Sunday, October 25, 2009
Minors and Major - A Request for Prayer
This next week I go to be with my father who is having major open heart surgery. I am grateful that God has protected my father and I know that God is in absolute control of all that will transpire.
I have only had "minor surgery." Of course I have come to believe that the label "minor" is only given to the surgery that is done to someone else. But this is a "major" deal. No matter what kind of circumstance of life, major or minor, we need to always remember that God is still God. Nothing has taken Him by surprise and that His will is best.
I am most certainly not a fatalist, nor am I one to believe that life is only what I make of it. God has a plan, a purpose, a design for life. I fit into that framework and in my existence I affect and am effected by others.
My father has affected many lives in over 50 years of ministry. This is a surgery that will be prayed for in many different time zones and in different countries. I am sure of that. However, I am grateful that people are praying for it is to the One and only One God that we turn to in these "major" points of life with absolute confidence that He is the only one who can make the "no-matter-what-happens" of life work out for His glory and our good.
I hope we can also learn this in the "minors" of life as well. God is still the only one who can seam together the monotonous of our daily routine into a tapestry of effective and purposeful living.
Thanks for praying and may we remember that God is just as concerned with our minors and we are about our majors.
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
The First Argument
I know I was planning to get back to my previous post, but I came across this today and thought it pretty funny. What do you suppose was Adam and Eve's first argument after they were kicked out of the garden? Here is one possibility.
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
Open Source Churches
J. R. Kerr, the singles/teaching pastor at Park Community Church in Chicago, IL, recently wrote an article in Leadership Journal. The title of his article was "Open Source Activists." The motivation behind his article is to demonstrate how leadership styles need to change to reflect the changes in how people process and interact with information.
Open Source tools like YouTube and Wikipedia give the average person on the street the ability to create and give input where before that person would be forced to simply observe or only interact with a limited audience.
J. R. Kerr challenges the way our churches today use leadership and specifically a top-down mentality. The pastor becomes the focal point and without his input and direction, people are left powerless to perform their tasks and accomplish their ministries.
He put it this way, I was supposed to have some degree of control over every part of the church, supposed to have the answer to whatever problem arose. One day, I had a string of meetings that kept me from my office most of the day. Upon my return I met five people whose jobs had come to a halt because they needed me. They all had the information and the skills necessary to do their work, but they lacked the authority—the necessary space—to lead. This kind of organizational environment expects leaders to know and control virtually everything in the life of the community.
Mr. Kerr's big push is that leadership in churches today needs to relinquish control and allow others to be involved in the creative and development process of ministry within the church. He argues that people today want to be heard and have a voice in the development of ideas and even the shaping of vision for that assembly.
Kerr holds that nothing within our churches should be considered off limits or untouchable if it is felt to be an obstacle to success.
J. R. Kerr's final paragraph helps summarize his view. This new generation sees themselves and their potential differently. They don't require titles and positions to influence the culture. This is a generation of social activists, artists, and leaders who intend to accomplish great things for the kingdom of God. Our responsibility is to make space for them, and that requires thinking differently about how we lead.
Read the article if you find time and I am going to react more in my next blog. It is a challenge to us as "leaders" to make sure that we are truly leading in a way that is Biblical, effective, relevant, and going somewhere. Are we leading or just being control freaks? Are we enabling or just micromanaging? Are we shepherding or butchering our flock? We are to be leaders so how should we lead?
Kerr is pressing an issue here. Is he right or reactionary? Is he on target or misguided? Is it situational, personality, or is it overarching?
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Crazy Love (A Review)
I have just finished listening to the audio book version of Crazy Love by Francis Chan. It has been a very challenging and meditative time. Francis Chan incites us to earnestly inspect our God and His love for us. Chan also then provokes us (me) to consider how I love my God in return. How then do I demonstrate, interact, and increase my ability to love God?
Tim Challies does his review of this book as well. Read his review and then I encourage you to also read or listen to this resource.
It is a crazy love to this world. But to us may it be a kind of love that causes us to be more like Christ. You can also check out the website for this book HERE.
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Fearful
My family and I had the opportunity to go this past Monday and Tuesday to the Wisconsin Fellowship of Baptist Churches. It was their annual meeting and held in West Bend. We traveled over and had a great couple of days making some new acquaintances, seeing old friends, and getting know newer friends better.
The theme this year was from 1 Corinthians 16:13 Watch ye, stand fast in the faith, quit you like men, be strong.
The phrase they took was "stand fast in the faith." Fred Moritz was the main speaker and did a phenomenal job of challenging us to stand fast, be strong, to understand that the source of our strength is not in us but is from the Lord.
I am reminded of Paul's comments in 2 Timothy 1:7 For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind.
What do we have to fear? What do we have that could cause us to cower in dread and timidity? The power of God is mighty to the pulling down of strongholds. It is the power of God that raised Jesus from the dead, cast demons out of people, healed the sick, opened the eyes of the blind, gave strength to the lame, and today transforms a sin-dead soul into a forgiven-eternally saved saint!
This power is the same power that rests in each and every one of us who knows Christ as our Savior. This power is what grants us the authority to go and proclaim a message of deliverance and redemption.
Fearful? Of what? A threat on our life, a shunning of a relative, a losing of an old friend? Afraid of losing your job, losing your health, losing your parent, losing your spouse, losing your child?
Fearful? Of whom? The devil, the political activists, the unregenerate neighbor, the waiter at our table? The bill collector, the soldier at the door who is there to tell you your loved one is missing or dead while serving his/her country?
There are perhaps many scenarios that would warrant our response to be fearful. But really, what do we have to fear? For God is not its author. God is not the bringer of fear. He is the One who grants POWER! His power, the creative power of a God who can and did create everything in six literal days according to His perfect design. The Power of this God created storms and yet He also calms storms.
He is the One who grants us LOVE! A love that sees the burden of a sin-sick soul and the consequences of a life who rejects Christ's sacrifice upon that cross. A love that is not sensual, selfish, or based upon it being reciprocated. We have the love of Christ which then compels us to love others and to demonstrate that love. It is a love that passes all comprehension and yet is something to be known. It is a love that sacrificed all and gave it to you and to me. It is a love that sees past the immediate and beholds the potential of all that is good in the hand of this gracious and loving God.
He is the One who grants to us a sound mind, a discipline, a view point on reality and the way we are to live. Fear causes a frantic tendency. We lose perspective; we lose faith. Fear stirs up imaginations and tendencies to lose touch on what is real. God is REAL. God did not put into us a spirit of fear, but gave to us a source of control and understanding. We can grasp the direction we are to go because we have His Word. We can gain the comfort we need because we have His Spirit. We can gravitate toward the right support group because we have His Body, the church. Nothing can truly shake us if we are living by faith and not by fear.
We are not to live in fear. Fear cripples, distracts, and states that we have not a God who understands, comprehends, or transcends to our situation, needs, or time frame. Fear takes our eyes off God who CAN and declares that there is now before us a situation that God cannot do anything about. But that is not true. Fear focuses upon the lie and Faith focuses upon the truth.
I have not a God who can't, but a God who is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the power that worketh in us. (Ephesians 3:20)
Fear CANNOT, but God certainly CAN!
The theme this year was from 1 Corinthians 16:13 Watch ye, stand fast in the faith, quit you like men, be strong.
The phrase they took was "stand fast in the faith." Fred Moritz was the main speaker and did a phenomenal job of challenging us to stand fast, be strong, to understand that the source of our strength is not in us but is from the Lord.
I am reminded of Paul's comments in 2 Timothy 1:7 For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind.
What do we have to fear? What do we have that could cause us to cower in dread and timidity? The power of God is mighty to the pulling down of strongholds. It is the power of God that raised Jesus from the dead, cast demons out of people, healed the sick, opened the eyes of the blind, gave strength to the lame, and today transforms a sin-dead soul into a forgiven-eternally saved saint!
This power is the same power that rests in each and every one of us who knows Christ as our Savior. This power is what grants us the authority to go and proclaim a message of deliverance and redemption.
Fearful? Of what? A threat on our life, a shunning of a relative, a losing of an old friend? Afraid of losing your job, losing your health, losing your parent, losing your spouse, losing your child?
Fearful? Of whom? The devil, the political activists, the unregenerate neighbor, the waiter at our table? The bill collector, the soldier at the door who is there to tell you your loved one is missing or dead while serving his/her country?
There are perhaps many scenarios that would warrant our response to be fearful. But really, what do we have to fear? For God is not its author. God is not the bringer of fear. He is the One who grants POWER! His power, the creative power of a God who can and did create everything in six literal days according to His perfect design. The Power of this God created storms and yet He also calms storms.
He is the One who grants us LOVE! A love that sees the burden of a sin-sick soul and the consequences of a life who rejects Christ's sacrifice upon that cross. A love that is not sensual, selfish, or based upon it being reciprocated. We have the love of Christ which then compels us to love others and to demonstrate that love. It is a love that passes all comprehension and yet is something to be known. It is a love that sacrificed all and gave it to you and to me. It is a love that sees past the immediate and beholds the potential of all that is good in the hand of this gracious and loving God.
He is the One who grants to us a sound mind, a discipline, a view point on reality and the way we are to live. Fear causes a frantic tendency. We lose perspective; we lose faith. Fear stirs up imaginations and tendencies to lose touch on what is real. God is REAL. God did not put into us a spirit of fear, but gave to us a source of control and understanding. We can grasp the direction we are to go because we have His Word. We can gain the comfort we need because we have His Spirit. We can gravitate toward the right support group because we have His Body, the church. Nothing can truly shake us if we are living by faith and not by fear.
We are not to live in fear. Fear cripples, distracts, and states that we have not a God who understands, comprehends, or transcends to our situation, needs, or time frame. Fear takes our eyes off God who CAN and declares that there is now before us a situation that God cannot do anything about. But that is not true. Fear focuses upon the lie and Faith focuses upon the truth.
I have not a God who can't, but a God who is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the power that worketh in us. (Ephesians 3:20)
Fear CANNOT, but God certainly CAN!
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Anxious
Be careful for nothing; but in every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God. (Philippians 4:6)
I need this verse today. Quit the natural tendency to grow anxious and fretful. Let nothing distract from the primary hope and supply. Turn your worry into a prayer. Turn your anxiety into a source of supplication.
Remember with thanksgiving the hope you have in God and the past supply that God has already demonstrated Himself capable of granting.
Simple requests, important requests, the outcry of "help, its an emergency and I have no where else to turn." God smiles and says, "Finally. You understand. You had no where else before. About time you showed up. So, what is it, Child, that you need today?"
May I be anxious about nothing, for God is careful about everything that comes into my life that it be for my good and His glory.
I need this verse today. Quit the natural tendency to grow anxious and fretful. Let nothing distract from the primary hope and supply. Turn your worry into a prayer. Turn your anxiety into a source of supplication.
