As promised, here is all available audio from the 2010 Campus Ministry United Workshop at Harding University:
- Lynn Stringfellow – “Grace & the Tin Man: Grace Only Fails When We Get in the Way” pt. 1 (29:23) (PowerPoint)
- Lynn Stringfellow – “Grace & the Tin Man: Grace Only Fails When We Get in the Way” pt. 2 (25:12)
- Clint Hill – “How My Ministry Survived a Church Split … and Thrived!” (38:29)
- Patrick Mead – “Christian Evidences: God Shows Up … Really!” pt. 1 (39:24) (Patrick’s Blog)
- Patrick Mead – “Christian Evidences: God Shows Up … Really!” pt. 2 (46:58)
- Patrick Mead – “Christian Evidences: God Shows Up … Really!” pt. 3 (46:27)
- Robert Cox – “Church Discipline in Campus Ministry: Are You Serious?!?” pt. 1 (60:07)
- Robert Cox – “Church Discipline in Campus Ministry: Are You Serious?!?” pt. 2 (32:35)
- Robert Cox – “Church Discipline in Campus Ministry: Are You Serious?!?” pt. 3 (53:20)
- Robert Cox – “Church Discipline in Campus Ministry: Are You Serious?!?” pt. 4 (37:02)
- Kerry Cox – “The Anatomy of a CrossChat: An Effective Model for Weekly Group Bible Studies” pt. 1 (37:10)
- Kerry Cox – “The Anatomy of a CrossChat: An Effective Model for Weekly Group Bible Studies” pt. 2 (29:18)
- Monte Cox – “Grace & Truth: You Can’t Have One Without the Other” (47:41)
- Orlando Henlon – “How a New Campus Ministers Learned to Focus on Outsiders Instead of Insiders” pt. 1 (48:04) (PowerPoint)
- Orlando Henlon – “How a New Campus Ministers Learned to Focus on Outsiders Instead of Insiders” pt. 2 (52:09)
- Benson Hines – “Better Brainstorming With Benson: Connecting Creativity to Christ’s Mission” pt. 1 (55:29) (Benson’s Blog)
- Benson Hines – “Better Brainstorming With Benson: Connecting Creativity to Christ’s Mission” pt. 2 (53:47)
- Patrick Mead – “No More Samaritans: Getting ‘With It’ for Christ Means Getting Over Our Prejudices” (44:29)
- Patrick Mead – “On Loving Sinners” (35:07)
A few lessons did not make the recording (namely Mitch Wilburn’s, Clint Hill’s [edit: Clint’s lesson was re-recorded and uploaded at a later time], and one of Patrick Mead’s) – our recording equipment wasn’t cooperating in the beginning. Sorry about that.
Despite minor technical issues, this was our best workshop yet overall. About 160 very excited people were in attendance, and most left fired up to reach their campuses for Christ. Mitch Wilburn was awesome, Patrick Mead was both informative and hilarious, Monte Cox was insightful, Robert Cox was challenging, and all of our other speakers did a wonderful job.
Benson Hines‘ class on brainstorming proved to be a hit, as did Orlando Henlon’s class on learning to focus on reaching outsiders. Of course, Lynn Stringfellow, Kerry Cox, and Clint Hill brought heat as they always do.
2010 was a great year, and we’re praying 2011 will be even better! Go ahead and mark your calendars now – the 2011 CMU Workshop will be held July 7-10, 2011 on the campus of Harding University in Searcy, AR.
To access audio from all of the past CMU Workshops as well as other CMU events, visit the CMU Audio/Video Page. We’ve developed quite an archive.
Enjoy! 🙂
Don’t Be a Facebook Nitwit: What You Post Matters!
Did you hear about the comments made by Eric Schmidt, Chief Executive Officer of Google?
As I’ve told you before, social media is not simply a fad – it’s here to stay and will continue to affect your life well into the future.
In the future politicians will attack opponents based upon quirky Facebook status updates they posted as a teen or will share old, embarrassing photos of the other guy still lurking around the web. Employers will vet job candidates by viewing their online profiles and activities, and military recruiters will include this type of research in screenings. Did I mention companies and marketing executives will specifically target products toward you based on who you are and what you’re in to? … Oh wait, they’re already doing that, aren’t they?
What you post is out there, and it’s there to stay whether you realize or not!
Is Eric Schmidt right? Will young people actually need to change their names to hide publicly-searchable foolishness from the past?
I believe that’s a bit of an exaggeration (though I know a couple of people that may need to consider it … lol), but his comment does bring a valid point to light: what you post on the web matters – it simply doesn’t go away. Even if you think you’ve deleted something, if it was publicly available for a while it’s likely archived somewhere else and is still out there.
I have a growing list of over 1,500 “friends” on Facebook. Currently about half of these “friends” I have some sort of offline connection with, but a large percentage I’ve never met face to face (people add me because they read this blog, have heard me speak somewhere, etc.).
Sometimes I read things people post on Facebook or Twitter that cause me to wonder if the poster has recently been hit in the head (after an encounter with Jim Duggan, perhaps?).
Are the public forums of Facebook or Twitter really wise mediums to use in airing out private conflicts? Are they the best forums to have intensely controversial theological or political arguments that have great potential to get very nasty or very offensive very quickly? Are they really the best places to broadcast profanity-laden rants about this, that, or the other?
What’s more, and at the risk of being labeled judgmental: often the biggest social media nitwits out there are the very people who should know better!
Please don’t be a Facebook nitwit.
Hey, that’d make a great slogan for a T-shirt!