Field Notes for Transformation

Spritual Leadership Inc.

Environments shape everything—how we lead, how we grow, and how we impact others. Hosted by Lindsay Martin, Field Notes for Transformation is your go-to resource for cultivating impactful teams and ministries. Through practical insights and inspiring stories, this podcast equips you with the tools to create transformative environments. Whether you’re leading a ministry or nurturing a team, these field notes will help guide your journey.

  1. 11/20/2025

    Ep 24: The Future of Worship is Both/And with Michael Huerter

    In this conversation, Michael Huerter opens up about his unexpected journey into worship and music ministry and the way hybrid worship is reshaping the life of the church. He names both the beauty and the tension of weaving technology into our worship practices—how we can use new tools without losing the human connections that make church feel like church. Michael talks honestly about the challenges leaders face right now: the overwhelm of adapting to online spaces, the pressure to “keep up,” and the fear of getting it wrong. But he also points us toward the opportunities, for example, how music can create connection even through a screen, how creativity can build real community, and how relationships will always matter more than platforms. Takeaways Technology can open surprising doors for connection, but it should never replace the sacred gift of human relationships—it’s here to serve community, not define it. For leaders feeling the weight of constant change, the invitation is simple and steady: focus on relationships first. The tech will follow. Hybrid worship isn’t a stop-gap anymore; it’s a real and lasting expression of church life when we approach it with intention.   Episode field note: Technology and online ministry aren’t replacing relationships but they’re deepening them and reminding us we’re not alone. Even though the pace of new technology can feel overwhelming, this moment is also opening unexpected doors for connection and support in ministry. Online spaces, Zoom calls with mentors, glimpses into a friend’s worship service, shared creative work can actually strengthen the relationships we nurture in person. Instead of choosing between online and offline, we’re invited to see them as a hybrid whole and lean into the creativity, curiosity, and community this season makes possible.   Resources and links Michael’s book: The Hybrid Congregation    Follow Michael on Facebook                           Follow SLI: @spiritualleadershipinc Head to Spiritual Leadership, Inc to take a look at resources for ministry leaders.

    45 min
  2. 11/04/2025

    Ep 23: Finding Freedom in Limits: A conversation with Alan Noble

    In this conversation, Alan Noble helps us name the weight we all feel in a world that tells us we must be everything on our own. Drawing from his book You Are Not Your Own, Alan invites us to imagine a different kind of freedom, one found not in limitless choice, but in belonging to a loving God. Alan talks about the exhaustion of modern life, the grace of limits, and the practices of gratitude and attention that can reorient us. This is a conversation about recovering our humanity and remembering that we were never meant to carry the world alone.   Takeaways: Freedom isn’t found in endless choice, it’s found in belonging.   Gratitude and attention are small rebellions.   Modern life is heavy, but we were never meant to carry it alone.   The fruit of our labor belongs to God. (Our work has meaning not because it’s impressive, but because it’s offered back to Him.)   Love people for who they are, not for what they achieve.   Episode field note: Get to know someone really well When we move beyond surface conversations and risk true connection, we start to see one another as we are, not as we present ourselves to be. That kind of knowing creates room for compassion, for shared humanity, for healing. Bearing each other’s burdens isn’t about fixing what’s broken. It’s about standing close enough to feel the weight and say, “You’re not alone in this.”   Resources and links: Alan’s website Alan’s book w/ IvPress Follow SLI: @spiritualleadershipinc This episode is brought to you by Spiritual Leadership, Inc Head to spiritual-leadership.org to take a look at resources for ministry leaders.