Remember with thanksgiving the hope you have in God and the past supply that God has already demonstrated Himself capable of granting.
Simple requests, important requests, the outcry of "help, its an emergency and I have no where else to turn." God smiles and says, "Finally. You understand. You had no where else before. About time you showed up. So, what is it, Child, that you need today?"
May I be anxious about nothing, for God is careful about everything that comes into my life that it be for my good and His glory.
Friday, August 28, 2009
Understanding the Times
I guess for the past few days I have been very aware of some of the issues going on in our political and social spheres. Of course this impacts us. As believers we need to be aware of the times and aware of what is influencing the thinking of our neighbors and even our fellow church attendees.
I have been reading through the Chronicles lately. Yeah, I know... But as I have been working, more like plowing, through the lists of names and chronologies, and David's mighty men, I was struck with some verses in 1 Chronicles 12.
And of the children of Issachar, which were men that had understanding of the times, to know what Israel ought to do; the heads of them were two hundred; and all their brethren were at their commandment. Of Zebulun, such as went forth to battle, expert in war, with all instruments of war, fifty thousand, which could keep rank: they were not of double heart.
1 Chronicles 12:32-33
Notice those words, understanding of the times, to know what Israel ought to do.
I especially love the next verse, they were not of double heart.
These men, simply leaders of their people, no mention of names, but they new the times in which they lived. Their hearts were not duplicitous.
Obviously (but perhaps not to some) the context is that of establishing David as king after the death of Saul. David did not just assume the support of the people. They had loved Saul, been loyal to Saul, had followed him even at great peril to their own lives. They had established Saul as king. Now, here is David. Some had run immediately to crown him. Saul's descendants had been obviously less forth coming. But we find it took nearly eight years before all of Israel rallied around David.
But these men, these ones who understood the times and had hearts ready for submission saw in David the leader that needed to rule, the one that God had ordained.
Where am I going with this? I see so many times the need for our people today to be ones who "understand the times" in which we live. We have our systems of loyalty and yet we have become more stubborn in areas that perhaps God is ready to move on or allow for a new direction.
I look at people following man and they become disillusioned with the person instead of beholding where they are in time and events of life. Pastors rise for the occasion and if we are not careful we begin to grow more enamored with the charisma or the personality of that man instead of allowing the greatness of God to work through him.
We can grow enamored with a stand on some issue because it meant something different in the 60's and 70's but today that position is mute because either the medium has changed or the association surrounding it has changed. However, we will still refuse to have any connotation or context associating our lives to it because of a previous need to stand firm against something that resembled it in the past.
I know I am speaking in vague terms, but of course, I have things in my mind that I see as being a totally different issue today than it was 20-30 years ago. If we don't start understanding the times in which we live and get our hearts in tune with the current trends and directions our people are facing, we are going to continue to prove to our audiences that the Bible is irrelevant and insufficient to deal with 21st Century living. How sad that is!
Saul is dead! David is ready to assume the throne. Let's move on already. Come out of hiding, accept the vision and leadership God has given us and let's go face the enemy in power and with God's present, ordained, and appropriate strategies. Remember, David was a man after God's own heart. He was not going to lead them contrary to God's vision and leading, but it would be different than how Saul led them. Have understanding appropriate for the day in which you live.
Understanding the times and like we find in Esther, "for such a time as this." It's time for some things to change in order to reveal the changeless truth of God's Word to a different world from the one we went to sleep in last night and the one we woke up to today.
I have been reading through the Chronicles lately. Yeah, I know... But as I have been working, more like plowing, through the lists of names and chronologies, and David's mighty men, I was struck with some verses in 1 Chronicles 12.
And of the children of Issachar, which were men that had understanding of the times, to know what Israel ought to do; the heads of them were two hundred; and all their brethren were at their commandment. Of Zebulun, such as went forth to battle, expert in war, with all instruments of war, fifty thousand, which could keep rank: they were not of double heart.
1 Chronicles 12:32-33
Notice those words, understanding of the times, to know what Israel ought to do.
I especially love the next verse, they were not of double heart.
These men, simply leaders of their people, no mention of names, but they new the times in which they lived. Their hearts were not duplicitous.
Obviously (but perhaps not to some) the context is that of establishing David as king after the death of Saul. David did not just assume the support of the people. They had loved Saul, been loyal to Saul, had followed him even at great peril to their own lives. They had established Saul as king. Now, here is David. Some had run immediately to crown him. Saul's descendants had been obviously less forth coming. But we find it took nearly eight years before all of Israel rallied around David.
But these men, these ones who understood the times and had hearts ready for submission saw in David the leader that needed to rule, the one that God had ordained.
Where am I going with this? I see so many times the need for our people today to be ones who "understand the times" in which we live. We have our systems of loyalty and yet we have become more stubborn in areas that perhaps God is ready to move on or allow for a new direction.
I look at people following man and they become disillusioned with the person instead of beholding where they are in time and events of life. Pastors rise for the occasion and if we are not careful we begin to grow more enamored with the charisma or the personality of that man instead of allowing the greatness of God to work through him.
We can grow enamored with a stand on some issue because it meant something different in the 60's and 70's but today that position is mute because either the medium has changed or the association surrounding it has changed. However, we will still refuse to have any connotation or context associating our lives to it because of a previous need to stand firm against something that resembled it in the past.
I know I am speaking in vague terms, but of course, I have things in my mind that I see as being a totally different issue today than it was 20-30 years ago. If we don't start understanding the times in which we live and get our hearts in tune with the current trends and directions our people are facing, we are going to continue to prove to our audiences that the Bible is irrelevant and insufficient to deal with 21st Century living. How sad that is!
Saul is dead! David is ready to assume the throne. Let's move on already. Come out of hiding, accept the vision and leadership God has given us and let's go face the enemy in power and with God's present, ordained, and appropriate strategies. Remember, David was a man after God's own heart. He was not going to lead them contrary to God's vision and leading, but it would be different than how Saul led them. Have understanding appropriate for the day in which you live.
Understanding the times and like we find in Esther, "for such a time as this." It's time for some things to change in order to reveal the changeless truth of God's Word to a different world from the one we went to sleep in last night and the one we woke up to today.
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Obama comes down on DOMA (OneNewsNow.com)
President Obama is at it again. I know we are commanded in Scripture to pray for our leaders. As believers we need to be aware of the direction our government leaders are taking this nation. The Defense of Marriage Act is now our president's target. You can follow the link below to see a viewpoint on this. May we pray..."Even so come QUICKLY, Lord!"
Obama comes down on DOMA (OneNewsNow.com)
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Obama comes down on DOMA (OneNewsNow.com)
Shared via AddThis
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
In that day!
In our Wednesday evening Bible studies we are just starting a series on the Names of God. A study of this type is not meant to become a series of etymological digressions or a broad excuse of rabbit trails, but it is a powerful study into the character and the vast attributes of our God.
As I was studying for tonight's thought one of the key verses is found in Isaiah 12. The whole chapter is only six verses long and is such a wonderful declaration of God's remembrance and restoration. Of course it is following fast upon the thoughts found in Isaiah 11 where we read.....
And there shall come forth a rod out of the stem of Jesse, and a Branch shall grow out of his roots: And the spirit of the LORD shall rest upon him, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the LORD; And shall make him of quick understanding in the fear of the LORD: and he shall not judge after the sight of his eyes, neither reprove after the hearing of his ears: But with righteousness shall he judge the poor, and reprove with equity for the meek of the earth: and he shall smite the earth with the rod of his mouth, and with the breath of his lips shall he slay the wicked. And righteousness shall be the girdle of his loins, and faithfulness the girdle of his reins. (Isaiah 11:1-5)
The chapter then goes on to describe a regathering of the people of Israel. Then chapter 12 comes in with a certain optimism. In that day thou shalt say, O Lord, I will praise thee. (Isaiah 12:1b)
Then again in verse four,
And in that day shall ye say, Praise the LORD, call upon his name, declare his doings among the people, make mention that his name is exalted.
Now I do understand a distinction must be made between Israel of the Old Testament and the church of the New Testament. But there is the matter of Isaiah's prophecy of this "rod" and "Branch" in 11:1. This is Christ. In many ways we see a prophetic glimpse into the coming Savior who would not only offer redemption to Israel, but also to me, a Gentile!
Behold, God is my salvation; I will trust, and not be afraid: for the LORD JEHOVAH is my strength and my song; he also is become my salvation. Therefore with joy shall ye draw water out of the wells of salvation. (Isaiah 12:2-3)
For us as New Testament believers, that day has already come. I will praise Him! I now say, "Praise the Lord!" For today I can call upon His name and can declare to the world His doings among His people. I am ready and willing to make mention that His name is exalted.
As Peter tells us in his first epistle,
But ye are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a peculiar people; that ye should show forth the praises of him who hath called you out of darkness into his marvelous light: (1 Peter 2:9)
As Paul declares in Ephesians,
And that he might reconcile both unto God in one body by the cross, having slain the enmity thereby: And came and preached peace to you which were afar off, and to them that were nigh. For through him we both [Jew and Gentile] have access by one Spirit unto the Father. (Ephesians 2:16-18)
We as believers in the promised One of God, the Messiah, the anointed and holy One sent down from the Father should respond with enthusiasm as Isaiah put it in verse five:
Sing unto the LORD; for he hath done excellent things: this is known in all the earth.
Let it be in this day we praise our great God for such a great plan that demonstrated His awesome power and delivered unto us His very presence all granted in the Person of Jesus Christ, the rod, the Branch, the Savior. In this day!
Monday, July 20, 2009
Did You Know?
I was made aware of this video short by one of our church members recently. The components struck me as "wow factors" and of course I immediately think of how these things are impacting the shape of Christianity, our missions endeavors, the way we approach the world as a whole and even the smaller cluster of that population within our local regions.
I also thought about how this is shaping end times and bringing about more possibilities than we could have even imagined 10 years ago. Check out the video and see it through a Biblical Worldview.
I also thought about how this is shaping end times and bringing about more possibilities than we could have even imagined 10 years ago. Check out the video and see it through a Biblical Worldview.
Thursday, July 16, 2009
Amazing Techno Animation
Signs of the times! This is pretty neat. The music is not so "cool," so if you wish to mute feel free. However, we are coming into an age where a picture of your face on a computer can be used to do some pretty amazing things. (Kind of scary too!) Here is a case in point. Pretty neat animation and some pretty cute kids too.
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
This thing called "Ministry" (Part 12)
I come to the conclusion of this series I have been running on the shape of ministry through the pages of Paul's epistle to the Corinthians, specifically, 1 Corinthians.
The whole series has been a personal viewpoint of how Paul did ministry, expressed ministry, and challenged me as a minister to view my own understanding and performance. There are obviously many other passages we could go to and study, but this book was for me a challenge. Ministry is about a heart and soul dedicated and sold out for Christ. Ministry is about forgiveness and forthrightness. Ministry is about transparency and honesty. Ministry is about people and less about pride.
