Thursday, October 28, 2010

Future Glory


"I have now to ask whether you can consent to part with your daughter early next spring, to see her no more in this world; whether you can consent to her departure, and her subjection to the hardships and sufferings of missionary life; whether you can consent to her exposure to the dangers of the ocean, to the fatal influence of the southern climate of India; to every kind of want and distress; to degradation, insult, persecution, and perhaps a violent death. Can you consent to all this, for the sake of him who left his heavenly home, and died for her and for you; for the sake of perishing, immortal souls; for the sake of Zion, and the glory of God? Can you consent to all this, in hope of soon meeting your daughter in the world of glory, with the crown of righteousness, brightened with the acclamations of praise which shall redound to her Saviour"

- A missionary to Burhma asking for his fiancee's hand. The father left it up to her. She said yes.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Sermon Audio

Hey Guys, this is a sermon I preached last Sunday 10/17.  It is the second sermon in a ten week series of the story of God. Enjoy , I hope it pushes you towards the Gospel and therefore the adoration of God.

Ben

http://www.kaleochurch.com/sermon/20101017-story-of-god--week-2

Monday, August 9, 2010

Transcript of a Sermon on Matthew 9: 34-38


·        I am here to love and serve you with my gifts. I pray that you will be blessed richly by the holy spirit we will see the Gospel triumphant and God receive glory for the work that he doing here in this community. (Pray)
·         Intro the Story
o   Good morning guys. In the story that we are digging into we are going to experience Jesus’s heart towards his city. In the piece of Matthew that we are going to be going over today we are going to rally behind and discuss how Christ models for us a heart of desperate love for those who he is sent to. We are going to discuss what it looks like for us to take on this posture, why we are taking on this posture, and how we can take on this posture. Its a beautiful snapshot. Lets walk through it together.
·         Tell the story:
o   35 And Jesus went throughout all the cities and villages, teaching in their synagogues and proclaiming the gospel of the kingdom and healing every disease and every affliction. 36 When he saw the crowds, he had compassion for them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd. 37 Then he said to his disciples, “The harvest is plentiful, but the labourers are few; 38 therefore pray earnestly to the Lord of the harvest to send out labourers into his harvest.”
o   What were some initial things that hit you?
§  Look For:
·         Proclamation of the gospel not just alluding to it.
·         He is in the city, going to the centres of the city
·         He is healing diseases
o   How was he responding to the people?
·         He has compassion for the crowds
·         He sees there affliction (harassed and helpless)
·         He sees they have no shepherd and he promotes the gospel as the remedy of that issue.
·         We see in Christ’s heart for those who he was sent to as a desperately in love king. There is some irony in this story is there not? We have a king, the greatest king, humbled into total obscurity, pleading for the allegiance of his own people who are barely listening. Think about how frustrating that would be. It wasn’t as if he was a cruel king, he was the greatest king! The kindest, most joy filled, wonderful king of all. Yet they would not listen.
·         I want to tell you guys another story. Its also about a king.
Adaption of Kierkegaard’s Parable of the King and the Maiden

o   "There once was a king who loved a humble maiden. This king was of uncommon royal lineage. He was a king above kings, with power and might to make all others humble before him. Statesmen trembled at his pronouncements. None dared breathe a word against him, for he had the strength to crush all who opposed him. The wealth of his holdings was unfathomable. Tribute arrived on a daily basis from lesser kings who hoped to gain his favour.
And yet this mighty king was melted by love for a humble maiden who lived in the poorest village in his vast kingdom. He longed to go to this maiden and announce his love for her, but here arose the king’s dilemma: how to declare his love? Certainly, he could appear before her resplendent in his royal robes and surrounded with the Royal Guard, ready to carry her away in a carriage inlaid with gold and precious stones. He could bring her to the palace and crown her head with jewels and clothe her in the finest silks. She would surely not resist this type of proposal, for no one dared to resist the king.

But would she love him?

She might say she loved him. She might be awed by his royal splendor and tremble at the thought of being blessed with such an amazing opportunity. She might tell herself that she would be foolish to reject such a marriage proposal. But would she love him, or would she go through the motions all the while living a life of empty duty, nursing a private grief for the life she had left behind? Would she love him or regret the moment of being face to face with the overwhelming grandure of the king?

Or would she be happy at his side, loving him for himself and not for his title or riches or power?

He did not want a wife who behaved as a subject to his royal decrees, cringing at his word and unwilling to do anything but agree with all he said and did. Instead, he wanted an equal, a queen whose love knew no restrictions or limitations. He wanted an equal whose voice would speak to him at all times without hesitation. Love with his beloved maiden must mean equality with her. He wanted a relationship with the woman that had neither barriers nor walls in which he was not a king and she was not a poor subject of the crown. The love shared between them would cross the chasm that threatened to keep them apart, bringing the king and peasant together and making the unequal equal. In short, he wanted the maiden to love him for himself and not for any other reason.

He had to find a way to win the maiden’s love without overwhelming her and manipulating her emotions. The king realized that to win the maiden’s love, he had only one choice. He had to become like her, without power or riches and without the title of king. Only then would she be able to see him simply for who he was and not for what his position made him. He had to become her equal, and to do this he must leave all that he had.

