Showing posts with label Larry Travis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Larry Travis. Show all posts
Thursday, May 24, 2012
A Special Lunch, a Productive Dinner
Today we had a retirement lunch for Tom Riehle who has worked at Standard Publishing since he got out of high school, more than 40 years. He started as valet to the company president! I've worked with him through the years in his service as a job operator and a procurement specialist, and all of us wish him well for a retirement well earned.
Tonight I met with Rafa Soares and Larry Travis to nail down details about our trip to Brazil for the World Convention. Rafa will be our host in Brazil, as well as the man finding the hotels, renting the buses, planning the itinerary, and buying our in-country plane tickets. We're going to have a wonderful time there. I'm starting to get really excited after our conversation tonight at Olive Garden.
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
New Church Initiative
Yesterday I attended a lunch hosted at Mason Christian Village with a bunch of Cincinnati-area ministers and other church leaders. The agenda was to share information about a new church-planting start-up group for the Greater Cincinnati area.

"We want to create a high-output, no-overhead organization," he said. He will serve as a trustee of the new effort, along with Don Sams, Stephen Sams, and Larry Travis, who will also serve as the director. (Larry is also serving as associate minister with the Riverhills church where he will have his office for both jobs.)
"I believe every church, every Christian should be involved in new church planting," he said. And every speaker encouraged us to remember that the gifts of many Christians throughout the area can combine to make new church planting happen here.
They're calling it New Church Initiative. It's goal is to partner with other church-planting efforts and organizations to start new churches between Northern Kentucky and Dayton.
"Church planting is the most effective means of evangelism on the planet," Jeff Metzger told the crowd. "I heard Donald MacGavran say that in the 80s, and now I've experienced it myself." To highlight the need in our area, which we think of as "churched," he shared some research he did. "On a typical Sunday, 8.4% of the population in Clermont County attends church. In communist China, the figure is 8.3%!"
This is a worthy goal, pursued by men with pure motives, it seems to me. I'm glad I was there to witness something close to the birth of New Church Initiative.
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