Spiritual Conversations Insights

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Spiritual Conversation Tools

This lens is dedicated to the help Chirstians engage in more meaningful and effective spirirtual conservations. The resources on this lens were developed and collected by Gary Rohrmayer.

Spiritual Conversations: Creating and Sustaining Them Without Being a Jerk! is one of those tools Gary has developed over the last 22 years.

Here is what other leaders are saying:

This book is much more than the latest in a long line of inspirational Christian books. Spiritual Conversations is a book about evangelism. You hold in your hand a practical tool. Plenty of good books will impress you and inspire you. God can use the book to empower you. Your greatest days engaging the harvest and raising leaders for the harvest are in the future.

Dr. Ed Stetzer
President of Life Way Research

The title says it all: Spiritual Conversations: Creating and Sustaining Them without Being a Jerk. Far too many well-meaning believers stumble over the basic principles of engagement with unbelievers. The relational, process-oriented approach Rohrmayer takes opens up practical skills we can use, as well as exploring the deeper principles at work in our approach to these conversations. If you want a book on the loaded topic of evangelism that is both helpful and real, read Spiritual Conversations. Rohrmayer knows of what he writes.

Dr. Bob Logan
Founder of CoachNet

Engaging in More Spiritual Conversations

by Gary Rohrmayer

Buy it hereEvangelism has moved in the last 20 years from being a monologue (one-sided conversation) to a dialog (two-way conversation.) There are people all around us who are receptive to spiritual discussions and open genuine spiritual guidance. George Barna sites, "That 62% of American adults consider themselves to be not merely religious, but deeply spiritual." This means that there is more than a 50-50 chance of getting into some type of spiritual conversation with people who travel in and out of your life. Learning to engage people in a meaningful, spiritual dialog is critical for a spiritual leader.

Here are four ideas for increasing the spiritual conversations in your life:

1) Make It a Priority

It is important for a leader to think strategically about their conversations throughout the week. If you don't plan it or make room for it, the likelihood is that it is not going to get done. I agree with Brian McLaren's statement, "We should count conversations rather than conversions, not because I don't believe in conversions, but because I don't think we'll get many conversions if we keep emphasizing them." The number of conversations you have is directly related to the number of conversions you will see happen over a year. In coaching church leaders we use the 3 by 5 rule. If leaders are going to be serious about connecting with people they need to uncover at least 5 new contacts a day, equaling about 35 a week, which will lead to 3 "sit-downs" for a meaningful conversation.

How many contacts does it take for you to get a meaningful sit-down with a person?

2) Pray for Opportunities

I remember praying one morning, "Lord, it has been a while time since I led someone to you. Open the doors and show me who I need to speak to today." As soon as I finished praying that prayer a man walked over to me and said, "Doesn't that book (my pocket Bible) get old after a while?" which I replied, "It gets better every time I read it. Would you like to read it?" He took the Bible and began reading it. This resulted in a number of great conversations that eventually led to him and his family to attend our church and embrace Jesus as Lord and Savior.

When is the last time you asked God to open new doors of opportunity for you?

3) Get out and into your community

All too often we are so isolated from the world in which you live. Look at your calendar and see what fills your week. I encourage church planters to think about tithing their time to community service and interaction. As a planter I put in 60 plus hours a week. This meant about six hours a week out in the community like playing in a noon basketball league on Tuesdays and Thursdays or coaching my children's baseball and football teams. My week could be filled with serving on various community committees within the school district or through the Chamber of Commerce. It could also involve attending community events or joining professional groups like Toastmasters International. I could easily fill up my six hours a week.

Opportunities abound when we get out into our communities. Jon Cawston, a church planter in Plainfield, IL., joined a local entrepreneurial networking group. After a couple of months of being in this group, he was wondering why he was there and was feeling out of place. Then a crisis took place within the group and he discovered that he instantly become "the chaplain" of the group which led to spiritual conversations.