And so one night, after all within the castle were asleep, he laid aside his golden crown and removed his rings of state. He took off his royal robes of silk and linen and redressed himself in the common clothes of the poorest of the kingdom. Leaving by way of the servant’s entrance, the king left his crown, his castle, and his kingdom behind. As the next day’s sun rose in the east, the maiden emerged from her humble cottage to find herself face to face with a stranger, a common man with kindly eyes who requested an opportunity to speak with her and, in time, to court her for her hand in marriage."
·         After they were married because of the kings sacrifice, how do you think she felt towards her new husband?
o   She was immensely thankful to him.
o   She loved him even greater then if he came to her in all his glory.
·         How would you use your new position of queen after you were treated in such a manner?
·         Is this not like us?
o   Are we not the disgusting humble maidens who were adored out of the favour of the only great King? Did he not in his mercy humble himself into being a beggar –just as humble and despicable as us? HE WAS THE SENT KING FOR OUR HAND. IT WAS HIM WHO WAS SENT TO BE SACRIFICED FOR US! And he did this totally and utterly out of the radical love he has for us.
·         This is the truth that allows us to be missionaries like Jesus. This is what enables us to serve, to love to share the gospel in all its forms.
o   Let me tell you how.
·         Matthew 9:35-38
o   We see that Christ was so heartbroken for the people he was called to.  This is exactly how we need to be in seeking after our mission. People who are not heartbroken over people who are dying will never help those who are dying. Think about every starving child commercial you have seen, now think if your friends child, or you neighbours child, or even your child were in the same place. You would try everything in your ability to save them from their horrible plight wouldn’t you? We do not care if we do not heartbroken over it.
o   It is the same with our mission! People die every day and most do not enter life to be with the father. Hell is filling. They die, separated from the father because they did not put their trust in Christ. The only way that we will care enough to tell them about it is if we are living in the truth that we were once them ourselves.
§  We must realize and be desperately in love with them because we were saved by one who was desperately in love with us.  
§  We need to be broken for our city because Christ was broken for us.
§  The intense dedication that we see in the scriptures to mission can only be achieved when we are believing that we were intensely dedicated to by Christ in his life, death, burial, and resurrection. This is the only thing that will free us.
·         It is only in this practice of having faith in Christ that we will begin to see our sin of complacency die and life reign.
§  John 4:7-12
·         7 Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God, and whoever loves has been born of God and knows God. 8 Anyone who does not love does not know God, because God is love. 9 In this the love of God was made manifest among us, that God sent his only Son into the world, so that we might live through him. 10 In this is love, not that we have loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins. 11 Beloved, if God so loved us, we also ought to love one another. 12 No one has ever seen God; if we love one another, God abides in us and his love is perfected in us.
·         It is only then that we can truly “have compassion” on your context. It is only then that you can see them “as sheep without a shepherd”. It is only then that “ you can pray earnestly for labourers”.
·         How can we grow in this belief?
o   Be living in a community that constantly is speaking and modelling this truth of the gospel to you
o   Be in the word and prayer constantly
§  You can live in and experience by the holy spirit how Christ has done this on your behalf.
o   BE HANGING OUT WITH PEOPLE
§  You cannot be broken over people who are not around you or who are un aware of you.
§   We need to be there.

·         Go live in what Christ has done. I do not do a very good job of living in this heart of love for the context that I have been called to. Please aid me as my new community in spurring me on to this belief. 

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Know yourself Equipper Part 1: spiritual gifts




In the community that God has birthed around me I have been given the immense pleasure and honour to serve in helping develop leaders. In this charge by the Holy Spirit, our saviour has been faithful in equipping me in the ministry of other men who are called in the same way. I have been given some useful tools for serving and enabling leaders to be the church in the certain ways God has gifted them to be so. This is another post regarding leadership. It is for those who are called to equip the saints for acts of ministry. If this is you please read on, if it is not read on if you like so that you may love and serve those who strive to serve you.

When Christ ascended after his resurrection he left a ragtag band of rebel conspirators, blue collar fisherman, crooked government officials, professional whores, and cowardly followers. This laughable motley crew was Gods foundation for the way he was going to appeal to the nations. His church was going to be built on these misshapen rocks. In no other group were Pauls words more true than with these men and women when he said regarding the church,



"26 For consider your calling, brothers: not many of you were wise according to worldly standards, [2] not many were powerful, not many were of noble birth. 27 But God chose what is foolish in the world to shame the wise; God chose what is weak in the world to shame the strong; 28 God chose what is low and despised in the world, even things that are not, to bring to nothing things that are, 29 so that no human being [3] might boast in the presence of God. 30 And because of him [4] you are in Christ Jesus, who became to us wisdom from God, righteousness and sanctification and redemption, 31 so that, as it is written, "Let the one who boasts, boast in the Lord." (1 Cor. 1:26-31)
But sadly and gloriously enough, this starts to become familiar does it not? Are we not in our own way just as destitute in our abilities as those early followers? The stolen moments of gossip, late night lusts, backstabbing, eating disorders, suicide attempts, and all other obvious disbeliefs in the gospel are marked in our history. At least that is true for me and my community and I don't suspect that we are unique. That is why we need help leaders. The most potent and evil lie of the enemy is that of self sustainability. We have nothing inherent in us that will enable us to build up the saints in the gospel to be sent out. Let us not forget the gospel as we build people up in it. Remember the way in which you were saved? It had so little to do with you. Your role was to except the obvious, the truth. You earned your salvation as the poet earns the sunset, by seeing it. It was revealed not, discovered. (Luke 10:21) You continued in that salvation by faith did you not-for it was not your works that sanctified you either. "For in it the righteousness of God is revealed from faith for faith, [5] as it is written, "The righteous shall live by faith." (Rom. 1:16) It is the belief in the gospel that saves us, but it is the belief in it that preserves us, sanctifies us also. You are not only saved by your faith but to your faith. Your ability, your power is foreign and even hurtful to your sanctification. Therefore, your ability to lead and serve is not yours either. "It is God who works, both to will and to work for his good pleasure" (Phil 2:13).

