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Leesburg Presbyterian Church recommends the
following leadership resources.

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| For Personal
Spiritual Development:
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If You Want to Walk on Water,
You've Got to Get Out of the Boat,
John Ortberg
John Ortberg invites you to consider the
incredible potential that awaits you outside your comfort zone.
Out on the risky waters of faith, Jesus is waiting to meet you
in ways that will change you forever, deepening your character
and your trust in God.
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For Congregational Development:
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The Church on the Other Side,
Brian D. McLaren
Thirteen strategies for navigating the
modern/postmodern transition.
Today's breakthroughs in communication, education, travel,
cultural diversity, science, economics, politics, and philosophy
are creating a new matrix in which Christians will live,
worship, work, and pursue their mission. This book will help you
think differently; see church, life, and these revolutionary
times in a new way; and act with courage, hope, and an
adventurous spirit. |
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Moving Off the Map,
Tom Bandy and Bill Easum
In his book Kicking Habits: Welcome Relief for
Addicted Churches, Thomas Bandy provided the "big picture" of
the five stages of congregational renewal and transformation.
Similarly, in Growing Spiritual Redwoods, Bandy and Bill Easum
provided new metaphors for change to help congregations break
out of outmoded attitudes and assumptions, and they described
the nature of spiritual leadership necessary to grow spiritual
giants that would change the face of the cultural forest.
Yet there is another set of questions remaining
to be answered, questions that pastors and church leaders
frequently ask: "Where do we begin?" and "Exactly how do we go
about change?" The characteristics of change, and the stresses
that lie behind them, seem complex and monumental. What are the
first steps a congregation can take? Are there practical tools
that have helped churches change?
The purpose of Moving Off the Map: A Field Guide
to Changing the Congregation is to answer these questions. Here
are powerful processes and tools to help congregations identify
their strengths, weaknesses, and addictions. These processes can
help a congregation shift attitudes, deepen spiritual awareness,
receive Biblical visions, and shape ministries for the future. |
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Rediscovering Church,
Bill Hybels
Rediscovering Church is the candid story of
Willow Creek Community Church's phenomenal growth, from 100
members meeting in a Palatine, Illinois, movie theater to its
present Sunday morning attendance of 15,000. Bill Hybels and his
wife, Lynne, tell about Willow Creek's beginnings, its
struggles, the philosophy behind its success, and the strategies
that have made it a model for church growth. The first half of
the book, written by Lynne Hybels, explores the early years of
Willow Creek and the personal accounts behind one of this
century's most remarkable church stories. It offers an honest
look at the ways God has used both the strengths and weaknesses
of His people, creating a church of believers who have had
tremendous impact for Christ in their community. In the second
half of Rediscovering Church, Bill Hybels helps you apply the
strengths of Willow Creek's ministry philosophy to your own
congregation's mission. From mission statements to developing
leadership, making sound financial decisions, and handling
growth, Bill stresses that God wants to build His church to be
an effective and committed community of faith that reaches out
to a hurting world, to be the body of Christ in real and
tangible ways. Rediscovering Church draws on the experiences of
Willow Creek to show how one fellowship crystallized its mission
and methodology, its vision and values. The Willow Creek story
provides an example that churches and individuals alike can turn
to for inspiration, encouragement, and a means of uncovering the
pattern for their own unique mission and ministry. |
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Christian Chaos,
Tom Bandy
In his previous books—Kicking Habits, Growing
Spiritual Redwoods, and Moving Off the Map—Thomas Bandy has
drawn a compelling contrast between two kinds of congregational
systems: the thriving church system, whose focus on hands-on
ministry and shared core values propels it toward the future
into which God’s Spirit is leading; and the declining church
system, whose focus on control and hierarchical structures
leaves it bound to the past.
In this book, Bandy argues that the organization
of a congregation—its boards and committees—will be directed
toward one of these two kinds of systems. In other words, the
means by which a church makes decisions and conducts its
corporate life will determine the kind of church it will become.
Drawing on a helpful contrast between prescriptive and
proscriptive thinking, Bandy argues that congregational
organization should focus on setting the larger boundaries
within which its programs and ministries should operate. This
frees leaders and members to express their God-given creativity
in ministry, rather than forcing them to follow a prescribed set
of functions and tasks laid out for them in advance.
The book concludes with a compelling call for
“turning the laity loose” through cell-group ministry,
unleashing the Spirit-driven Christian chaos by which a
congregation can thrive in the challenging days ahead. |
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The Disciple-Making Church,
Glenn McDonald
How to change from a program-dependent church to
a church that makes disciples. Newly updated and revised edition
of a major resource use successfully by thousands of churches,
church leaders, denominations and church growth organizations.
