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Leadership Lessons

You need to read this entire article by clicking right here! I want to take some points from the article that I think will bless pastors and missionaries. I really enjoyed the article so I hope this only whets your appetite to read the article.

Never give up no matter how hard the task seems to get. You started out believing this was God’s will for your life so go for it. The old saying was don’t doubt in the night what God gave you in the light!

Keep a spirit of praise. Laugh in the middle of the crisis because you know that God is going to get your through. Do not let the obstacles win. See Jesus and the work that He is doing in and through you!

Spend and be spent for those that God blesses you with the privilege to lead. Do not fall into the trap of using men. Someone once said, use the work to build your people and never use your people to build the work!

Every lesson from this article is clearly an illustration of Biblical truth. Paul exhibited it in his life long before this article.

We are blessed to pastor, to lead men, to train people, to care for them. We must never forget the great blessing that we have been given. As we have gotten more and more successful we have wanted to turn it around and make the ministry about us and being served more than about them and serving Jesus and others.

Read the article. Compare it to how you lead your men and work your ministry. See if there is anything that you can learn and apply to your ministry!

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How does the preacher treat the text?

Reading passages like the one that follows can be very painful for a preacher! Put on your seat belt before beginning the reading. Warning the following content may be hazardous to your current preaching style!

Not only do we need to make the text visible in corporate worship; we need to go swimming in it! The process of exposition plays out in the sermon as the preacher presents, explains, and expounds facts or ideas with commentary and interpretation. This is the very heart of the pastoral sermon. As the pastor engages the listeners with the text of the Bible, he exposes them to the only thing that possesses the ability to change their lives. Picturing the sermon as a body of water, I have often likened this engagement to the activity that goes on in a backyard swimming pool. Let me clarify the implications with regard to the types of biblical authority mentioned earlier.

As I see it, there are basically three ways a pastor can use the text of Scripture in his sermon. Many preachers use the text merely as a diving board in their sermons. They jump off of the text into the sermon, swim around for twenty to forty minutes, and never return to it. They read a passage at the beginning of the message and then never mention it again! Still other preachers treat the text like patio furniture around the pool. They swim around in the sermon but make only casual and periodic visits to the text. Just as the pool furniture is there to augment the pool, these pastors actually are using the text of the Bible to augment their sermons, almost as illustrative or supportive material.

In reality, the text simply does not happen in these sermons. The preacher announces and reads the text, assumes it to be authoritative because it comes from the Bible, and then proceeds to reduce it to a theme. The only time the text is revisited is for the purpose of repetition or for springboarding off of another loose reference. White described the snowball affect:

Now, possessed of the “theme” … the preacher gets down to the serious business of “developing” and “applying” the theme. After all, the theme is short and pithy, implying a lot in a few general words. But the sermon must spell out at length, develop, and explain what’s implied in it. And what does the preacher use for this development? What authority does the sermon invoke in support of its “theme”? Why, every authoritative source the preacher knows and can find—except the lesson on which the sermon is being preached.

The real problem here is a lack of confidence in the sufficiency of the biblical text. The preacher has abandoned his belief that the Scripture passage has anything to offer, nor does he believe it possesses the power to transform lives. Digesting its content into the “theme,” he prostitutes the potent Word of God for the observations, conjectures, and experiences of man.

Many of these kinds of sermons—heard weekly from pulpits and platforms across the globe are based on the indirect, casual, or combined biblical authority we discussed earlier. Many more are even corrupted. And even the best of these is void of the total strength and full authority of Scripture possessed by the biblical sermon. Therefore, these sermons are weaker and less potent than direct biblical sermons.

The expositor, however, uses the text of Scripture as the pool itself. He jumps off into it and goes for a swim. In this message the text is actually the sermon, and the preaching pastor is allowing it to be the main event. He and his listeners are being immersed in the supernatural, life-changing agent of God’s Holy Word. This pastor gives the text a real voice in the sermon. The primary feature of the sermon, then, is a journey into the biblical text where the preacher immerses both himself and his listeners in a rhetorical presentation of a Bible passage. Then and only then does the preacher tap into the full authority and the full potency of the biblical text.

Shaddix, J. (2003). The Passion Driven Sermon : Changing the Way Pastors Preach and Congregations Listen (157–158). Nashville, TN: Broadman & Holman.

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The Blessing Service

Several have asked what the blessing service is, how we do one, and why . I wanted to take a few minutes of your time to try and answer that.

