Video Transcript: Lesson 36 Making the Most of Meetings
Well, for the last time, let me say it Welcome back to this class on revitalization. I am just so honored and privileged to have gone through this time with you, thank you so much for this. And I do hope and pray that God is going to bless what you've learned, he's already at work in you through this class, and that he will continue to do so for a long time. So here we are lecture 36. Let's jump into it. Let's get it done. And just celebrate all the things that God has been doing in through you during this class. Father, thank you so much for this opportunity we have had as brothers and sisters in Christ to gather together through the wonderful gift of technology to share your truth, God, we know that your heart is for the church, she is your bride. I mean, this was great love, that you lead it, so Lord, We ask in this final lecture that you would help us to be the very best we can be for you. And Lord, thank you again, for this wonderful call to love your church and to work alongside you, in bringing it to the place it needs to be. Lord, we ask this in your name, amen. Okay, so these last three lectures have been making the most of your leadership. Because as pastor or leader, wherever you are, you are uniquely situated to influence the direction of the church, right? You have a unique opportunity to move people from where they're at, to God's agenda, you know, which I think is a great way of just certain defining, revitalization, moving people from where they are to where God wants them to be on his agenda. I think that that just sums up revitalization. And so you have a unique ability to do that, where you are God's puts you there, for that very special purpose. And so we've talked a little bit about how to make the most of it. And the first one we talked about was building the body, that your role is not to be the all star who saves the church, right? Your role is to be the coach, the equipper, you're getting people out there doing dancing, living for the Lord, right? That's your job, so that everybody is growing, you're all maturing, all the parts of the body are working together, that's your role, that you got a unique position to be able to do that. And the second thing where we talked about more in our last lecture was about expanding the leadership base, and really keeping an eye on who are the people around you, that you can develop very intentionally. Because you're in again, you're in a position, make the most of it you this is your there's going to be time well spent as you equip. And as you multiply, it's time well spent your make your make the most of the office that you sit in, okay, and I don't mean this physical space, I mean, the place the position that you're in. And so today, we're going to finish on one more on making the most of your leadership, which is making the most of meetings. Now, this doesn't necessarily sound like the most spiritual way to end this. But I promise, this is a very, very practical and helpful thing for you to be thinking about. Because as a leader, you probably call meetings right or you chair you lead meetings. That's a unique spot that God has you in literally like you're in a very unique, special chair, to lead meetings. And so we're going to talk today about how to make the most of those wonderful opportunities, called meetings, what a
valuable tool it is. When you can have all your people together around the table, and to discuss, you know, what God is up to and how you can join him. Now there's nothing worse than a meeting where nothing gets done. I hate going to meetings where nothing gets done, whether I'm the leader or I'm sitting around the table and somebody else is leading. And you know, meetings get a really bad reputation of like, well, meetings and committees nothing ever gets done out of them, because they think they're often done poorly. Yet I've seen meetings generate so much, you know, energy and direction and, and plans for the future and, you know, really energizing you know, walking out of a meeting just ready to just kick down the door and go do what God would have us do next. So meetings aren't inherently good or bad. They're just an opportunity that we really want to make the most of, okay. And we've got to be really careful about how we do meetings, because time is very valuable and precious. And since that most of our meetings are attended by people who are volunteers, and they're coming on their free time are, often after a day of work, or on a weekend or something like that, we need to make sure that their time is honored, that it's valued, we make the most of it, and that they feel like when they leave the meeting at the, you know, at the end, that it was worth their time that they were glad that they were there, and they've got some, they've got some real momentum going forward. Okay. So meetings, we need to talk about it, and making the most of it. So I'm just going to bullet point, a bunch of things that I think are important parts of making the most of a meeting. And so hang on, we're going to kind of move through this here. So how to lead effective meetings, let's talk about that. So first is agendas. And an agenda is really just the outline of the meeting, and what