The story of the transformation of a large suburban congregation
from relying on the latest and greatest in programming to a
ministry wholly dedicated to making disciples for Jesus Christ. |
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Twelve Dynamic Shifts for
Transforming Your Church, E.
Stanley Ott
That today's mainline churches are in crisis is
apparent; a solution is less obvious. In this constructive new
book E. Stanley Ott points a way ahead, describing twelve shifts
in philosophy and practice that can help congregations build
need-responsive, disciple-growing churches full of life and
vigor. Arguing that the weakness of the church today is a loss
of personal spirituality and congregational vitality, Ott
challenges local churches to discover how to adjust the style of
their ministries to attract new people while encouraging current
members. Ott examines the characteristics of "traditional"
churches, extols the features of new, "transformational"
churches, and lays out proposals to help established
congregations make the transition. Well balanced by an honest
assessment of the church's present and a positive vision for its
future, this book is must reading for pastors, church leaders,
and members of every congregation. |
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Transitioning,
Dan Southerland
A biblical look at how to steer a congregation
in a new and exciting direction aligned with God's unique
purpose for them. Transitioning is written to help church leaders
and their congregations successfully navigate change and
discover that the rewards far exceed the risk. Drawing
principles from the book of Nehemiah, Southerland maps out an
eight-step strategy for moving from being a traditional,
ministry-driven church to a purpose-driven church. Transitioning
illustrates practical, field-tested concepts with examples from
the Bible and Southerland's own experience. A detailed workbook
section with fill-in-the-blanks, scripture passages, and action
steps helps pastors and their leadership teams convert knowledge
into reality. |
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Purpose Driven Church,
Rick Warren
What Drives Your Church?" The Purpose-Driven
Church has brought focus and direction to more pastors and
church leaders than you can count. What a gift! I can't imagine
anyone who's serious about the church not reading it." John
Ortberg Author of Everybody's Normal Till You Get to Know
Them". After reading The Purpose-Driven Church in 1995, I ordered
twenty copies for my staff and elders. Eight years later, the
message and strategy contained in this work are as significant
and relevant as ever." Andy Stanley, Senior Pastor, North Point
Community Church" In 1985, I heard Rick present the contents of
this book in a seminar format. As he spoke, for the first time I
imagined leaving my teaching career in higher education to enter
pastoral ministry. My heart was won by Rick's vision of the
Church driven by her God-given purpose--rather than by doctrinal
arguments, denominational competition, or institutional
survival. That vision has been alive in me ever since, and you
can catch it too, through these pages." Brian McLaren Pastor,
Author, Fellow in Emergent (Emergentvillage.com) "One hundred
years from now church leaders will be studying the movement
known as 'purpose driven' churches. They will find Rick Warren
as its architect and The Purpose-Driven Church as his
blueprint." Erwin Raphael McManus Founder of Awaken and Lead
Pastor of Mosaic "Although the actual form of ministry may look
different from different types of people, there are extremely
critical principles within this book that we all need to know,
no matter what generation or philosophical mindset we are
involved with." Dan Kimball Author of The Emerging Church and
Pastor of Vintage Faith Church Discover What Business Leaders Can
Learn from the Church "The best book on entrepreneurship,
business, and investment..."Rick Karlgaard Forbes Magazine |
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Purpose Driven Life,
Rick Warren
A Groundbreaking Manifesto on the Meaning of
Life. This book will help you understand God's amazing plan for
you--both here and now, and for eternity. This personal 40-day
spiritual journey will transform your answer to life's most
important question: What on earth am I here for? Knowing God's
purpose will reduce your stress, focus your energy, simplify
your decisions, give meaning to your life, and, most important,
prepare you for eternity. The Purpose-Driven Life is a blueprint
for a lifestyle based on God's eternal purposes, not cultural
values. It is a book of hope and challenge that you will read
and re-read. |
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Leading Beyond the Walls,
Adam Hamilton
Good pastoral leadership is not a "by the
numbers" proposition. It is a matter of heart and soul, of
devoting the whole self to the vision God gives for the
congregation in which one serves. Yet neither is it purely
intuitive; it requires hard, careful thinking about the
directions and details of the path down which God calls. When
Adam Hamilton became pastor of the United Methodist Church of
the Resurrection, its membership consisted of himself and his
family. Ten years later the church averages between five and six
thousand worshipers per weekend. Throughout this remarkable
period, Hamilton learned many serious lessons about both the
broad visions and the specific details of pastoral leadership.
