe more importantly, what are the implications of this principle for local church leaders?

JT: Throughout the New Testament, the Church is described in terms of cities—the church of Jerusalem, Antioch, Corinth, Ephesus, Smyrna, Pergamum, Thyatira, Sardis, Philadelphia, Laodicea, etc. You get the idea that when God looks down on a region, He doesn’t see individual churches---He sees One Church, His Family meeting in multiple congregations across a geographical area.

This is confirmed theologically in 1 Corinthians 12, “For we were all baptized by one Spirit into one body…the Body is not made up of one part but of many.” Ephesians 4 states that “there is one Body and one Spirit—just as you were called to one hope, when you were called—one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all.” Jesus affirms this spiritually in his prayer recorded in John 17, “Father, may they be one, as we are one.”

Somehow Christian leaders think unity is nice, but not necessary. The reality is that we are called to a functional unity based on our spiritual unity in Christ and it is the basis for credible proclamation of the Gospel on a regional basis. Jesus prayed this for us in John 17, “May they be brought to complete unity to let the world know that You sent me.” God designed the Church locally and regionally to function as a body with all the parts working together in harmony. As the Apostle Paul reminds us in 1 Corinthians 12, “When one part of the body suffers, we all suffer; when one part prospers we all rejoice.” This is the way healthy local congregations are designed to function individually and corporately.

NPPN: Transformation has become a buzz-word in city-reaching and collaborative partnerships. What defines or best describes the goals of a transformational movement? Is it possible to know if transformation has taken place? Is this just another fad or program?

JT: Eric Swanson of Leadership Network describes the paradigm shift that occurs when city-reaching, collaborative efforts take root in a community and its leaders. You can find the full article at www.catalystweb.org:

1. From building walls to building bridges.
2. From measuring attendance to measuring impact.
3. From encouraging the saints to attend the service to equipping the saints for works of service
4. From “serve us” to service—from inward to outward focus.
5. From duplication of human services and ministries to partnering with existing services and ministries.
6. From fellowship to functional unity.
7. From condemning the city to blessing the city and praying for it.
8. From being a minister in a congregation to being a minister in a parish.
9. From anecdote and speculation to valid information.
10. From teacher to learner.

Effective and sustained church-based community transformation will show tangible results both in the Church and in the Community. If the Church in a region is not showing a substantial growth in baptisms and church attendance then our efforts will not sustain long term. But, if the Church is seeing significant Christ-awakenings occurring that translate into transformed lives and local congregational growth; then we should see over time, a transformed community as reflected in lower crime rates, divorce rates, abortion rates, and poverty rates. Spiritual and social demographics are useful and tangible ways to measure and evaluate our effectiveness.

NPPN: What are the most significant reasons these transformational movements stall?

JT: The team at Mission Houston (www.missionhouston.org) has identified the typical reasons that transformational movements stall and I have added a few others as well:

  1. Leaders not having a clear idea of where they are going and a workable map to get there.
  2. Leadership teams moving from a catalytic role to one of sponsoring and owning ministries.
  3. Current leaders failing to engage senior leaders from the diversity of the Body of Christ, especially prominent leaders from the African American and Hispanic community.
  4. Current catalysts not seeing and not moving beyond prayer and relationships only.
  5. Leaders committed to the transformational process not engaging in community based ministry.
  6. Senior leaders not leading the way.
  7. A low level of commitment by leaders leads to an administrative rather than a catalytic leadership role.
  8. The strategic initiative is hijacked by some other competing agenda.
  9. The initiative is under funded, typically beginning with the leadership team.
  10. Leaders not giving priority to fostering spiritual vitality and relational priority within the pastoral community.
  11. Leaders and others not understanding the holistic and comprehensive nature of transformation, so settling for something less.
  12. Thinking too regionally and not going local enough in relationships and initiatives.
  13. A failure to mobilize believers and leaders from the marketplace.

NPPN: Who has had the most influence on your thinking about community transformation?

JT: Peter Wagner, John Dawson, Robert Lewis and Jack Dennison have captured a lot of the principles of city reaching/community transformation. Eric Swanson’s writings with Leadership Network on the Externally Focused Church have been instructive as well. John Perkins and the Christian Community Development Association have also had a profound impact upon my thinking.

