Followship in the Fellowship
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This message was delivered to a congregation that had
recently suffered a “split” when a rebellious faction decided that they would attempt
force the pastor to change the direction of the ministry. The pastor wisely chose to
follow the Great Shepherd instead of the dissenters, and the dissenters broke
fellowship. Unless otherwise stated, Scripture quotations are from the Complete
Jewish Bible, translated by David Stern. Copyright © 1998, David H Stern.
As some of you may know, I’ve been serving in pastoral
ministry for a fairly long time, beginning with my first assignment as youth pastor in a
Navy base chapel on Guam in 1965. That’s almost 40 years ago. Since then I have served in
nearly every possible office within a local congregation, and I have managed to survive
through an awful lot of congregational trials and conflicts, including a few congregational
splits. And I have learned a lot from these experiences. I have asked your Pastor if I might
have this morning to share my heart with you — to spend the next few minutes thinking with
you about what happened to this congregation, how you can get through it, and how you can
keep it from happening again.
Before we get started, I think it is extremely important
that you understand that what I am going to say this morning is my own personal opinion of
how the Holy Community is supposed to work. I have discussed this subject with your Pastor
in only vague and general terms, and the fact that he has allowed me the honor of being in
the Bema this morning is not necessarily his endorsement of what I’m going to say. As they
say on TV and radio, “the opinions expressed in this message are not necessarily those of
the staff and management of this congregation.”
I really believe that we — that is, the Body of Messiah —
have taken what Yeshua and the Shliachim, the Apostles, intended for the Family of G-d,
and in many respects have turned it exactly upside down — exactly the opposite of what it
was like among the Holy Community of the first century.
And I sincerely believe that G-d has raised
up the Messianic Jewish Movement as a Last-Days ministry of restoration — not only to reach
the Jewish people with the Gospel, but also to help restore the Holy Community to what He
originally intended it to be — and to serve as example to the world in these final years
before Messiah returns to reign on earth.
There are a great number of subjects that we could
consider, but that would take several weeks. So for this morning there are essentially three
areas that I would offer for your consideration. The three main ideas are these:
• The role or function of the
Pastor,
• The role or function of the
Sheep, and
• The role or function of the
Assembly at large.
These three concepts are so totally interwoven that it’s
sometimes going to be difficult to tell which of them I may be talking about at any given
time, but let’s start with a look at the role of the Pastor.
First of all, a simple word study of the Brit Chadasha
will demonstrate that the titles Elder, Pastor, Shepherd, Bishop, and Overseer are used
interchangeably to refer to the same office; and I also always use those words
interchangeably.
Ephesians 4:11 tells us that G-d has
appointed, or ordained, men who are called “Elders” within the Holy Community to perform
four specific functions, or areas of ministry.
First, He appointed some of these Elders to serve as
Emissaries or Apostles. We understand the title of “Apostle” in the technical sense to be
reserved for those men who were eye-witnesses to Yeshua’s resurrection and who were
personally commissioned by Him. Since I don’t know anyone who is 2000 years old, it is my
personal opinion that there are very probably no living Apostles, in the technical sense.
However, in the generic sense, we understand the term
“Apostle” or “Emissary” [or “Shiliach” in Hebrew] to refer to Traveling Elders, those Elders
whom G-d has called to travel from place to place as messengers or
missionaries. In fact, in modern Hebrew, the ambassadors from Israel to the other nations
are referred to as Shliachim.
Second, G-d has also appointed some other
Elders to serve as Prophets. While the terms “prophet,” “prophecy,” and “prophesy” sometimes
contain a predictive element, the word literally means “to speak forth” and is used to
describe someone who speaks in the place of another, or who delivers a message from someone
else, or simply someone who speaks in front of an audience. Before we had our completed
Bible to serve as our source of revelation about G-d, Adonai would often speak
to his people through a person that He had chosen, and He would include in that message some
information about events that would happen in their future. This was so that when the
predicted events happened, His people would know that He was the true source of that
message. Now that Abba has spoken to us through His Son, and we have the written record of
what He wanted us to know, we have no more need of that kind of special revelation. So now
in the Holy Community we have men who speak forth G-d’s word from the
Scriptures, and they deliver messages to audiences. They are called Prophets, or Preaching
Elders, or just Preachers, whom G-d has called to specialize in preaching the
Word of G-d.
