Ministry on the Move
Hank Williams is an evangelist based out of Texas. Named after Hank Williams Sr. — his dad was in country music and wanted to bless his youngest boy with that name. Mom vetoed it. His legal name is Randall. He found out after they were married that his wife's middle name is the same. He's been in ministry 46 years, split evenly between itinerant evangelism and pastoral ministry, and he sat down with Chris on the last night of a revival at Lake Murvaul in East Texas. The conversation centers on the family. Hank's framework is rooted in Genesis: God created three institutions — family, church, and government — and he created the family first. The order matters. Jesus first, then spouse, then children, then vocation. Not as a checklist, but as a living priority that shows up in your calendar, your energy, and what you say yes and no to. Hank spent his evangelism years asking every pastor he met two questions: what are your priorities, and how do you maintain them? The gap between the answers was instructive. A lot of men could articulate biblical priorities clearly and live them poorly. That tension drove his ministry focus toward discipleship — specifically, one-on-one, life-on-life investment in men and women, a year at a time, through a process he called Intentional Discipleship. He talks about travel ball and what it did to church attendance — his education director did a deep dive and identified an average of 700 people a weekend missing from a 3,500-member church because of travel sports. Rather than rail against it, Hank built a travel ball ministry: curriculum, voluntary hotel Bible studies, connection tools for families on the road. He's not anti-sports. He's pro-intentionality. He closes with the question left by the previous guest: what's your best advice for time management as a pastor, balancing ministry, community, and family? It was the thesis of his doctoral work. His answer: rhythms. Not schedules. Rhythms. Sacred Fridays with Mary Ann. Date nights on the calendar. Accountability relationships he's been in for 40 years. Defining finishing well as establishing biblical priorities and maintaining them reasonably well over time. That's a life's work distilled into one sentence. Worth the listen.
103 episodios
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