As with any job, vocation, or ministry there is always more to
do. There is extra effort that could be
made. It could well be detrimental to
the worker in a multitude of ways.
Pushing on to do a little more, to spend just a few more hours to
accomplish that special task perfectly, knowing inwardly perfection is often being
unattainable. But ministers press
on. They push, they strive, they persevere
to do one more thing. It is the
difference between average and the superior.
For the minister of the Gospel is no less susceptible to this over stretching. The result is nothing is ever quite good
enough. At least that is what ministers
tell themselves and is often reinforced by casual innuendo and under breath
remarks. Ministers try think at issue is
the prioritization of what is most important. It becomes an exercise of time
management. But that is an
oxymoron. Time is beyond the control of
anyone. The clock keeps ticking regardless
of how we lead our lives. So what is so important that all else must take back
seat? What is the ministry’s greatest calling
song? What is the calling’s most
important thing? What is the priority for the high calling of minister?
In the church as it exists today in the twenty-first century some
would say the church is a business. It
has all the characteristics of industry.
It has a purpose statement, it has board meetings, it has budgets, and
accounting principles. Shouldn’t the
first priority of the minister be administration. Let’s give our ministers classes on
micro-economics and let some of the biblical history classes slide. The church needs an executive head. The wheels of industry need to be well oiled. Repairs to the bathrooms and classrooms need
to be managed, orders of service created for Sunday’s, PowerPoint presentations
must be created, and meetings must be held.
Friction must be reduced to the lowest levels. Every portion of the mechanism must be
scrutinized, inspected, examined and improved upon. That effort needs a leader. If you would use
the parlance of the Old Testament this position would be called the King. The
administration of the day to day workings of the church are vital. They have to be finely tweaked to measure up
to the standards of the world. The
Pastor as administer is important. But
it is not the most important. I believe
any minister who would set this priority first is missing the high calling to
which God has called.
So what should the priority be?
Another candidate for the high calling of the minister is priest. The official over the altar of worship. The spokesman of the people. The help to all those who need grace and
peace in their lives. Priest provides
the means of grace through ritual, public prayers, reading of scripture,
baptisms, communions, baby dedications, funerals, weddings. The man of the people as they offer up their sacrifice
of praise and supplication. He leads the
congregation to the throne of grace.
From his mouth come the concerns, hopes, desires, and pain of many
hearts. He may not be talented in
singing but it is the Priest that discerns the amount of singing. He may not be a part of an inspired music
team, but he determines the character and amount of music in which the church
will express its adoration and thanksgiving.
He should be the ordained ministrant of the worship service. He leads the church to a place of peace,
reverence, thanksgiving, praise, hope, joy, and worship. The priestly ministry is both difficult and
critical to the church. Without a
faithful understanding of this role and a dutiful action the Church will
suffer. But again, if the priority of
the minister is to be priest, the aim is just too low. The calling of God has to be more than an
official of the sacraments. The calling
of God is being lessoned by anyone called to be a minister who sets his
priority to being a priest. It is just
is not enough.
The minister’s priority could well be to be a shepherd. A shepherd,
what a great picture. A protector of the
sheep. A guide to the sheep. Someone who knows them all by name. A special person that becomes so well acquainted
to each of his charge that the shepherd knows that one is missing. The shepherd minister knows the individual
sheep’s disposition, needs and habits.
The shepherd knows where the grass is greenest. He knows where the fodder grows the best in
the different times of year. He knows
where the water is the freshest. He
knows who the enemies of the flock are and all their habits and forms of
attack. He knows the weakest and the
strongest of the flock. The ministry of
shepherd is a mighty task. It makes the
difference between life and death of the flock in his charge. To the church this is more important than everything
else because it is all about them. Concern and shepherding is vital in the church. But it is not the most important.
Ministry to the world around him.