Third, He has appointed still other Elders to serve as
Evangelists, or “Gospelizing” Elders, those Elders who have been called to specialize in
presenting to the unsaved the Gospel (which Scripture defines as the Good News concerning
the death, burial, bodily resurrection, ascension, and return of Yeshua HaMashiach). Billy
Graham is probably the best-known example of a “Gospelizing” Elder today.
And fourth, He has also appointed some other Elders to
serve as Pastor/Teachers. The very specific grammatical construction of this term as
recorded in the Ephesian letter literally means “Shepherds who are also Teachers.” The Brit
Chadasha also refers to these Elders as Shepherding Elders or Ruling Elders. These men are
Elders whom G-d has called to fulfill a shepherding ministry over a local
assembly of believers.
Since we are immediately concerned with the functioning of
a local assembly of believers, we are primarily concerned with the role of the Elder whom
G-d has called and equipped to serve the Holy Community as a Pastor/Teacher, or
Shepherd, over that local assembly.
Why does G-d refer to this man as a Shepherd?
What are his responsibilities?
In the Good News as recorded by Yochanan, chapter 21, we
find the record of Yeshua appointing the first Shepherd:
The Scripture tells us that this event occurred “the third
time Yeshua had appeared to the talmidim after being raised from the dead.”
After breakfast, Yeshua said to Shim‘on Kefa, “Shim‘on
Bar-Yochanan, do you love Me [with G-d’s kind of love] more than these?” He
replied, “Yes, Lord, You know I’m Your friend.” He said to him, “Feed My lambs.” A second
time He said to him, “Shim‘on Bar-Yochanan, do you love Me [with G-d’s kind
of love]?” He replied, “Yes, Lord, You know I’m Your friend.” He said to him, “Shepherd My
sheep.” The third time he said to him, “Shim‘on Bar-Yochanan, are you My friend?” Shim‘on
was hurt that He questioned him a third time: “Are you My friend?” So he replied, “Lord,
You know everything! You know I’m Your friend.” Yeshua said to him, “Feed My sheep.” (Yochanan
21:14-17)
So Yeshua’s instructions to Kefa were to:
• Feed My lambs;
• Shepherd My
sheep; and
• Feed My sheep.
A shepherd is primarily concerned with the care and safety
of the flock. He feeds them. He provides nourishment for them. He protects them from those
who would harm them. He treats their injuries, and even carries them when they are too weak
to walk themselves. He leads them where they need to go.
Please notice that it is the shepherd and not the flock
who determines where the flock is to go. One of the major causes of conflict in the Holy
Community is when the sheep come to believe that they are supposed to lead the Shepherd
instead of following him.
The 23rd Psalm says that the Shepherd leads the
sheep beside the quiet waters, he makes them lie down in the grassy pastures, and he guides
them in the right paths. The shepherd leads the sheep, and the sheep follow.
Yeshua describes Himself as the Good Shepherd in Yochanan
10:1-16, and He gives us some ideas of how the Shepherd is to take care of the flock:
1“Yes, indeed! I tell
you, the person who doesn’t enter the sheep-pen through the door, but climbs in some other
way, is a thief and a robber. 2But the one who goes in through the gate is the
sheep’s own shepherd. 3This is the one the gate-keeper admits, and the sheep
hear his voice. He calls his own sheep, each one by name, and leads them out. 4After
taking out all that are his own, he goes on ahead of them; and the sheep follow him
because they recognize his voice. 5They never follow a stranger but will run
away from him, because strangers’ voices are unfamiliar to them.”
“6Yeshua used this indirect manner of
speaking with them, but they didn’t understand what he was talking about. 7So
Yeshua said to them again, “Yes, indeed! I tell you that I am the gate for the sheep.
8All those who have come before me have been thieves and robbers, but the sheep
didn’t listen to them. 9I am the gate; if someone enters through me, he will be
safe and will go in and out and find pasture. 10The thief comes only in order
to steal, kill, and destroy; I have come so that they may have life, life in its fullest
measure.
11“I am the good
shepherd. The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep. 12The hired hand,
since he isn’t a shepherd and the sheep aren’t his own, sees the wolf coming, abandons the
sheep, and runs away. Then the wolf drags them off and scatters them. 13The
hired worker behaves like this because that’s all he is, a hired worker; so it doesn’t
matter to him what happens to the sheep. 14I am the Good Shepherd; I know My
own, and My own know Me — 15just as the Father knows Me, and I know the Father
— and I lay down My life on behalf of the sheep. 16Also I have other sheep
which are not from this pen; I need to bring them, and they will hear My voice, and there
will be one flock, one Shepherd.”