The reason we do a blessing service is that we want to honor God’s men and also because “you get what you honor!” You get what you expect, what you are looking for, what you honor! I firmly believe that, so at Vision we look for, honor, and expect missionaries/church planters!

The idea of the blessing service comes from the stories in the Old Testament when the man of God would lay hands on the young man and give him his blessing. It often happened just prior to death or when the ministry change was taking place.

The idea would be that our church would recognize publicly the ministry of a man and his family. We would just love on them profusely. I learned something very beautiful while living in Peru. Those days were very difficult financially for the Peruvian people.

I would get invited to a family birthday, anniversary, or something else very special. They might not have had something for a gift but they would have the person of honor sit in a special seat. Then everyone would share loving comments about the person to their face.

It was the kind of thing that you hear at the funeral. It is too late to say it then but many of us wait until that moment.

So when we have a blessing service we do the following things.

We try and sing a couple of songs and have a couple of special music pieces that are the favorite of the person being honored.

We write them letters or notes with encouraging words that will go in a memory box that they will be presented that evening. Vision gives them a sword that says either, Has your sword tasted blood? Or His hand clave to the sword, depending on if they are just now going out into the ministry or if they have already been in the ministry.

Pastor Trent Cornwell represents our church preaching something to challenge and motivate the family. Then I, also, as pastor preach to challenge and help them.

The main goal of the evening is to magnify Jesus while letting them know how much we love them.

We then will have a couple dozen testimonies from men and women to each of them telling how we love them and will be praying for them.

After all of that we have them sit in chairs on different sides of the auditorium and then the men gather around the men and the ladies around the lady and we lay our hands on them and pray.

It is a super sweet time. It is one of our most beautiful services. The people always tell me how much they love being there.

Of course we also take up a love offering to give them but that is the least important part of the night!

I hope you can institute something like this in your church. I hope you will look for, expect, and honor men of God in your church.

We desperately need more missionaries and church planters. Our churches need to be training the next generation and more leaders for the work.

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A Missionary Call

This is one of the strongest explanations of the need to get involved in World Evangelism that I have ever read. Read and enjoy!

by Robert E. Speer

source

What constitutes a missionary call? It is a good sign that men ask this question.

First, because it suggests that they think of the missionary enterprise as singularly related to the will of God.

Second, because it indicates that they believe their lives are owned by a Person who has a right to direct them and whose call they must await.

But when we have said these two things, I think we have said everything that can be said in favor of the question because, far too often, it is asked for thoroughly un-Christian reasons.

For instance, Christians will pursue a profession here in the United States having demanded far less positive assurance that this is God’s will than it is for them to go out into the mission field.

But by what right do they make such distinctions?

Christianity contends that the whole of life and all services are to be consecrated; no man should dare to do anything but the will of God. And before he adopts a course of action, a man should know nothing less nor more than that it is God’s will for him to pursue it.

If men are going to draw lines of division between different kinds of service, what preposterous reasoning leads them to think that it requires less divine sanction for a man to spend his life easily among Christians than it requires for him to go out as a missionary to the heathen? If men are to have special calls for anything, they ought to have special calls to go about their own business, to have a nice time all their lives, to choose the soft places, to make money, and to gratify their own ambitions.

How can any honest Christian say he must have a special call not to do that sort of thing? How can he say that, unless he gets some specific call of God to preach the Gospel to the heathen, he has a perfect right to spend his life lining his pockets with money? Is it not absurd to suggest that a special call is necessary to become a missionary, but no call is required to gratify his own will or personal ambitions?

There is a general obligation resting upon Christians to see that the Gospel of Jesus Christ is preached to the world. You and I need no special call to apply that general call of God to our lives. We do need a special call to exempt us from its application to our lives. In other words, every one of us stands under a presumptive obligation to give his life to the world unless we have some special exemption.

This whole business of asking for special calls to missionary work does violence to the Bible. There is the command, “Go ye into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature.” We say, “That means other people.” There is the promise, “Come unto Me all ye that labor and are heavy laden and I will give you rest.” We say, “That means me.”

We must have a special divine indication that we fall under the command; we do not ask any special divine indication that we fall under the blessing. By what right do we draw this line of distinction between the obligations of Christianity and its privileges? By what right to we accept the privileges as applying to every Christian and relegate its obligations to the conscience of the few?

