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Frequently Asked Questions
by Gary Yagel

  1. Why have a men’s ministry?
     
  2. What is the Biblical basis for men’s ministry?
     
  3. Why is it so difficult to get men to attend men’s ministry events?
     
  4. Why is it that a successful men’s event or ministry in my church is so often followed by a total loss of momentum?
     
  5. What men’s ministry programs are working in the PCA?
     
  6. How do you build a sustainable disciple-making ministry for men in the local church?
     
  7. How do you obtain the pastor and session’s support?
     
  8. How do you build a strong men’s ministry leadership team?
     
  9. What do men identify as their greatest spiritual needs?
     
  10. How can I get my men spiritually connected at the level of their walk with Christ so they are not so alone in their spiritual battles?
     
  11. How can I be better equipped for men’s ministry?

1. Why have a men’s ministry?

A. Because we are failing to disciple men effectively.

Studies show that for every ten men in the average church:

  • 9 will have kids who leave the church
  • will not find their jobs satisfying
  • will pay monthly minimum on credit cards
  • have a major problem with pornography
  • 4 will get divorced affecting 1,000,000 children each year
  • Only 1 will have a biblical worldview
  • All 10 will struggle to balance family & work
                    
     (Statistics cited by Man In the Mirror)

In the PCA we may be doing a little better than the average church, but not much! Most of our men don’t even have a daily quiet time, much less delight their hearts in the Lord. Few have thought through what it means to love their wife as Christ loves the church, much less are they regularly focused on meeting the needs of her heart or on applying I Cor.13:4-8 to loving her. Most men have no plan for discipling their kids or much of a clue what it means to be the spiritual leaders in their homes. Fewer than 10% are actively seeking to share their faith with non-believing friends, relatives, and work associates, etc. The bar is very low.

B. Because if you help men get it right, everybody wins.

When we think covenantally, we realize that God has assigned men a strategic position of influence in the family, church, and society. He has designed our wives to be responders, and our children to have many needs that we must meet as their fathers. PCA author Pat Morley helps us see the strategic role assigned to men when he writes:

“Can you think of any way the WORLD can be made right unless the CHURCH is made right. Can you think of any way the CHURCH can be made right unless FAMILIES are made right. Can you think of any way FAMILIES can be made right unless MARRIAGES are made right. Can you think of any way MARRIAGES can be made right unless MEN are made right. Can you think of anything that has more potential to change the world than reaching MEN?”

C. Because Jesus built his church by discipling men.

Jesus was radical in his day because he treated women and children with great dignity. But he built the foundation of his church by investing heavily in 11 men. Today’s church is completely upside down in its approach. Resources are allocated and staff is added for children’s ministry, youth ministry, college ministry, singles ministry, women’s ministry, even nursery ministry before resources are invested in men’s ministry. These priorities would appear to be the exact opposite of our Lord’s. So, why should we be surprised that the church is in such bad condition?

• Research cited by Focus on the Family shows that when a mother comes to faith in Christ, the rest of the family follows her example 17% of the time.
 
• When a father comes to faith in Christ, the rest of the family follows his example 93% of the time.

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2. What is the Biblical basis for men’s ministry?

A. Men’s ministry helps the church accomplish its mission, to make disciples.

“Therefore, go and make disciples of all nations, 1) baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and 2) teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you.” Matt. 28:19-20

  • Sometimes in the PCA we are tempted to abandon the discipleship model for the academic model, but men learn best by example.
  • Biblical Christianity is not intended to be one smart person imparting knowledge to the masses; it is one follower helping another follower.
  • We tend to ask men to follow our teaching, our methods, and our theology. God has hardwired them to prefer following men. Men’s ministry brings men together for life-on-life discipleship.

In the above text, the structure of the sentence implies that there are two parts to the way disciples are made.

1. Baptizing them:

  • Baptism is the sign and seal of membership in the covenant community.
  • The inward spiritual reality to which the sacrament of baptism points is our connection to Christ and to one another in the covenant of grace. (We differ from our Baptist friends at this very point; they see baptism as a sign of conversion, but we see it as a sign of membership in the covenant community just as circumcision was, and thus include our children in the covenant sign. But even our Baptist friends still see baptism as marking the recipient as belonging to the covenant community.)
  • Becoming a Christ-follower requires not just a vertical commitment to Christ, but a horizontal commitment to connection with the rest of his body.
  • 95% of Christian men have no best friend—they are not connected at any significant level to the body of Christ.
  • The first goal of men’s ministry, therefore, is helping them get connected as brothers at the level of their spiritual lives.

