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Monthly Archives: August 2008

We were given a lot of advice about church planting and we are grateful for all of it!  However, one of those tidbits was the knowledge that we didn’t really need to pursue a youth pastor because many church plants don’t attract teenagers…

But then there’s the God factor.

As Mark and I started to pray about the staff situation, a couple came to my mind repeatedly.  I did not even know their names…they were just faces that would later on become priceless to this journey. 

I went to Mark one day and said, “There was a couple at camp last year.  You spoke with the guy’s wife.  I think his name is Matt?  He was on the drama team at Northwest…you know?  I can’t remember his wife’s name either…is it Angel?  I think we’re supposed to call them to join our church planting team.” 

First of all, that’s not the brillant networking skills that I would like to take pride in.  But when you just know something is from God, you don’t question it, you just do it.  So, Mark went on a manhunt for Matt and Angel’s phone number, figured out their names were Jeff and Angela, and called them on Dec. 26, 2005.  We wanted to wait until after Christmas to mess up their lives.

We met with the Welks in January of 2006 and by May they had gotten new jobs, moved here, and decided to fulfill the role of youth pastor (among a million other things!).

I’ve already mentioned Angela in The Velvet Hammer post, so I’ll tell you about Jeff.  He is eloquent, charismatic, funny, and talented in too many areas to list.  He’s from a family with a heritage of incredible men.  His family is the type of people who puts together puzzles without looking at the box, and that is exactly how Jeff navigates ministry.  He’s already got the big picture in his mind and he is a master at manipulating the pieces to achieve what the picture needs to look like.

He is very different than my husband in the way they think, which provides a teamwork that is near perfection.  They often remind me of the verse about iron sharpening iron.  They are both strong leaders, but there strengths and weaknesses are polar opposites.  Together they cover the other’s blind spots.

Jeff chose youth ministry, but I struggle putting him in a box.  He is much more than just any one position could define.  He is a partner in ministry, a selfless martyr of comfort for the cause, a shining example of a Godly man, and a man whose instincts for leadership are keen.

My gut tells me that God has an agenda for Jeff’s life that is vital to the church…not just our church, but the bigger picture of the kingdom of God.  So, remember the name Matt..I mean, Jeff Welk.  He’s going to be one of those guys in Heaven with a lot of crowns to cast at the feet of Jesus.

Perhaps the most difficult and daunting process in the beginning was assembling a staff around us.  Imagine the task of defining what “positions” you wanted to fill, finding a qualified, talented, amazing person who would work for free, and differentiating between the church planting leadership team and who would become “staff”.

At our previous church, our Junior High pastor, Kris Gray, had become invaluable to our hearts.  God was stirring in her a change in the future and together we walked down the path of what this change would be. We mourned the loss of our youth ministry days and lost sleep over the possibilities that lie ahead of us. 

It was unclear what Kris’ role would become at the beginning.  The only thing that we knew is that if Kris weren’t there, we were pretty sure we didn’t want to be, either.  It was her anchor in our lives that guided us to stay in Vancouver. 

Kris is currently our Small Groups Pastor, our sermon augmentor, and a general sounding board for the latest crazy ideas that we throw on the table.  She is the imagination behind most of our sermon stage sets and a look out for anyone who would dare cut a corner on creativity.  She is a counselor for the frustrated and will laugh at any joke you’d like to throw at her.

As a pastor’s wife, she fills a role in my life that is almost undefinable.  She knows me inside and out and thinks about ministry so similarily that communication is easy.  It is hard to escape the leadership mantel as a lead pastor’s family, and Kris gives me the opportunity to do just that.   She says it like it is, but somehow you don’t realize it because she is so invested into your wellbeing that you tend to forget that she is correcting you.  She has made a full time job of getting into people’s business to make sure that they are living according to God’s plan.

Kris is an example to our young mom’s about how to raise your kids with unbending consistency, which is her “secret” ministry.  You aren’t even sure you have been impacted by her mothering until your kids are misbehaving and you find yourself thinking, “What would Kris do?”  And that’s when you know that she’s wormed her way into your very DNA.  And that’s why we all love her.