It does violence to the ordinary canons of common sense and honest judgment. We do not think of ordering other areas of our lives on this basis. I think ex-president Patton of Princeton was representing the situation accurately when he used the following illustration. He said, “Imagine I was employed by the owner of a vineyard to gather grapes in his vineyard. The general instructions were that as many grapes as possible should be gathered. I went down to the gate of the vineyard and found the area around the walls well plucked and the ground covered with pickers. Yet away off in the distance no pickers at all are in sight and the vines are loaded to the ground. Would I need a special visit and order from the owner of the vineyard to instruct me as to my duty?”

If I were standing by the bank of a stream, and some little children were drowning, I would not need any officer of the law to come along and serve on me some legal paper commanding me under such and such a penalty to rescue those children. I should despise myself if I should stand there with the possibility of saving those little lives, waiting until, by some legal proceeding, I was personally designated to rescue them!

Why do we apply, in a matter of infinitely more consequence, principles that we would loathe and abhor if anybody should suggest that we should apply them in the practical affairs of our daily life? Listen for a moment to the wail of the hungry world. Feel for one hour its sufferings. Sympathize for one moment with its woes. And then regard it just as you would regard human want in your neighbor, or the want that you meet as you pass down the street, or anywhere in life.

There is something wonderfully misleading, full of hallucination and delusion in this business of missionary calls. With many of us it is not a missionary call at all that we are looking for; it is a shove. There are a great many of us who would never hear a call if it came. Somebody must come and coerce us before we will go into missionary work.

Every one of us rests under a sort of general obligation to give life and time and possession to the evangelization of the souls everywhere that have never heard of Jesus Christ. And we are bound to go, unless we can offer some sure ground of exemption which we could with a clear conscience present to Jesus Christ and be sure of His approval upon it.

“Well,” you ask, “do you mean, then, that I should take my life in my own hands?” No! That is precisely what I am protesting against! That is exactly what we have done. We have taken our lives in our own hands and proposed to go our own way unless God compels us to go some other way. What I ask is that, until God reveals to us some special, individual path on either side, we should give our lives over into Jesus’ hands to go in that path which He has clearly marked out before His church.

I want to say one last thing.

I think love will hear calls where the loveless heart will not know that they are sounding. If there were a hundred little children crying, a mother would be able to pick out the voices of her own – especially if they were voices of pain and suffering.

There is a mighty keenness in the ears of love, and I wonder, after all, whether that may not explain a great deal that one is perplexed over in this matter of a special missionary call. Is it possible that, in many cases, it is just a matter of a callused heart, a reluctant will, or a sealed mind?

God so loved the world that He gave. It was need in the world plus love in God that constituted a call for Jesus. Do we need more than what sufficed for Him? If they were our own, would we hesitate and hold back?

Let us lay aside all double-dealing, all moral subterfuge, all those shuffling evasions by which the Devil is attempting to persuade us to escape from our duty, and let us get up like men and look at it and do it.

Students are old enough to decide to do their duty. They are old enough to decide to go to college. They are old enough to decide for law and medicine and other professions. They are old enough, too, to decide this question. God forbid that we should try to hide from solemn consideration of our vital duty behind any kind of pretext.

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Biblical Authority in the Pulpit

The following is a great article for all of us that preach! Do we preach the Bible? Do we have real authority when we preach? This passage comes from the book mentioned at the end of the quotet. It is one of my favorite books and I recommend that you buy it!

Homileticians have identified five types of biblical authority in sermons. I want to mention them here in the order of digressing degrees of divine dominion. As you consider the nature of each one, think about two things.

First, consider the relationship of each degree of authority with the clarity of God’s voice in the sermon.

Second, evaluate how each degree of authority relates to the submission of the preacher and the listeners.

A sermon with direct biblical authority treats the text of Scripture in accordance with its intended meaning. Building on the natural, grammatical, historical, and theological meaning of the passage, it moves from the then to the now in a straightforward fashion. This sermon seeks to say the same thing as its text.

A sermon with indirect biblical authority uses Scripture in a secondary way, varying from the meaning of the text. Although it may begin with the natural, grammatical, historical then of the text, it quickly moves to the now at a tangent from the central idea of the passage or passages. This type of sermon is usually weighted with the preacher’s expansion and/or reduction of the intent of the text.

Still other sermons contain casual biblical authority, making a rather free use of the intended meaning of the text. This type of message usually does not even begin with the historical meaning of the biblical passage and maintains a rather loose relationship with it throughout. About this highly subjective approach that characterized the last century, Brown lamented: “Most likely, more sermons of this type have been preached during the twentieth century than all other types combined. What a tragic commentary on the modern state of preaching! What a shallow regard this demonstrates for the Bible!”6 The same horror no doubt should be expressed as we analyze sermons at the dawn of the twenty-first century.