2. Teaching them everyday obedience

  • Jesus qualified the kind of teaching that makes disciples--teaching that focuses on obedience: “teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you..”
  • Men’s disciple-making ministry therefore focuses on the areas that are specific to men’s unique struggle to be obedient
  • The second goal of men’s ministry, therefore, is to get Biblical teaching to them that is specific to their 1) responsibilities and 2) temptations as men. These are the areas where they struggle with obedience.

B. Men’s ministry helps the church follow the Biblical method for discipling men, i.e. mobilizing the members of the body to use their gifts.

“From Him the whole body, joined and held together by every supporting ligament, grows and builds itself up in love, as each part does its work.” Eph. 4:16

“Men’s ministry” refers to the process of mobilizing members of the body to use their gifts to help men move down the discipleship path towards greater maturity in Christ. This process involves planning events and ministries for men. But is more than that. It also involves linking men to the disciple-making events and ministries in the church that are already in place. In summary, “men’s ministry” is the mobilization of some in the body to use their gifts to help the session disciple the men of the church.

C. The word, “disciple” should not be confused with the one-on-one multiplication method of discipleship.

Many people associate the verb, “to disciple” with the multiplication method explained in the booklet, Born to Reproduce, by Dawson Trotman of the Navigators and the book, Master Plan of Evangelism, by Robert Coleman. This is the idea that the pastor disciples two elders for two years. Then, at the end of the 2 years, those elders each disciple two men for two years, etc.

  • I believe this is the absolute best method to disciple men—for those who are called and equipped to do so. If you have such men in your church, free them from other responsibilities and encourage them to build themselves into a few men who will build themselves into a few other men, etc.
  • However, it is a mistake to call the multiplication method—the primary method of New Testament discipleship. That is simply not true.
  • The method for the body to be built up is given in Eph. 4:7-16 as we have seen above. Paul makes no mention of the gift of “discipleship,” or “mentoring” or whatever we might call the multiplication method. He says the body is built up not by the disciplers, but by every member of the body contributing.
  • 2 Timothy 2:2 is often quoted to substantiate the multiplication method as the primary NT method to make disciples. However, this verse is not talking about Paul’s one-on-one time discipling Timothy—but about insuring that sound teaching continue in the church at a time when the New Testament had not yet been completed. Paul says to Timothy, “And the things you have heard me say in the presence of many witnesses entrust to reliable men who will also be qualified to teach others.” The focus here is Paul’s PUBLIC teaching—not his PRIVATE discipleship meetings with Timothy. Paul wants the content of his teaching, i.e. the gospel, passed on to reliable men who are able to teach (not disciple) others.
  • If a pastor disciples two elders for two years who then disciple two men for two years, at the end of 4 years, there are 7 mature believers. Praise God! But someone has to focus on the 95% of the men left out during this 4 year period to help them grow in Christ. That is the task of the men’s ministry. The Biblical method for growth is given in Eph 4.16. The body “grows and builds itself up in love as each part does its work.”
  • Nine out of ten pastors I know say they do not have the gift of mentoring or “discipling.” So, how can this multiplication method be the preferred NT method for making disciples? The marching orders for the whole church are to make disciples—not just for those gifted in mentoring!

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3. Why is it so difficult to get men to attend men’s ministry events?

A. Nearly all of the subgroups in the church (children, teens, college kids, singles, women, seniors) are strongly motivated to come to church events because they want to be with their friends. Men are not. Therefore, they don’t show up just because the bulletin says that a men’s event is planned.

B. Your men’s event takes men away from their homes. Many men already feel guilty about being away from home so much to do their jobs. So you have to overcome the guilt and pressure he feels NOT to be away from the family more.

C. For the 21st century man, time is the commodity of highest value. There has been an explosion of activities to compete for his time, from Karate for his kids to 200 channels on TV, including sports channels that have games nearly 24 hours a day. The length of the American work day is the highest it has ever been, while commuting time is increasing. He has less free time to give to a men’s event than ever before.