the meeting's about and what you want to accomplish. And so, never meet without a purpose. Okay, so you never meet just to meet, I've been part of meetings where it was, you know, we meet the first Monday of every month, at seven o'clock, whether we need to or not, we meet the first Monday, and there's no clear purpose other than this is just when we always meet, okay, and you're trying to I don't even know what we're doing here. So every meeting, you don't ever want to go to meetings like that I've been to too many, there are waste, and you just you resent being there. And then the next time they call a meeting, you say forget it, I have no interest in doing that. So you want to have a really clear goals. And you should be able to state to your team or whoever you're meeting with. Why are we here today or tonight? What is the purpose of it, and it's right at the beginning, this is what we're hoping to accomplish. When we walk out of here in an hour, this is what we would like to see. Okay. And so that's what an agenda we'll help you do. And you're going to want to really kind of prioritize what you're talking about. So, you know, if you go to an agenda, and there's 78 things on the list, like nobody prioritize, you know, what are the one, two, maybe at most, three things that we need to talk about right now. So you want to be, you want to be really clear, this is what we're talking about. And this is the end
goal we're trying to get to, or we're trying to make a decision on this particular item. And I would say you know, really be good about honoring time. So if you say the meeting is from seven o'clock to eight o'clock at night, don't let the meeting go to 930. You know, respect people's times when they're there. And I would really just recommend keeping meetings, like 60 minutes to 90 minutes at the max, we've probably all been to marathon meetings. And you know that once you get past a certain amount of time, the energy goes down, people are just tired of thinking they've had a long day, they want to go home, they're supposed to be someplace else. But now they're kind of stuck here. And so now they're not contributing at all, they're just more irritated that they're still at this meeting that they should have been out of an hour ago. And so I would really limit meetings to 60 to 90 minutes. And so I try to keep it like very focused, clear, short, and like boom, boom, boom, we know what we're here for, we're going to do it, and then we're gonna get out. With that being said, what I find to be really helpful in the practice that our church has adopted, for the last number of years is most every meeting, we begin with a time of worship. And that could be I play guitar, so it could be me just playing something. It could be we'll watch a video, some worship music, maybe it's something new, or we'll sing along to it if there's words on the screen or handouts. Sometimes it'll be like, just a prayer time with some open space just honoring and glorifying the Lord. You know, some scripture reading. But again, that has a more worshipful bent, or just going around and saying, let's just, let's lift up some names of the Lord, as in Scripture, and as we and why, why it's important to us and we'll go around and I just always so wonderful to be reminded why we're even at a meeting what the church is all about. It's for Jesus, and that Are we're at the meeting actually then often say is an act of worship, you know, we're giving you know, it's not just singing songs is worship, it's, it's everything we do for the Lord. And here we are tonight seeking, seeking out what we can do and trying to listen to the Lord and decide and come together as a body and, and push forward and, and that's an act of worship, so. And it also, I think if people have bad days, it really recenter them, it focuses them. If there's any negativity that people are coming in with about the agenda, I think it really just takes the edge off of that, because it's like, yeah, you know, this isn't about me, it's about the Lord. It's his church. He's honored and glorified. And so I would just like, we've just had 510 minutes. And it's always worth it. I've never done that. And so boy, we really wasted our time worshiping, before we got started, just practically speaking, starting with an easy item that everybody can agree on, that's not going to take a lot of time, you kind of want to build some more momentum, you know, don't start with like, the most divisive, contentious issue, or, you know, something like that. Just something easy, that you guys can just, you know, talk about, and there's agreement, and there's good feeling. And then usually after that, then I would move on to like the bigger item like, okay, like, here's really why we're here. And, and really trying to
