Showing posts with label ministry gifts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ministry gifts. Show all posts

Thursday, February 20, 2014

Two minute commentary on the word "pastor" in Ephesians 4:11

This is a republishing of a blog I originally did on December 4,2010.  It is unique in that, unlike any of my other blogs, it never received a page view.  Maybe it is because of the title I gave it, or that it was with the first few days after I started this blog.  This piece was written to be a one minute long radio commentary.  At the time, I recorded it and was able to say all this in clear English in two minutes.  Later, when I compiled a recording, I did five minute commentaries.  Because of the time limit I was working on, there is one statement below that comes across less nuanced than may be proper.

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95—“pastor” word study

My name is Tom; this is Simple Church Minute.
            The modern job, position, and title of the word “pastor” is far different from what Paul meant in Ephesians chapter 4 verse 11.  The Greek word “poimen” appears 18 times in the New Testament.  The other 17 times it is translated “shepherd” meaning either a) a sheep herder, or b) a reference to Jesus, that what He does for his people is like what a shepherd does for the sheep.  Neither of those meanings fit Ephesians 4:11.  Paul is speaking about gifts of ministry.  Pastor is the Latin word for shepherd; its use is a distinction in context, but not in the word itself.  The way the sentence is constructed, Paul was putting shepherd or pastor together with teacher, such as we, in English, would write shepherd hyphen teacher.  This was an experienced, faithful, obedient believer who has accepted a gift to care for and teach others in Christian love as a matter of their growing in spiritual maturity.  Such maturity is a criterion on the shepherd’s part.  Intellectual achievement was not.  Certainly no man or organization was or is today capable of giving God’s gifts.  It was not an honorific title.  It had nothing to do with getting paid. 
            Another thing that shows that pastor or shepherd does not stand alone from teacher is that, in the New Covenant days scriptures, one can find persons indicated to be apostles, prophets, evangelists, and teachers, but no person is designated to be a pastor.  How did we wind up using the term to designate the leader of a group of believers? Before the Reformation, the word “priest” was used, but the Old Testament shows that a priest is a mediator between man and God.  Jesus’ death destroyed that need.  After the Reformation, over time, the word “pastor” worked itself out over time.
            You can email me at 757757tev@gmail.com.(1) For more info on organic worship, visit http://www.simplechurch.com/ or locally at (local website).
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 What would be more nuanced is the idea that pastor/shepard and teacher definitely would be a hyphenated two word phrase in English.  This, I am told by people who know this better than I, is a maybe yes, maybe no thing, although, personally, I believe it makes better sense when combined with the fact that we have no early examples of a person being called a pastor or shepherd, and we have a woman, Junia, being called an apostle in Romans 16:7.
I got all this information from Barna & Viola's Pagan Christianity, which, in turn, has the scholarly references.
1)  In the original post, I had a different email address, but that one I am no longer watching.  I have inserted the one I do regularly use for all kinds of purposes.


Sunday, July 1, 2012

Calling: a word study


            About a week ago, thanks to the wonder of the internet, I was in a discussion with a brother in another part of the world, with regard to the posting I have on 13 definitions of the word “church” (my latest revision being on June 20, 2012).  He stated the idea that church means “called out ones.”  I have heard that numerous times in sermons, and is generally a true interpretation, but is not a literal definition of the word in the original language, and does not at all fit the use in Acts 19.  A further problem is that we believers in our culture have a fuzzy definition of what “called” means.  I struggled with this, as I grew up going to an institutional church in a Calvinistic denomination.  I do not remember the idea of what “called” meant ever being taught, but I do remember that, before graduating from high school, I already knew that, if the pastor got up and spoke about Acts 16, about Paul receiving a dream guiding him to go to Macedonia, the sermon would end with the announcement that the pastor was leaving his current position.  There was this vague feeling that “calling” had something to do with holding a position of leadership.  This makes some sense in that, in the King James Version, which was used far more extensively among believers then, than now, Ephesians 4:1 reads, “I therefore, the prisoner of the Lord, beseech you that ye walk worthy of the vocation wherewith ye are called,” which appears to say that calling is connected to doing a paid job.  As other versions show, this, at most innocently, is a function of the translators reading their own experience into the text, and, at worst, their writing a justification for their jobs into the text. Newer translations show that that was not a nuance in the original language.