D. Today’s men are tired and busy. They spend their days in the work world where products and activities are assigned a bottom-line value. That is the way they will see your men’s event. Is the value of the event worth the time and effort to be involved? Out of a sense of commitment to the church, a man may come once to a men’s event. But tired, busy men will not consistently attend something that does not have high value to them.

E. The availability of graphic pornography at the click of a mouse means that more men are enslaved to secret sins than ever before. They may participate in something safe like playing softball. But, they won’t come regularly to events that get them connected to other men at the spiritual level. On the one hand, they know they need help, but they are terrified of the shame they would experience if they were found out.

F. Because of the way God has hardwired men, they are much more likely to come to an event when personally invited by another man. Most churches have not built a strong men’s ministry leadership team that reaches out to the men of the congregation to make these personal invitations. Instead, they resort to bulletin or pulpit announcements which are not very effective.

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4. Why is it that a successful men’s event or ministry in my church is so often followed by a total loss of momentum?

Do these stories sound familiar?

  • You have a great men’s retreat with table discussions after the talks. The men all want to continue getting together with the guys at their table after the retreat, but 3 months after the retreat no one has actually connected.
  • The pastor leads a men’s Bible study group. The first night there are 25 guys. By the fourth meeting the group has dwindled to 8.
  • You have a great speaker as you launch your monthly Saturday morning men’s breakfast ministry. 30 guys come. The next month 20 come and one of the elders shares a devotional. The next month 10 come. Then it evens out at about 5.
  • When Pete Jones was at the church, great things were happening with the men. He organized paint ball socials, the golf tournament, the December First Saturday “Let the Mom’s Shop” event when the men took care of the kids all morning at the church. Pete moved 2 years ago, and now nothing is happening in men’s ministry at your church.
  •  The pastor led a Wednesday night men’s study on Man In The Mirror. It went well. 8-10 guys were consistently there throughout the study. But, this year the pastor feels called to lead EE. So right now there is nothing going on in men’s ministry at your church.

A. Because men’s ministry is so difficult, successful events don’t automatically lead to success in subsequent events or ministries. The success of events is only maximized when they are fit into an overall strategy that meets the needs of men and moves them down the path of discipleship.

B. In effective men’s ministries, part of the planning for a men’s event includes how to capture the momentum of that event and use it to move men to connect with another aspect of the church’s ministry to men.

C. It is great to have a pastor or layman who is a champion for men’s ministry. These are two of the most important ingredients to sustain long term success in your men’s ministry. However those champions may leave or get busy with other ministries. That is why it is so important for that champion to build a lay men’s ministry team around him.

D. Saturday morning men’s breakfasts can work temporarily but it is rare that a monthly Saturday morning men’s breakfast will be effective for very long. The reason is that it is very limited as a vehicle for reaching the 2 goals of men’s ministry—helping men get connected to other brothers at the level of their spiritual life and giving them Biblical insight that is specific to their responsibilities and temptations as men.

  • Their time is often too valuable to them to give up two hours on a Saturday morning just to hear a devotional. The Biblical content that is presented must be focused on his felt needs, and presented well.
  • Excellence in the content, (not to mention the breakfast) is too difficult to obtain every month. A wiser plan is to have quarterly special events for men that are done with excellence, including excellent content that addresses the men’s felt needs.
  • Monthly men’s breakfasts can be an important starting point for men to enjoy a surface level of fellowship. But the superficial discussion that happens at monthly breakfast is nowhere close to the brotherhood connection that God commands us to have as Christ followers. Monthly meetings can’t accomplish close connection.

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5. What men’s ministry programs are working in the PCA?

A. Probably, all of them. There is no “key” program to copy. We’ve heard that the following resources have been used effectively in men’s ministry in the PCA:

  • Numerous Books, DVD’s, and seminars from Man in the Mirror
  • Studies of the WCF
  • Galatians Bible Study, Church of the Redeemer
  • Forging Bonds of Brotherhood booklet and program
  • Desiring God book study
  • Wild at Heart book and DVDs
  • Great Dads Seminar
  • Reading Paul Miller’s book, Love Walked Among Us
  • Called to Sexual Integrity Seminar
  • Dangerous Freedom Seminar
  • Men’s Fraternity—weekly DVD’s with table discussion
  • Top Gun—intensive weekly Bible Study with 2 hrs of prep.
  • Brother Brigade—works as part of a Wednesday family night program

B. However, successful men’s ministry is not being achieved because of using any particular program. It is being achieved by churches with strong men’s ministry teams that have an effective long term strategy for building a disciple-making ministry to men. Without the right leadership and long term strategy, any program you use will be a flash in the pan.