NPPN: What is the easiest mistake to make when asking leaders to work together?

JT: Not giving them something to do, something to focus on, a hill to take. Leaders are wired for action. Prayer and fellowship are not motivators for leaders. They see prayer as a means to an end and fellowship as a by-product of taking a hill together.

NPPN: Where is the community most open to collaborating with the Church?

In the suburbs I see believers who want to meet the basic needs of under-resourced neighborhoods with food, shelter, and basic services. In urban areas missionally oriented believers want to partner with schools—helping to provide a safe and quality education for our children.

NPPN: When is a community ready for transformation?

JT: When the local “anchor pastors” embrace the unity of the Body of Christ and take ownership as the spiritual gatekeepers of their community, then the community becomes poised for real transformation. It begins with local pastors, but must move beyond them and engage the masses who are sitting in the pews to participate in that transformation on a practical level. Sustained community transformation will not happen without mobilizing believers in the marketplace, ministries and organizations already existing in the community. The pastors cast the vision and empower the people. The people get the job done.

NPPN: Why are mega-church pastors so rarely involved in these kinds of efforts?

JT: All pastors have to resist the tendency to think their church is the center of the universe. The larger the church, the easier it is to become consumed with the needs of the congregation to the neglect of the larger community beyond the walls. City reaching efforts will not be sustainable and successful without the engaged leadership of the “anchor pastors” which should include the local mega-church pastors.

NPPN: How should they be invited into the process?

JT: Leaders don’t get “invited into a process”, they launch movements! Leaders are always drawn to the bold, compelling “grander” vision. When they get a picture of what could happen if the Body of Christ could get united in a practical way, then they will pick up the mantle of leadership. Prayer leaders should pray that the local mega-church pastors see the vision and impact of a local unified Body of Christ. I am encouraged that the emerging mega-church pastors of the 21st century are more missional in thinking beyond the walls of their own congregations.

NPPN: List a few resources that have served you well.

    City Reaching: On the Road to Community Transformation by Jack Dennison This is really the textbook for city reaching along with John Dawson’s book Taking our Cities for God which is so useful to intercessors. Dennison’s book is very comprehensive. I always go back to this book.

    The Church of Irresistible Influence by Robert Lewis The pastor of Fellowship Bible Church in Little Rock, AR shares the Little Rock story—one of the most effective church-based community transformation examples.

    The Tipping Point: How little things can make a big difference by Malcolm Gladwell (The rest of the title tells why this book is important! Sometimes reaching an entire region or nation can seem to be such an impossible task. This book brings the task down to real possibilities.)

    Mission America---www.missionamerica.org---The education/sharing information site for Mission America is www.cityreach.com/. This site and the Mission Houston site have a lot of really useful articles on the subject.

    The “Transformations” Videos----George Otis is the person who “originated” the concept of spiritual mapping to help make prayer and intercession more effective. His video “Transformations” has been so inspirational for so many and it proves that transformation on a larger scale is not only possible it is already happening in many places around the world. The Sentinel Group is his ministry. www.sentinelgroup.org

    Arthur Burk of Plumbline Ministries has a set of tapes on the “The Redemptive Gifts of Cities” that are also instructive. www.plumblineministries.com

JIM TOMBERLIN
Bringing churches together for kingdom impact has been a life-long obsession for Jim Tomberlin. God has utilized Jim in a variety of ministries from pastoring a church in Germany, to growing a mega-church in Colorado Springs, to pioneering the multi-site strategy at Willow Creek.
As the Director of Catalyst in Chicagoland, Jim is leveraging his three decades of pastoral experience as a spiritual entrepreneur, international church leader, mega-church pastor, alliance-builder, visionary communicator, city-reaching specialist, and multi-site pioneer to help local churches fulfill their destiny.

Jim holds a B.A. in Anthropology from Georgia State University and a Masters of Theology from Dallas Theological Seminary.
Jim and his wife, Deryl, have three grown children.