    41 min
  3. 10/22/2025

    Ep 22: Leading Through Storms with Bishop Geoffrey Dudley

    In this episode, Bishop Geoffrey Dudley shares what it takes to lead through the storms of life and ministry. Drawing from his experiences in both the military and the church, he talks about calling, resilience, and the connection between leadership and mental health. This conversation explores what authentic leadership looks like when you’re navigating real challenges, for example, crafting vision, managing the movement, and building teams that can bend without breaking.   Takeaways Calling isn’t static, it evolves as we do and is tested, refined by resistance and clarified through rest.  Leadership isn’t proven by what you achieve, it is revealed by how you show up when things get hard.  Authenticity outlasts performance.      Episode field note: Get to know you “Set aside time for self-reflection and get to know you. He already knows you. He fearfully and wonderfully made you. But when you begin to know you, that’s when He can really start working with you.”   Before you can lead others, you have to sit with your own story. Like Jacob, we wrestle with identity, with the question God still asks: Who are you?   Resources and links Bishop Dudley’s website Book: Leading Through Storms with IvPress Follow Bishop Dudley on socials:                   YouTube                  Instagram: @bishopdudleyphd                  Facebook Follow SLI: @spiritualleadershipinc This episode is brought to you by Spiritual Leadership, Inc Head to spiritual-leadership.org to take a look at resources for ministry leaders.

    44 min
  4. 09/23/2025

    Ep 20: Never Coasting: Ron Watts on Lifelong Growth in Leadership

    In this conversation, Ron shares the story of his own call to ministry, the early influences that shaped him, and the lessons he’s in almost 40 years of leading La Croix Church. We dive into what it means to build a healthy church culture, the power of storytelling to draw people into God’s bigger story, and why developing leaders is always worth the risk of giving away ownership, and even letting them learn through failure. As Ron looks toward retirement, he reflects on the hope that drives him: raising up disciples who wholeheartedly follow Jesus. Takeaways Healthy leadership multiplies, it doesn’t center on one person.  Painful seasons often become the very soil where transformation takes root.  The legacy of a leader is discipleship - raising up others, giving them ownership and having that person learn through success and failure.    Episode field note: Stay open to God’s stretching work Ron reminds us that growth is a lifelong posture. That kind of hunger to learn, to receive feedback, to stay open to God’s stretching work, even when it’s uncomfortable.    Resources and links La Croix website: lacroixchurch.org La Croix on socials: Facebook                                   Instagram                                   YouTube                                     Follow SLI: @spiritualleadershipinc Head to Spiritual Leadership, Inc to take a look at resources for ministry leaders.

    39 min
  5. 09/02/2025

    Ep 19: Redemption on the Clock: Rethinking Faith at Work with Elaine Howard Ecklund

    In this episode, Lindsay talks with Elaine Howard Ecklund (Rice University) to talk about the intersection of faith and work and why it matters in the places we spend most of our lives. We dig into insights from her new book, co-written with Denise Daniels (Wheaton College), Working for Better: a New Approach to Faith at Work. We talk about her research on how people experience calling in their jobs and what it takes to create systemic change. Elaine and Lindsay explore how leaders and congregations can foster environments where faith isn’t just something we carry to church on Sunday, but something we live out every day, helping workplaces become more redemptive for everyone.   Takeaways Faith can actually make us more committed and effective at work. Everyday employees have the power to shift workplace culture from the inside.  Churches/clergy can help people thrive professionally, not just spiritually.    Field Note: For leaders in the workplace, take the time to understand the specific challenges at work. Find a group of trusted peers (at church for example) and create the space to thoughtfully address similar challenges. For clergy, get to know the kind of work your congregants do and the challenges they face each day. This will have an impact on workplaces and help people bring more of themselves to both their work environment and church.    Resources and links Elaine Howard Eckland’s website: https://www.elainehowardecklund.com/ Working for Better book with InterVarsity Press: https://www.ivpress.com/working-for-better SLI’s Spiritual Leadership Generator Tool: https://www.spiritual-leadership.org/leadershipgenerator/ Head to spiritual-leadership.org to take a look at resources for ministry leaders.

    43 min
5
out of 5
13 Ratings

About

Environments shape everything—how we lead, how we grow, and how we impact others. Hosted by Lindsay Martin, Field Notes for Transformation is your go-to resource for cultivating impactful teams and ministries. Through practical insights and inspiring stories, this podcast equips you with the tools to create transformative environments. Whether you’re leading a ministry or nurturing a team, these field notes will help guide your journey.