C. That is why our strategy at CE&P is not to develop a men’s discipleship program. Many programs and materials already exist. Our strategy is to raise up men’s ministry coaches who can help our churches build men’s ministry teams that are equipped with an effective strategy for building a long term disciple-making ministry for men in their churches.

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6. How do you build a sustainable disciple-making ministry for men in the local church?

A. Build a strong foundation.

  1. Enthusiastic support and involvement of Sr. Pastor
  2. Support of session
  3. Men’s ministry champion/point man
  4. Equipped, motivated men’s ministry leadership team

B. Follow a proven strategy for the church of the 21st century to disciple men This strategy is fully explained in the book,
No Man Left Behind, written by three PCA authors, Pat Morley, David Delk, and Brett Clemmer. Here is a rough overview of the strategy:

  1. Recognize that the men of your church will fit into one of 4 categories. a. Non-believers b. Those who would say they are believers but appear to be growing little as Christians. In the Bible belt, they could be called cultural Christians c. Believers who are pursuing discipleship d. Believers who are using their gifts to reach out to others
  2. Another group might be called “hurting men,” which includes those struggling with addictions, divorce, the death of a loved one, etc. Hurting men could be in any of the above 4 categories of spiritual maturity.
  3. An effective disciple-making ministry to men moves men along the spiritual maturity continuum towards greater spiritual maturity
  4. Step one is to estimate roughly what percentage of your men are in each of the 4 categories of men on this continuum, 1) non-believers, 2) “cultural Christians” (immature believers or church going non-believers), 3) growing Christians 4) mature Christians (or leaders.)
  5. Make a list of what you think are the primary heart motivations of each of these 4 categories.
  6. Next, look back at the last few men’s activities at your church. Where on this continuum would you say each of these activities was targeted?
  7. Looking ahead, what group do you believe God is calling you to target your next men’s event to?
  8. List potential programs, events, activities, which appeal to the heart motivation of those in this target group. (eg, non-believer’s heart motivation might be fun and male camaraderie so a softball league would be great)
  9. Plan a specific event for your men by designing an event that would have value to the men in the target group
  10. Capture the momentum created by that event by designing the right next step (e.g. at the end of the softball season have a fun awards banquet for the whole team where a guy shares his testimony.)
  11. As men move across the spiritual growth continuum, provide opportunities for them to build closer friendships with other men.
  12. Give men who are starting to grow spiritually the tools they need to build a bond of brotherhood for encouragement and accountability.
  13. Call men to be gospel-centered, kingdom disciples, i.e. help them see that in every area of their lives, they have an exciting calling to live out the reality of the gospel, participating in the redemption of the cosmos by making visible the invisible kingdom of Christ. Men love challenges; they are hardwired for mission.

C. Purchase a copy of No Man Left Behind or attend the Man In the Mirror seminar by this title. There is much more to effective men’s ministry than the above 13 steps.

D. Call on the services of a PCA men’s ministry coach to help you with the above process. Contact gyagel@forgingbonds.org

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7. How do you obtain the pastor and session’s support?

A. Find out what the content is of the phrase men’s ministry in your session’s mind. Many PCA leaders associate the term “men’s ministry” with the Promise Keepers movement, which had its roots in the Vineyard movement.

B. Be sure your pastor and the rest of the session understand that by men’s ministry, you mean: the mobilization of some in the body to use their gifts to help the session disciple the men of the church.

C. Ask to meet with the pastor and/or session to get their ideas about men’s ministry.

D. After clarifying the term men’s ministry, ask the church leadership what their most important goals are for your church. Then explain to them how men’s ministry can help them achieve their goals.

E. Allow your pastor to have the role, at your men’s events, that he wishes to have. Some want to be the pastor. Others just want to be one of the men.

