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RAISING YOUR CREATIVITY QUOTIENT

A few good habits can improve the quality of your ideas

A few good habits can improve the quality of your ideas.

Someone once asked William Barclay how he had become such a prolific writer. The key, he said, is learning to apply the seat of your pants to the seat of your chair.

Creativity is far less subjective and ethereal than some make it sound. As much a function of our habits as our “genius” or inspiration, creativity takes discipline.

Here are four ways to enhance your creativity.

Know your moods

Perhaps you’ve heard the old saying about diet: “Mornings are gold, lunch is bronze, and dinner is lead.” Well, the same applies to personal energy levels.

A few months ago, a lay leader handed me a newspaper article outlining the body’s daily rhythms. It underscored how, for most people, mornings provide peak energy and concentration. Quick recall and analytical reasoning are strongest in the a.m.

Conversely, the infamous “afternoon grogs,” the inability to focus, hits from 1 to 3 p.m., with a short reprieve from 3 to 4 p.m., especially in recall.

By evening most people are downshifting, except for the late-night geniuses who hit their creative stride from 11 p.m. to 1 a.m.

Knowing this, I safeguard morning hours for the challenges of praying, studying, writing, and creative thinking. I no longer feel guilty when my engines are revving low. I pace myself, husbanding my energy for creative times.

I’ve also learned how to improve my energy and lessen the negative rhythms.

Soon after moving to the Twin Cities from Southern California, I thought about joining a fitness club. But I wondered, With my mornings scheduled full with message preparation and my evenings already overflowing with meetings and programs, how can I realistically expect to add an exercise regimen?

But I had heard others describe how a workout increased their energy level, so I decided to experiment. I discovered that a sixty-minute workout during my lunch hour or after 3 p.m. worked wonders. Regular exercise dramatically increased my endurance, making my low periods less low-and I feel better about myself. As an added bonus, I find thinking and praying easier while on the Nordic Track or between weight-lifting sets.

While getting into shape, I learned another valuable lesson: If I work out on Friday, resting or going easy on Saturday, by Sunday morning I’m primed to preach. A one-day layoff between workouts enables my body to bounce back with renewed vigor. I can’t recall a time in my previous fifteen years of ministry when I’ve been so clear-headed-able to think creatively and spontaneously-in the pulpit.

Write it down

Someone has said, “Opportunity is like a horse that gallops up and then pauses for a moment. If you don’t get on, before long you hear the clatter of hoofbeats dying away in the distance.”

Great ideas are just such opportunities.

Whenever you hear, see, or think a worthwhile thought, write it down before another moment passes. Experience has taught me to keep a pen and paper handy on my night stand. I never know when a brainstorm will strike-and quickly vanish!

That’s also true of the ideas we learn from others. For several years I’ve kept a journal handy at my office. Whenever I come across a good quote, I immediately jot it down and document the source. Often, when I’m stymied while preparing sermons, I thumb through this journal to stimulate ideas.

Others’ ideas provoke my ideas. While paging through my journal recently, I ran across the statement, “Leaders are to be imitated, not gold-plated.” It triggered a thought: I’ve wanted to do a series on leadership for some time. Why not develop a series of seven messages on leadership principles using one-liners as memory hooks?

I’m now reading and gathering ideas, illustrations, and resources on that theme.

Let it simmer

Most creative ideas mature over time. So, whether I’m planning a sermon series, a special holiday service, or a seminar, I arrange my time to give it as much advance thought as possible. My mind works best when I’m not clawing for ideas at the last minute.

I don’t get overstructured too early. A good idea has a ripple effect, soon suggesting other ideas or applications. At first, all I want to do is grasp the big picture-even if only a piece of it.

Useful ideas sometimes come to me after months of simmering.

Several years ago, I heard the story of Larry Walters, a 33-year-old man who decided he wanted to see his neighborhood from a new perspective. He went down to the local army surplus store one morning and bought forty-five used weather balloons. That afternoon he strapped himself into a lawn chair, to which several of his friends tied the now helium-filled balloons. He took along a six-pack of beer, a peanut-butter-and-jelly sandwich, and a bb gun, figuring he could shoot the balloons one at a time when he was ready to land.

