Article

Within One, Many Many Many …

One church, one journal, innumerable parts.

Last week our church offered leader training to our volunteers. I was reminded of how many distinct parts make up one normal congregation. Children's workers, youth workers, 20-somethings, life groups, compassion and outreach ministries, support groups, senior care, greeters, security, global ministries. So many distinct interests and roles …

One church, many parts.

I recalled one pastor's wry observation: "The church, like an airplane, is several thousand parts flying in relatively close formation." As leaders, we care for the closeness of that formation because we know what happens when too many parts detach.

We've also seen that with Leadership Journal this year. One journal, many parts.

Discerning readers will notice that this edition has a new look and new arrangement. For the past 10 months, we've been recrafting the journal. This involved countless conversations with readers, consultations with innovative Atlanta design firm Metaleap Creative, and lots of interaction with editorial, design, marketing, advertising, production, and publishing team members at Christianity Today.

The result is the redesigned journal you're now holding. Let me point out just a few of the changes.

The cover, ably designed by art director Doug Fleener, makes a fresh visual statement about this issue's theme, community, the purposeful complexity of a church body. The multiple moving parts actually get us somewhere.

Being thematic, which readers tell us is our most important characteristic, allows us to take one significant topic and go into depth, reflecting multiple perspectives. While our thematic approach hasn't changed, we are now offering 12 monthly themes (in our electronic editions, available to all subscribers), in addition to our four print issues annually.

New departments highlight our three recurring topics: the soul of leadership, the practices of leadership, and the culture in which we lead. Each department features real-life stories, hard won insights, and cartoons that put a knowing smile on a leader's face.

In addition to updated graphics and design, we're also introducing some new features:

Ideas that Work: we introduce you to innovative practices from around the ministry world that have actually worked. They demonstrate that churches are fully awake and creatively responding to needs and opportunities.

Leadership Shorts: executive summaries of the latest books on leadership and ministry.

My Calling: a story from a pastor about how that calling was received or how that calling was tested. You'll be reminded of your own calling and inspired to persevere.

I'm glad you've joined us for this new incarnation of Leadership Journal. Let us know what you think. This is an ongoing conversation as we continue to identify the ways we can best serve church leaders, encouraging and equipping us all to faithfulness and effectiveness.

Copyright © 2014 by the author or Christianity Today/Leadership Journal. Click here for reprint information on Leadership Journal.

Posted October 1, 2014

Also in this issue

How to keep it all rolling

Doing Community Behind Bars

Prison ministry demands really practical theology.

High Anxiety

Leaders have lots of reasons to worry … and one overriding reason not to.

Finding Time for Study

7 tips to make the most of your time

Facing Fears

Serving Immigrants Saved Our Church

How welcoming in the stranger revived a declining congregation.

For the Love of Fierce Variety

Host a Red Carpet Event For Special Needs People

Give them the “Best Night Ever.”

Hold a "Gas Buy Down"

Give the gift of cheaper gas.

Split The Tithe

Give half to the church and half to missions.

Host "Midnight Basketball"

Give kids a safe place to play.

Fix Cars For Single Moms

Serve your community through basic car maintanence

Shoot a Two-Minute Message

An easy way to connect with your audience

What to Do When Your Church is Declining

Merging with another church may be your only option, but handle with care.

Make Room for Me

New research reveals what Millennials like—and don’t like—about churches, and what we can do to reach them.

Chasing Rabbits

Squirrelly Motives

First Pastor on the Moon

Getting to 'Aha'

Kyle Idleman discusses three phases of transformation.

My Calling

From restaurant manager to pastor

When Smaller Is Better

Effective small church ministry starts with a clearer view of success.

Reaching Churchless America

Examining the unchurched

It Takes a Church

Adopting five foster children is impossible unless you have the right support.

Leading in Prayer

Max Lucado talks about how good prayers shake the heavens and shape community.

Leadership Shorts

Summaries of books you need to know.

Disaster Training

Sunday Morning Football

Pastoral Oversight

One Hamburger, Hold the Depression, Please

And other items of interest from ministry and culture.

'Nones' Are Your Business

A review of ‘The Rise of the Nones’ by James Emery White

Men and Women Working Together

And more helpful tools from Christianity Today

The Mars and Venus Church Staff

A field guide to navigating gender sensitivities.

Missed the Memo

Male Bonding

Be Yourself?

PK Confidential

A review of ‘The Pastor’s Kid’ by Barnabas Piper

Pastor, Church, & Law Volume 2

And more helpful tools from Christianity Today

A More Beautiful Bible

And other items of interest from ministry and culture.

View issue


Our Latest

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube
Down ArrowbookCloseExpandExternalsearch