BIVO'S - 2006 LBC ANNUAL CONVENTION
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- 7:30 - 8:30 am
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- CLICK HERE to register on-line
- Bivocational Pastors and Wives, children welcome
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- Date: November 14, 2006
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- Location: Trinity Baptist Church, Lake Charles
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- Lifeway recognizes an outstanding Smaller Church Pastor every year, that pastor is from Louisiana this year. The Lifeway Bivocational Pastor's Strategist, Mitch Martin, will be at the breakfast to honor that Pastor. We will also honor the Northern and Southern Louisiana Exemplary Bivocational Pastors of 2005. Come share a great breakfast before the Convention starts and fellowship with our LBC Bivo's.
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- 60 % of all LBC Pastors are bivocational . . .
- Come meet the Associational Bivocational Ministry Directors, the LBC Regional Bivocational Ministry Strategists

RESUMES needed from Bivocational Ministers
Pastors / Music / Youth
Submit at: www.lbc.org (Click on Resumes) |
- Goto www.lbc.org
- Click on Resume Button
- Either Click on:
- Church Seeking a Pastor
- or
- Pastor Seeking a Church
- Create your ID & Password
- Supply Information (fill in the blanks)
- Activate or Deactivate
- Remember your ID & Password, you will need it to edit, activate or deactivate your resume.
- Only you and our administrative staff can access your information


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- 4 Keys to Welcome Guests in the Smaller Church
- Written By Rick Ezell
- Article taken from Lifeway's Pastors Today, Craig Webb editor



This is a follow-up article to: How to Get Your First-Time Guests to Come Back.
Smaller churches have a distinct advantage over larger churches in welcoming first-time
guests. First-time guests are easily recognizable since the regular attendees know
everyone.



What can a smaller church do to be more effective in welcoming those people?
The following are four effective initiatives in welcoming first-time guests:
- 1. Demonstrate practical hospitality.
The strength of smaller churches is relationships. Take advantage of this by
encouraging members to not only greet first-time guests but also to include them for
lunch or in your home.
- • Simple gestures of introduction, invitation, and inclusion can pay enormous dividends.
- • Friendliness is expected; hospitality shows you care.
- • Friendliness is the first step; hospitality is the walk that welcomes people into the church.
- 2. Welcome without commotion.
A fine line exists between being friendly and being desperate. And, I don’t know exactly
where that line lies. Smaller churches, since they know who the first-time guests are,
will often go overboard in welcoming an individual or family.
This gesture of friendliness can be misinterpreted as being overkill for your guests if
too many people make too much “fuss” over the new people. Treat a first-time guest
how you would want to be treated when you visit a place for the first time. The next
initiative may help...
- 3. Employ a two-minute offense.
Since everyone knows everyone in smaller churches the opposite tendency is to speak
only to your friends or family, leaving the first-time guest alone. A way to break this
behavior is to encourage members to speak to guests before they speak to friends
immediately before and after the service. (This instruction needs to be made at some
other time than worship or it may appear manipulative.)
In a first-time guest’s mind, the most important time of a church service is the few
minutes before - do they feel welcomed, and the few minutes after the service - does
the church care. Simple gestures of smiling, a handshake, introductions, invitations to
lunch, to play softball, etc. will go a long way in making first-time guests feel
comfortable.
- 4. Repair, replace, or remove the cracked mirrors.
Cracked mirrors in our homes, if left that way over time, are often overlooked and
ignored. (The mind plays a trick on us and we don’t notice the crack any longer.) Show
that same cracked mirror to someone, seeing it for the first time, and the crack is glaring
and obvious.
Churches have cracked mirrors that have become overlooked and ignored to its
members. The cracked mirror may be something as simple as the frayed carpet in the
foyer or the hollow sound system in the sanctuary to something more complex as the
kind-hearted person who is overbearing and obnoxious to new people or the music
leader who sings every song at the same tempo.
Cracked mirrors need to be repaired or replaced or removed. To a first-time guest these
“cracks” are glaring. They cause the newcomer to question, “Why doesn’t someone do
something about this? Doesn’t the church care? How could this church be so blind?”
What does it feel like to be a first-time guest in your church? Now you can know for sure
through the services of Sunday First Impressions. For more information about making
the right first impression, visit www.SundayFirstImpressions.com or e-mail
info@SundayFirstImpressions.com



Rick Ezell
Rick Ezell has served churches in Naperville, IL, Scottsburg, IN and Overland Park, KS
for the past twenty-three years. Rick has been married to Cindy for over twenty years.
He is the author of several books including, The Seven Sins of Highly Defective People,
Strengthening the Pastor's Soul, Sightings of the Savior, & Cutting to the Core. He has
also provided several great articles and sermons available free from lifeway.com/pastor:
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