

Lead Time
Unite Leadership Collective
Lead Time is a podcast of the Unite Leadership Collective, hosted by Tim Ahlman and Jack Kalleberg. The ULC envisions a future in which all congregations fully equip the priesthood of all believers through world-class leadership development at the local level. Lead Time taps into biblical wisdom for practical solutions to today's burning issues. Each podcast confronts real-time struggles facing the local church in a post-Christian culture. Step into the action with the ULC. This is Lead Time
Episodes
Mentioned books

Mar 24, 2026 • 1h 6min
How Are LCMS Pastors Truly Formed? | Our Response to a Recent Seminary Podcast
In this episode, we respond to a recent seminary podcast discussing residential training and pastoral formation. WATCH THE PODCAST HEREWhile we deeply respect our seminaries and their leaders, we ask the hard questions many pastors and church leaders are already thinking:Why are pulpits still empty?Why are churches closing?And are we training pastors in a way that actually meets today’s mission?Stay up to date by Joining the LCMS Current! (LCMS Current Events Newsletter)https://www.uniteleadership.org/thelcmscurrentWe'll break down:The real strengths of residential seminaryWhere the current model may be falling shortThe rise of hybrid and local training approachesWhy EQ (not just theology) matters more than we admitThe urgent need for church planting and scalable leadership pipelinesSupport the showVisit uniteleadership.org

Mar 17, 2026 • 1h 3min
First Article Gifts: A Leadership Framework for the LCMS
Jon Braunersreuther, Texas District President focused on congregational multiplication and pastoral formation. He discusses the pastor shortage and SMP debates. He argues for scaling mission to meet a huge harvest. He introduces First Article Gifts as practical, Spirit-enabled talents for church work. He also explores leadership discipline, measurement, and guarding against manipulative uses of gifts.

Mar 10, 2026 • 44min
Is the LCMS Ignoring Its Biggest Crisis? | Implications of Officer Nomination Vote Totals
The latest LCMS nomination results may reveal far more than just who might become the next president.Stay up to date by Joining the LCMS Current! (LCMS Current Events Newsletter)https://www.uniteleadership.org/thelcmscurrentIn this episode of LEAD TIME, Tim Ahlman and Jack Kalleberg break down what the vote totals could mean for the future trajectory of the Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod. Looking beyond the surface, they explore the deeper story behind the data: institutional stability, declining participation, leadership pipelines, and the growing pastoral shortage facing the church.Is the LCMS signaling a desire to preserve the status quo? Or are deeper structural challenges forcing change in the decades ahead?Tim and Jack discuss five major implications emerging from the nomination data—including why participation matters, why leadership networks may shape the future more than elections, and what this means for pastors, congregations, and mission in the years ahead.This conversation is candid, thoughtful, and ultimately hopeful about how God continues to work through faithful congregations and leaders across the LCMS.If you care about the future of the church, this is a conversation you don’t want to miss. And if you got something out of this, share It with a friend.Support the showVisit uniteleadership.org

Mar 3, 2026 • 1h 1min
Is the LCMS in an “American Interim”? A Gospel-Centered Response
What is the “American Interim” — and is the Church compromising its identity?In this episode of LEAD TIME, Pastor Tim Ahlman sits down with Rev. Dr. Jeffrey Kloha (Dean for the Center for Missional & Pastoral Leadership) to thoughtfully respond to Rev. Karl Hess's presentation, “Pastoring Under the American Interim.”See the video here:http://youtube.com/watch?v=0IizshrQn9ETogether they explore:- What is a Lutheran hermeneutic?- Is Enlightenment liberalism replacing Christianity?- Is equality a false god?- Did the Church surrender during COVID?- How should Christians think about slavery in Scripture?- Are we soaking in secular assumptions without realizing it?Rather than reacting emotionally, this conversation returns again and again to the central question:How do we interpret Scripture faithfully in our cultural moment?Dr. Kloha reminds us that our context may look less like 16th-century Europe and more like the world of the New Testament — pluralistic, politically complex, and spiritually contested.And in that world, what did the apostles do?They preached Christ.This episode is not about winning political arguments.It’s about guarding the gospel.It’s about understanding narrative vs. prescription in Scripture.It’s about loving neighbor while remaining faithful to Christ.If you’ve wrestled with these tensions in your congregation, this conversation will equip you with clarity, charity, and courage.Stay up to date by Joining the LCMS Current! (LCMS Current Events Newsletter)https://www.uniteleadership.org/thelcmscurrentSupport the showVisit uniteleadership.org

Feb 24, 2026 • 48min
Priesthood of All Believers: The Debate That Still Shapes the LCMS
What is God’s mission? Sounds like a simple question. In this episode of LEAD TIME, Tim and Jack sit down with veteran missiologist, Rev. Dr. Bob Scudieri to unpack the theology, history, and controversy surrounding mission in the LCMS. From the early church to Walther and Grabau, from Constantine to today’s debates about the priesthood of all believers, this conversation goes deep.Is the mission of God (Missio Dei) central to the church—or does emphasizing mission threaten doctrinal clarity? Why has fear sometimes replaced boldness? And what would it look like for the LCMS to truly reflect Matthew 28 in 2050?Bob shares decades of experience in parish ministry, national leadership, church planting, and ethnic outreach—along with practical wisdom for congregations ready to step into courageous mission.If you care about doctrine, discipleship, and reaching the nations next door, this episode is for you.Stay up to date by Joining the LCMS Current! (LCMS Current Events Newsletter)https://www.uniteleadership.org/thelcmscurrentSupport the showVisit uniteleadership.org