Jesus did not simply allow his disciples to immediately start fulfilling his great commission right after his ascension. But rather told them to wait for his power to enable them for works of ministry. (Acts 1:8) Then and only then would they do the work set before them. It is in his great working that we can do church. And there is great wisdom in waiting for the Holy Spirit as evidenced on the day of Pentecost when 5,000 people committed themselves to Christ by the workings of the Holy Spirit. Paul adds to this implicit pattern with explicit command to the Church in Corinth in the twelfth chapter of his first letter, verses four through seven. "Now there are varieties of gifts, but the same Spirit; 5 and there are varieties of service, but the same Lord; 6 and there are varieties of activities, but it is the same God who empowers them all in everyone. 7 To each is given the manifestation of the Spirit for the common good." As you can see here in this chapter if you read on is the extant of the spirit empowered giftings that are to build up the Church. Furthermore, He "gives" the church people who are equipped by the spirit to build them up in works of ministry. (Eph 4: 11) We as those who are to lead are not doing so because of an objective knack or charismatic personality, rather by the empowerment of the living God who is good to redeem. This truth corresponds with and is obeyed by our belief in the gospel. If we are living in accordance to the annals and precepts of the glorious truth of whom Jesus is and what he does- faith in Christ- then we will stray from pride and what is really false Gospel. What believer in the Gospel is propelled and motivated by himself? He knows that he is worthy of nothing more than hell, eternal separation. He knows that it took a perfect God dying for his sin, to save him from himself. That is why he lives as he is saved. He works as he is saved, by grace in Christ that is given to him on the cross, by a life empowered by the Holy Spirit through faith. That is our power.

Why do I go through this before I get to the point of this post? Why would a post called "know yourself" have so little to do with me, the leader? If that is not your question then I may have failed because that is exactly the point. What I am about to un fold is going to illustrate tools by which you can gauge your place so we do not have a case of mixed roles or ears trying to be feet in the body of Christ. But this cannot be mixed up with a personality test. WE ARE NOT UNCOVERING YOUR ABILITES BUT RATHER PRAYING THROUGH HOW THE SPIRIT HAS ENABLED YOU BY GRACE TO SERVE HIM AND THE BODY. This is not written so that you may find yourself to be a teacher, or a prophet, or an apostle. Rather, it is written so that you may find yourself to be a son of God by grace that has been given a job with tools to do it. It is a question of identity. You were purchased by blood to be a co heir, not a pastor.

With that stated, here are some assumptions. I am a staunch believer that Jesus is the head Pastor of the global church and therefore of the local Church as well. He will build it (king) (Mat. 16:18), he is the mediator (priest) (Heb. 3:1), he is the arbiter of truth (prophet) (Deut 18:15). Therefore there is not one man to a Church who can address all facets of leadership- i.e. teaching, counselling, organization etc. I do not see that in scripture, anywhere. Rather I see men who are called to a similar vision who are gifted in various leadership gifting who enable, encourage, submit to and organize one another for equipping the saints to believe the gospel and thus be the Church in their specific regional/ urban/ rural contexts. That is an assumption; that the following jobs, perspectives and gifting are to be worked out in teams, period. If you do not agree with me then you are going to have some issues with the following exhortation but I urge you, get alone with your bible and search the new testament for evidence of a "lone ranger" pastor who is not called to operate within a team who all submits to the spirit for direction and the Lord Jesus Christ in headship.

Now that's out of the way, let's roll up our sleeves and get to work. If you are still with me we have established that your giftingS to build up the church are not yours, but the Spirits work in you. That is part of the manifestation of the spirit not your ability per se. In the following we will examine what exactly those manifestations could be so that we can be most effective. At the end of the day I want any leader who reads this to be equipped and freed up to do what he is gifted to do and not what he thinks he should do. Do not get me wrong, I think that there are those who have a very hefty gift set that enables them to be effective in many facets of building up the body, but if we are honest this person is probably not us. Usually those people are called to a vast ministry which involves apostolic type work which initiates movements and church plants but then hands them over to teams that he has trained. However, these men are few because we only need a few. They impact many so there is not as much need for them as they have a large influence, where as the need for people gifted in teaching or shepherding is much greater as they have a smaller influence. The more people influenced by a specific gifting the less we need of that gifting where as the inverse is also true. To have more than one Paul results in redundancy, not increased effectiveness. Therefore the majority of us will have a more focused and specific gift set because of the need for us and therefore require us to work together in consensus rather than monarchy.

The following is an explication of how you can effectively reckon how you are gifted then what that might entail. There are some theologically based epistemological helps that I have found quite useful in learning how exactly your gifts flesh themselves out. Not the gifting specifically but rather how that gift is utilized in how you think. Its end is to determine how you filter the world, the word, and people through certain lenses. Before I get into that though I think it would be first good to illustrate exactly what the spiritual gifts are in regards to those who are to lead and equip the saints. I will get into the epistemological stuff in part two. So here you are, the moment you have all been waiting for, the spiritual gifts as they pertain to equipping the saints for works of ministry.

I am going to draw from prescriptive, explicit sections of the bible where Paul illustrates specific gifts which are either apparently or definitely used to equip your community in being the Church. Please note also that you can be blessed with more than one, not be blessed with only leading/ overseer gifts, or have only one. Christ is our sufficiency, not our gifts. These cannot save you. Also, as I move through the following gifts I will try to give insight in what that gift entails or how it is manifested. My thoughts are based on either my experience, my community's experience, or scripture. And lastly, the following gifts are going to be organized in first the paradigm Paul gives us for those who are to build up the body for works of ministry in Ephesians 4 then I intend to supplement those gifts with other ones he outlines in other books which are also useful in ministry. I consider the Ephesians list to be a very comprehensive in its wisdom but I am not convinced that it is a formula for a church leadership staff. Rather, it appears to be a global model which is general in its application. I hold this view because there is no need for an apostle to be stationed at a local church for long periods of time. Then he would not be an apostle. So that being said I take it as it is stated, that the list here is a group that God raises up to equip the saints, period. No more, no less. It is neither sodal nor modal.