The passage I want to conclude with is thus:
Now this I say, brethren, that flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God; neither doth corruption inherit incorruption. Behold, I show you a mystery; We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed, In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump: for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed. For this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality. So when this corruptible shall have put on incorruption, and this mortal shall have put on immortality, then shall be brought to pass the saying that is written, Death is swallowed up in victory. O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory? The sting of death is sin; and the strength of sin is the law. But thanks be to God, which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. Therefore, my beloved brethren, be ye steadfast, unmovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, forasmuch as ye know that your labor is not in vain in the Lord. (1 Corinthians 15:50-58)
What a classic passage of Scripture! Paul grants to us a new lease on living. We are given such great contrasts between corruptible and incorruptible, mortal and immortality. We are shown the stark reality of death but the greater conquest of Christ over death. We are given "new revelation" that death holds no power over the forgiven soul and the grave is not a place of repose or cessation.
The law brought death's sting, but Christ's death destroyed death's law. Death and the grave hold no more power and we have victory, catch that, VICTORY!
Notice then the conclusion that Paul grants us in verse 58, "Therefore....BE."
Be what? Here then lies ministry. As ministers of the Gospel and the message bearers of Christ we are to be.....
Steadfast - firmly or solidly in place (also found in Colossians 1:23 and 1 Peter 5:9)
Unmovable (immovable) - without shift or change (only place in NT where this form of the word is used)
Always abounding - has an attachment to have abundance in growth and thus to be abundantly growing. Under that idea specifically here Paul is emphasizing the idea of being outstanding, to excel, to be prominent in that growth. (Used other places but a good example is found in Colossians 2:7 of the abounding of thanksgiving.)
We could spend a lot of time discussing the further implications these terms bear, but I will leave that to you. The issue then goes to what are we to be steadfast, unmovable and abundant in? Answer: "The work of the Lord."
Another passage that comes to mind is Ephesians 4:12 - the work of service, the work of ministry. The job of pastor/teachers is to equip the saints to do their labor of love (of course we as pastors are in that category of saints as well).
"The work of the Lord."
What is your work? Where do you labor? What do you find to be your place and practice of service?
The implication is that we all are to be doing something. Thus we all are to be ministers of some sort. We all have a toil to perform and a job to accomplish until the day we are called to glory either through grave's door or by means of Christ's coming back for His chosen people. So....What then is your task? Of course we all the the Great Commission to fulfill, but specifically, what is your ministry to the body of Christ?
The challenge is granted and with it Paul then offers this word of encouragement as well, "your labor (toil) is not in vain (futile) in the Lord (when done for and because of Him)."
Ministry is many things, but it is ours to do. Ministry has many challenges and sometimes is not as noticed or seems not as important as others, but it is handed to us by the Lord of our life and lover of our soul.
Whatever your "ministry," do it unto God and not unto men. Your labor is not futile, empty, vain if it is done for Christ. He is our ministry. We labor for Him because of Him, and through the power He affords us.
Now that is Ministry!
Friday, July 10, 2009
Red Neck Skeet Shoot
For all my southern friends and those who love to golf. Here is a great combination of two of our favorite past times. Enjoy!
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
Too Young to Stop
A few weeks ago I posted a YouTube video of Marlow and Francis Cowan. Here is a follow up interview that was done once they found out what a sensation they had become. What a blessing and encouragement to hear these people give praise and glory to God for the abilities and talents they have been able to use over the years.
Tuesday, July 7, 2009
Codex Sinaiticus
I heard this morning on our Christian AM station that there is a new website for the oldest existing copy of our Bible, the Codex Sinaiticus. Go HERE to see the website for yourself and to browse through digital pictures of the actual manuscript. I love the fact that we can know for certain that what we have in our Bible is truly God's Word. So much verifies the veracity and the integrity of our modern translation which we posses and read.
Here is a brief description from the website:
Codex Sinaiticus is one of the most important books in the world. Handwritten well over 1600 years ago, the manuscript contains the Christian Bible in Greek, including the oldest complete copy of the New Testament. Its heavily corrected text is of outstanding importance for the history of the Bible and the manuscript – the oldest substantial book to survive Antiquity – is of supreme importance for the history of the book.
Codex Sinaiticus, a manuscript of the Christian Bible written in the middle of the fourth century, contains the earliest complete copy of the Christian New Testament. The hand-written text is in Greek. The New Testament appears in the original vernacular language (koine) and the Old Testament in the version, known as the Septuagint, that was adopted by early Greek-speaking Christians. In the Codex, the text of both the Septuagint and the New Testament has been heavily annotated by a series of early correctors.
The significance of Codex Sinaiticus for the reconstruction of the Christian Bible's original text, the history of the Bible and the history of Western book-making is immense.
Monday, July 6, 2009
Friday, July 3, 2009
What old people do for fun
I know....you have seen this before. But I came across it again and just thought I would revisit it.
Wednesday, July 1, 2009
This thing called "Ministry" (Part 11)
It has taken me some time to come back to this thought due to church commitments and then other personal matters, but also because I did not want to come into this next passage flippantly. We have been going through 1 Corinthians and seeing how Paul handled this thing called "Ministry."
I am a minister of the Gospel. I am a minister in my church. I am a minister at home and wherever I find myself. To be a minister is not something that comes with one approach and only one manifestation. To be a minister in this thing called ministry means that I have to be in control of my flesh, and be controlled by the Holy Spirit. But Paul also leads us to see that ministry is also about being controlled by Love.
Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity, I am become as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal. And though I have the gift of prophecy, and understand all mysteries, and all knowledge; and though I have all faith, so that I could remove mountains, and have not charity, I am nothing. And though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor, and though I give my body to be burned, and have not charity, it profiteth me nothing. (1 Corinthians 13:1-3)
If I wish to speak to the needs of man and I have no love for him then it does him nor me any good. It is simply a lot of noise making. It may even sound pretty, but in the end it does not give us any melody or do much for harmony.
If I wish to proclaim the wonders of God's written word so as to impart understanding to the masses and even if my ability in faith is capable of hurtling mountains from their moorings and have no love, I am nothing.
If I gave everything I owned to feed and clothe the poor and even gave my own body up to be burned for the cause of Christ and yet have not love, it profits no one.
So many times I can get caught up in the doing and Paul reminds me that the doing is not as important as the decision to love those to whom we are doing it for and to. The messages I preach and the programs I organize will not avail to anything unless we have love for these people.
A minister is one who speaks, imparts God's Word, demonstrates faith, shows surrender, and reveals character by LOVE not titles, degrees, and even years of resume experience.
A new commandment I give unto you, That ye love one another; as I have loved you, that ye also love one another. (John 13:34)
The Christian life is a life of relationship. Imagine the relationship one would have with his or her spouse if love was ever in question. The divorce rate of our country is reflective of man's opinion of love. We move from one love to the next, from one desire to the next. The consumer mentality of our love lives is evident in the material greed and the moral degradation all around us.
But notice what Christ said...."A new commandment."
But I say unto you, Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use you, and persecute you; (Matthew 5:44)
Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved the church, and gave himself for it; (Ephesians 5:25)
That he would grant you, according to the riches of his glory, to be strengthened with might by his Spirit in the inner man; That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith; that ye, being rooted and grounded in love, May be able to comprehend with all saints what is the breadth, and length, and depth, and height; And to know the love of Christ, which passeth knowledge, that ye might be filled with all the fullness of God. (Ephesians 3:16-19)
And this I pray, that your love may abound yet more and more in knowledge and in all judgment; (Philippians 1:9)
Why do we not get it? The image of Christ is at stake. The purpose of the church is brought to bear. The power of the Spirit is made anemic when we choose not to love. When we choose not to love we choose to not care for and demonstrate the sacrifice of Christ, the magnitude of Christ, the preeminence of Christ by our love. When we seek to deny love we proclaim self as supreme and man as superior. We announce weakness as victorious and pride as the winner.
This thing called ministry is about how we love and if we love. It has never been about who. For even our worst of associates and our most dreaded of compatriots is brought into the circle of those with whom we are to demonstrate love as God has commanded.
Of course that is not easy. But what in the Christian life has ever been "easy?" That is why the Christian experience is a race, a battle, a field plowing experience. We wage war against the natural man everyday and we do not like being told what to do let alone who to love and how to love. We want to pick our vices and pick our friends. We want to choose our associates and compliment our likes and dislikes by the people who share in the same.
To love the unlovable and not get anything in return? Unheard of! To simply do it because God said so? Now wait a minute! I did not sign up for that kind of ministry. I want to do it my way and get something tangible for it.
May we soon remember that God got a raw deal when He chose to love us. Christ suffered immeasurably when He chose to love us. The Holy Spirit is even grieved at times with us as our indwelling representative of God when we choose to refuse to love and obey.
Ministry is about loving others as Christ loved us. May we choose wisely and quit with all the loud banging and haughty mindedness that is ruining the church. May we show love, live love, give love, and have love one for another.
Now that is ministry!
I am a minister of the Gospel. I am a minister in my church. I am a minister at home and wherever I find myself. To be a minister is not something that comes with one approach and only one manifestation. To be a minister in this thing called ministry means that I have to be in control of my flesh, and be controlled by the Holy Spirit. But Paul also leads us to see that ministry is also about being controlled by Love.
Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity, I am become as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal. And though I have the gift of prophecy, and understand all mysteries, and all knowledge; and though I have all faith, so that I could remove mountains, and have not charity, I am nothing. And though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor, and though I give my body to be burned, and have not charity, it profiteth me nothing. (1 Corinthians 13:1-3)
If I wish to speak to the needs of man and I have no love for him then it does him nor me any good. It is simply a lot of noise making. It may even sound pretty, but in the end it does not give us any melody or do much for harmony.
If I wish to proclaim the wonders of God's written word so as to impart understanding to the masses and even if my ability in faith is capable of hurtling mountains from their moorings and have no love, I am nothing.
If I gave everything I owned to feed and clothe the poor and even gave my own body up to be burned for the cause of Christ and yet have not love, it profits no one.
So many times I can get caught up in the doing and Paul reminds me that the doing is not as important as the decision to love those to whom we are doing it for and to. The messages I preach and the programs I organize will not avail to anything unless we have love for these people.
A minister is one who speaks, imparts God's Word, demonstrates faith, shows surrender, and reveals character by LOVE not titles, degrees, and even years of resume experience.
A new commandment I give unto you, That ye love one another; as I have loved you, that ye also love one another. (John 13:34)
The Christian life is a life of relationship. Imagine the relationship one would have with his or her spouse if love was ever in question. The divorce rate of our country is reflective of man's opinion of love. We move from one love to the next, from one desire to the next. The consumer mentality of our love lives is evident in the material greed and the moral degradation all around us.