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Friday, December 22, 2006

Movie Premier ~ Evangelism Tool

Dear Phil,
I am privileged to be representing an independent film titled BELLA. This film touched my heart and soul deeply, and I believe it will do the same for Christian audiences. It is a film that speaks loudly through story but is not preachy; a film that has the power to impact lives in a positive and beautiful way.
BELLA is an important film that all high school and college students will benefit from seeing. I am inviting you to please come to a special screening of BELLA at the Yorktown Premium Room in Lombard at 7:00 pm on January 10. An E-VITE is attached. The producer of the film and the lead actor will be there to have a discussion following the screening. These two impressive men, Leo and Eduardo, are on a mission to make a difference with their films, and BELLA will do just that.
Please respond to this email. If you cannot attend the January 10 screening, there is also one in Chicago on January 9. Please feel free to pass on this invitation to other church leaders who may be in a position to mobilize groups to attend BELLA when it is released to theatres, tentatively in April.
Thank you and God Bless,
Margo Lange
Cell: 630-440-8391
Office:630-480-0799
BELLA RODUCTION SUMMARY
The Story
An international soccer star (Eduardo Verástegui) is on his way to sign a multi-million dollar contract when something happens that brings his career to an abrupt end. A waitress (Tammy Blanchard), struggling to make it in New York City, discovers something about herself that she’s unprepared for. In one irreversible moment, their lives are turned upside down…until an impetuous action brings them together and turns an ordinary day into an unforgettable experience.
Once a famous athlete, and now a cook at his brother’s Mexican restaurant, José has retreated from the world but he recognizes something in Nina, a young waitress, and reaches out to her. In the course of a single day, he not only confronts his past but shows her how the healing power of a family can help her embrace the future.
Metanoia Films presents BELLA, a heartwarming story about friendship, family and our capacity for love in the face of the unexpected. Alejandro Monteverde makes his feature film directorial debut from an original screenplay co-written with Patrick Million. Stephen McEveety, porducer of The Passion of the Christ and Braveheart, is the executive producer.
* * * *
OTHER HIGHLITES:
uBella took top prize at Toronto’s International Film Festival by winning the “Peoples Choice Award.”
uCast Member: EDUARDO VERÁSTEGUI portrays José, a former soccer star who has become a chef in a Mexican restaurant owned by his brother.
[Mr. Verastegui has toured the world as a singer in the Mexican pop sensation Kairo, acclaimed solo recording artist, performing sold-out concerts in over 13 countries; starred in five highly-rated “telenovelas” (Spanish soap operas) for Televisa (broadcast in over 19 countries); has been featured on hundreds of international magazine covers including People En Español which voted him one of 50 Most Beautiful People; has appeared opposite Jennifer Lopez in one of her most famous music videos “Ain’t it funny!” as well as in an international television commercial promoting her self-titled commercial fragrances. He has also co-starred in an indie film called “Meet Me In Miami” and has appeared in such primetime television series as “CSI:Miami, “ “Charmed,” and “Karen Cisco”].
u"Bella," is the first project from Metanoia Films (committed to projects that entertain, engage and inspire), which includes a group of 5 partners: Eduardo Verastegui, Alejandro Monteverde, Leo Severino, Sean Wolfington and Eustace Wolfington. “Our mission is to make films that make a positive difference” said Wolfington. After seeing the film Steve McEveety (Produced Braveheart, We Were Soldiers, Passion of the Christ) signed on as an Executive Producer to help market the film.
For more information and the trailer go to www.BellaTheMovie.com

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Monday, December 18, 2006

Catalyst promotes Concert of Prayer for Lake County

Concert of Prayer for Lake County
“When We Pray” ~ Transforming Lake County through Prayer
Bound by Purpose

Saturday, January 20, 2007

Christ Church Lake Forest
100 N. Waukegan Road
Lake Forest, IL 60045
847-234-1001
www.cclf.org

9:00 am to 1:00 pm

Open Prayer - There will be a time of prayer designated for teens and young adults.
Theme for January’s Meeting: Unity in Spirit and Purpose, Philippians 2:1-11
We would love to have you and your congregation come and partner with us in prayer. Even if you can come for 30 minutes to pray with pastors and believers of Lake County, it would be a blessing.
For more info, please contact Debbie Stackhouse, 847-746-3041, dstackhouse@catalystweb.org.

