Issue No. 538 of Your Weekly Staff Meeting highlights "the power of camp" and three new books on growing emerging leaders. And this reminder: click here to download free resources from the 20 management buckets (core competencies), click here for over 500 book reviews, and click here for the table of contents to Mastering 100 Must-Read Books (a perfect Christmas gift for a leader/reader).
Inspire your family members and friends to WORK AT CAMP next summer (or year-round)! CCCA’s Venn Diagram (used by permission) spotlights “Work at Camp” at the center of who you are, your dreams, what you love, and making a difference. Visit FindACampJob.com.
3 Books: Growing Leaders
Oh, my. It was 53 years ago in the fall of 1969, as a very young camp director in Illinois, that I attended the fourth Christian Camping International Convention at Ridgecrest in North Carolina. Christianity Today reported on that gathering and quoted a camping leader: “You can accomplish more with a kid in one week of camp than in a whole year of Sunday school.”
Now today, the U.S. expression of CCI, Christian Camp & Conference Association, is back at Ridgecrest Conference Center for their National Conference, “Together ’22.” With pent-up demand to leave COVID in the rear view mirror, camping leaders have swarmed the place and the Dec. 5-8 conference is sold out! And still today, “the power of camp” continues to pack a punch. Visit CCCA’s website.
Little did I know during that 1969 conference what God was planning. CCI’s executive director, Ed Oulund, happened to sit across from me in the dining room—and oh, my! Ten years later, I was privileged to build on Oulund’s legacy and serve as CCI/USA’s executive director from 1979 to 1990. (CCI/USA is now called CCCA and Christian camping worldwide is thriving.)
So…in this issue, I’m fanning the flame for this amazing global ministry blessed by God—and urge you and all parents, pastors, educators, business leaders, and college students in search of spouses (I’ll explain below!)…to consider the powerful impact of Christian camps and conference centers.
Three new books/workbooks were published this year that effectively articulate the why and how of outdoor ministry and leadership development. Do your pastors and church leaders leverage the power of camp? Consider giving your church leaders one or all three of these new books:
[ ] Blueprints: Biblical Designs for Christian Camping—Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow, by Dan Bolin
Dan Bolin served 11 years as the International Director of Christian Camping International, plus 25 years at Pine Cove Christian Camps in Texas—so he’s the perfect person to write this treatise on the why of the Christian camping movement. Bolin has inspired and encouraged camping leaders in more than 30 countries and speaks with authority on why “Christian camping is mushrooming around the globe.”
Bolin notes that “the casual observer wonders, what does it take to be a camp director besides a whistle and a clipboard?” (Yikes! Was I supposed to own a whistle?) Using a thoroughly biblical approach to his thoughtful book, he quotes Henrietta Mears, the founder of Forest Home, who said “Camp is where people make up their minds.” (Watch for my review of Mother of Modern Evangelicalism: The Life and Legacy of Henrietta Mears.)
Bolin's book also addresses “the elephant in the room.” He writes that “sympathetic yet patronizing friends from the business world often wonder (sometimes to themselves and sometimes aloud) why can’t this camp be run like a business?” (If I had the proverbial $10 every time I was asked that question…well, you know the rest.) Bolin’s answer is excellent and he quotes Peter Drucker’s response to that question. And LOL...later on in the book, Dan mentions elephants again—but this time camping leaders in Kenya are teaching him!
[ ] Latin American Voices on Leadership: Their Emergence and Growth, by Lisa Marie Anderson-Umaña
In this must-read resource by Lisa Marie Anderson-Umaña—written for all Christian leaders and pastors (and camping leaders especially)—James Plueddemann doesn’t mince words in the foreword. He writes:
“Thousands of organizations and schools around the world claim to be ‘producing’ leaders. Huge amounts of money are being spent on training leaders, and when students demonstrate mastering of the content, they are certified as leaders. Dr. Anderson-Umaña undercuts this dangerous assumption. None of the outstanding leaders she interviewed identified a training course as having a significant effect on their growth as a leader.” Yikes!
Plueddemann, the author of Leading Across Cultures, adds, “Toxic self-centered leadership is a curse in the worldwide Church. Dr. Anderson-Umaña’s research demonstrates that healthy servant leaders grow as they learn to serve in the company of other servant leaders.”
Lisa Marie Anderson-Umaña is the Director of Leadership Development for Christian Camping International, Latin America. A missionary for 40 years, Lisa says she “married the culture” (her Honduran husband, Alfredo). A teacher and writer, her curriculum projects have been used by thousands of leaders in 12 Latin American countries.
As part of her research for this workbook, she asked Latin American leaders to share their leadership growth experiences. Anderson-Umaña’s research identified “four specific ways you can co-participate with God to help leaders emerge and grow.” They include:
• Accompany them
• Open up spaces for them to serve
• Create developmental experiences
• Promote self-leadership from the start of their journey
Research-based, but immensely practical, this workbook features 58 (not a typo!) exercises/questions to help leaders flesh out her findings and the practical next steps. And this warning: “If you’re someone who thinks that leaders can be formed through training courses, you’re in for a surprise!”
The voices of Latin American leaders: remarkable! Example: Adriana, “a pastor of a congregation of almost six-thousand members.” In the section on how to open up spaces for emerging leaders, the author describes the journey of Marcos, who inspired a Catholic priest and a Presbyterian minister to form soccer clubs in “hot” (gang-influenced) barrios.