For those of you who live in the Salmon Creek area, you may know North Creek best by an advertisment that landed on your door step in a coffee tin.  Ahhh, God bless those beautiful tins…

Alecia, a very creative woman at our church, came up with a brilliant advertising campaign strategy two years ago.  The only problem was that her ideas needed some cash behind them…something we were short of at the time.  Part of her strategy required coffee cups with lids, so I hit www.craigslist.com to see if there were any free cups out there.  Up came an ad for several thousand free coffee tins from a company that was shutting down.  I emailed immediately, got a hold of the lady, and she said, “Great, get a 24′ uhaul and meet me on Saturday.”  Seriously, a 24′ uhaul will move the majority of a regular size house.  I clarified twice, irritated her, and decided to shut up and get the uhaul.   

So on Saturday we pull up to get our 5,000 or so tins…except it’s more like 40,000 free tins, thousands of free disposable coffee cups, lids, and a few coffee makers, too.  We loaded it all up, handed the lady a tax receipt, and headed to the office house to unload a garage full of tins.

Long story short, those tins turned into some of the most creative advertising ever when we wrapped labels around them that said, “Life is sweet at North Creek”.  We filled those babies with coffee candy and dropped them on about 20,000 door steps in our area.  Thank you, God, for giving us an abundance! (And bless all of you who have walked a mile or two to deliver some tins!)

Last week we had a guest who got that tin two years ago…some things never die. 🙂  Not too mention, that we are still using those donated coffee cups after literally thousands of cups of coffee…

You never know how God will provide when you put yourself out there.  Get a dream in your spirit and get a strategy in your mind.  God will fill in the gaps.

This Sunday at church I had one of my favorite moments ever as a pastor.  I’ve been in situations in my past, not necessarily church related, but where great leaders did nothing in the event of a crisis.  Why?  Because of the unspoken rule that the leader at the top of the food chain needed to be the one to make the final decision.  I have even watched myself do nothing when I knew what to do to solve the problem in order to “stay out of it”.

Well, at 9:45 am on Sunday, we had no projector.  One is in the repair shop and the other went on the fritz.  Two of our amazing leaders got in their car, went to Best Buy (thank you for being open at 10:00 am!), bought a new projector, set it up, and had it running by 10:15 am.

Greg, one of those amazing leaders, saw it was working, through his hands up in the air, and said, “Twenty minutes!”  For those of you who have ever been part of a committee driven system, you can imagine that a similar crisis could take months or even years to solve…but not at North Creek.  Great leaders saw the opportunity to jump in and make that morning excellent for our guests.

And that is what it was all about.  Those two men believe in this church just as much as I do (and not to mention, the leader at the top of the food chain).  So much so that they would do whatever it took to make it the best possible morning for somebody who might walk in to our church for the first time.

Now that’s empowerment.  And the most honoring thing anybody could do for their leader…just be the incredible person that you are.

Mark, Kim and nine of North Creek’s beautiful kids got back from camp this afternoon.  It was awesome to see their dirty, smiling faces, fresh off of a week with Jesus.  One bragged that she hadn’t brushed her teeth since she left on Wednesday…ahhh, kid’s camp!

I loved hearing the stories of their little lives being changed and transformed by God.  I accepted Jesus as my Savior at a kid’s camp in 1984, so I know that what they are learning can change their entire lives.  Mark told me stories of one of our young girls who held another girl in her arms as she cried at an altar.  I know the story behind that girl’s life, and I know that the only one who has the power to right the wrongs in the world is our Lord.  For her to learn to lean on Jesus at this age could very well save her life. 

For our kids to minister to each other is truly unbelievable to me.  When the Bible says that the very kingdom of Heaven belongs to kids, He was right.  It is one thing for our pastors to pray with a student, but there is another kind of power when our kids know that their peers are walking through life with them with Godly standards.

That’s why I love our church.  Our kids are top priority.  Kim and Mark are two of the best pastors out there and they are giving time and energy away from their kids to invest into the lives of our youngest leaders.  And not only that, but our kids are finding a community of people that will encourage them to live up to the dreams that God has for them.  It’s what I want for my kids and I know it’s what you want for yours!