Many Congregations. One Church.
Catalyst of Lake County, IL 1200 American Way
Libertyville, IL 60048
847.201.2771
www.catalystweb.org
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Thursday, December 14, 2006

Chicagoland Prayer Summit Announces 2007 Dates

As you are preparing for the Christmas season we want you to remember the Chicagoland Prayer Summit that is coming up just after Easter. The next prayer summit is April 10, 11, 12 (that is the Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday after Easter). This will be a great time to refresh after the busy Easter Season. Jody and Dan Mayhew will be facilitating once again.

We also want to remind you that we need you to register (and pay) no later than March 15th. We can accept credit cards on our website (through PayPal) or you can send a check (directions and address on the website). We are planning on returning to Cedar Lake again this year, but we need you to register (and pay).

If you plan on coming to the next prayer summit please go ahead and register now===>Click headline to access site . . .

Sincerely,
Adam Shields for The Chicagoland Prayer Summit Team

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Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Prayer Summit for Pastors & Prayer Leaders

Chicago Prayer Summit

ChicagoPrayerSummit
Even for Pastors and Prayer leaders, the Prayer Summit is different than any meeting you have previously attended. Think of it as a place where all of God’s children, red, yellow, black and white, can come together with humility that produces scriptural unity. An environment that welcomes the expression of every person and culture and tradition; a prayer meeting where all have the freedom to be themselves and the responsibility to serve others. Prayer summits are not about an event - they are part of a process; a much larger vision of prayer and relationships that are being developed in Chicagoland. Prayer summits are about relationships... with our our Lord, and with each other. If you have any questions please feel free to email at info @ chicagoprayersummit.org

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Friday, December 01, 2006

Chicago Nativity Decision "Outrageous"



ASSIST News Service (ANS) - PO Box 609, Lake Forest, CA 92609-0609 USA
Visit our web site at: www.assistnews.net -- E-mail: danjuma1@aol.com


City of Chicago Declares War on Christianity, Christian Leader Asserts

HOLLYWOOD, CA (ANS) -- The City of Chicago and its Mayor's Office of Special Events has declared war on Christianity with its decision to ban advertisements for "The Nativity Story" movie from a local Christmas festival, a spokesperson for the Christian Film & Television Commission declared today.

"This is an outrageous, despicable decision," said Dr. Ted Baehr, chairman of the Commission and internationally renowned media critic and educator.

"I'm absolutely shocked that at a Christmas festival, they would not allow commercials people could see tonight on TV," he added. "It is just more hypocritical, leftwing political correctness where everything is OK - except Christianity."

Dr. Baehr labeled Chicago officials as "corrupt" and "bigoted."

"They wouldn't show this kind of terrible intolerance to minority groups or homosexual groups," he pointed out. "Apparently, the term 'free speech' means nothing to the Mayor of Chicago and his employees."

"The Nativity Story" opens Friday at many movie theaters around the globe.

For more information about the Christian Film & Television CommissionT, please visit its Movieguide® website at www.movieguide.org or call 1-800-577-6684..


NOTE from Dr. Ted Baehr: For more information from a Christian perspective, order the latest MOVIEGUIDE® magazine by calling 1-800-899-6684(MOVI) or visit our website at www.movieguide.org. MOVIEGUIDE® is dedicated to redeeming the values of Hollywood by informing parents about today's movies and entertainment and by showing media executives and artists that family-friendly and even Christian-friendly movies do best at the box office year in and year out. MOVIEGUIDE® now offers an online subscription to its magazine version, at www.movieguide.org. The magazine, which comes out 25 times a year, contains many informative articles and reviews that help parents train their children to be media-wise consumers. MOVIEGUIDE® also regularly broadcasts several international TV and radio programs hosted by Dr. Baehr. Also, if you want to train your family to be media-wise, call 1-800-899-6684 in North America to order the book, video or audio version of THE MEDIA-WISE! FAMILY, Dr. Ted Baehr's latest book. © baehr, 2001

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