The final two types seek either to combine various degrees of the text’s authority or even to corrupt it. A sermon with combination biblical authority simply uses an integration of any or all of the other types. A sermon with corrupted biblical authority cannot even be said to use the biblical text, but instead it abuses it. And countless ways have been discovered for twisting, misusing, and corrupting texts. Obviously these final two types have the potential of overlapping, the latter corrupting the former.

Now here are my questions. Why would any pastor want to adopt a lesser degree of biblical authority when the highest degree is always possible? And why would listeners want to sit under preaching that was not as authoritative as it could be? It is the difference between saying “Thus saith the Lord!” and “Thus suggesteth the Lord!” or “Thus implieth the Lord!” or even “Thus saith the Lord—possibly!” Commenting on the casual biblical sermon, Brown explained:

A valid question may be asked here. If this sermon represents such a weak and inferior use of Scripture, why discuss it in a book which seeks to have reformation in preaching? The casual sermon must be discussed for two basic reasons:

(1) that men who use it may see this procedure, with its weaknesses, defined and illustrated, and

(2) that those who use it may see this form in comparison to better forms and thereby be helped in changing to better methods and procedures. Those who preach casual sermons regularly should strive to move up to direct Biblical sermons.

I believe the same question could and should be posed with regard to the indirect, combination, and corrupted sermons. Sermons based upon anything other than direct biblical authority do not carry the highest degree of divine weight and, therefore, fail to be worthy of our submission.

Therein is the link between philosophy and process, between theology and practice, between conviction and form. Just as the pastor’s responsibility in preaching flows out of his view of revelation, so his approach to preaching flows out of his view of authority. And the connection between authority and exposition becomes obvious. John Stott wed the two thoughts in reflecting on the practice of the early church:

We note … that the public reading of Scripture came first, identifying the authority. What followed was exposition and application, whether in the form of doctrinal instruction or of moral appeal, or both. Timothy’s own authority was thus seen to be secondary, both to the Scripture and to the apostle. All Christian teachers occupy the same subordinate position as Timothy did. They will be wise … to demonstrate conscientious integrity in expounding it, so that their teaching is seen to be not theirs but the word of God.

The pastor’s authority as a preacher certainly does not come with a style he copies or an impression he receives. Nor does it come from implications or applications of the intended meaning of a text of Scripture. His authority comes by way of the truth he rightly proclaims. That truth has been revealed by God and should be exposed to people in the most direct way possible.

The most deceptive thing about an analysis of the landscape of contemporary preaching is not the heresy that flows from the pulpits of perverted churches, denominations, and cults. The most deceptive thing is the lesser degrees of biblical authority which undergird the sermons in many conservative pulpits, especially indirect and casual sermons. These are sermons that fail to tap the authority of the text from which they supposedly come.

Think about it. Most of us who know our Bibles to any degree recognize when the biblical text is being contradicted, corrupted, and even ignored. But when the Scriptures are being used indirectly or even casually in sermons, many congregants receive and even applaud them solely because of their incorporation of the Bible, albeit ever so loose. Richard C. White said that these sermons

are quite readily received and appreciated as Christian preaching. They speak of things conventionally sermonic. They urge a clearly Christian way of life and challenge the hearers to various exemplary enterprises. [They are] quite Christian in content and intent, sound in doctrine, and they may also be compellingly relevant, sensitive to our current situation. In such preaching we hearers are clearly addressed where we live, in specific modern terms. We hear the claim of the gospel.

Yet, in all of this, these kinds of sermons have no biblical authority. They fail to claim the listeners by the eternal truths of the text and the historical realities which encase them. And the tragic result is that man’s assumptions and opinions get exalted instead of the reign of God!

We must remember that the role of the pastoral preacher is to exalt God by preaching the Word of God with the highest degree of integrity. The highest degree of integrity comes only with the highest degree of authority. And the only real authoritative preaching is biblical exposition where the preacher and listeners are in submission to the primary meaning of each text. That’s where we find God’s stuff, not just good stuff! When the preacher allows the text to be preeminent, people are sure to be getting God’s stuff! And when they get His stuff, He gets the glory!

Shaddix, J. (2003). The Passion Driven Sermon : Changing the Way Pastors Preach and Congregations Listen (148–151). Nashville, TN: Broadman & Holman.

Check out bcwe.org

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