Can you imagine all the spiritual conversations that could take place if your staff and leaders were encouraged to tithe their time to community service and interaction?

4) Establish routines and cultivate relationships

Beyond the tithe of your time in your community I encourage leaders to establish routines and patterns so that you build relational presence with business owners and servers. Think strategically about all your interactions and pray that you can be a redemptive influence within that social network. A couple of tell tale signs of this is, "Do people know your name?" or "Do you know peoples names?" Reggie McNeal loves to ask his servers, "I am going to pray for my meal and I always pray for my server. Is there anything I can pray for you specifically?" I can see this really working as you cultivate relationships and move them from the mundane to the spiritual.

What places do you frequent in your community?

Jesus, Paul and James used the analogy of the farmer when it comes to spiritual leaders patiently sowing, working and cultivating the work of the gospel. When it comes to engaging in spiritual conversations you need to have an attitude of a farmer, faithfully working and cultivating your community. The first two suggestions deal with the leader's attitude, the next two suggestions deal with putting leaders in a position for engagement.

I learned a simple lesson over twenty-five years ago from an old missionary who said these words to me, "Gary you can't serve God where you are not!" That statement helped me move away from dreaming about future ministry to engaging myself in the daily personal ministry right in front of me every day.

Spiritual Conversation Tool

Bringing More Focus to Your Spiritual Conversations

Click Here to see a Sample VersionMany of you would agree that the majority of your spiritual conversations lack focus and direction. The reason I developed this spiritual conversation tool was to bring more focus and direction into my evangelistic conversations without being pushy or overbearing. The Spiritual Journey Guide provides an opportunity for personal discovery and spiritual assessment through a relationship and will revolutionize the way you share the gospel.

Many pastors are using this in their visitation program, handing them out in their small groups and giving them out to their entire congregation through their weekly worship services to generate more focused spiritual conversations throughout their congregation.

The holiday season is a great time to engage people spiritually. In order to serve you this holiday season, as you bring more focus into your spiritual conversations, we are drastically reducing the price of the Spiritual Journey Guide until December 15th.

The Spiritual Journey Guide is a simple conversational guide that helps people self-assess where they are on their spiritual journey while providing guidance and direction for taking the next step towards spiritual discovery and spiritual maturity.(Click on picture to see a Sample Version)

Link List

Gary Rohrmayer's Website
In 1995, Gary and Mary Rohrmayer launched a resource and consulting ministry called Your Journey Resources. This ministry birth out of a desire to emulate the ministry of Barnabas (Acts 4:36) in provide encouragement for ministry leaders. We have a deep conviction that no leader should travel alone!

Our desire was to provide reasonable resources, personal coaching and inspirational teaching for leaders, churches and organizations who are desiring to impact our culture and world.

Over the last 15 years we have specialized in developing reproducible, evangelistic and spiritual formation materials for adults and children. Over 2000 churches are using these materials across North America.
Spiritual Conversation Tool
The Spiritual Journey Guide is a simple tool that helps us become 'spiritual coaches'.

For over 20 years Gary Rohrmayer has been developing this tool through personal experience and the training of lay people, pastors, church planters and missionaries. Gary's desire is to help followers of Christ move from a combative approach to evangelism to a more collaborative approach that sustains and cultivates relationships.

Through four simple diagnostic questions you can help the spiritual searcher identify and discover the barriers in their spiritual journey and you can identify how deeply the Holy Spirit is at work in their lives drawing them towards Christ.

These four diagnostic questions are also useful in assisting a follower of Christ in identifying and discovering the barriers in their own spiritual maturity and fruitfulness.

The goal of this process is not to lead a person towards a forced prayer of repentance but to help them develop a personalized plan towards spiritual discovery or spiritual maturity.

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The Most Important Thing

"I pray that you may be active in sharing your faith, so that you will have a full understanding of every good thing we have in Christ." Philemon 6

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