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FAITH AND WORK: Connecting Sunday to Monday

Faith and Work News ~ Links to Interesting Articles

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• More links to interesting articles
• The Top 10 Faith and Work Quotes of the Week
• Faith and Work Book Review ~ The Emotionally Healthy Leader: How Transforming Your Inner Life Will Deeply Transform Your Church, Team, and the World by Peter Scazzero
• Quotes from the book Agents of Flourishing: Pursuing Shalom in Every Corner of Society by Amy Sherman.


Top 10 Faith and Work Quotes of the Week


FAITH AND WORK BOOK REVIEW:
The Emotionally Healthy Leader: How Transforming Your Inner Life Will Deeply Transform Your Church, Team, and the World by Peter Scazzero. Zondervan. 326 pages. 2015
*** ½

I was introduced to some of the material in this book through a few of the soft skill modules we covered in our NXTGEN Pastors Cohort. The book is divided into two parts – the leader’s inner life and outer life. The book was born out of the struggles and growth the author experienced following what he refers to as his “fourth conversion” in 2007. He writes that for nearly two decades, he had ignored the emotional component in his spiritual growth and relationship with God.
The author was senior pastor for twenty-six years, and when the book was published, he had been a teaching pastor and pastor-at-large for two years. In this book, the author offers a road map of sorts for an emotionally healthy journey, complete with specific ideas and practices to help you discern God’s next steps for you as a leader.
The author describes the emotionally unhealthy leader as someone who operates in a continuous state of emotional and spiritual deficit, lacking emotional maturity and a “being with God” sufficient to sustain their “doing for God.” Emotionally unhealthy leaders tend to be unaware of what is going on inside them. They are also chronically overextended and do not practice Sabbath, a weekly, twenty-four-hour period in which they cease all work and rest, delight in God’s gifts, and enjoy life with him.
The author tells us that to lead from a deep and transformed inner life, you must:

Among the topics that the author covers in the book are family of origin, shadow, genogram, marriage, and singleness, slowing down, Rule of Life, Sabbath, shame, limits, emotionally healthy culture and teams, power and boundaries, endings, and transitions.

The author includes numerous helpful stories from his ministry that help illustrate the points he makes in the book. There are several assessments included in the book so that you can see where you are currently with the topic being discussed. The book includes information on how to implement emotionally healthy spirituality in your church or ministry, and as well as a few helpful appendices.
This would be a good book to read and discuss with a group of leaders.

Below are some of my favorite quotes from the book:


Faith and Work Book Club – Won’t you read along with us?
We are reading Agents of Flourishing: Pursuing Shalom in Every Corner of Society by Amy Sherman. Sherman is also the author of Kingdom Calling: Vocational Stewardship for the Common Good, a book I first read in my “Calling, Vocation and Work” class at Covenant Seminary.
Every corner, every square inch of society can flourish as God intends, and Christians of any vocation can become agents of that flourishing. In this book, Sherman offers a multifaceted, biblically grounded framework for enacting God’s call to seek the shalom of our communities in six arenas of civilizational life (The Good, The True, The Beautiful, The Just, The Prosperous, and The Sustainable).
This week we look at Chapter 16: Cultivating the Sustainable Address Food Deserts. Here are a few helpful quotes from the chapter:

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