Walters, who assumed the balloons would lift him about 100 feet in the air, was caught off guard when the chair soared more than 11,000 feet into the sky-smack into the middle of the air traffic pattern at Los Angeles International Airport. Too frightened to shoot any of the balloons, he stayed airborne for more than two hours, forcing the airport to shut down its runways for much of the afternoon, causing long delays in flights from across the country.

Soon after he was safely grounded and cited by the police, reporters asked him three questions:

“Were you scared?”

“Yes.”

“Would you do it again?”

“No.”

“Why did you do it?”

“Because,” he said, “you can’t just sit there.”

His answer caught my interest. I pondered that story and its implications for several months. Then, as I was preparing a sermon, “The Crisis Called Christmas,” my thoughts came together. I used the Walters story in the introduction to set the stage for the idea that each of the birth narratives called for a response-or a reaction-from its participants. When it comes to God’s intervention in our lives, we can’t just sit there.

Talk about it

Creativity is often synergistic, so I cultivate people in formal and informal settings who cultivate my ideas.

When I write an article, for instance, I’ll often send it to a writer-friend in San Diego who gives me an honest, professional critique. After he returns the manuscript, I usually get on the phone with him for a late-night, long-distance dialogue about it.

When I’m planning my six-month preaching calendar, I’ll frequently gather select groups of thoughtful people for brainstorming sessions. Such conversations help to both generate ideas and refine the ones I already have.

Creativity isn’t reserved for the Einsteins, Shakespeares, and Spurgeons of the world. It isn’t something we either possess or don’t possess. Creativity is encouraged by developing the habits that create an environment where new ideas can germinate and grow.

– Gary Gonzales

Elim Baptist Church

Minneapolis, Minnesota

34 SUMMER/93

Copyright © 1993 by the author or Christianity Today/Leadership Journal. Click here for reprint information on Leadership Journal.

Posted January 1, 1993

Also in this issue

The Leadership Journal archives contain over 35 years of issues. These archives contain a trove of pastoral wisdom, leadership skills, and encouragement for your calling.

WRAPPING UP A LONG PASTORATE

Announcing your retirement early has its advantages.

ANIMAL INSTINCTS

Five ways church members will react in a fight.

PEOPLE IN PRINT

ICONS EVERY PASTOR NEEDS

Six ways to remember your value.

WHY WON’T I PRAY WITH MY WIFE?

Breaking the barriers to spiritual intimacy.

TIME TRACKING

A workable way to answer the question What did you do this week?

REGARDING RESULTS

In the ministerial box score, which stats really matter?

GOOD FENCES MAKE GOOD PASTORS

Boundaries can lengthen and strengthen your ministry.

FROM THE EDITORS

You rarely hit creativity by aiming at it directly. You have to point at a larger, more substantial target.

KEEPING CONNECTED TO SPIRITUAL POWER

An interview with Jim Cymbala.

THE POWER OF COMMUNION

STORIES FOR THOSE WHO MOURN

Personal memories can salve death’s sting.

10 Reasons Not to Resign

How one pastor kept himself from bailing out.

IDEAS THAT WORK

TESTS OF A LEADER’S CHARACTER

Spiritual Direction for today from a thirteenth-century saint.

IDEAS THAT WORK

COMEBACK

A sense of calling returns from the disabled list.

THE LEGAL LANDSCAPE

Some of the new lasws that impact ministry.

A STRUCTURE RUNS THROUGH IT

Contemporary worship that flows is flexible, but it isn’t random.

GREAT EXPECTATIONS

MINISTERIAL BUNIONS

What do you become when ministry rubs the wrong way? Toug? Or tender?

A GREAT PLAINS MINISTRY

Doing God’s work in windswept places.

CONTENDING FOR THE TRUTH...IN CHURCH PUBLICITY

When you tell others about your church, is honesty the best policy?

FROM THE EDITORS

While agreement is wonderful, sometimes conflict is better than consensus.

WHEN NOT TO CONFRONT

Sometimes conflict is better left alone.