make the bulk of our meeting is going to be talking about the big item, right? I don't want to have a 60 minute meeting, and spend only three minutes talking about the really big item, because I just spent 45 minutes talking about the smaller inconsequential things, right. So I'm really kind of deliberate with like, Okay, we really want to spend our time here, okay, and building an agenda kind of around that. And then, usually then ending with a minor, easy issue, or just something that we can all celebrate together, you know, ending on it's just a good positive note, on the way out. So, that's kind of an overall flow of what a meeting looks like. And in terms of agendas, depending on your ministry, and what means are available to you. We always send them out, you know, a week ahead of time, or you know, at least several days ahead of time, so that when people come to the meeting, they know exactly why we're meeting, you know, it's such as well, what are we doing here, when everybody comes in the door, they know exactly why we're meeting, they know, they've had a little time to think about it. And they know we're we're trying to get Okay, so give giving people a heads up is really important. Okay. And, uh, one last thing on on meetings, having a meeting, never have a meeting when it could have been like an email, you know, if you're, if you have that capacity, and then you have distribution lists, sometimes you just need to send out information. And it's like, or just Hey, everybody, just so you know, this is what's up, you know, if you can do it in an email, don't have the people come in, you just don't need to do it. So I always try to make people know that when I'm calling you in for a meeting, and we're we're going to spend some time face to face. It's, it's something that can only really be done face to face. Okay, so let's talk about this. So sometimes, in meetings, there's reports from different committees or different, you know, projects we have going on, whenever there's reports, they're always given ahead of time. You know, they're printed out, emailed out, or copies are given and handed off to people. So you know, like, again, a week, several days before the meeting. We don't spend our time just like, Okay, Bill has a report for us, and then builds out a three page report. And we just sit there and we listen to Bill, read the report, right? We can do that at home. And so basically, when we get to different reports, it'll be like, Okay, Bill has a report from the mission team. And Bill might highlight one thing that was in there, like, Hey, I hope everybody saw this, because that's a really big thing. And then we'll say, does anybody have any questions? And then it's like, you're on page two, you said this, you know, more often than not, people are like, Nope, I read it at home. Great. Let's keep on moving. As long as that information got out, and everybody knows about it, we don't need to talk about it. Right. So if anybody does need to give something and then occasionally time where it's like, we just didn't, you know, something popped up last minute or there's an addition to the report that was sent out. If a report needs to be given or if there's a guest who wants to Just come and speak to the team for whatever reason, it's very brief, you know, it's very brief, the
meetings are not the time to like, catch up on all the things you missed, you need to do that kind of, you know, everybody do that kind of before to be prepared for the meeting. So that's just something, you know, I've been at a lot of meetings where somebody just reads the report. And it's like, This just made the meeting 20 minutes longer. And I could have done this, you know, last week when I have the time to do it. Okay. Another thing with good effective meetings is really watching who speaks and how often they speak, it's typical in a group, that someone or someones are going to want to dominate the conversation and you, you probably had a name, jump right into your head, as I said, that you've been in a meeting. And it's like the same person, just always. It's like, everyone is entitled to their opinion. And, you know, they'll talk for 10 minutes, and then somebody else will talk for 30 seconds, and then they have to give their 9 minute rebuttal to what that 30 second thing was, you know, people have, you know, big personalities, and they have to be going out, you know, always just dominating the floor. And that really can destroy a meeting, as I'm sure you, you know, you've been I'm sure you've been part of meetings, whether you've led them or you've been one of the people on the table, and you just want that person to be quiet, because it's like, they're running the show. Okay. So just a couple of things. So if somebody does speak, you know, we didn't we need to set some guidelines, like, hey, you know, we want to talk about this. But if everybody could limit it to a couple of minutes, you know, that's probably about enough to get your point across. And so somebody's talking, you know, I don't like to have a stopwatch. But if it goes to like, four minutes, five minutes, I'll just say, was there anything else you needed to add? Because we, you know, we were going to try to limit it. And we want to make sure we hear from other people, then people will either cut it short, or they'll say, No, that, you know, that was about it. You definitely want to do that. And then if they speak again, it's like, you know, yeah, kind of how to cut them off. And then they're speaking again and going on. And, you know, don't be afraid to just say, you know, Bill, we already heard from you on that. And I think, you know, we've got a good idea of where you stand, and you can kind of say, you know, repeat from what