This is the high standard to which the Pastor/Teacher is
called. He is to be to the flock a living example of the Good Shepherd, Yeshua.
He enters the sheep-pen through the door, and Yeshua says
that He, Yeshua, is that door. The true Pastor/Teacher becomes a shepherd the correct way.
That means first of all that a true Pastor/Teacher has been called by G-d to
that office. It means that he has spent many years in preparation and training for his
calling, and that he has been thoroughly examined by a panel of other Elders who have
carefully considered his calling and who have agreed with the Ruach HaKodesh that his
calling is genuine, and that he has a sufficient knowledge of the Scriptures and the
appropriate spiritual gifts to fulfill that calling. Remember that even Rav Sha’ul submitted
to that same kind of examination by the Elders in Jerusalem. In the first two chapters of
his letter to the Galatians, Sha’ul tells us that with all his rabbinical training, after
Yeshua appeared to him and commissioned him on the Damascus road he spent 14 years in
private preparation before presenting himself to the Elders in Jerusalem for their
confirmation of his calling and message.
Anyone who enters pastoral ministry through another door
is a thief and a robber, and not a true shepherd. Please don’t misunderstand me. I am not
saying that a pastor necessarily has to have a seminary degree in order to be effective,
though that is certainly helpful. I am saying that he has to have an adequate
knowledge of the Scriptures, that he must meet the spiritual qualifications set down in
Sha’ul’s letters to Timothy and Titus, that he has to demonstrate the evidence of G-d’s
calling on his life, and that it is necessary for him to submit to the authority of other
Elders for the confirmation of his calling and qualification.
After he has been admitted through the correct door by the
Gate-Keeper (Yeshua), then he will learn the names of his sheep, he will call them by name,
and they will hear his voice. As the Chief Shepherd, Yeshua is the gate-keeper, and the
sheep are His. The Chief Shepherd admits the Under-Shepherd to the sheep-pen, and puts some
of the sheep under his care. The Under-Shepherd will get to know the sheep who have been
entrusted to his care, and the sheep will learn to recognize his voice. That can only happen
when the shepherd and the sheep are deeply involved in each other’s lives.
When the sheep learn his voice, he will lead them and they
will follow him. And he will be ready and willing to lay down his life for the sheep that
have been entrusted to him.
Moreover, the Shepherd provides a living example for the
human sheep to follow.
Yeshua’s final mitzvah, or commission, to the Shliachim
was that they were to go and make people from all nations into talmidim, or disciples
(Matt. 28:19). It was therefore Yeshua’s intent that we are to become His talmidim.
A talmid is not a person who sits
under the teaching of, or learns from, his or her teacher. A talmid is not
someone who wants to know what the teacher knows. Rather a true talmid is one who
earnestly and enthusiastically strives to become what the teacher is!
Yeshua has called us to become His talmidim, to
strive to become what He is! And whether either we or our Pastors like it or not, Yeshua has
called and ordained a true Pastor to be a living example to us – a model of Yeshua that we
can observe in the flesh – to follow, to become his talmidim.
In case you feel that I am putting too much on the Pastor,
read what Rabbi Sha’ul said on the same subject. To the Holy Community at Philippi, he wrote
these instructions:
12It is not that I have
already obtained it or already reached the goal — no, I keep pursuing it in the hope of
taking hold of that for which the Messiah Yeshua took hold of me. 13Brothers, I
for my part, do not think of myself as having yet gotten hold of it; but one thing I do:
forgetting what is behind me and straining forward toward what lies ahead, 14I
keep pursuing the goal in order to win the prize offered by G-d’s upward
calling in the Messiah Yeshua. 15Therefore, as many of us as are mature, let us
keep on paying attention to this; and if you are differently minded about anything,
G-d will also reveal this to you. 16Only let our conduct fit the level
we have already reached. 17Brothers, join in imitating me, and pay
attention to those who live according to the pattern we have set for you. 18For
many — I have told you about them often before, and even now I say it with tears — live as
enemies of the Messiah’s [cross]. 19They are headed for destruction! Their
G-d is in the belly; they are proud of what they ought to be ashamed of,
since they are concerned about the things of the world. (Philippians 3:12-19)
And to the Believers at Thessalonica, he wrote:
2We always thank
G-d for all of you, regularly mentioning you in our prayers, 3calling to
mind before G-d our Father what our Lord Yeshua the Messiah has brought about
in you — how your trust produces action, your love hard work, your hope perseverance.
