Life · Ministry · Faith

Month: October 2014

Do you feel a little rusty?

rusty truck

I have seen the movie so many times I should be able to quote the entire dialogue. Trevor used to love to haul logs and help thresh the corn. But those days were long passed him. He sat in the yard amongst rusty old cars and machinery waiting to be melted down and reused. That was the reason Edward came to the yard that day. He came to get a load of scrap metal to take to the steel works to be melted down. After meeting Trevor all that Edward could say was “It’s a shame. It’s a shame.” They were going to cut Trevor up and sell him for scrap. You see, Trevor is a traction engine and Edward, well he is a small steam train. Edward saw through the rusty exterior to see the usefulness of the old traction tractor. As the story progresses it is surprisingly the church who comes to Trevor’s rescue. Buying him from certain destruction, giving him what he needed most, some paint, polish, and oil and in no time he was good as new.

Seeing potential in people can sometimes be a bit more challenging and the road of transformation more complicated. But the first step is to see the next is to do something. Compassion that has no action is really no compassion at all.

Most of us have times in our lives when we questioned our general usefulness. It seemed like life was on an express train to the scrap yard. That is until someone saw us. Someone saw potential we struggled to see in ourselves. They came alongside us with compassion and gave us the opportunity to be as good as new again. Are there people in your life that need to hear a message of continued hope? Do you see them?

Blessings,
Pastor Stephen

Let’s Ride the Circuits Again

Hello Friends,

Today I share a bonus Milk Can. These are some ideas that have been rumbling around in my head. I have shared them on many occasions, but this is my first time to bring them into this arena.

Francis Asbury StatueIn short, my challenge today to churches and pastors is to consider riding the circuits once again, but instead of dusty trails on the back of a horse, let’s ride the electronic circuits of our computers.

What do I mean? In my denomination, and others like it all across our country, we have many small churches in small towns. These churches are struggling under the economic realities of our time. Many are unable to pay the salary for a part-time pastor, not to even consider a full-time pastor. Additionally, in many of our larger cities we are seeing a growing phenomenon of the multi-campus churches. Let’s put the two together and reach our smaller towns!

How do we do this? It is really quite simple. If you are in a city and there is a church or two in neighboring towns that are unable to find or support a pastor, offer to be there pastor. Provide pastoral care and cast a vision for what could be. When it comes to the sermon on Sunday morning there are several options available including:

  • Live simulcast your church’s sermon into the other church.
  • Video record your church’s sermon and upload it to a server. The other church could then download/stream the sermon into the service on the same day.
  • Burn a DVD of the sermon and have a runner take it to the other church.
  • Video record your sermon on a Saturday night. Play this sermon at the sites while the sermon is preached live at one of the churches on Sunday.

I hope you noticed something. Many of these options would allow us to be circuit riders once again. Each Sunday we could deliver our “live in the flesh” sermon to a different one of our churches. The other churches would receive the same sermon but in an electronic format.

What about leadership? Designate a lay pastor at each site who is responsible for the worship service details each week. One of the great things about small churches is they usually already have a person who is the de facto lay pastor. If they didn’t, the church would have closed years ago. On a very regular basis meet together with each of the lay pastors as a group. Use this time for unified prayer, vision casting, dreaming, planning, and leadership development.

What if we were to ride the circuits again?

Pastor Stephen

How to Find a More Excellent Way

hands in the shape of a heart

Maybe Paul knew we were not going to get along with each other. Maybe he knew we, as humans, are competitive by nature. No matter what we are doing there always has to be a winner and a loser. Someone has to be on top and be better than someone else. In the church we are certainly no better. In the midst of our competitiveness Paul wades deep into murky waters and attempts to address spiritual gifts. In his letter to the people of the ancient city of Corinth he begins to lay a foundation teaching us four things:

1. Your spiritual gifts are just that gifts.

“Now to each one the manifestation of the Spirit is given . . .” (1 Corinthians 12:7).

The gifts we have, whether they be wisdom, knowledge, prophecy, or healing are not earned by you and I, and therefore we have no reason to be proud of them. We may have a picture on our wall of a state championship earned in high school. This is good, we should be proud of the accomplishments we worked hard for. But spiritual gifts are different, there are no plaques on our walls. No pictures of glory days to look back on. They come from God at his discretion.

2 . . . . but they aren’t for you.

“. . . for the common good” (1 Corinthians 12:7).

To be a Christian is to live and share in community. We are spiritual gift Pony Express riders. We have been given the satchel of gifts to carry for our designated time until we can pass it on to the next rider and ultimately see it emptied out for the community to enjoy what is inside.

3. We need each other.

“The body is a unit, though it is made up of many parts; and though all its parts are many, they form on body” (12:12).

As much as we may be tempted to go it alone our gifts are worthless on their own. The gifts God gives to each one of us only have value when they are combined with each other’s. Attempting to go it alone makes us look like a chicken with its head cut off. The show is fun to watch for a little while, people may even chase you around, but eventually inevitable death will come.

4. There is an even better way.

“And now I will show you the most excellent way” (12:31).