Bringing a depth of analytical skills often
lacking in visionary leaders, in this book he goes beyond simply
telling the story of Church of the Resurrection. He shares the
questions that he learned to ask about the largely unchurched
population to which Church of the Resurrection has reached out.
Further, he demonstrates what he learned by listening to the
answers to these questions, and how doing so has made possible a
number of strategically crucial decisions the church has made.
One of those crucial decisions was to make more traditional
forms of worship and praise the center of the congregation's
life. The result is that the example of Church of the
Resurrection offers pastors and church leaders (especially those
in mainline denominations) the realization that they need not
completely change their liturgical and theological identity in
order to reach out to the unchurched.
Drawing on his own experience, as well as the
detailed research on the characteristics of highly successful
congregations he undertook during a sabbatical leave, Hamilton
offers pastors and other church leaders solid, substantive
thinking on steps that congregations can take to become centers
of vibrant outreach and mission. |
For Personal & Organizational
Effectiveness:
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The 8th Habit,
Stephen Covey
In the more than fifteen years since its publication, "The 7
Habits of Highly Effective People" has become an international
phenomenon with over fifteen million copies sold. Tens of
millions of people have dramatically improved their lives and
organizations by applying the principles of Stephen R. Covey's
classic. Being effective as individuals and organizations is no
longer merely an option -- survival in today's world requires
it. Accessing the higher levels of human genius and motivation
in today's new reality requires a sea change in thinking, a
whole new habit. The crucial challenge of our world today is
this: to find our voice and inspire others to find theirs. It is
what Covey calls the 8th Habit.
So many people feel frustrated, discouraged, unappreciated,
and undervalued -- with little or no sense of voice or unique
contribution. "The 8th Habit" is the answer to the soul's
yearning for greatness, the organization's imperative for
significance and superior results, and humanity's search for its
"voice." Profound, compelling, and stunningly timely, this
groundbreaking new book will transform the way we think about
ourselves and our purpose in life, about our organizations, and
about humankind. |
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Leadership by the Book,
Ken Blanchard
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Leadership Strategies That Work from the Greatest Leader
of All Time.
Best-selling authors Kenneth Blanchard, Bill Hybels,
and Phil Hodges offer a unique, compelling, and
paradigm-shifting model that effectively interweaves
successful leadership methods with character development
principles based on the teachings of history's most
influential leader, Jesus Christ. Told in the parable
format of The One Minute Manager and Raving Fans,
Leadership by the Book offers unexpected and exceptional
answers to crucial leadership issues today - helping
leaders in all walks of life to fulfill their calling
and help others do the same.
Is there any common ground between leadership success
strategies on one hand, and the Biblical principles
regarding character on the other?
Yes! And this new book - from three of America's most
successful and compassionate leaders - clearly and
creatively explains the answer. With unique value for
leaders of all kinds, Leadership by the Book interweaves
character development principles with successful
leadership methods - using the example and words of
Jesus as the catalyst and framework for it all.
The framework for the sound and practical teachings
of this unique and powerful book is a story about three
acquaintances who each have something vital to learn.
One is a businessman who, after years of fabulous
success, finally comes face to face with the emptiness
in his soul. His struggle becomes critical when a heart
attack leaves him hovering near death. This crisis
brings together two figures from his past - a teacher of
leadership strategies, and a successful pastor. Their
renewed interaction leads them all to deeper discoveries
of the value of biblical leadership principles.
In Leadership by the Book readers - particularly
company presidents, corporate leaders, middle managers,
department heads, parents, coaches, community leaders,
pastors, lay leaders, and others - will learn the very
practical side of Christ's teachings on leadership. And
they'll learn that truly effective leadership cannot be
divorced from the character issues that Jesus taught.
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Good to Great, Jim Collins
The Challenge "Built to Last," the defining management study
of the nineties, showed how great companies triumph over time
and how long-term sustained performance can be engineered into
the DNA of an enterprise from the very beginning. But what about
the company that is not born with great DNA? How can good
companies, mediocre companies, even bad companies achieve
enduring greatness?
The Study For years, this question preyed on the mind of Jim
Collins. Are there companies that defy gravity and convert
long-term mediocrity or worse into long-term superiority? And if
so, what are the universal distinguishing characteristics that
cause a company to go from good to great?
The Standards Using tough benchmarks, Collins and his
research team identified a set of elite companies that made the
leap to great results and sustained those results for at least
fifteen years. How great? After the leap, the good-to-great
companies generated cumulative stock returns that beat the
general stock market by an average of seven times in fifteen
years, better than twice the results delivered by a composite
index of the world's greatest companies, including Coca-Cola,
Intel, General Electric, and Merck.
