Rebuild Your Trampoline When You Move
April 3, 2009 by chuckquinley
Filed under LeadYou

I want to talk a bit about a concept I got from Dr. Donald Joy while working on my doctorate at Asbury. He says that we are all a trampoline and we need lots of relationships as springs to hold us up. When we move to a new place we lose all our springs and if we take our family with us, the family unit feels a real strain because the relationship work of support done formerly by dozens of people is now borne only by the family members who went with you.
In general the first order of business when you move to a new place is to rebuild the trampoline of relationships. You will need four kinds of relationships: (1) Casual relationships (nothing too deep, just people you know and say hi to on a daily basis) (2) Nuclear Family: the closest bonds in your life (3) Extended family (even if they are not blood kin you need old people like grandmas and mothers and also aunts and uncle types). You need a brother or a sister, a really satisfying same-sex friendship (4) Work relationships: people you gear up with to accomplish important things. We have moved four times as a family to an entirely new country/place.
This one insight has helped us get established in each location so we had a healthy relational web to support us in our ministry there. HOpe this is helpful to you.
I Want a New Church!
April 3, 2009 by chuckquinley
Filed under LeadOthers, Walk

OK, this has been a long time coming but I can’t hold it in any more. I want a new church. I LOVE the church and my soul has been enriched by my church life more than anything other than my family, but I am just so dissatisfied with my experience of trying to find a local church to go to when we aren’t on the road that I want to start a conversation about it. Everywhere I go I hear the same groans from people who love the Lord and who love the church, but are agonizing over what church has become. Much of this conversation comes even from the pastors themselves. This year we are traveling across the land visiting churches to advocate for stronger involvement in Asian missions so we are seeing many models of church. Much of this we have enjoyed, but we also have seen warning signs in some churches that trouble us. We haven’t been in America much for the past 5 years so I feel we are seeing things a bit more objectively than if we lived here and experienced the change gradually. Here’s what I feel…