Feb 18, 2026 • 49min
Joy, Curiosity, and Hard Conversations in the LCMS
Are we unintentionally losing relational leadership in the LCMS?In this episode of LEAD TIME, Tim sits down with DCE Jonathan Zellar to unpack the ideas behind Rare Leadership by Jim Wilder — and why joy, emotional intelligence, and relational connection may be the missing ingredients in many of our leadership conversations.Concerned about what is happening in the wider LCMS? Check this out: http://amazon.com/Confessing-Jesus-Mission-Pastors-Prayer-ebook/dp/B0FZW7MSTVThis episode isn’t about lowering doctrine. It’s about embodying it relationally.If we can remain relational, act like ourselves, return to joy, and endure hardship well — we may find a healthier path forward together.Support the showVisit uniteleadership.org

Feb 13, 2026 • 1h 15min
Is This “Seminex 2.0”? Dr. Jim Voelz Responds to the Controversy
Please excuse the internet issues experienced during today's episode.Is Concordia Seminary embracing “Seminex 2.0”?Does modern linguistic theory make Scripture meaningless?Can Christians interpret the Bible “objectively”?In this episode of LEAD TIME, Pastor Tim sits down with Jim Voelz, longtime professor at Concordia Seminary, to respond directly to recent critiques surrounding his books:- What Does This Mean?- Principles of Biblical Interpretation for EveryoneThis conversation tackles some of the most important theological questions facing the LCMS right now: hermeneutics, authority, objectivity, and confession.If you care about faithful biblical interpretation, Lutheran theology, and the future of our church — this episode is for you.Concerned about what is happening in the wider LCMS? Check this out: http://amazon.com/Confessing-Jesus-Mission-Pastors-Prayer-ebook/dp/B0FZW7MSTVSupport the showVisit uniteleadership.org

Feb 10, 2026 • 41min
How Real-Time Insight Can Strengthen the Local Church
What happens when churches stop listening to their people—and what becomes possible when they do?In this episode of Lead Time, Tim Ahlman sits down with Ryan Ermeling, founder of Parent Pulse and the newly launched Church Voice, to explore why feedback often feels threatening in church leadership—and why avoiding it can quietly erode trust, unity, and mission.👉 Learn more about Church Voice at https://www.churchvoice.io/Together, they unpack the difference between feedback and insight, how real-time listening can prevent families from slipping away unnoticed, and why humility—not fear—is the posture faithful leadership requires. The conversation also tackles healthy conflict, trust within the LCMS, and how leaders can listen without surrendering theological conviction.If you’re a pastor, church leader, or ministry decision-maker navigating complexity, disagreement, or change, this episode offers a grounded, hope-filled framework for leading with clarity, courage, and care.Care about what is happening in the wider LCMS? Check this out:http://amazon.com/Confessing-Jesus-Mission-Pastors-Prayer-ebook/dp/B0FZW7MSTVSupport the showVisit uniteleadership.org

Feb 2, 2026 • 43min
Confessing Jesus’ Mission in a Fragmented Church
Tim's Book - Confessing Jesus' Mission is finally out! Find it here:http://amazon.com/Confessing-Jesus-Mission-Pastors-Prayer-ebook/dp/B0FZW7MSTVThis is a very special episode of LEAD Time.On launch day of Confessing Jesus’ Mission, Tim Ahlman joins the podcast for a different kind of conversation—not to defend a book, but to ask a deeper question facing the church today:Have we lost a shared sense of why the church exists?In this episode, Joe Beran interviews Tim about the growing fragmentation within the LCMS, the false binary between confession and mission, and why fear has quietly replaced courage in many of our conversations. Together, they explore how tribalism has shaped church discourse, why the Missio Dei must once again drive our priorities, and how the church can move from playing defense to faithfully going on offense for the sake of the lost.The conversation also touches on pastoral formation, leadership development, and why strategic thinking does not undermine Lutheran identity—but can actually serve it when rooted in Christ, the Means of Grace, and love for neighbor.This episode is not a manifesto. It’s an invitation:- To leaders who care deeply about the future of the church- To pastors and lay leaders willing to have honest, collegial conversations- To anyone longing for unity without compromise and mission without fearTim also shares who the book is for, who it’s not for, and how it’s meant to be read—not in isolation, but in community, as a catalyst for deeper conversation and renewed clarity around the mission God has already given His church.If you’ve felt the tension between faithfulness and fruitfulness, confession and mission, or tradition and innovation, this episode is for you.Support the showVisit uniteleadership.org

Jan 27, 2026 • 47min
BARNA Findings: Why Gen Z Is More Open to Faith Than You Think
Want to take part in the private Zoom Call with Pastor Tim??ONLY 14 Spots remain! Your Purchase is your ticket to the event!https://pci.jotform.com/cglc/confessing-jesus-mission-order-formIs there really a spiritual openness emerging among Gen Z—and if so, how should the church respond?In this episode of Lead Time, Tim Ahlman and Jack Kalleberg are joined by Mike Jessop, Director of Christian Education at Christ Greenfield, to unpack recent Barna findings on Gen Z, discipleship, and the future of the church. Together, they explore why Gen Z may be more spiritually open than previous generations, what authenticity really means to young adults, and how technology, loneliness, and cultural instability are shaping the next generation’s search for meaning.See research here:https://www.barna.com/research/young-adults-lead-resurgence-in-church-attendance/If you care about LCMS health, leadership development, and long-term faith formation, this episode is essential listening.Support the showVisit uniteleadership.org