The way is love. It is rare to hear 1 Corinthians 13 read outside of the context of a wedding ceremony, but when Paul shares these words he is not standing in a chapel wearing an Elvis costume he is describing the “most excellent way” for the church. This is what the church should look like. This is how we should treat each other. This is what using our spiritual gifts should be. So “follow the way of love and eagerly desire spiritual gifts” (14:1) because . . .

Love is patient and kind.
Love is not jealous or boastful or proud or rude.
Love does not demand its own way.
Love is not irritable,
Love keeps no record of being wronged.
Love does not rejoice about injustice
Love rejoices whenever the truth wins out.
Love never gives up
Love never loses faith
Love is always hopeful
Love endures through every circumstance.

Now that is the kind of church I want to be part of!

Pastor Stephen

Why would a pastor commit suicide?

Blurred Stained Glass

Dear friends,

It seems over the past few months my social media feeds have frequently included posts and comments about pastors who have committed suicide. While I have yet to have had a friend choose this path, many of my colleagues have lost fellow pastor friends and neighbors to suicide. The frequency of these occurrences has give me pause and caused me to think about the reasons I believe pastors may feel trapped and choose the path of suicide. So in this month of “Pastor Appreciation” allow me to share with you some of the other side of being a pastor.

1. We are failures. Intentional or not, the message we receive today is clear. If your church is not growing, if your congregation is not a “mega-church,” then you are a failure. I remember having lunch with a gentleman and being asked what size of church I saw myself pastoring. I answered that I used to see myself pastoring a church of around 700 (to this day I do not know why that number) but now I am more interested in pastoring a church of significance than size. A church can be in the thousands and be doing nothing for the Kingdom of God, and a church can be a few dozen and cause the gates of hell to tremble in fear. My answer was not the right one.

Listen to what Trevin Wax has to say about this in his book, Holy Subversion:

Imagine interviewing for a church position today and saying, “I believe God wants us to be kingdom-focused and mission-minded. It could be that as we start to move into more intensive discipleship, we will shrink before we grow.” In most churches, you would be shown the door quickly. It’s too risky. No one wants to hear about shrinking. Never mind that the concept is biblical. Never mind that Jesus talks about branches being pruned for the good of the tree. Never mind that shrinking actually happened in Jesus’ earthly ministry. Embracing the small over the big? This is the era of super-sizing everything. Bigger is better—always; isn’t it?

2. Money is tight. Really tight. Money is a reality of life. And a lack of it in churches and a pastor’s monthly paycheck is also a reality. The skill set required to be a pastor could earn exponentially more in the marketplace. It is hard to not feel the draw to greener pastures as we see our social media friends go on elaborate vacations, buy new cars, and upgrade their houses. As a human I am responsible for the finances of my home. As a pastor I am responsible for the finances of the church. The weight of the two can be crushing sometimes. But, apart from starting a printing press in the church basement, there is little pastors can actually do about it.

3. We can’t leave. When a pastor decides to quit being a pastor or to even take a break from ministry, it is seen as at best, a failure and, at worst, an act of apostasy. Jesus said in Matthew 16:26, “What good will it be for someone to gain the whole world, yet forfeit their soul?” Sometimes pastors need to save their souls and leave the ministry. Church and denominational leaders, please let them go without tearing them down and exiling them for life.

4. Pastors are human too . . . but many forget this. We have good days and bad days. We say things we wish we wouldn’t have said and don’t say things that need to be said. Our kids behave in church and they don’t behave. We get sick. We get tired. We are still learning and growing. As a pastor I have been yelled at, slandered, threatened, lied to, betrayed, and gossiped about, just to name a few–all by the “saints” of the church. As one pastor I knew said, “Why is it that the people who call themselves ‘entirely sanctified’ are the most selfish, prideful people in the church?” It’s a good question to ask. Truth be told, I have never experienced the kind of personal attacks in the secular job world as I have experienced in the church. It would never be tolerated.

5. We have friends and yet we don’t. For most people when they move into a new community one of the greatest challenges is fitting in and finding friends. On this front, pastors have a huge advantage. When we move into a community it comes with a ready-made set of friends and support network. But, of course, it is a community tied directly to our vocation and so this can make forming deep friendships incredibly difficult.

As you read these words, think about how you might encourage your pastor. I mean, REALLY, encourage him or her.

Finally, I need to say something about my current church, Hope. You are a rare treasure in this world. The quality of leadership, depth of relationship, and care for your pastors and community is unmatched. Thank you for allowing us the privilege of sharing life with you.

Pastor Stephen

God and Money

Money Stacks

Dear Friends,

While working on a recent sermon for Hope I was reading John Wesley’s sermon On Money. For all of JW’s skills he was terrible at writing sermon titles, the sermon is better than the title would make you believe. In the sermon JW gives some guidelines to help Christians evaluate their purchases and they way they handle their money.

  1. Is this expense in accordance to my character? Am I acting as a steward of God’s possessions or acting as though it is mine?
  2. Am I doing this in obedience to his Word?
  3. Can I offer this expense as a sacrifice to God through Jesus Christ?
  4. Have I reason to believe for this work I shall have a reward at the resurrection?

Could your next purchase stand-up to his criteria?

Pastor Stephen

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