            Be that as it may, I dove into studying what “call/called/calling” actually means with regard to New Testament believers.  Two meanings are common uses of the word, one of which is to ask/command another to move from a place further away from one to another place closer, and the other is an introduction to a synonym, such as “that animal is called a cat.”  Many of the uses fall into those categories.

            I wish to deal with the spiritual meaning of calling, God’s direction to persons.  In Matthew chapter 4, we see Jesus called the disciples.  2 Peter 1:3 tells us Jesus called us because He is virtuous, not us.  That should be obvious in that some of us, by the world’s standards, were evil people before we were saved, and others, who seem to be nice people, do not come follow Jesus.  Of course, the world’s standards are inconsistent even to themselves. 

            I will take one paragraph to mention a problem that has vexed students of theology.  Is every person on earth called, or only some?  Mt. 20:16 and Mt. 22:14 appear to indicate that every person is called, but only some accept the call to follow Jesus.  Romans 8:30 and Hebrews 9:15 appear to indicate that only those who follow Jesus are called.  This brings up, to us humans, of God’s perfection and whether those not called have no opportunity to avoid hell, which seems to us quite imperfect.  Theologians have debated that in their halls of study for centuries, to no good resolution, but we are incapable to understand God in full, anyway, so I have nothing further to add to this.

            It appears to me that there are three general levels to God’s call on a believer’s life.  Romans 1:7 tells us that we are called to be saints.  All believers are saints.  The Roman Catholic use of the word is incorrect.  Acts 20:1 indicates that “saints” and “disciples” are synonyms.  A disciple is one who is following the master, Jesus, to learn what He has to teach.  If someone says he/she is a Christian, but shows no signs of desiring to follow Jesus, something is wrong.  In most societies where there is freedom of belief, and no governmentally or socially sanctioned persecution, there are plenty of persons who fall into this category.  Much could be said about this.

            John 15:15 tells us Jesus said that we are no longer His servants, but His friends. 1 Corinthians 1:9 tells us we are called into fellowship.  A local fellowship of believers is one correct definition of church.  1 Corinthians 7:15 tells us we are called to peace. Again in 1 Corinthians 7, verses 20 and 24 tell us that our calling is part of our life circumstances, which imply, along with the rest of the New Testament, that there are no special positions for the called, no “holy men” as in the surrounding religions.  We, the church, got (or maybe were forced) off-track during the early Middle Ages.  Colossians  3:15 tells us that we are called into one body, the Bride of Christ.  2 Timothy 1:9 tells us that this is a holy calling, not according to our works.  Holiness is not for the special few.  While the calling is not according to our works, the Holy Spirit in the believer’s life changes our heart, and therefore, our works, and that doesn’t happen in the person trying to fake being a believer.  Hebrews 5:1-4 and 1 Peter 2:9 defines Revelation 1:6, which helps us understand that saints are priests.  Now, if all believers are priests, and priests intercede between God and man, who are we interceding for but other persons and the situations surrounding them.  This is the basic level of God’s call on a person’s life.

            We are not to sit around, just feeling good about being saved, avoiding hell, nor, by the Spirit speaking into one’s spirit, would one wish to.  1 Corinthinans 1:22-31 tells us that we are to grow in faith.  Galatians 5:22, 23 tell us the results of growing in faith, which Paul describes as the fruit of the Spirit. 2 Thessalonians 2:13 and Jude 1:1 tell us another word that describes this part of a believer’s calling—sanctification.  Ephesians 5:11 describe four or five general gifts God bestows on persons, and in verse 12 tells us that they are for equipping the saints (the believers) for the work of ministry.  Therefore, every believer ministers, not just the gifted.  That, in turn, is for the edifying of the body (other believers).  1 Thessalonians 5:11 tells us that the church is a group of believers that comfort and edify each other.  If one person dominates the group and is attempting to be above others, that is wrong; that is normal in the world’s businesses, politics, and military, and in the religions around the world, and in the Old Covenant, but now Jesus is Head of the Church, as stated in Ephesians 5:23 and Colossians 1:18.  God gifts persons, but did not put any gifted person between God and the average believer.      