4We know, brothers, that G-d has loved you and chosen you; 5that
the Good News we brought did not become for you a matter only of words, but also one of
power, the Ruach HaKodesh, and total conviction — just as you know how we lived
for your sakes when we were with you. 6You, indeed, became
imitators of us and of the Lord; [and here is the result of your imitation of our
lives] so that even though you were going through severe troubles, you received the Word
with joy from the Ruach HaKodesh. 7Thus you became a pattern (or an
example) for all the believers in Macedonia and in Achaia. (1 Thessalonians 1:2-7)
To young Pastor Timothy he said:
Don’t let anyone look down on you because of your youth;
on the contrary, set the believers an example in your behavior, love, trust, and
purity. (1 Timothy 4:12)
And his instructions to Pastor Titus included the
following:
6… urge the young men
to be self-controlled, 7and in everything set them an example yourself
by doing what is good. When you are teaching, have integrity and be serious; 8let
everything you say be so wholesome that an opponent will be put to shame because he will
have nothing bad to say about us. (Titus 2:7-8)
Will any pastor ever be completely successful in that
task? Of course not! The pastor will be no more successful in consistently setting the
example than we will be successful in consistently following the example. Even the great
Rabbi Sha’ul said that he had not obtained it or reached the goal, but that he kept pursuing
it and straining forward to what lies ahead, he kept pursuing the goal.
Now, what should our attitude be toward those who choose
not to follow the example that has been set for us?
First of all, we are forced to consider whether they were
ever truly part of our flock.
Yeshua said that true sheep will follow the voice of their
shepherd; that true sheep will run away from the voice of the one who is not their shepherd.
He also said that there would come into the sheep-pen those who are thieves and robbers who
come in to steal, kill, and destroy.
Yeshua also warned that there would come a time when there
were within the Holy Community wolves in sheep’s clothing. They look like sheep, but in
reality they are ravenous wolves. These wolves will do whatever they can to drag off the
sheep, scatter them, and kill them.
In addition to intimately knowing the sheep that Yeshua
has entrusted into his care, part of the Shepherd’s job is to be able to identify both the
thief and the wolf, and to drive them off before they can harm the sheep.
I can promise you from many years of personal experience
that this is one of the most difficult and unpopular parts of the Shepherd’s responsibility,
but one that he must diligently pursue if he is to be faithful to his responsibility to
protect the true sheep.
But what about those whom we think are sheep that follow
after the thief or the wolf that has been driven out? As hard as it may be for us to accept,
Yeshua’s teaching is that they were not true sheep, because the true sheep will hear the
shepherd’s voice and follow him.
Rav Sha’ul wrote to Pastor Timothy:
“For the time is coming when people will not have
patience for sound teaching, but will cater to their passions and gather around themselves
teachers who say whatever their ears itch to hear. Yes, they will stop listening to the
truth, but will turn aside to follow myths.” (2 Timothy 4:3,4)
Yochanan tells us in his first letter, chapter 1 and verse
19, that:
“They went out from us, but they weren’t part of us; for
if they had been part of us, they would have remained with us. But you have received the
Messiah’s anointing from HaKodesh, and you know all this. It is not because you
don’t know the truth that I have written to you, but because you do know it,
and because no lie has its origin in the truth.”
In the third chapter of Rav Sha’ul’s letter to the
Thessalonians, he says:
6Now, in the name of
the Lord Yeshua the Messiah we command you, brothers, to stay away from any brother who is
leading a life of idleness [in this passage the word idleness may also be
translated as undisciplined], a life not in keeping with the tradition that you
received from us. 7For you yourselves know how you must imitate us, that
we were not idle [or undisciplined] when we were among you. [And although he is
talking specifically here about working for a living, and not just living off the welfare
of the congregation, his main point is that they — that is, the congregation — were to
follow the lifestyle example set by the Shliachim.] … 9It was not that we
didn’t have the right to be supported, but so that we could make
ourselves an example to imitate.
In this next couple of verses, don’t be thinking about
working to earn a living, but instead think in terms of working or ministering within the
Body of Messiah.