Apostles, prophets, evangelists, shepherds, and teachers.

This specific list of gifts in Ephesians has been considered unique by some as a either a description for what your leadership team needs to look like or a description of what your apostolic team needs to look like. I am utterly unconvinced of the former and still un sure of the later. However, since the purpose of this post is neither to define an apostolic team nor a leadership staff (a task I am unqualified in taking on) we can analyze the following and receive at the very least some good descriptions which will aid us in defining how some of us can serve whether that be sodally (regionally) or modally (locally).

Apostle (apostolos; Strong's #: G652): This word and office/ gifting, depending on who you talk to, has been the subject of a minor controversy. There are some individuals or even denominations who contend that it is simply an office given to the twelve and then Paul, Barnabas, and Timothy. I see no evidence for that contention. I am not here however to dispute it, if anyone has issues then talk to me. I do see the wisdom and some theological onus laid on idea that there was an office of the apostle that was given to the twelve that has sense closed, but am not convinced. We are now left with the gift of apostleship enabled by the Holy Spirit. Whichever the case, there seems to be definite biblical backing for both the gifting of Apostleship and the activity of the Apostles in the New Testament. This gifting pertains to those who are gifted in a regional perspective when they think, pray and engage in the body. More often than not in there regional perspective they develop systems of care or networks for multiple gatherings or even churches. These members of the body are usually gifted heavily in the leading/ teaching/ preaching/ prophetic gifting do to their necessity of raising up leaders and casting vision. In many ways their ministry goes past the local Church while they are involved in their respective local churches. They are more mobile then static. This precedent is heavily set from Christ leading and developing a team which will initiate movements that will eventually influence the world in a relatively short time. The disciples are called "apostles" multiple times and go out to plant churches and train up men throughout their area and beyond. Of course we see Paul following the same pattern and training up others to follow up in his apostolic ministry (i.e. Barnabas and Timothy). Contemporary illustrations of this gifting are manifested in men like Mark Driscoll, Alan Hirsch, Jeff Vanderstelt , Steve Timmis, Martin Luther and Billy Graham. You may have this gifting if you tend to serve in big picture ways, able to lead easily and equip people naturally. You tend to walk into a room and locate leaders and can easily see where this expression of the gospel needs to be in regards to mission. At many times you have a long term vision plan for many things concerning the church and how that factors into regional perspective with other churches.

Prophets (Prophetes; Strong's #: G4396): Here is another hot button gifting so to speak. At many times this particular gifting is intimidating because of its obvious supernaturalism and its seeming correlation to the Old Testament prophets. The former issue I think has arisen from a general lack of faith in the American Church in Gods power and a desire for control. The opposition has come as well with the advent of cessationism which is in my opinion an overreaction to the weak theology of the main vein of Charismatic or Pentecostal movements. The issue concerning a potential link to the Old Testament prophets is usually out of a concern of them being able to add to scripture as a kind of arbiter of God's word that is indisputable. When we do a brief survey of what is meant by the word "prophet" in the New Testament church who are operating out of this gift, there is no basis for this fear. (Acts 11:27,28; 13:1-3; 15:30-33; 21:10-12; 1 Cor. 12:28,29; Eph 3:5, Eph 4:11) We find that God has not only given us many examples of what that means but also rules and guidelines for how that gift is to be exercised in our gatherings both implicitly by example and explicitly through command. As we survey these verses we find that those with the prophet gifting serve in two different types of exhortation. The first is one of a general revealing of truth where future events are not the focus but rather the conditions of people's hearts are revealed or truths are displayed. This does require supernatural insight however due to the fact that you are getting revelation on what truth to spontaneously reveal realities about people that they have strived to keep secret. The second capacity is that of specific revelations about the future. As it would seem there are events that the spirit reveals to people with this gifting which tell them of what the future holds and how it affects those in the church. It is a beautiful leadership tool as it can reveal and cast vision that spirit is calling us to as well as display the glory and power of God. In this gifting though it is extremely important to understand the governances that the Spirit has laid out in scripture as illustrated in the above verses. In this definition of the New Testament Prophet I think we get a picture which is quite different from the one our knee jerk takes us too. This gift is overt and one which is plain to the gifted so a prescription I think is not necessary here. If you can prophecy and it corresponds with how the spirit has described in scripture then you have it. Contemporary leaders who have this gifting are those like Mark Driscoll who has exercised it responsibly in his service to the Church.

Evangelist (euaggelistēs; Strong's #: G2099): Now that we have waded through the mine field of gifts that we as American Christians have the hardest time with, we can now settle down into a more comfortable gifting like evangelism. In addition to gifts such as helps and services this is a gift which in addition to being a specific manifestation of the spirit is also a responsibility of all the saints and a right response to the gospel; this gifting however results in a more focused and empowered expression of spreading the gospel. While in scripture we have only a short list of people who are said to have the gifting, no demonstrated acts one exercising the gift. However, we can glean from what the word means a better understanding of what it entails. The original word is euaggelistēs which literally means a bringer of good tidings or good news. It really means bringer of the gospel in the biblical context. This being a spiritual gifting, that is a supernatural enablement by the Holy Spirit, we can safely say with relative certainty that this is a gift which enables a leader to communicate and declare the good news of Jesus in a way which goes beyond the average enablement of the spirit for every Christian. This gifting is a dynamic and necessary one for apostolic teams as well as the local Church. They are initiators for mission for their respective movements and teamed with a teaching gift can be a deadly combination for the kingdom. Those gifted with this are able to train up the larger body to be the church, the sent out ones. People with this gift are not necessarily teachers but it can manifest itself that way. It can simply be someone who quietly establishes social networks with intentionality, leaving a legacy of many won for Christ. However it can also be someone like a Billy Graham, Charles Spurgeon, or George Whitefield who is gifted in preaching and uses their preaching gift along with their evangelist gift to cause revival.

