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Talbot Davis

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The Relentless Pursuit Of Language
December 5, 2012 at 6:30 am 0
While I am a very disciplined person, I have not always been a disciplined leader.

In my years at Good Shepherd, I have gotten excited about new projects, taken us on different tangents, and been hesitant to reinforce the same few ideas time and time again.  For the sake of creativity or spontaneity, I have often neglected core principles.

Fortunately, the process that led to the adoption of

Inviting All Persons Into A Living Relationship With Jesus Christ

has helped to change all that.  Assisted by our friends at the Auxano Group, I was finally able to see how clear & consistent language reinforces a church's culture.  In particular, just when leadership tires of saying something (the mission statement, for example) is about the time congregation as a whole starts to comprehend it.

So we repeat the mission again.  And again.  And again.  At every staff meeting, at every Worship Gathering, in every Life Group, as part of every Serve Team, and on every Radical Impact Project.  In short order, people know what we are doing -- inviting all people into a living relationship with Jesus Christ -- and how we are doing it -- worship gatherings, Life Groups, Serve Teams, and Radical Impact Projects.

I see the power of this relentless pursuit of language most clearly in the reaction of new people to our church.  Just this week, for example, we received an email from a man who has attended three times.  After telling us what the experience has meant to him, he asked for help in two areas: how to connect to a Life Group and how to join a Serve Team.  He's not even aware of it, but his spiritual journey is being guided by the same language that shapes our church.  To many eyes that may seem like a small victory, but we on staff celebrated as we read those words.

The relentless pursuit of language takes on heightened significance as we go multi-lingual.  That's why our initial Good Shepherd Latino service began with a reminder that we are about invitado todos personas a un relacion vida con jesucristo.  And why the church bulletin for that community adopts our tag line:  Venga A La Vida . . . Come To Life.

And it's why the title of the sermon I'm going to deliver at that service in a couple of weeks -- yes, all in Spanish though I expect some help from the crowd! -- is called Un Relacion Vida, meaning, as you might suspect, A Living Relationship

So we may be talking in two different tongues now at Good Shepherd, but we're speaking the same language.  Relentlessly so.
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Top Five Tuesday — Top Five Football Final Plays
December 4, 2012 at 2:00 am 2
Watching Georgia come just short of upsetting Alabama as Chris Conley lost his footing on the five yard line as the clock ran out made me think about memorable final plays.

Here's the UGA sadness:



But that one, while current and painful if you live in or have friends from Georgia, is by no means the final word in final plays. 

My top five final plays are below.  These are the kind of jaw droppers that make you ask, "Did I really just see that?!"

A couple of conditions:  1) it can't be a field goal or even a kick-off return involving the school band; 2) the game has to mean something; 3) the clock must hit :00 during the play; 4) it can't be an final play in overtime. 

So here they are: my Top Five Football Final Plays.

5.  Colorado beats Michigan, 1994. Remember when Colorado could play?  Remember when Kordell Stewart could scramble?  Remember when Keith Jackson could announce?  Then remember this:



4.  LSU beats Kentucky, 2002.  It's called The Bluegrass Miracle.  Except the Bluegrassers were the victims of the miracle.  They were already celebrating the upset.  No wonder Guy Morris is no longer the coach there.  Of course, neither is Joker Philips.



3.  Jacksonville Jaguars beat Houston Texans, 2010.  It's fair to say that the 2010 Texans have very little in common with the 2012 version.



2.  Boston College beat Miami, 1984.  It's football's version of Laettner at the buzzer.  Or maybe Laettner at the buzzer is basketball's version of this.  Either way, enjoy: 1.  St. Louis Rams stop Tennessee Titans on the last play of 2000 Super Bowl.  Seeing how close Georgia came on Saturday is actually what got me thinking about Kevin Dyson's near touchdown.  No one scores on the play . . . but that's what made it so dramatic. Dyson's momentum gets stopped and Dick Vermeil's tears get started.


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Latino Service Launch
December 3, 2012 at 11:32 am 0
After years of pondering and months of planning, we celebrated our first-ever all-Spanish worship service yesterday.  Good Shepherd Latino lauched as . . .

141 people of all ages came to the Corner Campus . . .


received a welcome fit for a king . . .


then gathered for praise . . .


worship . . .

teaching from Sammy Gonzalez . . .


who reminded them that Jesuchristo es el unico por los todos . . .



and then a closing, impassioned prayer from Luis Guevara . . .



so history was made as the service was, well, history.

Gloria a Dios!

Photos courtesy of Jason Satterwhite.

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Christmas On Memory Lane Launch
November 30, 2012 at 2:00 am 0
I can't wait for this Sunday.

Two reasons.  First, we begin Christmas On Memory Lane, a series of messages, music, and dramatic pieces that has me genuinely excited.  I like the cover art very much as well:


Here's a summary of where the series is headed:

More than any other time of year, Christmas brings with it a host of memories.


The gift you got when you were six. The gift you gave when you were twelve. The meal time traditions that gave you security and hope. The pain that came when those traditions got interrupted or even abandoned.

A trip down memory lane at Christmas brings a mixture of nostalgia, pain, joy, and regret.

And where does faith fit into all that? What does God say about the role of family, memory, and a baby boy born in a manger so long ago?

That’s what we’ll explore this year as we celebrate Christmas On Memory Lane.

Dec. 2: Bumps In The Road

Dec. 9: Repaving Memory Lane

Dec. 16: Curb & Gutter

Dec. 23: Blessed Amnesia

Dec. 24: Parking Place


The second reason I'm unusually excited is because this is the Sunday we go multi-lingual, as our fourth worship service, all in Spanish and led by Sammy Gonzalez and team, launches at 11:30.  While I won't be with them for long on Sunday, I have every confidence that God will cause great fruit to grow there.
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Preaching Nouns
November 29, 2012 at 2:00 am 0
Reading The Collected Sermons Of Fred B. Craddock has been a revelation.

Now: I like reading sermons.  I enjoy seeing on paper (or on screen, for that matter) how a preacher arranges his material and builds his argument.

But I love reading these sermons.  I don't know if I'd love them so much if I hadn't heard several recordings of Craddock preaching.  But I have and because I have I can hear his unique inflection on every word of every page.  If you've never heard him -- or even if you have -- here it is:



Yet what strikes me most about these messages is the way Craddock uses nouns.  Many of us preachers specialize in either concepts or verbs:  we want people to think of ideas and then to do things.

Not Craddock. He wants people to see and to feel the texts on which he preaches.  The result is, in almost every case, a brand new look at a very old word.  Here are just a few from the book:

"God ordained a worm" in re-telling the Jonah story (p. 57).

"Well, we're not going to skip the genealogy; we're going to join Matthew for a walk through the family graveyard of Jesus" in speaking on Matthew 1:18-25 (p. 62).

"If I keep the pond small, I seem like a big frog" while preaching on Psalm 8 (p. 33).

"Skin color is determined by the rays of the sun the skin rejects" (p. 50).

"I've said 'forget it' to people who grew up in families where alcohol had broken every dish in the house.  Grown up peeking from behind the couch(p. 13).

I find these vivid images -- and many more -- planting themselves deeply in my brain.  They will not let me go.  Which is of course the mark of good preaching.

So in my own way, I'm looking for some more nouns.  Here are some of the series we've got planned, many of which are, in fact, noun based:

Christmas On Memory Lane

Home

Dog Whistle: The Art Of Listening To God

Journey Of Stones

Man On The Run: Sermons On Jonah

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