Leadership, Finances, Biblical Leadership Project 412 Leadership, Finances, Biblical Leadership Project 412

1 | Biblical Leadership

Drawing from God’s pattern of calling leaders, this message shows how His direction often requires a reordering of our location, our spiritual condition, and our priorities. Accepting God’s call touches time, talents, and resources, and often presses against personal comfort. True leadership begins with surrendering to God’s rearranging work so His purposes can take root.

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Leadership Project 412 Leadership Project 412

Leading Your Church Through Change

A practical guide for navigating the challenges and opportunities of change in a local church. Why change is both constant and costly, and why wise leadership must help people move from “where we are” to “where we could be.” Drawing from organizational life cycles, congregational dynamics, and biblical wisdom, it explores how different types of people respond to change, how trust shapes every decision, and how leaders can communicate with clarity, patience, and courage. Listeners are equipped to test the waters, listen to resistors, work with opinion leaders, avoid common leadership pitfalls, and guide congregations at a pace they can bear. At its heart, the message calls leaders to help their people see the value of the “pearl of great price,” recognizing that while change requires sacrifice, the fruit of God-directed transformation is worth it.

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Personal Growth, Colossians, Books, Leadership Project 412 Personal Growth, Colossians, Books, Leadership Project 412

Let No One Disqualify You | Colossians | Session 6

Paul exposes the heart of the threat facing the Colossian church by pulling back the layers of the so-called “philosophy” that promised deeper spirituality but ultimately pulled believers away from Christ. This mixture of rigid Jewish regulations and mystical pagan practices looked impressive on the surface, yet it replaced the substance of the gospel with shadows that could never give life. Paul reminds the church that Christ is the Head, and anything—visions, angel-worship, or human rules—that distracts from Him is spiritually dangerous. True growth comes from staying rooted in Christ, not in chasing experiences or tightening man-made restrictions. At its core, the passage calls believers to discern the difference between religious pressure and genuine life in Christ, and to guard the unity and simplicity of the gospel.

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