I hear Bill, you know, you're really against this because of one two, and three, or Bill, you you're really behind us because of these two reasons. So Bill feels like he's heard, as they say, we don't really need to talk about, you know, anymore, we can move on, let's hear from some other people. And, and I, you know, definitely if there's more quiet people, sometimes they just, you know, they need, you've got to draw it out of a little bit. The person who's quietest, I found this more often than not, the person who's the quietest often has like the best idea. And you've got people who talk a lot, and it's going round around, around around and you can't get any real solution. And then finally, ask the most quiet person to say something in about two sentences. They, they hit the nail on the head, and it's like, Oh, I wish you know, we needed to get you in on this earlier. So just making
sure it's it's more of a team feeling. And it's not just heavily dominated that one or two people are just running the whole conversation conversation. Again, so inviting people to speak or not, and then people who speak too much, saying, you know, we already heard from you, let's, let's, let's, let's move to somebody
else. So we all have a chance to express what we think the Lord would have for us? And also, I always hold people accountable to speak for themselves. So it's a well, I've heard, you know, that people are upset about the new worship style. Okay, well, I don't ask for names at all. But I will say, Well, Bill, we're picking on
Bill today. Say, Well, Bill, uh, you might have heard that, but what do you think? Because sometimes people will, you know, they'll dominate meetings and kind of, uh, you know, talk about what other people think. But it's really them. Like, if we're going to talk about this, I don't want to speculate, you know, so Well, Bill, is that how you feel, tell me what you think about this. And then he'll either say, Well, I agree, and then I can address that or he goes, Well, I disagree. And we
can talk about that. But if we're just having conversations about hearsay, there's no way we can address it. There's no way I can, you know, try to resolve it. Or things like that. Okay, so, speaking it's always like We're keeping it fair and balanced. But also, we're not having conversations on hearsay, it's what do you think, what, where are you at with this issue? Okay. Another key thing with meetings is vote when you need to come to a decision on a big issue, what I have found really helpful is not ever voting on a bigger issue. The at the meeting, it's first raised. So we're going to talk about hiring a new staff position, we've identified a need, you know, our children's ministry director has stepped down, and we need to replace that. Well, that's a pretty big decision, you know, or if it's like, budget or something like that, or we're gonna, you know, we're gonna, you know, do a remodel in our church, it's gonna cost a lot of money, whatever it is, you know, give people time to hear it. And then to process it, not to feel like it just got railroaded through. So if it's a big issue, even I'd say a moderate issue. It's like, we'll bring it up. We vote on it next month. And if we can't wait for a month, I'll say we're going to bring it up today. And then within next week, I'll call around or we'll do an email, and we'll take a vote then. Because we have to decide this within 10 days, we just found out about it. This is what we need to do. But those are really the exceptions. And I have found just letting people have a month to sit on something. By the time it comes back. There's almost like no. There's really very little, almost even conversation about it. Because they got introduced a month ago, they've had a month to ask questions to think about it's a process to work through any issues, if they needed to talk somebody outside the team. They did. And then when they come, it's usually like, Yeah, sounds good. All the problems I had I worked through, rather than saying we're voting on this tonight, and they still have like, eight unresolved questions about what you're doing and who's doing it, and how's it gonna get paid. And it's like, it's much better to wait and get everybody on board
than to just like, get it done. And, you know, slam it through. So I would really encourage you to just if I need something, you know, a big vote, I need some I need a decision by October, well, I'm gonna probably introduce it in like August, or something like that, or September at the latest. So people have time to process it and think about it, okay. And they'll appreciate it. Because you don't want meetings where there's like a lot of anxiety and, and artificial deadlines, increase that anxiety. Okay, so voting, very important how you do that you want everybody feeling good about it, building consensus, deliverables, this is a really, really, really big one and really important, okay. So there needs to be some accountability, let's say you're, you're at a meeting, and you've decided to do three things, you're going to do A, B, and C. So that's great. And a lot of times the meeting ends, we all agree on this, and we all walk out the door. And then we come back next month, and no, but nothing's happened. A, B and