Showing posts with label Bill Hybels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bill Hybels. Show all posts

Top 25 Books Every Children's Ministry Leader Needs to Read

Reading is a key to growing as a children's ministry leader.

I'm often asked what books I recommend.  It's hard to narrow it down to 25, but here's 25 books I believe every children's ministry leader should read.  You can purchase any of these through Amazon.

Creating Ever Cool: A Marketer's Guide to a Child's Heart by Gene Del Vecchio

100 Best Ideas to Turbo Charge Your Children's Ministry (co-authored)

Next Generation Leader
by Andy Stanley

Doing Church as a Team by Wayne Corderio

The Disney Way by Bill Capodagli & Lynn Jackson

Disney U by Doug Lipp

Good to Great
by Jim Collins

Start with the Why by Simon Sinek

Axiom by Bill Hybels

Deep and Wide by Andy Stanley

100 Best Ideas to Turbo Charge Your Preschool Ministry (co-authored)

Simple Church
by Thom Rainer and Eric Geiger

Volunteers That Stick
by Jim Wideman

17 Essential Qualities of a Team Player by John Maxwell

21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership by John Maxwell

Be Our Guest by The Disney Institute

Inside the Magic Kingdom
by Tom Connellan

I Quit by Peter and Geri Scazzero

Replinish: Leading from a Healthy Soul by Lance Witt

Children's Ministry in the 21st century (co-authored)

Right from Wrong by Josh McDowell

Carpe Manana by Leonard Sweet

Think Orange by Reggie Joiner

Too Busy Not to Pray with Bill Hybels

Communicating for Change by Andy Stanley

What's missing from the list?  What other books do you recommend for children's ministry leaders?  Share the titles with us in the comment section below.

How to Reach a Parent's Heart

The answer is simple.  Reach their child.

When you take a child by the hand, you take a parent by the heart.

I heard this quote by Bill Hybel's several years ago and have never forgotten it.

“Throughout the years, society offers the church just a certain number of entrance ramps into the ‘non-church’ world.  At times, it's been sports.  Then it was marriage enrichment.  Today, I believe the single remaining common interest or entrance point for non-churched people into the life of the church is children.  No matter how lost a guy is, he still usually loves his son.  And no matter how off track a woman is, she still has a soft place in her heart for her kids.  This means we have a wide-open door to almost every family in every community worldwide when we love and serve their kids.”
Bill Hybels