            All believers receive the first calling.  To some degree, believer’s grow spiritually, although it is clear that some grow faster than others, and do not grow evenly.  Any of us can see that in our own life.  The third area of calling is one some believers do not ever enter.  Some believers, and even non-believers, are tempted to fake being in.  This is the special calling on a person’s life.  This ties in, in some way, to the general gifts God gave to us via our DNA, and life experiences, and added to once we accept Jesus’ salvation for us and have grown in faith to a degree.  Unlike deciding what occupation to study, we don’t choose this call, although to others, it sometimes might appear that way.  Mark 3:13 indicates this.  Luke 6:13 tells us that the 12 were apostles still while Jesus was on earth.  Yes, some will have a theological problem with that, given that Judas Iscariot was in their midst, and the Holy Spirit was yet to come upon them.  Some might argue that an indication of our imperfection, even while saved and desiring to follow the Holy Spirit was Acts 1:23, as an example of how special calling does not happen.   Acts 9:11 and 16:10 are examples of special guidance.  Acts 13:2, 1 Corinthians 1:1, and Romans 1:1 are examples of special gifting.  These are not examples of titles.  Paul said that he was an apostle, but he didn’t call himself Apostle Paul.  None of these words that are descriptions of gifts were titles, with the exception, as mentioned above, of Jesus, Head of the Church. In Mark 9:35, Jesus taught the twelve that to be great, one must be the servant of all.  This speaks a word of warning about those persons whose “ministry” is such that such person is impossible to access, and whom appears, as one person, to be the equivalent to a whole church.  Then, again, this is a form that has been taught to both leaders and non-leaders for centuries, and wrongdoing is only deliberate sin when the Holy Spirit brings a thing to a person’s attention.  Just to clarify that these gifts were not just natural abilities, Ephesians 4:9 tells us that God gave gifts of ministry to men (humans).  I say that in that Romans 16:7 tells us that a woman named Junia was an apostle.  Further, Galatians 5:13 tells us that we are called to liberty, to serve one another.  Further, when we look at Romans 12, Ephesians 4, and 1 Corinthians 12, we see in two spots where Paul is inspired to say “gifts”, which is plural, about healing and administration, but we have no indication of why.  Also, there is nothing that tells us that the various list of gifts is complete.  The point of God’s gifts is not that we can attach a name to it, but that one uses one’s gift for the benefit of the body to God’s honor.

            Above, I rattled off many scriptures in a proof-texting style.  One of the problems of that style, which goes back to the rabbis of the Old Testament, and, while I do not know this, probably extends even to the false religions of men, is that a sentence can be taken out of its context to say something that, in its correct literary and/or cultural context, it doesn’t mean.  To the best of my knowledge, I do not believe that I have quoted any of these scriptures out of such context. Part of the reason for this writing is that this is an idea which has been misunderstood because others, intentionally or not, have taken this idea out of its proper context, oftentimes not by actually teaching incorrectly, but implying ideas “between the lines” of other teachings which give believers an incorrect understanding.  Therefore, not just now, but always, I would urge others, along with myself, to examine this and any teaching, to search the scriptures, and I would add history, to see that I have quoted these passages correctly.  This is one of the problems of the modern sermon, versus the participatory Bible study, that it is way too easy in a speech to miss a dubious point, and impossible for any leader wishing to teach correctly to explain a point.   

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An exact transcript of the one minute version of Simple Church Minute appears as the entry for July 8, 2012.

           

Monday, May 7, 2012

On being a gifted leader


            Today, I got around to reading some emails which are longer, and tend to be teachings.  One email I looked at was from my friend and missionary Don Davis, who relayed, from the blog www.preparehisway.com, the posting of April 25, 2010. This writer points out that Matthew 23:8-10, which begins by Jesus saying, “Call no man rabbi” was not merely his instructing the disciples not to use that word.  Some versions use the word “father” instead of rabbi, which I perceive to be a subtle shot at those denominations which have used that word as a title instead of “pastor.”  The point the writer is making, which is emphasized in the larger context, but which would naturally not be emphasized by teachers in the traditional western church system, is that Jesus was warning them against using any titles whatsoever in the New Covenant.  Whether they actually realized it at the time of its hearing, or not until the Holy Spirit came upon them in Acts 1, is a thing for God and them to know, and not us.