“Marcos established strict discipline with the teams, charging one dollar if a player committed a foul, five dollars if a player said a bad word, and fifty dollars if a player attacked a referee.” (“We made a lot of money,” he joked!) But the bigger point: Marcos found a way into leadership through a side door, since his denomination insisted, “You must prove yourself first. You are young.”
Preferring direct communication and “giving more weight to the exact words” of others, Lisa learned that her “low-context” culture, as a North American, didn’t always align with the high-context culture of Latin America. One time in Mexico City, at the end of a camp counselor training session, she asked if everyone would be returning for the next session in a week. “Without exception, every single person said yes.” Yet… “No one showed up for the next meeting.” Must-read: Chapter 2, “The Role Culture Plays in Leadership.”
[ ] Leaders Yet Discovered: Experiential Development for Emerging Leaders, by Greg Robinson and Rob Ribbe
Lisa Marie Anderson-Umaña (see above) writes a generous recommendation for Leaders Yet Discovered, noting that “the streams of literature the authors have consulted stretch farther and wider than most of us have time to study and form applicable concepts.” I agree—and I’m grateful for these two leaders who have the intellectual and academic chops to deliver a concise, but comprehensive, leadership book on both the theory and the practice of growing authentic Christian leaders.
You’re probably not leadership material yourself if you can scan these pages and not be drawn deeper into these critical topics. Check out:
• Pages 21-29: Chapter 3, “Who Am I as a Leader?” details the book’s “leadership identity formation” model—and the progression it follows: Observer (“Leadership is a thing”), Explorer, Performer, Delegator, Developer, and Sage. (This will preach!)
• Pages 124-125: Two charts on the “Vicious Life Cycle” and the “Virtuous Life Cycle.” Vicious: “Staffing and Operating Budget Cuts: Program offerings cut; remaining staff must work harder to support existing programs.” Virtuous: “Program offerings are supported with the right level of infrastructure.”
Plus...see page 134 for the four quadrants chart assessing impact and viability:
• High Mission Impact/Low Viability: Keep but contain costs
• High Mission Impact/High Viability: Invest in continuance and growth
• Low Mission Impact/High Viability: Enhance impact
• Low Mission Impact/Low Viability: Discontinue or give away
Note: See my related review of Nonprofit Sustainability.
While this book is targeted to Christian camp ministries (with dozens of examples), the authors also suggest a new paradigm for all those working with emerging adults. Greg Robinson is the Associate Professor of Outdoor Leadership Ministries at John Brown University. Rob Ribbe has served at Wheaton College as Executive Director of HoneyRock, Center for Leadership Development since 2000. He’s also a faculty member of the School of Mission, Ministry, and Leadership.
ABOUT THAT MEET-YOUR-SPOUSE-AT-CAMP IDEA! Parents and grandparents: while helping your future leaders pay for college—it can be expensive. If one of your goals is to help them find a future spouse, you may be surprised to learn that serving on the summer staff of a Christian camp or conference center—often leads to special relationships and, sometimes, matrimony! (Just ask any camp director how many wedding gifts he or she purchased in the last five years!) Think about it! For more, visit: FindACampJob.com.
YOUR WEEKLY STAFF MEETING QUESTIONS:
1) Is it time to rethink how emerging leaders become authentic, servant leaders? What’s our plan?
2) Lisa Marie Anderson-Umaña, on opening up spaces for emerging leaders, asks, “Are the voices of those who are crying out to serve, or those whose voices are soft and tentative, being listened to? Does each department or ministry have a system in place to listen to these voices?” What’s our plan?
3) Read the chapter, "The Trucker Driver Was No Match for the Faith-filled Board Chair," about the board chair at SAMBICA in Bellevue, Wash. (from Lessons From the Nonprofit Boardroom). What's our prayer plan?
Book #9 of 100:
Scaling Up
For your team meeting this week, inspire a team member to lead your “10 Minutes for Lifelong Learning” session by spotlighting Book #9 in Mastering 100 Must-Read Books.
Scaling Up: How a Few Companies Make It…and Why the Rest Don’t
Mastering the Rockefeller Habits 2.0
by Verne Harnish
Books #6 through #21 feature 16 books that I named the Book-of-the-Year from 2006 to 2020. The best quote in Book #9 is this one: “Senior leaders know they have succeeded in building an organization that can scale—and is fun to run—when they are the dumbest people in the room!”
• Read my review.
• Order from Amazon: Scaling Up
• Download the 100 Must-Read Books list (from John and Jason Pearson)
My review listed 12 reasons this book is a must-read, including Reason #12: Sloppy Execution! Verne Harnish says if you don’t execute the Rockefeller Habits, “It just means you’ve been leaving massive amounts of money and time on the table. And if you have a killer strategy and/or heroic people willing to work 18-hour days, eight days a week, these will make up for the messes created by sloppy execution and lack of discipline.”
A WELL-PLANTED FAITH. What are you growing in the next 30 days? How about your own personal growth? Read Ed McDowell’s devotional guide, A Well-Planted Faith in an Uprooted Culture: A 30-Day Devotional with Guided Journal Entries. Read more on the Pails in Comparison blog.
PEARPOD | TELLING YOUR STORY. Ready to scale up? What's the right-size staffing for your 2023 communications and marketing projects? Full-time staff, part-time staff, or contract help? We can help you think this through. Contact Jason Pearson at Pearpod (Design, Digital, Marketing, Social).
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