Jon Tyson went to New York City to plant a church and has had success in reaching thousands of New Yorkers.
He talks about how the New York mindset is impacting young adults across America, what is effective in reaching young adults, and about what to do when the burden of leadership feels so heavy when Jesus promised it would be light.
Welcome to Episode 204 of the podcast. Listen and access the show notes below or search for the Carey Nieuwhof Leadership Podcast on iTunes or wherever you get your podcasts and listen for free.
Guest Links
Jon on Instagram | Twitter | churchofthecity.nyc
Links from this Episode
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Timothy Keller Sermons Podcast
Dave Lomas – Reality San Francisco
John Mark Comer – Bridgestown Church
Pete Hughes – King’s Cross Church
Nobrow: The Culture of Marketing, the Marketing of Culture
The Critical Journey: Stages in the Life of Faith
Keeping the Sabbath Wholly: Ceasing, Resting, Embracing, Feasting
3 Insights from This Episode
1. Hitting a wall is an opportunity to confront and confirm your calling
Leadership is hard, but there is a difference in the hardships a leader experiences when faithfully living out God’s calling and when striving to achieve something motivated by selfish ambition.
But how do you discern between the two?
A leader must take the time to assess his calling, but fine tuning the motives of the heart is intense work. The opportunity usually arises when a wall has been hit and the process can be painful.
God is sending you on an inward journey to go deeper with Him by confronting your own identity. Accepting that invitation and willingly going through the process will rescue you from a place of frustration and bring you a renewed sense of calling.
2. Be aware of the moments you need to surrender and trust
There are two kinds of control – Godly and ungodly.
Godly responsibility (self-control) is obviously the healthy version of the two. Ungodly control is rooted in fear, hurts others and crushes opportunity for joy. It’s the if I don’t make this happen, it won’t get done right lie we often hear in our heads. Trying to be God is exhausting, damaging and has been the downfall of far too many leaders.
Surrender to the truth that –
You cannot control other people.
You cannot control outcomes.
You cannot control the driver’s seat.
Be aware of the moments you need to surrender and trust that God is in charge of your life.
3. Prepare your people for the day they have to leave
Jon Tyson pastors a church that sees a lot of turnover simply because of the life trends within the city. Because of that fact, his goal each weekend is not to find ways to get people to stay at his church, but rather how to best prepare them for when it’s time for them to leave. Here are the 5 things he wants them to feel when that time comes:
Loved – with the New Testament love of Jesus.
Formed – into the image of Jesus.
Equipped – with tools to follow Jesus well.
Empowered – with the Holy Spirit.
Sent – on a mission.
Quotes from This Episode
CNLP 204: Jon Tyson on Reaching Cynics in NYC and What to do When the Burden of Leadership Feels Too Heavy Click To Tweet CNLP 204: Jon Tyson on Reaching Cynics in NYC and What to do When the Burden of Leadership Feels Too Heavy Click To Tweet CNLP 204: Jon Tyson on Reaching Cynics in NYC and What to do When the Burden of Leadership Feels Too Heavy Click To Tweet CNLP 204: Jon Tyson on Reaching Cynics in NYC and What to do When the Burden of Leadership Feels Too Heavy Click To Tweet CNLP 204: Jon Tyson on Reaching Cynics in NYC and What to do When the Burden of Leadership Feels Too Heavy Click To Tweet CNLP 204: Jon Tyson on Reaching Cynics in NYC and What to do When the Burden of Leadership Feels Too Heavy Click To Tweet CNLP 204: Jon Tyson on Reaching Cynics in NYC and What to do When the Burden of Leadership Feels Too Heavy Click To Tweet CNLP 204: Jon Tyson on Reaching Cynics in NYC and What to do When the Burden of Leadership Feels Too Heavy Click To TweetThe podcast releases every Tuesday morning
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Next Episode: Eliot Crowther
In 2010, 24-year-old Eliot Crowther was in an almost dead end job as a door to door salesperson. Then he had an idea. Within months he and Chris Heaslip founded Pushpay. The fledgling company almost failed more than once, but Eliot tells the story of how Pushpay went on to becoming a company with a 100 million dollar revenue stream by processing over 3 billion dollars a year in giving, with a goal of 10 billion a year by 2020.
Subscribe for free now and you won’t miss Episode 205.