Shepherd(poimēn; Strong's #: G4166): Shepherd or Pastor is another gift that the spirit gives us to build up the body according to Ephesians 4:11. Comfortingly enough, the one who we see exhibit this gift most is The Great Shepherd Jesus. From him we can glean the best example of how to Shepherd and use the gifting. He exercised it best so we can see it best from him. If you feel after reading this that you have this gift I encourage you to reread some gospels so that you may see exactly how our King shepherds his sheep. Aside from the beautiful illustrations of faithful pastoring we get from Christ the specific ways those gifted with the shepherd orientation work out their gift in our context of the Church requires some investigation. We do not get overt examples or illustrations of what the pastor gifting looked like in the early church but we can draw on some obvious correlation between the word used and the action one is gifted to perform. We see the word literally means "a shepherd", a keeper of sheep. We also see that this word is closely related to the Greek word which means "to protect". Also, the context in which Jesus uses it seems to illustrate a protector/ leader of sheep whose job it is to "care" for his flock. This put into the context of a local leader in the church, illustrates a person whose Job it is to minister and care for the people who have been entrusted to them. This leader would have a deep affinity for his flock which would fuel his ambition for their care. You may have this gift if you are first and foremost concerned with the hearts and minds of specific people. In an intentional way you seek to always counsel, pray with and teach your community to grow in the gospel. It would fit then that Shepherds are those who are more local in their orientation, not necessarily regional. I believe that a manifestation of Shepherd exists within an apostolic team who would shepherd leaders and tend to their hearts. Some modern day leaders who are gifted this way are leaders like CJ Mahaney or John Piper who minister faithfully those whom God has entrusted to them. CJ Mahaney could be considered one of those shepherds who care for leaders more specifically.

Teachers (Didaskalos; Strong's #: G1321): This last gifting in the series of gifts given to us in the Ephesians list for building up the saints in the gospel is probably the one which is most self evident. It is one gift which all the other gifts build off of. If you cannot teach then you probably don't have the other leadership gifts. I say this for two reasons. I do not see how you can inspire movements and train up teams (apostle), declare and cast truth (prophet), declare and speak the gospel (evangelism), or shepherd a flock (pastor) without being able to teach. And secondly it is a requirement for eldership (1 Timothy 3:2). We must all be able to teach, not necessarily well, but we have to be able to do it. Teachers are characterized by both the effective transmission of information but also the ability to make it understandable and desirable to attain. This gift is the foundation for the others. If you have this gift then you are prone to explanation dissection. You easily understand and you are able to replicate that information into appropriate forms for specific audiences. Contemporary examples of this are great teachers such as Matt Chandler, Tim Keller, and Mark Driscoll.

Administration and Leadership.

Administration (kybernesis; Strong's #: G2941): This is a gift Paul mentions in passing in 1Cor. 12:28 and a word which is used only once in the whole bible. It actually directly means governance or to govern. So we could paraphrase that text by saying God has set some in the Church... to govern. This gifting is an indispensible one once you start leading more than twenty people. However, this is not a "leadership" gifting per se. It is just really nice if either you or someone else on you leadership team has it. I say this because it is entirely possible to have a quiet and understated ministry of serving the church with your gift without having to be in a leadership position. It is the one that binds and supports the other gifts in any expression of the body as it organizes and develops systems of care and networks by which the body can be loved, taught, and built up in the truth of the gospel. Sadly we see that the immediate assumption of this gift is that they schedule gatherings and buy real estate but at many times people with this gift are really well used in developing sequential training models or replication strategies or anything else that involves pragmatic, down to earth structure. It is then that we see a whole new world open up for this manifestation of the spirit because we see that it contains not a simple organizational mindset but a very specific experiential outlook which can leak into almost all facets of leadership which can pragmatize and bring down to earth the teacher/ apostle/ shepherds/ evangelist's vision. They are indispensible for the body. This is another gifting that if you have it you probably know it according to the description that I just gave. However if when you walk into a room where the body has expressed itself and immediately start to think experientially then you may have this gifting- how are people experiencing the ministry that is serving them. How are they being cared for in regards to how the vision is being implemented? Do not worry if you do not feel focused in this gifting as its focus is broad because there are so many ways that it can used. A good utilize of this gifting in modern terms are people like Mark Driscoll or Dr. James Dobson who have developed massive systems and curriculum to aid in the care of the body.

Leadership (proistemi; Strong's #: G4291): I waited to do this one until the end because I assumed that it would be assumed if you are taking any of this to heart. But this is the gift that binds together all the above gifting (with the possible exception of administration). If you are exercising them with any effectiveness in the spirit then you have this one to one degree or another. Obviously inherent within the name we know what this gift entails. The original word essentially means to preside over or to superintend. No real loss of meaning in this transliteration. However because this gift binds the entire over seer gifts there are some important things to note and this is where the beauty of a pastoral team comes into play. It manifests in different capacities and degrees of potency. There are some who are effective leaders of leaders but ineffective in smaller groups. There are those who can lead and inspire thousands while there are those who are best in discipling and developing three or four or even one! That is why it is necessary to know how you can serve and what you have been given by the spirit

What to do with this.

