Dwight Robertson

Dwight Robertson

Dwight Robertson

Kingdom Building Ministries' Founder and President Dwight Robertson is known nationally as a dynamic and gifted communicator. His life calling and mission—to challenge Christians to the role of laborership—is shared passionately as Dwight communicates with evident excitement and urgency. The goal of his message is to see individuals moving toward deeper levels of spiritual intimacy and to gain a world-changing vision while assuming their role as laborers for God’s Kingdom.

Dwight and his wife, Dawn, live in Denver, Colorado, with their two children, Dara and Dreyson.

Kingdom Building Ministries

Mission

Kingdom Building Ministries is an evangelical Christian, parachurch organization that partners with churches, universities, denominations and other ministry organizations to:

Challenge, equip and mobilize Christians to become Kingdom laborers. At the center of our mission is the distinguishing word laborer. It's a biblical word that Jesus used in Matthew 9:35-38. After traveling from town to town and seeing all the harassed and helpless people, He turned to His disciples and said, "The harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few. Ask the Lord of the harvest, therefore, to send out laborers into his harvest field" (italics added). According to Jesus, laborers are the answer to the great harvest need. Laborers are his plan for the masses of harassed and helpless people in the world. And He doesn't seem to have a "plan B." But what is a laborer? Simply put, a laborer is a disciple in action. (The very word implies action and work.) Laborers are those who are making a difference in people's lives and in God's Kingdom by actively and lovingly serving those around them. They get into the mud puddles of life’s deepest needs. They're ordinary people who are making an extraordinary difference in the places where God has given them influence—in their families, neighborhoods, communities, schools, workplaces, churches, etc. They're taking their love for God into places all over the world by putting their Christian faith into action in practical and meaningful ways. Laborership (a word we made up) is not confined to vocational ministry. In fact, we believe God has called every Christian to be a laborer in His Kingdom—applying his or her gifts, passions, hobbies, past experiences and season of life to ministry. It's not just for the speakers, teachers, preachers, authors, missionaries, musicians and other "spotlight" ministers. And it's not just for those who have culturally-valued leadership gifts. Every Christian is uniquely designed by God to have an impact on the lives of others in ways that are meaningful and important. Every Christian is a minister. Every Christian is called to be a laborer.

Pastors commonly speak of the 80-20 principle that's at work in their churches—20 percent of the people do 80 percent of the work. This reality can cause those who are actively involved in ministry (vocational or non-vocational) to become weary because the job is much bigger than them. Meanwhile, those who are sitting on the sidelines of ministry get even more spiritually complacent and lazy. A part of our mission is to challenge the 80 percent who are sitting on the sidelines to get into the game! Part of the power in the word laborer is that it does not specifically imply what the work of a laborer is or can be. Indeed, God has called us each to a different kind of labor. He's equipped us with different passions, gifts and spheres of influence that will shape how we serve Him and others. God doesn't use a cookie cutter to cut out each laborer. Each laborer's ministry is as distinct as he or she is. But there's more to being a laborer than laboring. Much more. Being a laborer, first and foremost, means knowing and loving the One for whom we labor. Before God calls us to live a life of ministry, He will call us to a life of intimate relationship with Himself. That's why we believe that laborershipstarts with loving God. We believe the hallmark characteristics of a laborer are:

•Love—Laborers have an intimate, love relationship with Jesus and a passion for bringing Him glory.

•Life—Their love for God and others overflows in a life of active, personal ministry that's as distinct and unique as they are.

•Legacy—They leave a lasting, spiritual legacy by multiplying other Kingdom laborers. In the wake of their lives is an eternal legacy of other lives that have been touched by God's life-changing power flowing through them.

For a more complete understanding of what it means to be a laborer, see the article "The World's Greatest Need," by Dwight Robertson.

Purpose

In addition to challenging, equipping and mobilizing Kingdom laborers ourselves, God has also called us to be a catalyst for a movement of laborers throughout the world. We believe God is raising up a movement of laborers—ordinary people who, empowered by His Spirit, are ambassadors of His love in every corner of the world. Kingdom Building Ministries is not the movement, we’re a catalyst for the movement that’s much larger than we are.

So what does it mean to be a catalyst? A catalyst is something that speeds up a process. It's like in your high-school science class when you combined two chemicals to start a chemical reaction. Then, when you added heat, the reaction sped up. The heat was a catalyst.

Our purpose, then, is to get in line with what God’s doing in our generation and quicken—or fan the flame—of this worldwide laborership movement.