            I had been thinking about this situation for a couple of weeks.  If the gifts mentioned in Ephesians 4, along with Romans 12 and 1 Corinthians 12, are truly gifts of God, then no person or organization can give out titles rightly.  What I mean is this:  In our culture, most institutional churches call the head person pastor, a word they get from Ephesians 4.  Until a couple of years ago, I didn’t know that that word wasn’t used as a title until after the Reformation.  History gives us some inkling that the persons, including leaders, in the early church understood that word to be a modifier of “teachers”, in a way that in modern English would have been written pastor/teacher, pastor-teacher, or pasturing teacher.  Whatever way, today we have in some traditional churches that have wandered astray, pastors by title who are not even believers, and clearly, therefore, have received a title, but do not have the gift.  Here’s the opposite side:  If a person has that gift of God, and another believer, for whatever reason, doesn’t recognize it in that person, that gift is still is upon that person.  It doesn’t take my or any person’s recognizing the gift, and, therefore, certainly not that person sticking a title onto their name, to make the gift effective. 

            In the Old Testament, we consider Jeremiah to be a prophet, but we see that gifting brought him little but suffering, and the writings of the Old Testament do not show of anyone getting right with God, or growing closer to God, in his day through his ministry.  While many principles have changed from Old to New Covenants, usually  from a thing being in the physical realm among the physical Chosen People, to in the spiritual realm among the spiritually chosen of the New Covenant church, this aspect is equivalent, albeit more common in this era.  God’s gifting is not associated with people recognizing it.  In theory, the gifted person attempting to advertise it would come across as, in this one aspect, the opposite of spiritual maturity.  Part of the spiritual weakness in some parts of the church comes from a tendency of leaders, assuredly because they were taught to do this by the previous generation of leaders, is to attempt to lure as many people as possible into their program.  In John 6:60-71, Jesus showed the exact opposite interest when He said things that caused many to stop listening to Him and leave.

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Simple Church Minute 93--requirements for leadership

93—Requirements for leadership
THIS BLIP IS NOT ON FIRST RECORDING
My name is Tom; this is Simple Church Minute.
            I have mentioned in other blips that for a pastor/shepherd/teacher or any other ministry truly appointed by God, as opposed to any man or organization, that it is a function of gifting—both spiritual and natural, experience, maturity, faithfulness and obedience to the Holy Spirit, according to scripture.  Scripture says nothing about academic achievement or accreditation by any man or human organization.
            Natural gifting is our natural abilities—we believers have no more or less ability to use these as the unbeliever, with the note that occasionally the Holy Spirit will guide a person to specifically not use a natural gift for a reason.  Spiritual gifts are listed in Romans, Ephesians, and First Corinthians without a comment of whether this is a total list, and with the case of a number of gifts, little or no explanation of exactly what it is.  There is no explanation on any of the gifts as to why, other than no one has all of them.  One person I’ve heard has suggested that one of these gifts that seems worthless to the human mind is useful for exactly that reason—if the Creator of the universe wishes to give you something that you don’t see a use for, who are you or I to question his choice to give such a thing to you.  Experience and maturity makes all God’s gifts more powerful, as those are two aspects of wisdom.  Faithfulness is a quality that results in one receiving greater amounts of experience based on doing the right thing.  While God can use even our rebellious acts to His glory, it is a thing far better to be minimized.  Obedience to the Holy Spirit is putting that faithfulness into action.  Given the things we have seen of gifted persons publicly embarrassing themselves and, in turn, dishonoring Jesus and embarrassing fellow believers by their actions, it must be pointed out that obedience trumps gifting.  The Holy Spirit has given gifts of leadership to a sufficient amount of people that there is no need for any one believer to believe that he or she needs to be the mentor to more persons than he or she can physically and psychologically handle.  Jesus poured his life into 12, and possibly to a lesser degree, 70. 
            You can email me at simplechurchminute@gmail.com.  For more info on organic church, visit http://www.simplechurch.com/ or (local website)  