C are still not done. Because there wasn't any, like accountability attached to it. So what we do, which has been very helpful for us and becoming very effective, is that whenever we decide something, there's always what are we doing? Who's in charge of making sure it gets done? And then when are they getting it done by? So Sally is going to you know, interview three people for the children's ministry director position in the next month. And she will report back here next time on that, right? Or, you know, we're going to, you get the idea. I don't have to make up a bunch of examples. But you say what's happening? Who's responsible for it? And when are they getting it done by So then everybody has a really clear idea, okay, by the next meeting, I have to do this. Or by the next meeting, I'm not responsible for anything. Because if nobody's name is attached to something, it's never going to get done. You have to say this is who's doing it. This is and this is what it's gonna get done by. So then as a leader, what I do and what I'd encourage you to do a week before the next meeting, or whenever that deliverable is do by, I'll call Sally and say. Sally, how's it going? Have you been able to meet with any of the three candidates yet? Yes, I met with two of them and I'm meeting with one on Thursday. Great. Or she'll be like, No, I haven't I haven't met with any of them yet. Okay. Are you going to be able to meet with them? No. Okay. Well, that since that was going to be the the focus of the next meeting, well, we're not going to have to have a meeting now because Sally didn't get to it or, and there's different reasons. Sally said, Well, my mother's been in the hospital for the last two weeks, and we've been running back and forth taking care of her. I totally get it. I totally understand. Life happens. Don't worry about it. Sally, why don't we plan on you doing this for the next month? She says, Great, perfect. Or it's like has something come up? No, no, I just haven't gotten around to it. And that's where you can then, you know, she just kind of dropped the ball. That's when you can do a little bit of coaching on, you know, leadership. And, okay, well, let's talk about this. And you know, why it matters, and, you know, very gently, very graciously, but because there's
some accountability, I can, you know, we're going to get more stuff done. But even if it doesn't get done, I can actually do some coaching, I can do some leading, I can do some developing. So kind of a win win, either way. But if we just say we're going to do A, B, and C, and then we don't agree on anything, or who's doing it, we all come back and said, Yeah, that was great. We all decided it. Nothing, nobody's done anything. Okay, well, we just wasted this meeting. And I've been in way too many meetings for things have been wasted. Okay. And so that's just a really big one. Also just throw out the idea of some meeting alternatives, if it's difficult for you to all meet in one place. And just kind of working between meetings. Our church as we do a lot of collaborative work, a lot of work on teams. And so we do, we've got our churches, a big space on Google Drive, with shared folders and documents and people work together. So it's like, they don't have to meet in person, because they're working on a document together. I don't know how technologically astute your people are, or what technology you have available to you. But we try to use technology as much as we can. So I can work on it when it's convenient for me, my friend, Sally can work on it when it's convenient with her. We don't have to, you know, schedule time to meet together. And we can kind of collaborate and work on things. And that's been, you know, just cuts down on meetings, honestly, it makes it a lot more effective for us. So we use as much kind of digital stuff as we can to cut down on meetings. And another way we do that is with conference calling. There's lots of free companies, or companies that offer free conference calling. So if we just need to do like a quick 15 minute check in what's going on. It's like, we don't all need to drive in and talk about this. We can just do a quick conference call and like, Hey, Sally, how's it going? Hey, Bill, how's it going? And this is what I'm working on. And boom, boom, boom, okay, yeah, sounds good. We don't We didn't need to meet, but it was important that we updated each other. And then that's the end of it. So Bill can be driving in this car calling in and, you know, that saves him a meeting and Sally's, you know, her lunch break. And so now she hasn't come in at night, and she's eating her sandwich at her desk, you know, doing this. So we just look at a lot of just alternatives. So that when we do meet, and when we are together, we get the most kind of bang for our buck, that we're not just doing reports, we're not doing something that could have been an email, we're not doing something that could have been just a phone in that it's stuff that we really need to talk about in person. And so I found that we now have less meetings. But we get more done in less meetings. So I'll get more done in four meetings than I used to get done in 10 meetings, doing it this way. And then finally, last little bullet note here is the communication post meeting. You can have the greatest thing happen in a meeting. But if it word doesn't get out about it, it's almost like it never happened. And so you really can't overdo it, you know, sharing with the congregation, sharing with, you know, appropriate whether it's you want to share with just all your leaders or the whole
