Have you ever dreamed of writing a book?
I have. All my life.
Scores of titles have flowed through my brain. I can’t recall any offhand, but I rejected them all out-of-hand.
Because most of the time, one question haunted me:
Why would anyone be interested in anything I had to say?
If I was a celebrity, I could sit down with a ghost writer and a dictaphone, and when the manuscript was finished, someone would be assigned to edit it.
If I was a big-name pastor, I could preach a sermon series and turn it into book form a la Chuck Swindoll or Andy Stanley.
If I had an inspirational tale to tell – a shark took off my arm, I went to heaven as a little kid – publishers would approach me asking for the rights to my story.
But I’m not an A-lister, no publisher has requested any of my sermons, and I haven’t been in the ocean in ages.
Besides, I’ve always been concerned that if I did write a book, I’d walk by Barnes & Noble several months later and find it in the bargain section with a remainder mark on it.
In spite of all my doubts, I have authored a book anyway.
In fact, I’m committed: I’ve already made a down payment with the publisher.
Thank God for self-publishing, because my book wouldn’t see the light of day if I had to submit a manuscript to a major Christian publishing house. You have to be a televangelist, a mega-church pastor, or a perennial bestselling author to get published these days. Publishers want a certain return on their investment, and in this economy, who can blame them?
In fact, a Christian author told me several months ago that he once worked for a major Christian publisher. Another author with a proven track record – whom I have met – proposed writing a book about the same issue I’m writing about.
The publisher declined to pursue the idea.
However, I’m praying that my book will gain some attention. Five words describe it:
*It’s narrative. I write about a major church conflict that my wife and I experienced firsthand – and let church conflict experts make comments all through the book. My hope is that lay people especially will read the book because it’s in story form.
*It’s timely. There are 1,800 pastors leaving churches every month in our country, 1,300 of them involuntarily. When I share these statistics with people, they are blown away. We Christians (leaders and lay people alike) can do more to address and resolve this issue – but first we have to shine a light on it.
*It’s long. My original manuscript was 450 pages in length. I’ve cut it down to 400 and I’m still trying to pare it down. When you self-publish, you can pay for an editor or do your own editing. I’m doing my own, so it takes time – and I don’t want any misspellings or syntactical errors. But if the book is too long, it will cost more, which will cut down on sales – so I’m taking the knife to it. It’s just that the knife is dull.
*It’s authentic. The book describes a real conflict from a behind-the-scenes perspective. And I have a whole chapter on mistakes that I made. However, I have changed the names of nearly everyone except for family members. I don’t even identify the church or the city or state it’s in.
*It’s redemptive. While I honestly report what happened – and with emotion at times – my overall objective is for Christian leaders and congregations to learn how to handle these situations better. Shockingly, there is little written for lay people on the subject of church conflict.
So even if I end up number 2,374,981 on Amazon, I still plan on publishing the book.
When?
I thought it would be done last winter … then last spring … then this past summer … and now I’m hoping for two weeks from now. I’m going through it page by page: sharpening wording, clarifying statements, rearranging material – and deleting stuff.
My publishing agent told me she could print the book in 45 days from the day of submission. If so, it will be ready by Christmas. If not, then it will be ready in early 2012. You’ll be the first to know.
So please pray for God to prompt me to finish the book – and for Him to prepare the hearts of potential readers.
When I was at Fuller Seminary, I took a class with Dr. Archibald Hart. I wrote a long paper for him, and he encouraged me to write for publication. He was one of my few heroes before the class, so you can imagine how I feel about him today!
I lack a venue for teaching publicly right now. Hopefully the Lord will rectify that in the near future.
But I can always write – as long as I have wonderful readers like you.




Giving Your Pastor Feedback, Part 2
September 12, 2011 by Jim Meyer
Last time, I presented four ways you can share feedback with your pastor:
*Speak only for yourself.
*Speak to him directly.
*Speak to him wisely.
*Speak to him positively.
Let me add three more ways:
Fifth, speak to him sensitively. Learn his schedule and share your feedback at a time when he can receive it.
If you have something positive to say, you can share that pratically anytime. If you have negative input, try and avoid sharing that on a Sunday.
The pastor needs to be “up” on Sunday, not only to preach, but also to meet people. The pastor has been focusing on those few hours on Sunday morning all week long, and if you want to derail his ministry temporarily, then throw some criticism his way. It may wound him enough that it impacts his ability to help others that day.
I don’t know how other pastors are on a Sunday, but I tried to be sensitive to God’s Spirit. If God was going to use my ministry, I needed to be right with Him and right with others. Although I always welcomed constructive suggestions, there were times when people meant well but said things that discouraged me.
One Sunday, a couple pastors visited our church in Santa Clara because they planned on starting an outreach-oriented church in a nearby community. After the service, I greeted both of them. One of the pastors was kind in his remarks, but the other one made derogatory comments about the service. I had never met him before, and didn’t think he had earned the right to offer an instant critique. His comment was all I could think about for days, and it deflated me.
A pastor friend once did some research on the best day to share criticism with a pastor. Sunday was the worst day. Tuesday was the best day. Why Tuesday? Probably because the pastor has worked through his emotions about the previous Sunday and is looking forward to the following Sunday with optimism.
So if you have any comments about today’s article, save them for Tuesday!
Sixth, ask questions rather than state opinions. As a child, I didn’t enjoy taking communion. The atmosphere was funereal. The organ played softly while people bowed their head in reflection. Didn’t Jesus tell His disciples, “Do this in remembrance of your sin?”
No, He said, “Do this in remembrance of Me.” When I think of my sin, I’m somber. When I think of my Savior, I’m grateful, joyful, and excited. So during communion, I sometimes invited the congregation to focus on Jesus by singing.
While many people enjoyed this experience, some did not – and made it very clear to me.
One man expressed his displeasure to me about singing during communion three times on his response card. After the third time, I sent him a letter telling him why I did it that way. He promised he’d never complain again.
Which would have been more effective?
“I don’t like the way you do communion … I grew up in churches that did it another way … it should be a solemn time … I’m not used to it …”
or
“Why do we sing during communion?”
If you ask a pastor a question about a church issue, you make him the authority (which he probably is), and you can decide whether you like his answer and respond accordingly. When you state your opinion like you’re the authority, you’re just setting yourself up for an argument. There is a time and place to state your opinion, but before sharing it with the pastor, you might find out why he does what he does first.
Finally, avoid making threats. Like most pastors, there are people who have said to me, “If you don’t start doing this or stop doing that, I’m going to leave the church for good.”
It is never wise to say that to a pastor.
Most pastors will think to themselves, “Fine. Then leave. If you’re going to threaten me, then we don’t need you around here. Go mess up someone else’s church.”
I always figured that if someone threatened to leave the church, they were as good as gone anyway. Most people have more sense than to say that.
The truth is that I usually welcomed feedback from people. There were times when I wanted to do something in the church but either the staff or the board didn’t agree with me. If some people came to me unsolicited and said, “Pastor, we need to fix and repaint that wall” or “We need to start a ministry for singles,” then I could share that complaint/suggestion with the appropriate group so they would know others felt the same way.
When you share feedback with a pastor, give him time to respond to you. Sometimes people came to me with an idea and they wanted an instant answer from me, but I usually had to think and pray about it, as well as consult other leaders.
Feel free to share a time when you shared feedback with your pastor. How did it go?
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