But notice what Christ said...."A new commandment."
But I say unto you, Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use you, and persecute you; (Matthew 5:44)
Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved the church, and gave himself for it; (Ephesians 5:25)
That he would grant you, according to the riches of his glory, to be strengthened with might by his Spirit in the inner man; That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith; that ye, being rooted and grounded in love, May be able to comprehend with all saints what is the breadth, and length, and depth, and height; And to know the love of Christ, which passeth knowledge, that ye might be filled with all the fullness of God. (Ephesians 3:16-19)
And this I pray, that your love may abound yet more and more in knowledge and in all judgment; (Philippians 1:9)
Why do we not get it? The image of Christ is at stake. The purpose of the church is brought to bear. The power of the Spirit is made anemic when we choose not to love. When we choose not to love we choose to not care for and demonstrate the sacrifice of Christ, the magnitude of Christ, the preeminence of Christ by our love. When we seek to deny love we proclaim self as supreme and man as superior. We announce weakness as victorious and pride as the winner.
This thing called ministry is about how we love and if we love. It has never been about who. For even our worst of associates and our most dreaded of compatriots is brought into the circle of those with whom we are to demonstrate love as God has commanded.
Of course that is not easy. But what in the Christian life has ever been "easy?" That is why the Christian experience is a race, a battle, a field plowing experience. We wage war against the natural man everyday and we do not like being told what to do let alone who to love and how to love. We want to pick our vices and pick our friends. We want to choose our associates and compliment our likes and dislikes by the people who share in the same.
To love the unlovable and not get anything in return? Unheard of! To simply do it because God said so? Now wait a minute! I did not sign up for that kind of ministry. I want to do it my way and get something tangible for it.
May we soon remember that God got a raw deal when He chose to love us. Christ suffered immeasurably when He chose to love us. The Holy Spirit is even grieved at times with us as our indwelling representative of God when we choose to refuse to love and obey.
Ministry is about loving others as Christ loved us. May we choose wisely and quit with all the loud banging and haughty mindedness that is ruining the church. May we show love, live love, give love, and have love one for another.
Now that is ministry!
Thursday, June 18, 2009
What your pastor wishes you knew about him
A missionary friend of mine passed this along to me and I have already told him that there is no way that I can simply let this one pass by without adding it here. Of course, he picked this up as you will see from a pastor by the name of Dan Burrell.
First I have to interject that I give this not out of necessity. I serve in a wonderful ministry where there is much grace and love and these matters have not touched our relationship. However, I also know of men who have struggled and are still struggling with some of these attitudes and issues.
Keeping to the purpose of my blog I feel it fits to help others by passing this along so that we can be fit "for the work" of Christ. So, without further ado, here are Dan Burrell's comments.
____________________________________________________
In the last week, I’ve spent time talking with three pastors who are about ready to throw in the proverbial towel. Each case is different and no two pastors, churches, boards or any other “part” of church leadership is exactly the same, but what is common among them is a sense of deep despair. Sadly, in the last week, I’ve also heard of two colleagues in the ministry who ended their ministry with a catastrophic failure — one of them a rising evangelical leader who admitted to an affair. Not in every case, but in some cases, I’ve noticed a correlation to the thought processes between those who burnout in ministry and those who “flame out” due to sin. But whether you burnout, flame out, drop out or rust out — out is still out.
I am now two years beyond my own decision to step away from the Senior Pastorate, so I hope I can be a bit more objective about a topic like this than I might have been 24 short months ago. As for my own situation, I had my own reasons for changing the nature of my ministry and I am not looking back. For the cynical or others, nothing I write in this article should be construed as anything more or less than what it is — an opinion piece from someone who has sat on both sides of the pulpit for the last 25 years of ministry and who is still engaged in pastoral ministry — just from a different perspective in recent months.
I don’t pretend to write for every pastor out there, but I spend a lot of time with pastors and former pastors. There are some trends that are impacting pastoral leadership at this time that I think impact churches and their leaders. There are some frailties and vulnerabilities that any man called to be a pastor is naturally going to carry into his responsibilities. Add to that the spiritual warfare that is incumbent upon being a spiritual shepherd (or undershepherd). It is with these realities in mind that I offer some things that I’m guessing your pastor wishes you knew about him.
1. Bible College and Seminary Weren’t Enough
I don’t care where your pastor went to school, they did not and could not possibly prepare him for all that a pastor faces. Today’s pastor must be an extraordinary communicator, an effective administrator, somewhat astute to legalities and business procedures, a counselor, a therapist and a dozen other roles that today’s high-expectation church member often expects from their pastor.
Though many will say that’s what boards and staff are for, that thinking simply isn’t based in reality. The expectation is that the Pastor should be able to protect the church, lead the church, inspire the church and manage the church. Failure to function in those four primary departments may jeopardize the support level he enjoys from the congregation.
Much of the experience and expertise in those areas needs to be learned and earned over time. That fact has lead me to a personal conclusion that we should discuss pastoral internships more seriously in seminaries and church leadership circles.
2. Good Sermon Preparation Takes Time
If your pastor is going to accurately and thoroughly present the Word to your congregation, he must have study time. The best pastors and Bible teachers will tell you that for every one hour of teaching or preaching, about eight hours of study is optimum. Your pastor may make it look simple, but it isn’t. Typically, your pastor may need 3-4 fresh preparations in a week (particularly if he speaks outside the church a lot or if he is a solo pastor.)
It is not realistic to expect your pastor to attend every function, make every hospital visit, lead every meeting, make an appearance at every social, go to every shut-in and still be brilliant in the pulpit 2-3 times per week. A pastor should be about leading and shepherding and equipping the church for the work of the ministry. Certainly every pastor should attend “some” functions, make hospital visits on occasion, attend important meetings, drop in a socials when possible and take the time to minister to the shut-ins — but to heap all of those responsibilities (plus the administration of the church, personal growth exercises and other important tasks) is not just unreasonable, it is inhumane.
If each Bible study teacher, each deacon, each elder, each staff member took some of these responsibilities, everyone and everything would be covered and all would be blessed as they fulfill their spiritual giftedness in the work of the ministry.
3. His Family is Important Too
Your pastor needs time with his children and spouse. If his marriage fails, his ministry is likely over. If his kids don’t turn out right, his grief will be deep, his regrets will be suffocating and his reputation will be diminished. You will bless your pastor and your church by freeing him to be with his family.
For years, I’ve often told my pastors to look at their day in three parts — Morning, Afternoon and Evening — each comprised of about 4 hours. On average, it is reasonable to expect that those in the ministry will work at least 14-16 “parts” over a week’s time. That way, we should have at least 5 - 7 morning/afternoons/nights available for family time. Remember that a pastor who preaches and teaches the Word is working — it isn’t the same as sitting in the pew. It is physically exhausting and emotionally draining. Most pastors go into “Sunday mode” on Saturday evening and aren’t much of a “family guy” then. If they have a Saturday night service, move that “mode” to Saturday around noon.
According to that formula, your pastor needs one full day off and 2-4 evenings free. If he can’t get those evenings free, then he should take a morning or an afternoon when he can to compensate for the lost evenings.
Another blessing you might share with your pastor is to give him a gift card for dinner out on his birthday or at Christmas or if you own a condo at the beach or a vacation home in the mountains, offer to let him take his family there for a few days. These small tokens can be a fresh encouragement when relationships get neglected. Being able to run to a restaurant with your spouse and pay for it with a gift card is a double blessing.
In cases of extreme crisis — a wayward child, substantial marriage difficulty — be willing to send your pastor to professional help, a retreat or some intervention. If you don’t think pastors ever have family problems, then you are naive. This is a great time to practice the Golden Rule and ask one’s self what they would appreciate if the roles were reversed. The investment of giving your pastor a week or even a month off to deal with a family crisis is far cheaper than the process of kicking him to the curb and looking for a new pastor — not to mention more Biblical.
4. Be Kind if You Have a Criticism
Your pastor is going to make some mistakes. I certainly made my share of bone-headed decisions over the years. And, if the truth be told, sometimes the pastor won’t see them as quickly as everyone else does. No pastor has a corner on the Truth and no pastor is above criticism, correction or simple advice. But when you approach your pastor with something you’re concerned about, address the problem without attacking the person.
Pastoring is interesting in that no decision a pastor ever makes is received positively by everyone. That would also include no sermon, no vision, no counsel, no strategy, no hire, no building campaign and the list goes on and on. So before bringing your offense to the pastor, it would wise to pause and ask yourself, “Is this important enough to complain about or to place on the pastor’s mind?” Some things are — certainly things that deal with Theology, ethics, morality and legal matters should be addressed. Some things simply aren’t — personal peeves and preferences, gossip, many traditions and irritations.
Some pastors, when faced with the cacophony of criticisms, suggestions, problems and hissy fits they regularly confront, simply shut down — overwhelmed by the torrent and unable to prioritize, distinguish and discern what is legitimate and what is simply whining. Others will respond defensively at first, but after a while, the Holy Spirit guides them to acknowledgement of the validity of the issue. A stiff-necked and unapproachable pastor will soon lose credibility and will probably require a confrontation initiated by spiritual leadership with the church. But it is wise for all of us to measure our words correctly and to do as the Scripture tells us and “entreat as a brother” as opposed to rebuking an elder with hostility, demands or threats.
5. Give Your Pastor Time to Grow
Sadly, the average term (depending on several factors) of a pastor in America today is somewhere between 2 and 5 years. Yet, all the research tells us that a pastor’s most effective years take place after the 10th year of ministry at a congregation. It is not until a pastor marries, buries, cries and works with a majority of his congregation that he can really “connect” intimately with them as a family member might. Relationships simply take time — most of us who are married realize that the longer one is married the more we learn about patience, perseverance and unconditional love.
This is particularly true if you have a young pastor. I was twenty-nine when I became a Senior Pastor. Thankfully, our church was rather small (fewer than 300) at the time. The Lord tremendously blessed and in short order the church doubled in size and then went on to triple. But the growing pains that we went through together were extraordinary. How they put up with me for a decade, I’ll never know. I was so blessed to have some of the most wonderful and Godly elders surrounding me that I’ve ever known. They encouraged, counseled, cautioned and sometimes just let me go and in the process — I learned and the Lord blessed. They let me grow up and grow deep and though I was the youngest among them, they respected my position while offering me wise and Godly counsel. I love them to this day. I’m grateful for their patience.
Your pastor will make some bone-headed decisions. Sometimes you’ll be frustrated with how he arranges his priorities or handles problems. Sometimes you’ll have to clean up his messes and occasionally, you might have to speak earnestly and honestly with him. But like rearing children, dealing with aging parents, settling in to married life or maintaining a life-long friendship — it takes time and patience and grace.