congregation or whatever, hey, this is what we're doing. This is what we're talking about. You can do newsletters, you can do email, you can do it in bulletins, you can do it in person, announcements and worship, whatever it is. You know, communicating this is what's going on. This is what's happening, because everybody likes to be in the know people don't want to be in the dark. If you're doing really good things, and good things are happening at your meetings you want, you want people to know about it, you want people to get jazzed about all the great things that are going on. And I can tell you, you can't do this enough. Because for every one time I've heard somebody say, we've heard enough about this, you know, kind of you're beating a dead horse. For every one time I hear that there's probably 500 times I hear, I never heard anything about it. You know, what, where did this come from? Nobody said anything to me. Even if they've, we publicize it like crazy. They still are, they still swear they've never heard it. And so we've even done things like, we'll have meetings and take, like the big, you know, poster paper that will take notes on, we'll just, like, hang it in a common space for people to look at, and be like, Oh, what was this for? Oh, this was for this meeting, you know, not just, you know, kind of our notes are private. And we just try to be transparent and let people see, this is what we're doing. This is what we're working on. So when there's I work with youth leaders, it's like, hey, this was a great meeting, the parents need to know about this. And the kids need to know when, when what's going on, and the things we're working on and the things we're deciding. But that's kind of an example of, again, if you want to have effective meetings, don't just have them be effective when you're actually meeting? Have them be effective after the meeting and getting the word out. Okay. So that's it, can you believe that, my goodness, we have finally made it to the end. Good for you. Congratulations. I do pray that, again, all the talks, the readings you've done have been helpful, all the challenges for you to do that along the way that God has just stirred something in you at different times. And truly, my every blessing, the work or revitalization you're doing is very hard. As I've shared in the past, there are times where I just feel like Yes. And there's times where I feel like you no, like, there's times where I teach this, these lectures, and I feel so excited about because I see what God is doing in my church, and I want to just pass it on with you. And then there's been other times in these lectures where I almost feel like why am I to even teach this, we're still we're still struggling with this or we've gone backwards. And I think that's the big thing for you to remember, as you do revitalization, we've talked about this so much, it's a slow process. There's not just one kind of silver bullet. And you're gonna go two steps forward and one step back, and one step forward. And one step back, then two steps forward. And it's it's an up and down process, you need to be patient with your people, you need to be patient with yourself. And just keep keep at it, keep working. Keep pushing into the things that God is leading you to keep moving your
yourself and your people onto God's agenda. Try to grow as a person of character that displays Christ, model it for others, and at the end of the day, just trust it with God, just give it to the Lord, and your congregation or your ministry might double. It might go down in size. But if you're being faithful to the Lord, at the end of the day, you can go to bed, put your head down, and no in confidence. God, I'm giving it to you, I love you, I'm serving you. And friends, let that be enough. Let that be enough. Because your people might not. You might be the most wonderful leader but they're just not going to accept it. You know, think of Moses 40 years trying to get the people to go in the right direction. And he couldn't you know, so if you're discouraged in six months or a year from now, it's okay. It's okay. Just continue to develop who you are as a person and as a leader, keeping in mind all the things we've talked about, and then trust it to the Lord, and pray for him to turn the hearts of those you lead so that they might share in your joy in him. With that, let me pray for you one more time. Father, may your blessing be upon your people. Your blessing be upon your church, particularly Lord, the church that struggles, the church in decline the church that is stagnant and Lord the leaders who grieve over it. Lord, replace their grief with joy. Continue to speak to them with direction and wisdom and guidance far beyond this class. May their people be open to them that is not just them that are leading but it's you through the power of Your Spirit Lord may your church grow until you come again to take us all into your glory Amen