Now I want you to remember that this was neither a charge nor a redefinition of who you are. The sole reason for this post was to serve the leaders in my community with a gospel centred biblical tool to help them with serving others in their very specific and unique gift set. I implore you to remember that all these gifts are administered by the holy spirit that dwells in you richly by the death, burial, and resurrection of our risen saviour and Lord. If some, none, or all of these gifts were could be located in your realm of service then I implore you to not take them as your identity but rather praise God for your son-ship in him. And then, out of love, serve those around you to whom God has given you to disciple. Please do not consider this the beginning of the rest of your life, rather consider them slaves who you will whip until they serve your master Jesus until he returns or calls you home.

In part two of this series we will explore a less reified way in which we can gauge our selves as leaders. We get to mess around with some more theological/ philosophical ways we can know ourselves better as leaders in the body. This is done predominantly to piss off the Shepherd nature of Karl and the general old man nature of the Hamburgular. Love you guys. 





http://www.wordle.net/show/wrdl/2214368/1_corinthians_12

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Dont Fall Asleep






You got your electricity
The heat is on high
You cant keep your eyes away
From the TV
You walk outside
With your face on the ground
Too tired to hear the sound
Of a child on the rooftops
And he was kicking off slate
Do you remember when
You were a boy
And you were void of hate
Because I know a place
Where the smiles last for days
And the people celebrate
At the drop of rain
They go outside
On the barefooted ground
They can hear the sound
They can hear the sound
But switch back to the first world
The smiling face on a TV
A man walks out of a square house
Into a square car
And he wonders what happened to me
I don̢۪t ask him where he̢۪s going
Cause he doesn̢۪t know
When he̢۪ll be back
He sits there in his car
With the keys in his lap
Well have you figured it out
Have you figure it out
Well have you figured it out
Have you figured it out
Well have you figured it out
Have you figured it out
Cause I haven̢۪t got a clue
I was crossing the tracks
I saw a big yellow light
Coming for me
What happened to the blinking red lights
They must have run out of batteries
And I should stand up for my friends
Because I believe in them
And if someone puts them down
Why am I silent till the end
You better smile when I say hi
Because I̢۪m smiling whenever you̢۪re nearby
Well I guess you don̢۪t make a big deal
Out of anything anymore
And you pass a car turned over on the side of the road
You contemplate a reversal of the roles
But you don̢۪t pull over to help
You̢۪ll forget about it
Three seconds down the road
Well have you figured it out
Have you figure it out
Well have you figured it out
Have you figured it out
Well have you figured it out
Have you figured it out
Cause I haven̢۪t got a clue
And I held everything against you
Because you see you never held anything at all
Against me
You better smile when I say hi
Because I̢۪m smiling whenever you̢۪re nearby
Well I guess you don̢۪t make a big deal
Out of anything anymore
And I was crossing the tracks
I saw a big yellow light
Coming for me
What happened to the blinking red lights
They must have run out of batteries
Now you
Just forget about it all
Cause all your things are GONE
GONE, GONE, GONE, GONE,
GONE, GONE, GONE, GONE,
GONE, GONE, GONE, GONE,
GONE, GONE, GONE, GONE,
GONE, GONE, GONE, GONE,
GONE, GONE, GONE, GONE,
GONE, GONE


Lyrics by Dispatch 


The Cost of following Jesus



25 Now great crowds accompanied him, and he turned and said to them, 26 “If anyone comes to me and does not hate his own father and mother and wife and children and brothers and sisters, yes, and even his own life, he cannot be my disciple. 27 Whoever does not bear his own cross and come after me cannot be my disciple. 28 For which of you, desiring to build a tower, does not first sit down and count the cost, whether he has enough to complete it? 29 Otherwise, when he has laid a foundation and is not able to finish, all who see it begin to mock him, 30 saying, ‘This man began to build and was not able to finish.’ 31 Or what king, going out to encounter another king in war, will not sit down first and deliberate whether he is able with ten thousand to meet him who comes against him with twenty thousand?32 And if not, while the other is yet a great way off, he sends a delegation and asks for terms of peace. 33 So therefore, any one of you who does not renounce all that he has cannot be my disciple.
 “Salt is good, but if salt has lost its taste, how shall its saltiness be restored? 35 It is of no use either for the soil or for the manure pile. It is thrown away. He who has ears to hear, let him hear.”

For Those Called to Leadership




The purpose of this is to identify the expectations and characteristics of a leader and teacher (whether sodal (apostolic team) or modal (local Church) in 1 Timothy.  However I concede that these commands are declared in a modal context, Paul, a sodal leader, commands people to emulate him thusly his commands can be taken in both leadership positions.

I hope that this can help to distil some core, gospel centred principles by which we can lead for the glory of God to replicate effective leaders for the purpose of the gospel.

1 Timothy:

The Topics He Addresses and commands he gives (explicit)

