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LICC

Neil Hudson visit April 2016 – recorded talks

IMG_1672This page provides links to the presentations given by Neil Hudson during his visit to Queensland in April 2016. ?

  • Kenmore Baptist Church AM Service (Video, 43:02), Mission Matters, Luke 10. 17 April, 2016
  • Kenmore Baptist Church PM Service?(Video, 53:29, includes Q&A), Developing a Vision for Everyday Mission,?17 April, 2016
  • HumeRidge Church of Christ Workplace Breakfast – Whole Lives, Busy Lives (Video, 56:00) 23 April, 2016, not brilliant quality but content great!
  • Rangeville Community Church AM Service (Audio only, 41:16) Discipleship in Our Own Context), 24 April 2016
  • Toowoomba Community Baptist Church AM Service (Audio only), 24 April 2016
  • Hume Ridge Church of Christ PM Service (Audio only, 33:00), 24 April 2016

Developing a Whole Life Disciple Making Church Community – a Malyon Intensive with Neil Hudson

Neil Hudson v3Rev. Dr. Neil Hudson from the London Institute for Contemporary Christianity is coming to Australia (well, just Queensland actually!) for a series of events from ?April 17-24, 2016.

One of the key events will be a four day Masters Intensive exploring the challenge of “Developing a Whole Life Disciple Making Church Community”?– no doubt a topic close to the heart of every church leader. ?

Full details can be found as follows:

  • Video introduction – Neil Hudson shares what this course is all about
  • Course Brochure?- the bare bones!
  • Program Overview?- the program and topics for each day
  • Unit Guide?- the full bottle.?

[Read more…] about Developing a Whole Life Disciple Making Church Community – a Malyon Intensive with Neil Hudson

Messengers in Context: Simon Ward (LICC Blog)

Great interview from the LICC with Simon Ward, Chief Operating Officer of the British Simon-Ward-Shaun-James-CoxFashion Council:

The impact of workplace culture on prayer

In this article, Beverley Shepherd from the LICC explains how workplace culture and values impact our prayer lives. ?Understanding these four cultural drivers/beliefs will deepen our understanding of prayer and how it impacts our prayer life in unhelpful ways.
?

Time is scarce:?The belief that we don’t have enough time is widespread. Once this is assumed, prioritisation against certain criteria becomes essential. Our criteria reveal our true values – often linked to success based on observable achievement. If prayer does not meet these criteria ‘finding time to pray’ becomes a perceived obstacle.

Consumerism:?In a consumer culture, everything becomes a transaction and is measured in terms of customer satisfaction. With prayer we can view ourselves as the ‘client’ and ask: ‘Do I enjoy praying?’, ‘What am I getting out of this?’, ‘Would I get a better return on my investment of time in some other activity?’ Philip Yancey in his book,?Prayer – Does It Make a Difference, notes that ‘Worship becomes a kind of transaction: I’ve given God something, so it’s God’s turn to reciprocate. Prayer as transaction rather than relationship can decline into a practice more duty than joy, an occasional and awkward exercise with little connection to life.’

Image:?In an image based culture, appearance and visibility count. We track the number of people who have visited our website, the time spent on each page, the ‘likes’ recorded. Marketing and advertising consultants help craft the most compelling image. In the world of office politics, being seen at that important meeting or speaking to a ‘key player’ is part of developing your personal ‘brand’. Effective prayer is often unseen: ‘When you pray, go into your room, close the door and pray to your Father, who is unseen. Then your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward you’ (Matthew 6:6). In fact, there is nothing more shattering to our carefully constructed self-image than the presence of God and the searching of the Holy Spirit.

Individualism:?In a culture of individualism, independence and self-reliance are valued. Personal interests take precedence over the needs of the group. It can manifest itself in the workplace though an absence of teamwork, inter-departmental rivalry, or a blame culture. In contrast, the model of prayer given us by Jesus (Matthew 6:9-13) contains the words ‘our’, ‘us’ and ‘we’ nine times in four short verses. To pray is to acknowledge our dependence on God and our inter-dependence with each other.

Christian vocation – Mark Greene

Mark Greene (London Institute for Contemporary Christianity) talks about Christian vocation. ?Part of the Bible Society’s Lyfe series.

And an extra part – staying close to God at work.

?Fruitfulness on the Frontline? ? a six week course for equipping whole-life disciples

Fruitfulness on the FrontlineOur friends at the London Institute for Contemporary Christianity have done it again!

They have just released a resource package that will without doubt be an outstanding success and a critical resource in helping Christians to be fruitful on their frontlines – workplace or elsewhere.

Full details of the package can be found here but in summary: [Read more…] about ?Fruitfulness on the Frontline? ? a six week course for equipping whole-life disciples

Equipping the Scatter Church – Neil Hudson

Neil Hudson from the London Institute for Contemporary Christianity speaks to church leaders about the importance of equipping the congregation when they are gathered to live from Monday to Saturday when they are scattered. (2.01)

“Life on the Frontline” – a six week course for equipping whole-life disciples

Life on the FrontlineHere at Malyon Workplace, we are keen to help people explore what it means to be a whole life disciple – to understand that being a disciple of Jesus is a 24/7 commitment, being his person wherever he has placed us in our normal, everyday lives. ?

For many of us, the workplace is the most significant setting, but most of us have many, many more frontlines – the gym, the shopping centre, the local school community, our neighbourhood, the kids sporting clubs and so on.

The?LICC?folk define the a person’s frontline as,?’… the place where you spend the majority of your time outside the church, where you are in contact with non-Christians.’ [Read more…] about “Life on the Frontline” – a six week course for equipping whole-life disciples

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