Simple Church Minute 83--Simson's Thesis #9

83—WS#9
My name is Tom; this is Simple Church Minute.
            We have been looking at German writer Wolfgang Simson’s 15 Theses towards a Re-Incarnation of Church.  Today, we look at Thesis #9, Return from organized to organic forms of Christianity.  On this idea, Simson writes, “The ‘Body of Christ’ is a vivid description of an organic being, not an organized mechanism.  Church consists, at the local level, of a multitude of extended spiritual families, which are organically related to each other as a network.  The way these communities function together is an integral part of the message of the whole.  What has become a maximum of organization with a minimum of organism has to be changed into a minimum of organization to allow a maximum of organism.  Too much organization has, like a straightjacket, often choked the organism for fear that something might go wrong.  Fear is the opposite of faith, and not exactly a Christian virtue.  Fear wants to control; faith can trust.  Control, therefore, may be good, but trust is better.  The body of Christ is entrusted by God into the hands of steward-minded people with a special charismatic gift to believe that God is still in control, even if they are not.  Today we need to develop regional and national networks based on trust, not a new arrangement of political ecumenism, for organic forms of Christianity to re-emerge. (Unquote)
            In another place, Simson wrote that if nothing can go wrong, nothing much can go right either.  Personally, I’ve seen that not only does it take letting go of the agenda for the Holy Spirit to work most powerfully, but when something does go wrong, that recognition, and how mature believers deal with it is used by the Spirit to bring everyone to greater maturity.
            You can examine these 15 ideas at your own pace, on the web, at www.simsonwolfgang.de. You can email me at simplechurchminute@gmail.com.  For more info on house churches, visit http://www.simplechurch.com/ or  with regards to the local area at (local website).


                                                                                            

Simple Church Minute 80--Simson's Thesis #6

80—WS#6
My name is Tom; this is Simple Church Minute.
            Recently, these blips have been discussing Wolfgang Simson’s 15 Theses towards a Re-Incarnation of Church.  Thesis #6 is “No church is led by a pastor alone.”  On this idea, Simson says, The local church is not led by a pastor, but fathered by an elder, a man of wisdom and engaged with reality.  The local house churches are then networked into a movement by the combination of elders and members of the so-called fivefold ministries (apostles, prophets, pastors, evangelists, and teachers) circulating from ‘house to house’, like the circulation of blood.  Here there is a special foundational role to play for the apostolic and prophetic ministries (Eph. 2:20, 4:11,12).  A pastor (shepherd) is an important member of the whole team, but he cannot fulfill more than a part of the whole task of ‘equipping the saints for the ministry’, and he has to be complimented synergistically by the other four ministries in order to function properly.” (unquote)
            The whole idea that a healthy church has a balance of ministry from the five ministries mentioned in Ephesians 4:11 and 12 and with more than one person with each of these giftings is an idea that I, personally, have not heard of being examined, period, but there it is in scripture as a direction for the church.  Much of the church in the west is stuck on one person given the title pastor, without regard to his or her actual gifting, if any, as the end all in ministry and a title within a hierarchy which has words found in scripture as an excuse for the hierarchy’s existence.  Leadership in the church is not to be militaristic, but a structure for the purpose of helping everyone higher up and further into Jesus.
            You can read back and ahead about Simson’s 15 Theses at www.simsonwolfgang.de. You can make a comment or ask a question of me at simplechurchminute@gmail.com , and you can find out more about simple church at http://www.simplechurch.com/ and locally at (local website).

Friday, December 3, 2010

Simple Church Minute 40--covering

40—covering
My name is Tom; this is Simple Church Minute.
            In the early church, there were leaders, but no flow chart type hierarchy such as one would find in government, military, business, or our modern institutional churches.
Jesus is the head of the church; we are told that in Col. 1.18 and Eph. 5.23. Each believer can be prompted by the Holy Spirit.  Believers might be apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors/teachers, elders, deacons/deaconesses, presbyters, workers, overseers, servants not as a matter of an appointed office with title, but according to faith, gifting, experience, character, and obedience to the Holy Spirit.  The Revised Standard Version has First Timothy chapter 3 verse 1 say “office of an elder”, but that is not in the original language.  This is an example of a translator putting in, possibly without realization, his cultural experience instead of what the writing actually said.
            Just one generation after the the apostles trained by Jesus, the idea of covering crept into the church. Cyprian of Carthage taught that every believer was accountable to a spiritual authority, with only the top person in a hierarchy being accountable to God alone.  This structure solidified in middle ages Catholicism, the Reformation removed some layers, but the idea never disappeared.  The covering doctrine reappeared in the charismatic flavor of the church under the teaching of Juan Carlos Ortiz in Argentina and the New Wine Magazine writers in the U.S.  All this runs contrary to the priesthood of all believers in which ministry is functional, organic, and shared by all believers before God.
            You can email me at simplechurchminute@gmail.com.  For more information on simple forms of honoring Jesus corporately, visit http://www.simplechurch.com/, or locally at (local website).