Leadership Summit - Richard Curtis

CurtisA prolific screenwriter, producer, and director for film and television, Richard Curtis has earned international renown for his award-winning comedic storytelling. His most personal project — eradicating poverty worldwide — is a story still in production. A New Zealander by birth, Richard Curtis is best known as the Oscar-nominated screenwriter for the popular British romantic comedies Four Weddings and a Funeral and Notting Hill, as well as the Mr. Bean television series. His most recently broadcast film, HBO’s Emmy-winning The Girl in the Café, asked hard questions about Third-World debt and poverty in Africa. In addition to co-founding the Make Poverty History campaign and the Live 8 concerts, Curtis founded Comic Relief UK in 1985 to raise money for victims of famine in Ethiopia.

“Living for the Greater Good”

  • His comedy tries to recreate the good feelings of being with family talking about your aunt.
  • Hiring the right person: Have to pick the actors for the right reasons, not because of they latest success otherwise goes all wrong.
  • Getting best out of someone: Help them discover the answer themselves. Has to come from inside the person. Remember the reason you do something.
  • Resolving conflict: Try to avoid it in the first place with actors. But ask what’s the reason they’re tense. Keep cool and do your homework.
  • Learned that things aren’t disastrous when things go wrong. Don’t panic, probably would have been cut or will get fixed later.
  • Nobody ever feels they have enough money to do the job properly.
  • Passionate about writing optimistic movies. Nasty is not more true.
  • Spent four years in the Philippines as a child. His mother cancelled Christmas gifts to give money to a famine. Visited Ethiopia in 1984 during famine. It was there that he hatched what he would do for the next 25 years. Do what I do (write comedy) but do it to rectify this grave injustice. Fighting for the poor to have the right to laugh and have a good time.
  • Red nose days. Make over 100 million pounds and other such events. A national day of giving.
  • Pursued the American Idol people to help the poor and ended with Idol Gives Back.
  • Challenges his friends to get involved. “Even my not-friends.” Not embarrassed about asking because people  want to do things that have great effect.
  • Results of Idol was $73 million and large viewership.
  • More has to be done. Any normal person can see this if they face it.
  • Make Poverty History Campaign.
  • The Sermon on the Mount is foundational to what he has done. Started it all.
  • i've seen my friends lose themselves in the luxury of political theory. You have to get up and do something. Can't let yourself off the hook after reading the Bible. Can't pray for people at night and not try to help them at the end of the day.
  • "The other day my son said he wanted to take care of the poor children like his dad but afraid that after Red Nose Day there wouldn't be any more poor children."
  • What grade would you give the church? All I know is that someone shouldn't be starving. It's our God-given duty. If we believe it, we can halve poverty. Churches shouldn't let their leaderss off the hook. We can achieve world poverty being crushed in half a generation.
  • Hybels: Can you leverage what you do well to rectify this injustice? Usually get this passion when they have an encounter with God and with the need. I'm done with just adding more stuff to my over-stuffed life. Sum total of life in things. Be real sure about the affections of your heart. When you do the right things, the buzz endures. But not with things. Calling all of us to a life like that. Dream of the day when it's normal for every church to fight AiDS, racism.... We're writing the next chapter of church history and you've got a guy who's not sure about his faith cheering the church on to make a difference.

Another great winner of a session. Powerful. A call to compassionate action. Another opener for a "missions conference" Five Oaks style?

Leadership Summit - John Ortberg

OrtbergA leading voice on the subject of spiritual formation, John Ortberg brings the heart of a pastor and the insight of a trained psychologist to address issues of character and motivation in the life of a leader.

John Ortberg is a highly acclaimed writer and speaker and is the senior pastor at Menlo Park Presbyterian Church in Menlo Park, California. He is the best-selling author of many books including God is Closer Than You Think, Everybody’s Normal Till You Get to Know Them, and, most recently, When the Game is Over, It All Goes Back in the Box. Ortberg served as the teaching pastor at Willow Creek Community Church from 1994 to 2003 and earned a Ph.D. in clinical psychology from Fuller Seminary.

“The Leader’s Greatest Fear”

  • What is it? Fear of failure? Mutiny? Criticism? Leadership is disappointing people at a rate they can stand. All of these are recoverable.
  • The greatest fear is not something that can happen to us but what can happen in us.
  • Shadow Mission: Center life on something that is unworthy, dark or self-centered. This can happen to people, whole congregations, companies and leaders.
  • Based on Esther
  • Mordecai challenges Esther when she explains that she doesn’t want to go to the king…”for such a time as this”…You haven’t brought to this point in your life to wear expensive clothes but for justice and to oppose a man who is vile and evil…to be part of God’s plan for the world.
  • Esther asks for three days of fasting and prayer. “When done I will go to the king even though it is against the law, and if I perish, I perish.” (And a woman beauty queen saves all the men in the story.)
  • What is your shadow mission? Except for the help of God, what would you drift toward? Can you name it? If you don’t know it, it’s hard to fight it.
  • What’s the shadow mission of your church? Israel’s shadow mission was to be exclusive. Rome, to build an empire. Jesus got caught in the cross-hairs of several shadow missions. What if your shadow mission was out in front of our church? “Successfully avoiding conflict since 1893.” “Not growing but criticizing those that do.”
  • Who is Mordecai in your life? Who loves you enough to challenge your shadow mission. If you don’t know your shadow mission, everyone on your team does.
  • Courage is indispensable but it’s not enough. Esther is savvy and invites him to a party. Her timing is breathtaking.
  • Hamon’s shadow mission is called MORE. More status, power, etc. One indicator is a chronic sense of soul dissatisfaction. More never brings contentment. Who is more content, the man with a million dollars or the man with twelve children? The man with twelve children because he doesn’t want any more.
  • In the end many people from other nations become God-followers and all because one man is willing to challenge the shadow mission and one woman is willing to adopt her real mission.
  • Jesus is our model here. He was tempted like us in every way. Likely faced his shadow mission…to be the leader without suffering, the Messiah without a cross. In the dessert…Peter’s rebuke…ways we don’t even know the agony all the way to the Garden of Gethsemane…on the cross challenged to save himself. At a cost we’ll never understand he says NO.
  • Our little lives and missions are part of God’s great mission. God isn’t mentioned but God is clearly behind it all, orchestrating everything. Even in the exile, God is at work behind the scenes and his purposes are served. Lead with courage because God is at work behind the scenes. Who knows that you have come to your position for such a time as this.
  • Some shadow missions are kept secret and that may be worse than being exposed. If God wants to do surgery on your heart, open up as wide as you can.

Okay, this one, Hybels and Powell...outstanding in their challenge, deep to the heart... Get this one!