John Ortberg

John Ortberg
John Ortberg, Jr.is an evangelical Christian author, speaker, and senior pastor of Menlo Park Presbyterian Church in Menlo Park, California, an evangelical church with more than 4,000 members. Ortberg has published many books including the 2008 ECPA Christian Book Award winner When the Game is Over, It All Goes Back in the Box, and the 2002 Christianity Today Book Award winner If You Want to Walk on Water, You've Got to Get Out of the Boat. Another of his publications,...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionClergyman
Date of Birth5 May 1957
CountryUnited States of America
I have always heard that you need to give yourself a long time to unplug when you do a sabbatical. I unplugged so fast I was a little concerned that I was losing brain capacity.
A simple way to address hidden curriculum issues is to spend time talking with staff and key leaders about their spiritual lives.
In the context of worship, amusement is a waste of time and a waste of life, and therefore a form of sin.
Love and hurry are fundamentally incompatible. Love always takes time, and time is the one thing hurried people don't have.
One of the great illusions of our time is that hurrying will buy us more time.
I hate how spiritual formation gets positioned as an optional pursuit for a small special interest group within the church.
I am a political junkie. During a presidential campaign, I will often buy a couple of newspapers a day just to keep up.
I am struck by how quickly I am prone to judgmentalism.
Ghettos and barrios and abusive homes and trauma wards may produce scarred souls; they can cripple more human spirits than they strengthen.
From ancient times, the core idea of the soul is the soul is the capacity to integrate different functions into a single being or into a single person. The soul is what holds us all together: what connects our will and our minds and our bodies and connects us to God.
People with the strongest and healthiest sense of calling are not obsessed with their calling. They are preoccupied with the Caller.
Politics, after all, is largely about power. And power goes to the core of our issues of control and narcissism and need to be right and tendency to divide the human race into 'us' vs. 'them.'
One of the reasons I'm an interesting person to be married to is my intensely late-blooming self-awareness.
My wife is one of the most extroverted people I know. She could out-talk Oprah and Joyce Meyer simultaneously.