1.       Charge the body to (1:4)
a.       Not devote themselves to any other doctrine
b.      Not to devote themselves to any myths or genealogies
c.       But do devote themselves to faith which results in stewardship from God (or good order)
2.       The aim of an overseer is Love (1:5)
a.       This comes from a good conscience, a pure heart, and sincere faith
b.      If you swerve from these you will wander into vain discussion and you won’t have understanding.
3.       The law is everything that is in accordance with the gospel. That the law is laid down for those who don’t walk in the truth of the gospel. (1: 11)
4.       Wage good warfare by holding faith and a good conscience. (1:18-19)
a.       If you depart from these you make a shipwreck of your faith. Some in doing this have been handed over to Satan.
5.       Constantly be praying (supplications, prayers, intercessions, and thanksgiving) for all people especially for those who have authority so that the saints can live peaceful lives which are godly in every way. (2:1)
a.       This is good and we should do this with no malice because God desires everyone to be saved (regardless of persecution probably in context.)
b.      The reason and motivation of this particular mindset is that there is one God and the mediator of that God is Christ who gave himself up as a ransom for all. The Gospel is the motivation for this practice of praying.
6.       To ensure that the men in the body pray everywhere lifting their hands up in prayer not in anger. Women should also be modest and adorned in respectful apparel. This modesty should be an extension of their godliness. (2:8) (i.e. there works being an indication of their heart)
7.       Women are not to exercise authority or to teach (2:12)
8.       The office of overseer is a noble task (3:1)
a.       Overseers are to be:
                                                                                       i.      Above reproach
                                                                                     ii.      The husband of one wife
                                                                                    iii.      Sober minded
                                                                                   iv.      Self controlled
                                                                                     v.      Respectable
                                                                                   vi.      Hospitable
                                                                                  vii.      Able to teach
                                                                                viii.      Not a drunkard
                                                                                   ix.      Not violent but gentle
                                                                                     x.      Not quarrelsome
                                                                                   xi.      Not a lover of money
                                                                                  xii.      He must manage his household well
                                                                                xiii.      In dignity he must keep his children submissive
1.       If he cannot do this how can he mange the household of God?
                                                                                xiv.      He must not be a recent convert
1.       Or he could become puffed up
                                                                                 xv.      He must be well thought of by outsiders
9.       Deacons
a.       The qualifications of a deacon
                                                                                       i.      The must be dignified
                                                                                     ii.      Not double tongued
                                                                                    iii.      Not addicted to much wine
                                                                                   iv.      Not greedy or dishonest
                                                                                     v.      They must hold the mystery of the faith in good conscience
                                                                                   vi.      They must be tested to prove that they are “blameless”
                                                                                  vii.      Their wives must be dignified, not slanderers and faithful in all things.
                                                                                viii.      They must manage their children and households well.
b.      Paul warns Timothy that people will depart from the faith. They are those who do not give any allowance for their freedom in Christ. They forget that everything is made holy by the word and prayer. (4:5)This will happen by devoting themselves to the teaching of demons.
c.       Through human liars
d.      Through those with seared consciences
10.   Hold to the truths outlined by Paul and be a good servant of Christ Jesus. (4:6)
11.   Be trained in the words of the faith (the gospel) and good doctrine. (4:6)
12.   Train yourself in godliness so that you may strive to the end empowered by hope in the gospel. (4: 8)
13.   Command and teach the Gospel
14.   Set the believers an example in speech, in conduct, in love, in faith, in purity. (4:11)
15.   Timothy is to devote himself to the public reading of scripture, to exhortation to teaching (4: 13)
16.   Don’t neglect your gifts (your gifting needs to be nurtured and identified (4: 14)
17.   Immerse yourself in the utilization of your gifting. (4:15)
18.   Keep a close watch on yourself and on the teaching (4: 16)
a.       Persisting in this will save both yourself and your hearers.
19.   Don’t rebuke an older brother but encourage them. (5:1)
a.       Treat older woman as mothers
b.      Younger men as brothers
c.       Younger women as sisters in all purity
20.   Pay the elders, especially those who preach and teach (4:17-18)
21.   Do not except a charge against an elder unless the charge is brought upon by two or three witnesses.
a.       If they do sin though they are to be rebuked in the presence of all so that the other elders may stand in fear (4:20)
b.      Do these commands  and keep them not performing them partially or with out knowing all the facts.
22.   Do not allow anything else but the gospel be preached in the Church that person is puffed up, understands nothing, has an unhealthy craving for controversy, and all this produces envy, evil  suspicion, dissention, slander. It creates friction among the evil, depraved, deprived of truth, and they consider Godliness to be a means of wealth. (6:5-8)
23.   Flee all these things (6:11)
24.   Fight hard (6:11
a.       Pursue
                                                                                       i.      Faith
                                                                                     ii.      Love
                                                                                    iii.      Godliness
                                                                                   iv.      righteousness
                                                                                     v.      steadfastness
                                                                                   vi.      gentleness
25.   Charge the Rich to no put their faith in their riches (6:17)
a.      They are to trust in Gods power not there money’s
b.      They are to rich in good works
c.       This is to build a foundation by which they can grasp what true life is.
26.   Do not devote yourself to what some people are calling “knowledge”
a.      Rather guard the deposit entrusted to you

His implicit: encouragements/ commands/ illustrations/ personal example/ interaction with timothy