G. Be extremely loyal to your church leadership. As a men’s ministry and as a men’s ministry leadership team, be intentional in looking for ways to support and serve your pastor. Be known around the church as those who are loyal to their pastor. One men’s group had guys take turns cutting the pastor’s lawn each week. Another group gave the pastor the money to take his wife to a bed and breakfast.

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8. How do you build a strong men’s ministry leadership team?

A. The most important principle is to find champions for men’s ministry.

  • If they have a passion for men’s ministry, they will be self-motivated. The pastor or session will not have to twist their arms.
  • Don’t assign an elder to be the point man for men’s ministry unless that is his passion. If you do, you will kill the passion for men’s ministry on the rest of the team.
  • Since the men’s ministry leadership team is overseen by the session, not every member needs to meet the qualification for being a church officer. The key is their passion. If some elders have a passion for men’s ministry—great. They are welcome members of the team.
  • The men’s ministry point man must first be a self-starter, highly motivated about men’s ministry in the congregation. He must also be spiritually respected in the congregation.

B. The second most important principle is to equip the team with an awareness of what is required to sustain an effective disciple-making ministry to men over the long haul. Tools for this equipping are mentioned under question 11.

C. The third most important principle is to constantly cast a vision for the importance of men’s ministry to the team along with encouragement and challenges to pay the price. If it were easy to build an effective men’s ministry, you would have already done it! The point is that it is difficult, discouraging, and opposed by the enemy every step of the way. The last thing Satan wants in the church is strong, spiritually connected men! He wants to bind our men in sin, guilt, and isolation. Then he can plunder their house.

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9. What do men identify as their greatest spiritual needs?

Where Men Want Spiritual Help

  1. With their marriages—the number one request on men’s surveys.
  2. Battling sexual temptation—the temptation men struggle with most.
  3. Getting control of their anger and becoming more patient.
  4. Managing their personal/spiritual lives, sticking to the right priorities and spiritual disciplines.
  5. Investing their lives not just for success, but for significance.
  6. Being the spiritual leader in their homes and knowing how to disciple their kids.
  7. Seeing their job as a calling from God and receiving Biblical wisdom for tough, job-related issues.
  8. Being more faithful in outreach to the lost. Most men feel like spiritual failures because they are doing little to share their faith.
  9. Finding a brother for encouragement and accountability.
  10. Knowing how to satisfy their hearts more by delighting in God.

The Root Need:

True discipleship is not behavior modification; it is heart transformation. It is not piling more discipleship tasks on the tired backs of men; it is leading them to the feet of Christ, in whose presence the inner desires and motivations of his heart are changed. The root need of every man is the gospel of grace deeply taking root in his soul.

Many men today are tired of the constant demands upon them to perform. They can’t provide for their family as they want to without working long hours. Instead of their home being the place where they feel appreciated and refreshed—it is full of exhausting demands to perform more.

Today’s Christian man is supposed to suck it up, rub it out, and keep performing. He carries a 100 lb pack on his back called his responsibilities. The daily pressure to perform increases the lure of various kinds of escape. More than one man has found that escape in a return to his drug days, an illicit affair, a growing dependence upon alcohol, a gambling addiction, or in the secret pleasures of viewing Internet porn.

The only true escape from this constant pressure to perform is the gospel of grace. Basking in God’s unconditional love, letting our failures drive us to our savior, is the only way the soul of a man can be refreshed, his strength renewed, and his heart re-energized to follow his calling.

The bigger the demands upon us, the more we need to shun the myth that we are self-reliant and let that pressure drive us to Christ for help. In his presence, we see that some of the pressure comes from our idols of success, respect, pleasure. In his presence we realize that God specializes in impossible situations and our faith is renewed. When we do fail, we remember that the greater our sin—the greater is the love of our savior in forgiving us.

Only the gospel of grace can transform the heart of a man—and that is the ultimate goal of discipleship.

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10.  How can I get my men spiritually connected at the level of their walk with Christ so they are not so alone in their spiritual battles?

A. Have a clear picture of your goal: Every man meeting regularly with one or two other brothers for encouragement and accountability in their spiritual battles.