To be the moral and religious leader of a community and to be the bastion
to the world, could well be a priority. The minister has a responsibility not
only to his own body of believers but to the community in which it dwells. Every street, every alley, every home, those
without homes are all a part of the calling of the minister. He is a member of
the Church universal. He should well be
part of feeding the poor, lifting the downtrodden, a minister to the widow and
the orphan. Uniting with churches of the
community in efforts to do more than the local church can do is part and parcel
of being part of the body of Christ. The minister as ambassador from the court
of heaven to the court of earth is a lofty and worthy goal. But it is not the
priority that is needed most.
Minister, do not choose to be come only a king or a shepherd or a
priest or an ambassador. While each of
these high offices are worthy of effort, they are not the highest calling. A king is but an administrator, a shepherd is
just a protector, a priest is just a pointer, and an ambassador is just an
assigned representative. There is one
thing, only one profession greater that all these.
The minister as a prophet of God.
A prophet is a minister that speaks for God. There is no higher calling. There is no greater task. There is no greater priority. Preaching is not some peripheral item in the
program of the local church. It lies at
the very heart of what is to be a minister of God. He is the truth teller and therefore must be
a truth-seeker. The primary purpose of
the minister as prophet is to speak for another. Like Moses, he must travel the high hills to
the mountain of God and talk with Him.
Talk to him face to face and then and only then can he come down and
give the people the very revelations of God.
Being a profit is pouring back in a flood what was received from an
audience with God in a vapor.
What does a prophet do? What
is his calling? A prophet shares God’s
intent; what God expects, what God desires, what God is planning to do, and
what God judges. A prophet shares God’s
mind with those who want to hear and those who don’t. From the first prophet
Moses to last Jesus, they all shared God’s proclamation that it is possible to
align ourselves with God’s intent.
A Prophet shares God’s intent. But it is more than just an
interpretation of the intent of God. In
second Peter the prophet does not share based upon his own understanding or
initiative. It is not just one person’s
idea of God’s intent. It is not a compiled
list of three points explaining in a precise way a personal understanding of
God’s intent. It is a revelation from
the Holy Spirit that pushes its way through the folly of man’s understanding
and preaching. Visionary preaching does
not come from studied works or commentaries.
The tools of the study are not to be discounted; they are not bad
things. The Visionary minister as Prophet is the mouth of God to a people who
must hear from God to survive. Ministers should not throw intellectual rigor,
research, personal values or planning out the window and expect God just to
just fill his mind. These things just
can become poor substitutes for the revelation of the Holy Spirit. There is no aspartame
substitute for the sweetness of God. The
minister is the connection of God’s intent with God’s vehicles.
The offices of king, ambassador, shepherd, and priest are vital to
the church, but without the word of God the church will suffer most. The minister may lead the church in the best
practices, the minister may proclaim to the community this is a place of
healing and hope, the minister my well lead the well-known and intimate sheep
to the safest places, the minister may well point the body to the throne of
grace, but without the words of God it avails the minister little. Each of
these offices have great worth to the ongoing function of the Body of Christ.
Never-the-less without the mind of God all else is not as important. The minister can shirk all his duties but
that of preaching and still accomplish the work God has called him to do.
Preaching is the cornerstone of all ministry. Out of the mind of God, out of the knowledge
of the intent of God comes the other ministries. A minister cannot be a leader to the church
unless he knows God’s intent. A minister
cannot be decision maker without knowing intimately the intent of God. A minister cannot reach the unloved and the
lacking without knowing the very mind of God.
An ambassador cannot proclaim the worth of his country without knowing
the reason the homeland exists. The priest cannot point and guide the
congregation to the throne of grace without knowing the intent of each ritual,
event, or piece of music.
This writing is not to diminish these other ministries or even to
underestimate necessity of them. The
importance of efforts outside the holy desk can never be overstated. The
concept here is not that you should ignore them, to make these ministries as nothing
more than pearls thrown before the swine, but to elevate the one most important
and relevant to the church, to the community, to the world, and to God.
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