1.       Apostles are of Christ and commissioned by him (1:1)
2.       In close relationship with timothy (1:2)
3.       Paul  brings timothy along in his assertions. He assumes and welcomes his “son in the faith” into right understandings about doctrine. This can be immensely encouraging for a young leader and affirms him because his teacher is implicitly confirming his legitimacy in leadership. ( 1:8)
4.       He never departs or moves on from the gospel in his encouragement. He is content to teach and disciple timothy in it even in his talks about leadership. He is training him up in it even when discussing leadership. ( 1:11)
5.       He reinforces that the gospel has been entrusted to him. This is implicitly telling timothy that it is being entrusted to him as Paul is modelling leadership to him. (1:11)
6.       He openly praises and thanks God for his grace. ( 1:12) This rejoicing is for his ability to serve. He claiming his ability as a leader is as a result of the Lord, as he “judged me faithful, appointing me to his service”.  He is not putting up his own power as the catalyst for his leadership but rather God’s to his young leader. (1:12)
7.       He is openly confessing sin to his young leader. (1:14-15)
8.       He is a lover of Jesus and enabled by his spirit as a result of Gods great mercy demonstrated in the gospel as a way to show his great patience. (1:16)
9.       His life as a leader is to display that patience of God in the gospel. Paul’s life is to show practical examples of the gospel. (1:16)
10.   He openly praises and glorifies God in front of timothy. (1:17)
11.   He again calls him his child (1:18)
12.   He reminds him of the promises of God that were given him through prophecy. (1: 18)
13.   Paul is continually using the Gospel as the motivator and dominant appeal for his calls on Timothy. (2:1)
14.   Paul is communicating the same enabling practices that he just exercised with timothy in 1:8. He is showing that in training the called deacons to their office their faith will increase in their responsibility. If they are qualified that is. Paul demonstrates then he illustrates.  (1:13)
15.   Paul loves and longs to be with Timothy (3:14)
16.   He reminds Timothy that the church is not the rules and structures that he just illustrated.
17.   He reminds timothy of what the church is after his very pragmatic calls. He buttresses his practice with principle, his orthopraxy with orthodoxy. This is all massaging and implicitly littering young Timothy’s heart and mind with the Gospel in encouragement as well as instruction. This just reinforces the Pauline as well as the entirety of the biblical narrative’s emphasis on gospel centrality.  (3:15-16)
18.   Undergirded in his argument is the freedom that the gospel gives us. (4:5)
19.   Honor widows (5:3)
a.       Care for them
20.   He loves and cares for his young leader, giving him malady’s for his ailments. (5:23)
21.   He refers to him as the man of God (6:11)
22.   Paul brings him personally back to the Gospel by bringing him back to his salvation (6:12)
23.   He retells the gospel and charges him with it as he bursts forth in joy about Jesus to his young leader. (6:13-17)
24.   He wishes grace on him (6:21)
a.       This is really important to get across because this is not just something people said back then. It literally means that what Jesus has given you, may that be with you.
25.   The Gospel is the reason that he was appointed as an apostle and a teacher of the gentiles in faith and truth. (2:7)
a.       Deacons gain good standing for themselves and in being one they gain confidence in the faith that is in Christ. (Gospel appeal) (3:13)



These are some practical questions that we can apply to leadership lessons from 1 Timothy. They are organized in implicit and explicit examples. The explicit questions are the direct commands that Paul gives Timothy as a young leader- the prescriptive texts. The implicit commands are what we can glean from Pauls example of leadership not necessarily his commands- description. Remember bring the gospel to bear on your convictions. In answering these questions, refer back to the scripture and outline so that you can read them in context, not in religious isolation and proof texting.

Questions:

Explicit Questions:
1.       Do you charge people to devote themselves to the gospel?  (1:4)
a.       Do you in that charge dismantle the ways they are rebelling against the gospel specifically? (i.e. the endless genealogies etc.) This can work its self out in money, relationships, identity, safety, etc.
b.      Or do you give them principles that pray on their tendency to try and save themselves from their sin instead of the belief in Christ that enables them to respond in obedience.
2.       Could you be an overseer or deacon?  (1:5; 3-4)
a.       Is your faith sincere? Is your heart pure?
b.      Do find yourself wandering into vain discussion? Do you have understanding?
c.       If not there are places where you are not believing the Gospel.
3.       Are you constantly praying? (2:1)
a.       Is the motivation of this prayer mindset the gospel?
4.       Do see the people that  persecute you or those you work with or are ministering as one’s whom God wants to save?
5.       Do you preach freedom in Christ? Are there people who you need to softly illustrate there lack of faith?
a.       However, we need to weigh this scripture with other scripture. Paul says in Romans 16 where that we are not to make people stumble because of our freedom. This one takes alot of discernment, prayer and humility. Also context is important, a “freedom” rebuke probably will be better received on a one on one or in community rather then from the pulpit or monologue teaching settings.
b.      However, Paul does refer to people who restrict people from freedom as those who are liars and have seared consciences and are influenced by demons. ( 4:5)
6.       Would you say that you are trained in the words of faith (the gospel) or are you trained in empty theology and bible quotes?
7.       Do you set the believers an example in faith, conduct, purity and love. (4:11)
8.       Do you neglect gifts? Are you being a good servant and utilizing the means that God has given you to serve?  (4:14)
a.       The “Tri- perspectival” leader ship forms of prophet priest and king are helpful here.
9.       Do you flee all the things outlined in 6:5-8?

Implicit questions:
  1. Do we promote and display the Gospel as the reason we are appointed and serve? (2:7)
    1. As opposed to knowledge etc.
  2. When they are ready, do we appoint people or give them responsibility so that they may have confidence in Christ? (3:13)
  3. Do we bring our younger leaders along in your assertions of Godliness in you language? Do you refer to the people you are discipling as “sons” “fellow workmen” “men of God”? This can give them great confidence and motivation in the gospel as you confirm the spirits work in them. (1:11)
  4. Do you “entrust” the gospel to people? Declaring the gospel over them and allowing the holy spirit to work? (1:11)
  5. Do you illustrate your ability to serve and work in the gospel as a work of God enabling you for ministry? Do you put forth Gods power continually instead of your power?  (1:12)
  6. Do you openly confess sin to those you teaching or discipling? (1:14-15)
  7. Do you have familial relationships with people you are discipling? (1:18)
  8. Is the Gospel the dominant appeal to all of you exhortations? (2:1)
  9. Do you demonstrate then illustrate? (1:13)
  10. Do you love and long to be with people you are discipling? This is indicative of how much you love them? (3:14
  11. Do you buttress your practice with principle? IS the gospel the reason for your doing? (3:15-16)
  12. Do you know the people you are discipling enough to know if they are sick? (5:23)
  13. Do you bring people back to the Gospel personally by reminding them of their conversion? Or do you ”encourage” them by giving them something other then the gospel? (6:12)
  14. Do you routinely re-tell the Gospel to people? (6:13-17)