6. Your Pastor probably views you differently than you view him.
Being someone’s pastor is actually a very intimate experience. If your pastor is a good one — he loves you. He’s been there during some of your most difficult moments. He’s caught tears, perhaps had to be the one to tell you difficult news, has seen you at your best and at your worst. You may have confided some personal things in him that are known only to you, him and God as you work through the consequences of sin, personal tragedies and other pains. He has invested his heart and soul in you by praying for you, weeping with you, perhaps even putting your needs ahead of his or his family’s at times.
Then a church down the street calls a new pastor, builds a new building or offers a service style that you find a bit more appealing and you switch as if you were changing from Wal-Mart to Target or finding a new chiropractor. And of course, people are going to ask “why” and often excuses like “We’re just not being fed” or “Our needs aren’t being met” or “We just need a change” are offered. For you, it’s a new adventure. For him, it feels painfully like rejection.
That’s not to say that there are no good reasons for changing churches. It doesn’t justify those renegade pastors who then grow angry and defensive and say unkind things. It doesn’t mean that you are leaving God’s will for you life necessarily and are making the first step on a trek toward leaving the faith. But it does hurt. Pastors are human too. And while you may see him as a distant leader or provider of services, if he knows you personally, he probably sees you more like family or a friend. It’s simply a difference in roles and perspective and you might never understand that. Sometimes where you stand on things depends on where you sit. But I think you should know — pastors usually see their church members differently than they are viewed by their church members.
7. Pastors sometimes find it difficult to have friendships.
For better or for worse, there is a celebrity element to being a pastor. If you don’t believe that then check out the New Testament account of those who were “Paul fans” verses those who liked Apollos. A wise pastor resists being viewed as “special”, but this tendency is why humility in leadership is so necessary. Any celebrity, politician or person of wealth will tell you that one of the greatest frustrations is that one never knows which friendships are genuine. There is always the difficulty in knowing who is genuinely a friend or who is simply there to exploit their position or fame or influence. Pastors struggle with this on several levels. Some pastors purposefully choose not to be friends with people in their congregation — it’s too risky in their opinion. Some pastors refuse to have friendships with their staff — they are afraid it will hurt objectivity, communicate favoritism or just simply be too complicated. Some pastors have been burned by past friendships and thus become almost reclusive and over-guarded. Some pastors naturally migrate toward friendships exclusively with peers — fellow pastors who can relate to the unique role and scrutiny being a pastor encompasses.
Several years ago, a pastor of a large and prestigious church in the same city where I was a pastor had a very close friend as a church member. A local seeker-sensitive church in town “caught fire” and all of us were experiencing mass migrations out of our pews to the new “cool/hip” church. His church was among those hardest hit. But then his very best friend, the person who had introduced him to the church before he was pastor, his closest confident, took him to lunch and let him know that he was leaving for the new “fellowship”. The pastor said all the perfunctory things about following the Lord, etc… and then went to his already scheduled staff meeting. After he opened with prayer, he looked at his team of pastors — broke down in wracking sobs, explained what had just happened, apologized and excused himself. I wish that wasn’t the only story like this that I’ve heard, but I’ve got many more — people meeting privately for the “dismissal” of their pastor, people trying to arrange financial gain/business with the church, people who expected their sins to be covered and undealt with — all while claiming “friendship”.
I don’t have any solutions to this. I’ve experienced it personally. I don’t know of many pastors who haven’t. It is what it is. But maybe it will give you some insight into your Pastor’s world.
8. Your pastor may well be different out of the pulpit than when he’s in the pulpit
and that doesn’t necessarily make him a hypocrite.
I’ve laughed over the years at how people often describe me — outgoing, super confident, “people person”, extrovert. I can understand why they would say that, but they don’t know the “real me”. The “real me” is actually rather shy, mostly an introvert, hopes that the people in the seat next to him in the airplane go to sleep and don’t want to talk, am a veritable cauldron of insecurities and often would rather have a quiet evening at home with his family or a book than be with a large group of people. So why do they suddenly go “electric” when they walk behind the lectern? It’s a God thing. It’s His gift, His calling, His annointing — whatever you want to call it. Moses experienced it. Coarse Peter overcame his own proclivities. Odd John the Baptist certainly got beyond his idiosycracies enough that he was heard. The delivery of the Gospel is never about the man, but always about the message — so don’t get too enamored or distracted by the amplification system.
Some of my most important spiritual moments have regularly been before I preached on a topic that God had led me to address, but on which I was still struggling. Your pastor probably doesn’t sleep in a suit, sing praise choruses before every meal and memorizes Spurgeon and the Reformers in lieu of watching Reality TV. He has morning breath, he sometimes fusses with his wife, he yells at the kids when they forget to take the dog out and he steps in a wet spot on the carpet, gets frustrated in heavy traffic and might have a secret affinity for Roller Coasters or deer hunting or restoring old cars. In other words — he’s just a regular guy. He certainly isn’t perfect. But if he’s a good pastor, he’s earnest and sincere and also man enough to admit his faults and make them right when he needs to do so.
Take time to get to know your pastor as a person before you make huge assumptions about him as a “professional”. You might be shocked at how much like you he really is even though your callings are different.
9. Your Pastor has bills too.
This area is touchy. There’s nothing like a conversation about money to get people stirred up. Let me just say this. Scripture is very clear that spiritual leadership should be supported by the tithes and offerings of the people who benefit from and need their ministry. It’s God’s plan. Paul referenced it as the “double honor”. Someday, your pastor will need a home to live in that isn’t owned by the church. There will come a day when he will need, because of age or infirmity, to transition out of being a full-time pastor so he needs a retirement strategy. (There are few things sadder than a pastor who has faithfully served a congregation for years and years who can’t “afford” to retire and thus inflicts himself on a poor church or has to beg for “meetings” because he has no income. Many pastors foolishly opt out of Social Security and when it comes time to fund their 403b retirement plans, they get cut because of tight budgets.) Your pastor’s kids need to go to college. There are weddings that need to be paid for, children that need braces, cars that need repaired.
Please don’t demean him by noting every purchase he makes, vacation he takes or gift he receives with a “It must be nice to be in the ministry to be able to afford that!” or “I guess that explains that special offering last month!” or some other witty little cutting remark that puts him on the defensive. It’s unkind and petty. Stop it. Instead, show some maturity and say something like, “Wow….I’m so pleased that God has blessed you and provided that for you. If anyone deserves it — you do!” and then notice how you are blessed for rejoicing with those who are rejoicing and how he is blessed in receiving your kind words.
If you think your pastor is a crook, given to filthy lucre, too wealthy — then confront him Biblically or shut up. If you are a church leader and wonder what is appropriate compensation, may I recommend a study that is produced each year called the “Church Compensation Report” and HERE’s the link to it.
Finally, I want to state for the record that all three of the churches where I have ministered have been a genuine blessing to me and my family in this regard. They very generously honored us with a living wage, they gave me freedom to write, teach and speak which allowed me to squirrel away money for life’s unexpected or bigger expenses as they came and provided me with the necessary tools for ministry. I wish every pastor was treated as I have been treated in the matter of financial support.
10. Your pastor loves the work of the ministry.
You might say, “duh” — but I would ask, how many people do you know who really, deep down inside, would like to be doing something else as a vocation? If you are like me — a ton. Preaching the Gospel, seeing people accept Christ, watching lives transformed by Truth, seeing healing and reconciliation occur in families — wow….that’s just the best.
Over the years, I have wearied over the administrative load of ministry. I do not get excited about trying to get budgets to balance, dealing with maintenance issues, making sure that risk-management is taken into consideration every time we start a new initiative and dealing with governmental and even church bureaucracy and politics. But that’s simply the price a pastor pays for being able to stand up, open the Word of God and share what the Holy Spirit has laid on his heart for that day. I can be absolutely exhausted, frustrated, depressed or overwhelmed, but the moment I crack open my Bible before a group of people ready to hear — I realize once again that I’m doing what I was created to do. Whether you pastor a mega-church, lead a Sunday School class, host a home Bible study or simply leading your family in devotions — when you are called to the ministry of the Word, everything is as it should be every time you get the chance. It simply doesn’t get much better than that!
First I have to interject that I give this not out of necessity. I serve in a wonderful ministry where there is much grace and love and these matters have not touched our relationship. However, I also know of men who have struggled and are still struggling with some of these attitudes and issues.
Keeping to the purpose of my blog I feel it fits to help others by passing this along so that we can be fit "for the work" of Christ. So, without further ado, here are Dan Burrell's comments.
____________________________________________________
In the last week, I’ve spent time talking with three pastors who are about ready to throw in the proverbial towel. Each case is different and no two pastors, churches, boards or any other “part” of church leadership is exactly the same, but what is common among them is a sense of deep despair. Sadly, in the last week, I’ve also heard of two colleagues in the ministry who ended their ministry with a catastrophic failure — one of them a rising evangelical leader who admitted to an affair. Not in every case, but in some cases, I’ve noticed a correlation to the thought processes between those who burnout in ministry and those who “flame out” due to sin. But whether you burnout, flame out, drop out or rust out — out is still out.
I am now two years beyond my own decision to step away from the Senior Pastorate, so I hope I can be a bit more objective about a topic like this than I might have been 24 short months ago. As for my own situation, I had my own reasons for changing the nature of my ministry and I am not looking back. For the cynical or others, nothing I write in this article should be construed as anything more or less than what it is — an opinion piece from someone who has sat on both sides of the pulpit for the last 25 years of ministry and who is still engaged in pastoral ministry — just from a different perspective in recent months.
I don’t pretend to write for every pastor out there, but I spend a lot of time with pastors and former pastors. There are some trends that are impacting pastoral leadership at this time that I think impact churches and their leaders. There are some frailties and vulnerabilities that any man called to be a pastor is naturally going to carry into his responsibilities. Add to that the spiritual warfare that is incumbent upon being a spiritual shepherd (or undershepherd). It is with these realities in mind that I offer some things that I’m guessing your pastor wishes you knew about him.
1. Bible College and Seminary Weren’t Enough
I don’t care where your pastor went to school, they did not and could not possibly prepare him for all that a pastor faces. Today’s pastor must be an extraordinary communicator, an effective administrator, somewhat astute to legalities and business procedures, a counselor, a therapist and a dozen other roles that today’s high-expectation church member often expects from their pastor.
Though many will say that’s what boards and staff are for, that thinking simply isn’t based in reality. The expectation is that the Pastor should be able to protect the church, lead the church, inspire the church and manage the church. Failure to function in those four primary departments may jeopardize the support level he enjoys from the congregation.
Much of the experience and expertise in those areas needs to be learned and earned over time. That fact has lead me to a personal conclusion that we should discuss pastoral internships more seriously in seminaries and church leadership circles.
2. Good Sermon Preparation Takes Time
If your pastor is going to accurately and thoroughly present the Word to your congregation, he must have study time. The best pastors and Bible teachers will tell you that for every one hour of teaching or preaching, about eight hours of study is optimum. Your pastor may make it look simple, but it isn’t. Typically, your pastor may need 3-4 fresh preparations in a week (particularly if he speaks outside the church a lot or if he is a solo pastor.)
