I’m reading this with my Dad; I just started last week. It’s an excellent, thorough history from Lyn Alden. I read nearly everything she writes and have benefited immensely from her analysis of both historic and current macro conditions.

What I'm reading, writing, and thinking about.
I’m reading this with my Dad; I just started last week. It’s an excellent, thorough history from Lyn Alden. I read nearly everything she writes and have benefited immensely from her analysis of both historic and current macro conditions.
Our leadership training group at McCoy Memorial Baptist Church finished reading this one this week. It is a quite detailed and practical (blueprint-like!) look at how to design and implement a leadership development program in your local church.
I’m nearing the end of this book and it has been practical. It has shown me examples of how leadership development can work in local church contexts. I’m on the leadership-development-focused subgroup of our church’s transition team and we are developing our approach to leadership development for the coming years.
This book builds upon the previous book in the series, Being Leaders, and provides “blueprints” to aid in cultivating leaders and a healthy leadership culture in the local church.
I think that this book, more than any other I have read, aligns with my God-given bent/wrapping and is entirely relevant to what I’m facing in life right now. The content is practical and applicable. I can consider and then apply concepts the very next day at work at SonSet Solutions, or on our church’s transition team.
This audiobook has around 12 of the most popular short stories of Arthur Conan Doyle, the creator of the famous character, Sherlock Holmes. My favorite so far has been The Five Orange Pips.
It has been so enjoyable to pop in the earbuds while working (or working out!) and be drawn into the mysteries Holmes is solving. Doyle is engrossing with his character development and narrative style.