The Comparisons The research team contrasted the
good-to-great companies with a carefully selected set of
comparison companies that failed to make the leap from good to
great. What was different? Why did one set of companies become
truly great performers while the other set remained only good?
Over five years, the team analyzed the histories of all
twenty-eight companies in the study. After sifting through
mountains of data and thousands of pages of interviews, Collins
and his crew discovered the key determinants of greatness -- why
some companies make the leap and others don't.
The Findings The findings of the Good to Great study will
surprise many readers and shed light on virtually every area of
management strategy and practice. The findings include:
Level 5 Leaders: The research team was shocked to discover
the type of leadership required to achieve greatness. The
Hedgehog Concept (Simplicity within the Three Circles): To go
from good to great requires transcending the curse of
competence. A Culture of Discipline: When you combine a culture
of discipline with an ethic of entrepreneurship, you get the
magical alchemy of great results. Technology Accelerators:
Good-to-great companies think differently about the role of
technology. The Flywheel and the Doom Loop: Those who launch
radical change programs and wrenching restructurings will almost
certainly fail to make the leap. “ Some of the key concepts
discerned in the study, ” comments Jim Collins, "fly in the face
of our modern business culture and will, quite frankly, upset
some people.”
Perhaps, but who can afford to ignore these findings? |
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The 7 Habits of Highly
Effective People, Stephen Covey
In "The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People,"
author Stephen R. Covey presents a holistic, integrated,
principle-centered approach for solving personal and
professional problems. With penetrating insights and pointed
anecdotes, Covey reveals a step-by-step pathway for living with
fairness, integrity, service, and human dignity -- principles
that give us the security to adapt to change and the wisdom and
power to take advantage of the opportunities that change
creates. |
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Principle-Centered Leadership,
Stephen Covey
How do we as individuals and organizations survive and thrive
amid tremendous change? Why are efforts to improve falling so
short in real results despite the millions of dollars in time,
capital, and human effort being spent on them? How do we unleash
the creativity, talent, and energy within ourselves and others
in the midst of pressure? Is it realistic to believe that
balance among personal, family, and professional life is
possible? Stephen R. Covey demonstrates that the answer to these
and other dilemmas is Principle-Centered Leadership, a
long-term, inside-out approach to developing people and
organizations. The key to dealing with the challenges that face
us today is the recognition of a principle-centered core within
both ourselves and our organizations. Dr. Covey offers insights
and guidelines that can help you apply these principles both at
work and at home - leading not just to a new understanding of
how to increase quality and productivity, but also to a new
appreciation of the importance of building personal and
professional relationships in order to enjoy a more balanced,
more rewarding, more effective life. |
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Courageous Leadership,
Bill Hybels
The book you hold resonates with this
conviction: that leaders such as you have the potential to be
the most influential forces on planet Earth. Yours is the
staggering responsibility and the matchless privilege of
rallying believers and mobilizing their spiritual gifts in order
to help people who are far from God become fully devoted
followers of Christ. Life transformation and the eternal
destinies of real people depend on the redemptive message
entrusted to the local church. Are you willing to do whatever it
takes to lead your church effectively so God's message of hope
can change the world? Then this book is for you. Courageous
Leadership is Bill Hybels' magnum opus, a book far too important
to be written before its time. Only now, after nearly thirty
years leading his own church from a handful of people with a
burning vision into a globe-spanning kingdom force--only after
almost three decades of victories and setbacks, of praying hard
and risking big--is Hybels ready at last to share the lessons he
has learned, and continues to learn, about Christian
leadership. Too much is at stake for you not to maximize your
spiritual gift of leadership, insists Hybels. In this
passionate, powerful book, he unpacks the tools, tasks, and
challenges of your calling. You'll discover the power of vision
and how to turn it into action. You'll gain frontline insights
for developing a kingdom dream team, discovering your leadership
style, developing other leaders, making decisions, walking with
God, embracing change, staying your God-given course, and much,
much more. Drawing on his own richly varied life experiences,
Hybels fleshes out vital principles with riveting firsthand
stories. This is far more than another book on leadership
strategies and techniques. You'll find those topics in here, to
be sure. But beyond them, you'll find the very essence of one of
today's foremost Christian leaders--his fervent commitment to
evangelism and discipleship and his zeal to inspire fellow
church leaders even as he seeks to keep growing as a leader
himself. If unchurched people matter to you . . . if you love
seeing believers serve passionately with their spiritual gifts .