It is not realistic to expect your pastor to attend every function, make every hospital visit, lead every meeting, make an appearance at every social, go to every shut-in and still be brilliant in the pulpit 2-3 times per week. A pastor should be about leading and shepherding and equipping the church for the work of the ministry. Certainly every pastor should attend “some” functions, make hospital visits on occasion, attend important meetings, drop in a socials when possible and take the time to minister to the shut-ins — but to heap all of those responsibilities (plus the administration of the church, personal growth exercises and other important tasks) is not just unreasonable, it is inhumane.
If each Bible study teacher, each deacon, each elder, each staff member took some of these responsibilities, everyone and everything would be covered and all would be blessed as they fulfill their spiritual giftedness in the work of the ministry.
3. His Family is Important Too
Your pastor needs time with his children and spouse. If his marriage fails, his ministry is likely over. If his kids don’t turn out right, his grief will be deep, his regrets will be suffocating and his reputation will be diminished. You will bless your pastor and your church by freeing him to be with his family.
For years, I’ve often told my pastors to look at their day in three parts — Morning, Afternoon and Evening — each comprised of about 4 hours. On average, it is reasonable to expect that those in the ministry will work at least 14-16 “parts” over a week’s time. That way, we should have at least 5 - 7 morning/afternoons/nights available for family time. Remember that a pastor who preaches and teaches the Word is working — it isn’t the same as sitting in the pew. It is physically exhausting and emotionally draining. Most pastors go into “Sunday mode” on Saturday evening and aren’t much of a “family guy” then. If they have a Saturday night service, move that “mode” to Saturday around noon.
According to that formula, your pastor needs one full day off and 2-4 evenings free. If he can’t get those evenings free, then he should take a morning or an afternoon when he can to compensate for the lost evenings.
Another blessing you might share with your pastor is to give him a gift card for dinner out on his birthday or at Christmas or if you own a condo at the beach or a vacation home in the mountains, offer to let him take his family there for a few days. These small tokens can be a fresh encouragement when relationships get neglected. Being able to run to a restaurant with your spouse and pay for it with a gift card is a double blessing.
In cases of extreme crisis — a wayward child, substantial marriage difficulty — be willing to send your pastor to professional help, a retreat or some intervention. If you don’t think pastors ever have family problems, then you are naive. This is a great time to practice the Golden Rule and ask one’s self what they would appreciate if the roles were reversed. The investment of giving your pastor a week or even a month off to deal with a family crisis is far cheaper than the process of kicking him to the curb and looking for a new pastor — not to mention more Biblical.
4. Be Kind if You Have a Criticism
Your pastor is going to make some mistakes. I certainly made my share of bone-headed decisions over the years. And, if the truth be told, sometimes the pastor won’t see them as quickly as everyone else does. No pastor has a corner on the Truth and no pastor is above criticism, correction or simple advice. But when you approach your pastor with something you’re concerned about, address the problem without attacking the person.
Pastoring is interesting in that no decision a pastor ever makes is received positively by everyone. That would also include no sermon, no vision, no counsel, no strategy, no hire, no building campaign and the list goes on and on. So before bringing your offense to the pastor, it would wise to pause and ask yourself, “Is this important enough to complain about or to place on the pastor’s mind?” Some things are — certainly things that deal with Theology, ethics, morality and legal matters should be addressed. Some things simply aren’t — personal peeves and preferences, gossip, many traditions and irritations.
Some pastors, when faced with the cacophony of criticisms, suggestions, problems and hissy fits they regularly confront, simply shut down — overwhelmed by the torrent and unable to prioritize, distinguish and discern what is legitimate and what is simply whining. Others will respond defensively at first, but after a while, the Holy Spirit guides them to acknowledgement of the validity of the issue. A stiff-necked and unapproachable pastor will soon lose credibility and will probably require a confrontation initiated by spiritual leadership with the church. But it is wise for all of us to measure our words correctly and to do as the Scripture tells us and “entreat as a brother” as opposed to rebuking an elder with hostility, demands or threats.
5. Give Your Pastor Time to Grow
Sadly, the average term (depending on several factors) of a pastor in America today is somewhere between 2 and 5 years. Yet, all the research tells us that a pastor’s most effective years take place after the 10th year of ministry at a congregation. It is not until a pastor marries, buries, cries and works with a majority of his congregation that he can really “connect” intimately with them as a family member might. Relationships simply take time — most of us who are married realize that the longer one is married the more we learn about patience, perseverance and unconditional love.
This is particularly true if you have a young pastor. I was twenty-nine when I became a Senior Pastor. Thankfully, our church was rather small (fewer than 300) at the time. The Lord tremendously blessed and in short order the church doubled in size and then went on to triple. But the growing pains that we went through together were extraordinary. How they put up with me for a decade, I’ll never know. I was so blessed to have some of the most wonderful and Godly elders surrounding me that I’ve ever known. They encouraged, counseled, cautioned and sometimes just let me go and in the process — I learned and the Lord blessed. They let me grow up and grow deep and though I was the youngest among them, they respected my position while offering me wise and Godly counsel. I love them to this day. I’m grateful for their patience.
Your pastor will make some bone-headed decisions. Sometimes you’ll be frustrated with how he arranges his priorities or handles problems. Sometimes you’ll have to clean up his messes and occasionally, you might have to speak earnestly and honestly with him. But like rearing children, dealing with aging parents, settling in to married life or maintaining a life-long friendship — it takes time and patience and grace.
6. Your Pastor probably views you differently than you view him.
Being someone’s pastor is actually a very intimate experience. If your pastor is a good one — he loves you. He’s been there during some of your most difficult moments. He’s caught tears, perhaps had to be the one to tell you difficult news, has seen you at your best and at your worst. You may have confided some personal things in him that are known only to you, him and God as you work through the consequences of sin, personal tragedies and other pains. He has invested his heart and soul in you by praying for you, weeping with you, perhaps even putting your needs ahead of his or his family’s at times.
Then a church down the street calls a new pastor, builds a new building or offers a service style that you find a bit more appealing and you switch as if you were changing from Wal-Mart to Target or finding a new chiropractor. And of course, people are going to ask “why” and often excuses like “We’re just not being fed” or “Our needs aren’t being met” or “We just need a change” are offered. For you, it’s a new adventure. For him, it feels painfully like rejection.
That’s not to say that there are no good reasons for changing churches. It doesn’t justify those renegade pastors who then grow angry and defensive and say unkind things. It doesn’t mean that you are leaving God’s will for you life necessarily and are making the first step on a trek toward leaving the faith. But it does hurt. Pastors are human too. And while you may see him as a distant leader or provider of services, if he knows you personally, he probably sees you more like family or a friend. It’s simply a difference in roles and perspective and you might never understand that. Sometimes where you stand on things depends on where you sit. But I think you should know — pastors usually see their church members differently than they are viewed by their church members.
7. Pastors sometimes find it difficult to have friendships.
For better or for worse, there is a celebrity element to being a pastor. If you don’t believe that then check out the New Testament account of those who were “Paul fans” verses those who liked Apollos. A wise pastor resists being viewed as “special”, but this tendency is why humility in leadership is so necessary. Any celebrity, politician or person of wealth will tell you that one of the greatest frustrations is that one never knows which friendships are genuine. There is always the difficulty in knowing who is genuinely a friend or who is simply there to exploit their position or fame or influence. Pastors struggle with this on several levels. Some pastors purposefully choose not to be friends with people in their congregation — it’s too risky in their opinion. Some pastors refuse to have friendships with their staff — they are afraid it will hurt objectivity, communicate favoritism or just simply be too complicated. Some pastors have been burned by past friendships and thus become almost reclusive and over-guarded. Some pastors naturally migrate toward friendships exclusively with peers — fellow pastors who can relate to the unique role and scrutiny being a pastor encompasses.
Several years ago, a pastor of a large and prestigious church in the same city where I was a pastor had a very close friend as a church member. A local seeker-sensitive church in town “caught fire” and all of us were experiencing mass migrations out of our pews to the new “cool/hip” church. His church was among those hardest hit. But then his very best friend, the person who had introduced him to the church before he was pastor, his closest confident, took him to lunch and let him know that he was leaving for the new “fellowship”. The pastor said all the perfunctory things about following the Lord, etc… and then went to his already scheduled staff meeting. After he opened with prayer, he looked at his team of pastors — broke down in wracking sobs, explained what had just happened, apologized and excused himself. I wish that wasn’t the only story like this that I’ve heard, but I’ve got many more — people meeting privately for the “dismissal” of their pastor, people trying to arrange financial gain/business with the church, people who expected their sins to be covered and undealt with — all while claiming “friendship”.
I don’t have any solutions to this. I’ve experienced it personally. I don’t know of many pastors who haven’t. It is what it is. But maybe it will give you some insight into your Pastor’s world.
8. Your pastor may well be different out of the pulpit than when he’s in the pulpit
and that doesn’t necessarily make him a hypocrite.
I’ve laughed over the years at how people often describe me — outgoing, super confident, “people person”, extrovert. I can understand why they would say that, but they don’t know the “real me”. The “real me” is actually rather shy, mostly an introvert, hopes that the people in the seat next to him in the airplane go to sleep and don’t want to talk, am a veritable cauldron of insecurities and often would rather have a quiet evening at home with his family or a book than be with a large group of people. So why do they suddenly go “electric” when they walk behind the lectern? It’s a God thing. It’s His gift, His calling, His annointing — whatever you want to call it. Moses experienced it. Coarse Peter overcame his own proclivities. Odd John the Baptist certainly got beyond his idiosycracies enough that he was heard. The delivery of the Gospel is never about the man, but always about the message — so don’t get too enamored or distracted by the amplification system.
Some of my most important spiritual moments have regularly been before I preached on a topic that God had led me to address, but on which I was still struggling. Your pastor probably doesn’t sleep in a suit, sing praise choruses before every meal and memorizes Spurgeon and the Reformers in lieu of watching Reality TV. He has morning breath, he sometimes fusses with his wife, he yells at the kids when they forget to take the dog out and he steps in a wet spot on the carpet, gets frustrated in heavy traffic and might have a secret affinity for Roller Coasters or deer hunting or restoring old cars. In other words — he’s just a regular guy. He certainly isn’t perfect. But if he’s a good pastor, he’s earnest and sincere and also man enough to admit his faults and make them right when he needs to do so.
Take time to get to know your pastor as a person before you make huge assumptions about him as a “professional”. You might be shocked at how much like you he really is even though your callings are different.