ZONED OUT

These days it takes something extra to get a building permit.

THE LANDMARK SERMON

A clear word at the right time can keep the church from getting separated.

WHEN TO SPEAK IN PUBLIC

Five questions to ask before speaking in a secular situation.

The Unique Network of a Small Church

Learning to communicate in ways a congregation expects.

GOING TO YOUR LEFT

Pastoral ministry demands more than playing to your strengths.

HOW PASTORS PRACTICE THE PRESENCE

A Leadership Survey sizes up church leaders spiritual growth.

CLOSE UP

TO VERIFY

A CLEARER CALL FOR COMMITMENT

To win support for ministry requires the right attitude

ADDING BREADTH AND DEPTH

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Sometimes it’s wrong to take the blame.

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What some couples want in a ceremony borders on bizarre.

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Six creative approaches to an awkward pastoral dilemma.

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THE SLY SABOTEUR

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TO VERIFY …

WHAT THE WORLD NEEDS NOW

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CLASSIC CREATIVITY

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Pastoral lines you may not be around long enough to regret.

MAKING SENSE OF THE TRAUMA

Standing in the Crossfire

An interview with Bill Hybels

BENEFITS OF AN INTENTIONAL INTERIM

An interim pastor can turn a church with problems into a church ready for progress

THE BACK PAGE

Preachers and listeners perform a dance of the spirit, and sometimes Someone Else cuts in.

WARS YOU CAN'T WIN

Facing determined guerilla forces may be a no-win situation.

UNLIKELY ALLIES

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THE HIGH-TURNOVER SMALL CHURCH

Sometimes it feels like this isn’t a congregation but a bus depot.

Handing Your Baby to Barbarians

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TO ILLUSTRATE…

PEOPLE IN PRINT

TO VERIFY…

ARE PASTORS ABUSED?

Criticism comes with the territory, but sometimes it crosses the line.

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When church workers resist the draft, start enlisting them.

HEART TO HEART PREACHING

How to tap authentic emotions, both yours and the listeners’.

HIDDEN EFFICIENCIES OF PRAYER

Four ways that prayer is productive.

IDEAS THAT WORK

WHEN YOU TAKE A PUBLIC STAND

How one pastor calculated the costs of addressing abortion.

REKINDLING VISION IN AN ESTABLISHED CHURCH

The Prophet Joel said old men would dream dreams. What about old congregations?

WAYS TO SHAKE OFF THE DUST

Steps to putting a forced farewell behind you.

WHAT’S DRAMA DOING IN CHURCH?

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THE DANGER OF DETAILS

THE BACK PAGE

I continually have to monitor my spiritual life. How much of it is form without substance?

NEW AND NOTEWORTHY

SQUEEZE PLAY AT HOME

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A POWERFUL PRESENCE

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PRACTICING THE ORIGINAL PASSION

Different ways to observe the Christian discipline of prayer.

MAKING PEACE IN A WAR ZONE

The persistent creativity required to find a place to worship.

THE WELL-FED IMAGINATION

How to be your own best think tank.

LET THERE BE WIT & WISDOM, WEEKLY

After six days, God’s creation was done. But for pastors…

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FROM THE EDITORS

While some may thrive on heated confrontation, most of us long for a calmer, more compassionate means of resolving differences.

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Even traditional churches can gain a healthy flexibility.

Spiritual Disciplines for the Undisciplined

Seeking God with our own temperamental prayers—an interview with Charles Killian.

BREAKING THE GRUMBLERS’ GRIP

How to respond (and not respond) to chronic complainers.

WHEN YOUR CHILDREN PAY THE PRICE

How one pastor’s family withstood the trauma of sexual abuse in the church.

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When things look hopeless, you can call in outside help.

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Everyone stumbles. The graceful regain their balance.

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A new legal landscape faces churches that want to build.

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Having to speak doesn’t always mean you have something to say.

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A day alone with God may be your most important appointment.

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How to regain morale and momentum, if you’re so inclined.

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Conversations with God can wander into wonder.

IF YOU HAVE A GRIPE, PRESS 2

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DIAGNOSING YOUR HEART CONDITION

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View issue


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