. . if God's heartbeat for the church is your heartbeat as well
. . . then this book is a must. Courageous Leadership will
convince you to lead with all your might, all your skill, and
all your faith. And it will give you the tools to do just that. |
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Developing the Leader Within
You, John C. Maxwell
In this repackaged bestseller John Maxwell examines the
differences between leadership styles, outlines principles for
inspiring, motivating, and influencing others. These principles
can be used in any organization to foster integrity and
self-discipline and bring a positive change. "Developing the
Leader Within You" also allows readers to examine how to be
effective in the highest calling of leadership by understanding
the five characteristics that set "leader managers" apart from
"run-of-the-mill managers."
In this John Maxwell classic, he shows readers how to develop
the vision, value, influence, and motivation required of
successful leaders. |
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The Fifth Discipline,
Peter Senge
"The Fifth Discipline" has turned the principles
of the learning organization into a movement of snowballing size
and strength. The ability to respond to change was the crucial
issue of the '90s, but management tools such as "reengineering"
and "total quality" simply treat the symptoms. Adopted by Ford,
AT&T, and others, here is a cure for the disease Senge calls
"learning disabilities." |
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Leadership on the Line,
Ronald Heifetz
To lead is to live
dangerously. It's romantic
and exciting to think of
leadership as all
inspiration, decisive
action, and rich rewards,
but leading requires taking
risks that can jeopardize
your career and your
personal life. It requires
putting yourself on the
line, disturbing the status
quo, and surfacing hidden
conflict. And when people
resist and push back,
there's a strong temptation
to play it safe. Those who
choose to lead plunge in,
take the risks, and
sometimes get burned. But it
doesn't have to be that way
say renowned leadership
authorities Ronald Heifetz
and Marty Linsky. In
Leadership on the Line, they
show how it's possible to
make a difference without
getting "taken out" or
pushed aside. They present
everyday tools that give
equal weight to the
dangerous work of leading
change and the critical
importance of personal
survival. Through vivid
stories from all walks of
life, the authors present
straightforward strategies
for navigating the perilous
straits of leadership.
Whether parent or
politician, CEO or community
activist, this practical
book shows how you can
exercise leadership and
survive and thrive to enjoy
the fruits of your labor.
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For Evangelism:
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Just Walk Across the Room,
Bill Hybels
Believers universally affirm that evangelism is
a vital part of what God calls them to do, but very few make a
practice of doing it. They feel awkward and ill-equipped, either
because they've never been trained, or because their lack of
interaction with non- Christians prevents them from using and
developing the skills they do have.
Bill Hybels addresses these concerns and signals the next era in
personal evangelism with Just Walk Across the Room.
Drawing on fresh perspectives from the author's own experiences,
as well as time-tested and practical illustrations, Just
Walk Across the Room encourages and equips readers to
routinely initiate spiritual conversations with those who don't
know Christ. |
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Becoming a Contagious
Christian, Bill Hybels
Releasing the hidden evangelist in every
Christian -- Picture all of your church members as evangelists
who: Demonstrate a contagious Christian character . . . Build
spiritually strategic relationships . . . Direct conversations
toward matters of faith . . . Communicate their faith in a style
that's personal and natural . . . Explain biblical truths in a
style that's personal and natural . . . Explain biblical truths
in everyday language . . . Respond to the most common objections
to Christianity. Becoming a Contagious Christian is a proven
course designed to equip believers for effective evangelism in
today's world. It avoids stereotyped approaches that feel
intimidating to many Christians. Instead, it shows ordinary
believers how they can share the Gospel in a natural and
powerful way while being the person God made them to be. Each
session's exercises, discussions, self-assessments, and video
vignettes give step-by-step guidance to help participants become
effective communicators for Christ to those around them. There's
even a section on everyday answers that will help believers
respond to difficult questions regarding Christianity.
Field-tested with over 5,000 people at Willow Creek Community
Church -- a church known worldwide for its dynamic evangelistic
outreach -- Becoming a Contagious Christian is an innovative and
unparalleled program for training Christians in relational
evangelism. Becoming a Contagious Christian works with any size
group, from small groups of 4-9 to Sunday school classes and
other large groups of 10 to 150 or more. It can be presented
successfully in any of the following formats: - Four sessions of
two hours each - Eight sessions of 50 minutes each - One, two,
or three-day retreats - Or adapt it to fit the needs of your
church! Becoming a Contagious Christian materials include:
-Video - Leader's Guide - Overhead masters - Participant's
Guide8 sessions (flexible format); 1 60-minute video. Over
800,000 people have participated in Becoming a Contagious
Christian training in the last eight years. |
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