B. Recognize that each of your men can be placed on a continuum of male connection in your church that might look like this:

 << Know No one << Acquaintances >> Friends >> Brothers

  1. Acquaintances are those whose name you know
  2. Friends are those with whom you participate in some activity. It might be the softball team, board of deacons, or Bible study. Friends socialize and share common values.
  3. Closer friends are those you might have over to your home or might have lunch with during the work week.
  4. We’re using “brothers” here to refer to men who know what is happening at the level of each other’s soul. They are able to encourage and pray for each other because they know each other’s spiritual battles. As this “brother” relationship deepens, they begin to ask to be held accountable for their actions.

C. Realize that getting men to the point where they are connected as brothers is a process that takes time. Trust must be built before men reveal what is going on inside. Usually this process takes years. It rarely happens automatically. Rather, the men’s ministry must be intentional about helping men move from the no relationships, or superficial relationships (left) to connection with a brother or two at the level of their spiritual lives (right side of continuum).

D. Men find it easiest to build friendships when they are shoulder to shoulder working together to accomplish a common task. Keep this principle in mind especially as you plan events for the least connected men—those on the left side of the continuum.

E. Although working together as a team to accomplish an objective is the most natural way men connect, we must recognize that our natural tendency in that connection is to be superficial. Christian men must be challenged to overcome their natural masculine desire for autonomy, i.e. be intentional about building relationships with other Christian men. We are to be so connected to some brothers that we confess our sins to one another (James 5:16), consider how to stimulate one another to love and good deeds, (Heb. 10:24), and depend daily upon one another (I Cor. 12:21).

F. As you design activities for your men’s ministry, always:

  1. Know which group on this continuum of male connection you are targeting
  2. Include a component to help men connect at some level.
  3. For example:
    a. Follow up the softball season with a funny, well done, awards banquet. Be sure that any newcomers to the team are personally invited by other team members and given a place to sit with them. The banquet could be structured with a contest so that each table has to work together to come up with their answers to the game questions.

    b. Seminars such as Success that Matters or Great Dads have excellent 6 week follow up small group studies. These studies are safe because they review material heard at the seminar and because they are only six weeks long. Such groups give men a taste of connection and they may decide to keep meeting after the 6 weeks is over.

G. One of the best ways to get men connected at the level of their soul is a men’s Bible Study or large-group presentation, with table discussion afterward.

  1. Man In the Mirror has many excellent resources for men’s Bible study, including DVD series of Pat speaking and follow up discussion questions. Click here to visit their website.
  2. You can check out our bookstore for men’s Bible studies by clicking here.
  3. However, we must recognize the limitations of men’s Bible studies --Monthly studies can do very little to help men connect at the level of their everyday lives because they meet too infrequently --Weekly men’s studies rarely reach more than 15% of the men in the congregation and often fizzle out. Couples’ home groups compete with such men’s groups. Also, men do not like coming home from work and going back out to a weekly study. --Often men’s small groups that do exist are more about sharing opinions than about fighting spiritual battles. They are 80% study with prayer requests tacked onto the end.

H. Consider using another structure for helping men connect as brothers—Check 6 Partnerships. (Note: "I'll check your six" is military language for, "I've got your back.")

1. Check 6 Partnerships are:
    --Not a couples’ group, but a band of brothers
    --Not a 2 hour Bible study, but a 1 hour breakfast,
       lunch, or phone call
    --Not an evening away from your family, but an hour from
       your work day
    --Not 6-8 guys, but 2-4 guys
    --Not focused on learning, but focused on fighting
    --Not based on a meeting agenda that generates opinions, but a meeting agenda that generates connection as brothers

2. There is great Biblical precedent for such relationships:
    --Jesus and the inner three
    --Elijah and Elisha
    --David and Jonathan
    --Paul and Timothy
    --Peter and Mark

3. For more information on Check 6 Partnerships go to www.forgingbonds.org

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11. How can I be better equipped for men’s ministry?

A. Sign Up for Get In the Game--the PCA E-letter on Men’s Ministry

B. Take the 15 minute Man in the Mirror On-line training course (click here www.maninthemirror.org.

C. Read and study No Man Left Behind. (order from PCA Bookstore)

D. Take your men’s ministry leadership team to a “No Man Left Behind” training seminar (click here--- www.maninthemirror.org click on training center

E. Click here if you would like a 30 minute phone call from a men’s ministry coach gyagel@forgingbonds.org

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About Men's Ministry in the PCA


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