9. Your Pastor has bills too.
This area is touchy. There’s nothing like a conversation about money to get people stirred up. Let me just say this. Scripture is very clear that spiritual leadership should be supported by the tithes and offerings of the people who benefit from and need their ministry. It’s God’s plan. Paul referenced it as the “double honor”. Someday, your pastor will need a home to live in that isn’t owned by the church. There will come a day when he will need, because of age or infirmity, to transition out of being a full-time pastor so he needs a retirement strategy. (There are few things sadder than a pastor who has faithfully served a congregation for years and years who can’t “afford” to retire and thus inflicts himself on a poor church or has to beg for “meetings” because he has no income. Many pastors foolishly opt out of Social Security and when it comes time to fund their 403b retirement plans, they get cut because of tight budgets.) Your pastor’s kids need to go to college. There are weddings that need to be paid for, children that need braces, cars that need repaired.
Please don’t demean him by noting every purchase he makes, vacation he takes or gift he receives with a “It must be nice to be in the ministry to be able to afford that!” or “I guess that explains that special offering last month!” or some other witty little cutting remark that puts him on the defensive. It’s unkind and petty. Stop it. Instead, show some maturity and say something like, “Wow….I’m so pleased that God has blessed you and provided that for you. If anyone deserves it — you do!” and then notice how you are blessed for rejoicing with those who are rejoicing and how he is blessed in receiving your kind words.
If you think your pastor is a crook, given to filthy lucre, too wealthy — then confront him Biblically or shut up. If you are a church leader and wonder what is appropriate compensation, may I recommend a study that is produced each year called the “Church Compensation Report” and HERE’s the link to it.
Finally, I want to state for the record that all three of the churches where I have ministered have been a genuine blessing to me and my family in this regard. They very generously honored us with a living wage, they gave me freedom to write, teach and speak which allowed me to squirrel away money for life’s unexpected or bigger expenses as they came and provided me with the necessary tools for ministry. I wish every pastor was treated as I have been treated in the matter of financial support.
10. Your pastor loves the work of the ministry.
You might say, “duh” — but I would ask, how many people do you know who really, deep down inside, would like to be doing something else as a vocation? If you are like me — a ton. Preaching the Gospel, seeing people accept Christ, watching lives transformed by Truth, seeing healing and reconciliation occur in families — wow….that’s just the best.
Over the years, I have wearied over the administrative load of ministry. I do not get excited about trying to get budgets to balance, dealing with maintenance issues, making sure that risk-management is taken into consideration every time we start a new initiative and dealing with governmental and even church bureaucracy and politics. But that’s simply the price a pastor pays for being able to stand up, open the Word of God and share what the Holy Spirit has laid on his heart for that day. I can be absolutely exhausted, frustrated, depressed or overwhelmed, but the moment I crack open my Bible before a group of people ready to hear — I realize once again that I’m doing what I was created to do. Whether you pastor a mega-church, lead a Sunday School class, host a home Bible study or simply leading your family in devotions — when you are called to the ministry of the Word, everything is as it should be every time you get the chance. It simply doesn’t get much better than that!
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Getting Out The Message
I have a certain fascination with the way some of our modern churches have chosen to address the people of our modern, post-modern, mindset. Some have some really unusual concepts that I would never find appropriate and still some others I believe are onto something.
But how does the unsaved and even our fellow believers' minds really work? More importantly, how does this next generation's mind work? What ways do they use to communicate, learn, process information and then appropriate it to their lives? How has technology changed the way people of our country and even around the world approach information and process it?
I came across this video recently and wanted to share it. It is about 17 minutes in length but very engaging. It is a TED publication and thus from a completely secular perspective. I encourage you to watch it and think about how we as the body of Christ today should be using the technology we have at our fingertips to do a better job at engaging the unsaved and even the minds of our saved church family.
But how does the unsaved and even our fellow believers' minds really work? More importantly, how does this next generation's mind work? What ways do they use to communicate, learn, process information and then appropriate it to their lives? How has technology changed the way people of our country and even around the world approach information and process it?
I came across this video recently and wanted to share it. It is about 17 minutes in length but very engaging. It is a TED publication and thus from a completely secular perspective. I encourage you to watch it and think about how we as the body of Christ today should be using the technology we have at our fingertips to do a better job at engaging the unsaved and even the minds of our saved church family.
Wednesday, June 10, 2009
17 Ways a Pastor Can Cut His Sermon Prep Time
Joe McKeever gave this list and I hope that it will remind, inspire, and convict us in the intended fashion that he had in mind.
_______________________________________________________________________
17 Ways A Pastor Can Shorten His Sermon Prep Time
1) Borrow.
In the secular world, this is called plagiarism. But we pastors know "God richly gives us all good things to share" or something like that. Fortunately, your people don't read other preachers' sermon books anyway, so they'll never know. (Disadvantage: if the written sermon bombed, chances are yours will, too.)
2) Repeat.
Everyone knows repetition is a proven learning technique. Warning: do not call these sermons 'repeats' or 're-runs.' "Previously preached' is also verboten. If you have to put a label on them, try 'Back by popular demand.' It sounds better.(Disadvantage: some little sister in the church writes in the margins of her Bible every time you have preached a particular text, so you'll need to vary your Scripture even if it's the same sermon.)
3) Confess.
Tell a story out of your childhood and turn it into a microcosm of the universe, or at least of the gospel. Didn't Phillips Brooks call preaching 'truth through personality'? The advantages are that you are the authority on yourself, no one can contradict you, and very little study time is required. (Disadvantage: if nothing dramatic has happened to you, this can get boring quickly.)
4) Obvious.
Our Lord said people prefer old wine to the new (Luke 5:39). So, with that great insight in mind, choose a well-loved subject, reinforce it with three obvious points--preferably all starting with the letter 'P'--and then belabor the obvious.
An example of this could be a sermon on the Second Coming of Christ. Your points could be the PROPHECY of His coming (when), the PURPOSE of His coming (why), and the PEOPLE of His coming (whom).
The good thing about this approach is if you need to stretch out the sermon, your concordance has lots more 'P' words. Think how exciting your message becomes as you touch on the PROOF, the PRECEPT, the PREPARATION, the PRICE, the PROCEDURE, the PROFIT, the POSSIBILITIES, the POWER, the PLAN, the PLACE, the PATIENCE, and the PARADISE of His return. Any preacher worth his salt could wax eloquent for hours on these without a moment's advance notice. (Disadvantage: you'll probably want to leave out some of the good thoughts you had on this sermon, otherwise it can last till...well, until the Lord comes back.)
5) Concordance.
As you know, a concordance gives you a word and tells you where to find it in Scripture. But, if you have an aversion to actually studying for your sermons, you can use it as a book of magic. Look up a word and find at least three usages throughout Scripture that work for you. Let each reference suggest one main point of the sermon.
Then, go cut the grass while your subconscious reflects on how to make a sermon out of that odd collection of Scriptures. (Disadvantage: you have to own a concordance.)
6) Network.
Find some preacher no one has ever heard of who records his sermons and mails out tapes or CDs to friends who request them. Your people will never be the wiser. (Disadvantage: in the time it takes to learn someone else's sermon, you could be working on one of your own.)
7) Procrastinate.
Make it a point not to do any preparation until Saturday night, then begin to panic. Some people work best under a deadline, and you might as well be one of those. Besides, it's great for your prayer life. (Disadvantage: sometimes the Holy Spirit does not cooperate.)
8) Fudge.
Skip the word study. No one in your congregation knows Hebrew or Greek anyway, so they'll never be the wiser. (Disadvantage: God knows.)
9) Series.
If you preach a long series of sermons on the same general topic, you can spend half of each sermon time recapping the previous messages. Very little time is left for you to get to the new stuff. (Disadvantage: this is a proven congregation killer unless it's done well.)
10) Borrow.
Ask a pastor friend what he's preaching next Sunday and get him to practice on you. He'll appreciate the audience and the rehearsal will do him good. Your congregation can't be in two places at once, so they'll never know you both preached the same thing. (Disadvantage: be careful to adapt the stories to your own situation. Borrowing is one thing; lying is something else.)
11) Dramatize.
By turning your imagination loose, you can make biblical events come alive. Teach the people not to be bound by only what Scripture says happened in an incident. The advantage is that little study is necessary other than briefly rereading the text just before the service. This allows the inspiration of the moment to energize your message. (Disadvantage: if your imagination doesn't show up today, you could be in big trouble.)
12) Acceptance.
No one can be fresh every Sunday. Even Stuart Briscoe and Calvin Miller has their off-Sundays. Give yourself freedom to be human and deliver a poor sermon occasionally.(Disadvantage: you can't do this more than once a quarter or the deacons will get suspicious.)
13) Expand.
Shorten the song service to give preaching the central place it deserves. This will allow you time to chase a few more rabbits. (Disadvantage: know how to return to your home base when chasing rabbits. Some preachers have taken trails so deep and remote, they were never seen again.)
14) Condemn
By preaching against sin (pronounced with two syllables: see'-in), you can do about anything you please and so long as you are condemning the wickedness of the modern age, most of your people will think you are preaching the word. This may be the easiest of all methods for avoiding study, since you already know so much about sin. If you need additional material, the television will be glad to cooperate. (Disadvantage: certain elements of the congregation get high off juicy stories of sin, so be careful here.)
15) Stories
By telling stories of "what happened to me this week," you will hold your audience spell-bound. This is especially effective if you relate the conversations which took place in a counseling situation in your office this very week. People will sit on the edge of their pews trying to figure out who you're talking about. (Disadvantage: you lose a lot of church members this way. Of course, it balances out in that your counseling load drops quickly and permanently.)
16) Obedience.
Didn't our Lord tell us not to plan in advance what to say, but promised that the Holy Spirit would provide? (Matthew 10) Although He was speaking of believers on trial for their faith we all know nothing can be a greater trial than having to dig out a fresh sermon from Heaven every week. By walking into the pulpit unprepared, you give the Spirit a fresh slate on which to write His message. (Disadvantage: He has been known to leave the preacher who tries this hanging in the wind.)
17) Termination.
If you use the first 16 methods of sermon preparation, we can guarantee that you will:
a) be terminated.
b) have a lot of short-term pastorates.
c) eventually be out of the ministry altogether.
In this case, your sermon preparation time will be cut to the bare minimum. And after all, that's what you wanted, wasn't it?
_______________________________________________________________________
17 Ways A Pastor Can Shorten His Sermon Prep Time
1) Borrow.
In the secular world, this is called plagiarism. But we pastors know "God richly gives us all good things to share" or something like that. Fortunately, your people don't read other preachers' sermon books anyway, so they'll never know. (Disadvantage: if the written sermon bombed, chances are yours will, too.)
2) Repeat.
Everyone knows repetition is a proven learning technique. Warning: do not call these sermons 'repeats' or 're-runs.' "Previously preached' is also verboten. If you have to put a label on them, try 'Back by popular demand.' It sounds better.(Disadvantage: some little sister in the church writes in the margins of her Bible every time you have preached a particular text, so you'll need to vary your Scripture even if it's the same sermon.)
3) Confess.
Tell a story out of your childhood and turn it into a microcosm of the universe, or at least of the gospel. Didn't Phillips Brooks call preaching 'truth through personality'? The advantages are that you are the authority on yourself, no one can contradict you, and very little study time is required. (Disadvantage: if nothing dramatic has happened to you, this can get boring quickly.)
4) Obvious.
Our Lord said people prefer old wine to the new (Luke 5:39). So, with that great insight in mind, choose a well-loved subject, reinforce it with three obvious points--preferably all starting with the letter 'P'--and then belabor the obvious.
An example of this could be a sermon on the Second Coming of Christ. Your points could be the PROPHECY of His coming (when), the PURPOSE of His coming (why), and the PEOPLE of His coming (whom).
The good thing about this approach is if you need to stretch out the sermon, your concordance has lots more 'P' words. Think how exciting your message becomes as you touch on the PROOF, the PRECEPT, the PREPARATION, the PRICE, the PROCEDURE, the PROFIT, the POSSIBILITIES, the POWER, the PLAN, the PLACE, the PATIENCE, and the PARADISE of His return. Any preacher worth his salt could wax eloquent for hours on these without a moment's advance notice. (Disadvantage: you'll probably want to leave out some of the good thoughts you had on this sermon, otherwise it can last till...well, until the Lord comes back.)
5) Concordance.
As you know, a concordance gives you a word and tells you where to find it in Scripture. But, if you have an aversion to actually studying for your sermons, you can use it as a book of magic. Look up a word and find at least three usages throughout Scripture that work for you. Let each reference suggest one main point of the sermon.
Then, go cut the grass while your subconscious reflects on how to make a sermon out of that odd collection of Scriptures. (Disadvantage: you have to own a concordance.)
6) Network.
Find some preacher no one has ever heard of who records his sermons and mails out tapes or CDs to friends who request them. Your people will never be the wiser. (Disadvantage: in the time it takes to learn someone else's sermon, you could be working on one of your own.)
7) Procrastinate.
Make it a point not to do any preparation until Saturday night, then begin to panic. Some people work best under a deadline, and you might as well be one of those. Besides, it's great for your prayer life. (Disadvantage: sometimes the Holy Spirit does not cooperate.)
8) Fudge.
Skip the word study. No one in your congregation knows Hebrew or Greek anyway, so they'll never be the wiser. (Disadvantage: God knows.)
9) Series.
If you preach a long series of sermons on the same general topic, you can spend half of each sermon time recapping the previous messages. Very little time is left for you to get to the new stuff. (Disadvantage: this is a proven congregation killer unless it's done well.)
10) Borrow.
Ask a pastor friend what he's preaching next Sunday and get him to practice on you. He'll appreciate the audience and the rehearsal will do him good. Your congregation can't be in two places at once, so they'll never know you both preached the same thing. (Disadvantage: be careful to adapt the stories to your own situation. Borrowing is one thing; lying is something else.)
11) Dramatize.
By turning your imagination loose, you can make biblical events come alive. Teach the people not to be bound by only what Scripture says happened in an incident. The advantage is that little study is necessary other than briefly rereading the text just before the service. This allows the inspiration of the moment to energize your message. (Disadvantage: if your imagination doesn't show up today, you could be in big trouble.)
12) Acceptance.
No one can be fresh every Sunday. Even Stuart Briscoe and Calvin Miller has their off-Sundays. Give yourself freedom to be human and deliver a poor sermon occasionally.(Disadvantage: you can't do this more than once a quarter or the deacons will get suspicious.)
13) Expand.
Shorten the song service to give preaching the central place it deserves. This will allow you time to chase a few more rabbits. (Disadvantage: know how to return to your home base when chasing rabbits. Some preachers have taken trails so deep and remote, they were never seen again.)
14) Condemn
By preaching against sin (pronounced with two syllables: see'-in), you can do about anything you please and so long as you are condemning the wickedness of the modern age, most of your people will think you are preaching the word. This may be the easiest of all methods for avoiding study, since you already know so much about sin. If you need additional material, the television will be glad to cooperate. (Disadvantage: certain elements of the congregation get high off juicy stories of sin, so be careful here.)
15) Stories
By telling stories of "what happened to me this week," you will hold your audience spell-bound. This is especially effective if you relate the conversations which took place in a counseling situation in your office this very week. People will sit on the edge of their pews trying to figure out who you're talking about. (Disadvantage: you lose a lot of church members this way. Of course, it balances out in that your counseling load drops quickly and permanently.)
16) Obedience.
Didn't our Lord tell us not to plan in advance what to say, but promised that the Holy Spirit would provide? (Matthew 10) Although He was speaking of believers on trial for their faith we all know nothing can be a greater trial than having to dig out a fresh sermon from Heaven every week. By walking into the pulpit unprepared, you give the Spirit a fresh slate on which to write His message. (Disadvantage: He has been known to leave the preacher who tries this hanging in the wind.)
17) Termination.
If you use the first 16 methods of sermon preparation, we can guarantee that you will:
a) be terminated.
b) have a lot of short-term pastorates.
c) eventually be out of the ministry altogether.
In this case, your sermon preparation time will be cut to the bare minimum. And after all, that's what you wanted, wasn't it?
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
A Golf Tip
I am getting excited about the prospect of one of these days getting out and hitting a few golf balls. Been hard to peel away and find time as well as the money, but hopefully soon.
In preparation I have been doing a little research on golf swings, etc. Here is a short video clip that I have found extremely beneficial (note labels). Hope it will "help" you make sense of your swing and get out there and hit those fairways and greens.
In preparation I have been doing a little research on golf swings, etc. Here is a short video clip that I have found extremely beneficial (note labels). Hope it will "help" you make sense of your swing and get out there and hit those fairways and greens.
Friday, June 5, 2009
At 90...Still Got IT!
Fran & Marlo Cowan (married 62 years) playing impromptu recital together in the atrium of the Mayo Clinic. He turned 90 in February. I hope that when I get to be that old I will still be able to move like he does. Enjoy!
P.S. The tune is "Put on Your Old Gray Bonnet" for people like me who are not current on their "oldies."
P.S. The tune is "Put on Your Old Gray Bonnet" for people like me who are not current on their "oldies."
Thursday, June 4, 2009
This thing called "Ministry" (Part 10)
Near Skagen, Denmark, visitors can see the tower of the Tilsandede Kirke, the Sand Covered Church. The tower is visible because this 14th century church has been buried since the 1700's. Shifting sand from the coast of Jutland has covered much of the surrounding farmland and the church as well. Only the tower is visible. What a metaphor for the danger the church always faces; the danger of being buried beneath the sands of human opinions, power struggles, and personality clashes.*
As we continue our thought about "This thing called ministry," I come again to what Paul said.
"For as the body is one, and hath many members, and all the members of that one body, being many, are one body: so also is Christ. For by one Spirit are we all baptized into one body, whether we be Jews or Gentiles, whether we be bond or free; and have been all made to drink into one Spirit. For the body is not one member, but many. If the foot shall say, Because I am not the hand, I am not of the body; is it therefore not of the body? And if the ear shall say, Because I am not the eye, I am not of the body; is it therefore not of the body? If the whole body were an eye, where were the hearing? If the whole were hearing, where were the smelling? But now hath God set the members every one of them in the body, as it hath pleased him. And if they were all one member, where were the body? But now are they many members, yet but one body." (1 Corinthians 12:12-20)
The more I minister in the church today I get that there is a sense of uneasiness about the roles of the membership. There becomes a vision of opposing forces or different "sides" in this essence known as the "church" or the "body of Christ."
The greatest struggles come when someone hurts someone else and now both are "gun shy" about how to handle the future with all of its potential altercations. Pastors beating up on the sheep; sheep questioning the vision and direction of the pastor. Back and forth goes the power struggle and in the end, nothing is accomplished. Both sides become deeper entrenched and in the end both sides lose. Campaigns are waged and the tug of war drags unaware bystanders around like rag dolls.
So where then lies the hope of not seeing such chaos and destruction in the church? The only way we will ever see such a united church is when we as a whole adhere to unity passages like 1 Corinthians 12 and Philippians 2. Both "sides" appreciating that God has established leaders and established roles within His body. But yet remembering.....
Leadership is not Lordship.
"The elders which are among you I exhort, who am also an elder, and a witness of the sufferings of Christ, and also a partaker of the glory that shall be revealed: Feed the flock of God which is among you, taking the oversight thereof, not by constraint, but willingly; not for filthy lucre, but of a ready mind; Neither as being lords over God's heritage, but being examples to the flock." (1 Peter 5:1-3)
It reminds me of the game of chess. Each piece is vital. Each piece has a purpose and moves in designed fashion. (Do not take the analogy too far.) The object is to win without losing as many pieces as possible and of course to capture the opponent's king. Being the poor chess player that I am, I find myself losing pieces pretty quick and then I am left in the end on the run trying to figure out a way to keep my King alive. A lonely king is an eventual "check mate" in the game of chess.
Pastors, you are participants in this body. Breaking away from the analogy above, you are not kings for Christ is the head; but in keeping with the analogy, you most certainly are not able to stand alone. This body is one, yet its members are many. Each member is vital. As Senior Pastor, Assistant Pastor, Deacon, Sunday School Teacher, Charter Member, or "Church-Pew Warmer" Member do not forget that when you crush the spirit of another member you are hurting the body. When you abuse the membership you abuse the body. However, when you fulfill your Ephesians 4 prerogative to edify, build up, and encourage the membership, you are doing so to the body of Christ. "Speak the Truth (i.e. things pertaining to God) in Love."
"The church is the most complex of all human organizations," says Ed Dayton of World Vision. "It's what we call 'goal-conflicted.' One goal is to send people forth, and another is to care for them. People are always either getting on a stretcher or getting off. You've got this continual dynamic where relationships, not bottom-line numbers, are the key product." *
Ministry is people! Ministry is not us and them; it is us working together and there is not a "them" in this body of Christ. As ministers we stand opposed to sin and the destruction that wishes to come in its wake. As ministers we proclaim the Word of Truth to the ears of the saints inside the body and to the sinners outside the body. As ministers we are to hold our place in the body local in which you serve. Peter teaches that we are to "take the oversight," but do not take it for self-serving gain. Ministry is participating with the other members to build Christ's body and not our empire. May we Serve as the Holy Spirit serves us (John 14-16). May we communicate the Word of God as it communicates itself to us.
This past Wednesday evening in our church's Bible study we were focusing on Encouraging One Another. The last verses we went to were found in Colossians.
"And let the peace of God rule in your hearts, to the which also ye are called in one body; and be ye thankful. Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom; teaching and admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord. And whatsoever ye do in word or deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God and the Father by him." (Colossians 3:15-17)
Now that is Ministry!
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