11We hear that some of
you are leading a life of idleness [or “living an undisciplined life”] — not busy working,
just busybodies! 12We command such people — and in union with the Lord Yeshua
the Messiah we urge them — to settle down, get to work, and [oh yeah, by the way] earn
their own living. 13And you brothers [and sisters] who are doing what is good
[within the Holy Community], don’t slack off! 14Furthermore, if anyone does not
obey what we are saying in this letter, take note of him and have nothing to do with him,
so that he will be ashamed. 15But don’t consider him an enemy; on the contrary,
confront him as a brother and try to help him change.
Time doesn’t permit us to look at all that the Scriptures
have to say about the Pastor’s responsibility, but we can summarize the Bible’s teaching on
the subject with these short statements:
• The Pastor’s
primary duty is to give himself fully to study, prayer, and the ministry of G-d’s
word.
• He is to lead
G-d’s people by his example in word, conduct, love, spirit, faith, and purity.
• The Pastor is
to equip the saints to do the work of ministry. The saints aren’t to pay a hireling to do
the work of ministry for them.
• The Pastor is
to pray for the sick and visit those in their time of need.
• He is to
benevolently rule over the local congregation of Believers and, when it becomes
necessary, he is to rebuke and exhort with all authority.
And that’s the part that far too many people can’t come to
grips with. We in America have become comfortable with our ideas about democracy, and we
have tried to bring those concepts into the Holy Community. But there is nothing anywhere in
the entire Bible about any form of democratic process. G-d’s plan for the Holy
Community is that He appoints leaders to rule over the people, and He appoints the people to
submit to the rulership of those leaders.
• But the Pastor is not to be
dictatorial in his leadership, but rather he is to be to the congregation as a loving father
is to his family.
• The Pastor is to oversee the
entire ministry, willingly and eagerly, knowing that when Yeshua, the Chief Shepherd,
appears he shall receive a “crown of glory that does not fade away.”
When it comes to the subject of leadership and authority
in the Holy Community, the Bible is very clear that the Pastor who relinquishes his
G-d-appointed authority over the ministry of the local assembly is simply failing
miserably to perform the responsibility to which G-d has called him.
Having looked very briefly at the responsibilities of the
Pastor, we now come to what are the responsibilities of the members of the congregation.
The writer of the letter to the Messianic Jews tells us in
chapter 13:
“Remember your leaders, those who spoke G-d’s
message to you. Reflect on the results of their way of life, and imitate their trust …”
And again he says:
“Obey your leaders and submit to them, for they keep
watch over your lives, as people who will have to render an account. So make it a task of
joy for them, not one of groaning; for that is of no advantage to you.”
It should be extremely obvious to the most casual observer
that if G-d has appointed the Shepherd to lead and rule, then G-d
has likewise appointed the Sheep to follow and submit. Remember what I said before: one of
the major causes of conflict in the Holy Community is when the sheep come to believe that
they are supposed to lead the Shepherd instead of following him.
If G-d has appointed the Shepherd to set the
example of what a G-dly person is supposed to be like, then G-d
has likewise appointed the Sheep to follow that example. If G-d has appointed
the Shepherd to teach, then He has likewise appointed the Sheep to learn. If G-d
has appointed the Shepherd to equip the saints to do the work of ministry, then He has
appointed the Saints to do the work of the ministry, and not expect the Shepherd to do it
all.
In our society, there is a lot of emphasis placed on
“leadership” — but there is almost never any mention of “followship.” And I find that very
strange indeed. I believe that excellence in “followship” is every bit as important, though
difficult, as is excellence in “leadership.”
In our American society, there is also a lot of emphasis
placed on what we like to think of as “democratic process” — the process by which everyone
has an equal voice in just about everything, whether they know anything about it or not.
But let me challenge you to find one single place in all
of Scripture where G-d provides any form of democratic process for His people.
Nowhere in the Bible do you ever find the Holy Community having a voice in the operation of
G-d’s kingdom. In fact, in every single instance in Scripture where the opinion
of the majority is ever mentioned, the majority opinion is always wrong!
Just a few examples should prove my point.
Let’s start with the very first committee meeting in human
history. In chapter 3 of B’resheet [Genesis] Adam and Eve and the Serpent voted on what
should be on man’s menu and they outvoted G-d three to one.
In Genesis chapter 6 there was a construction project that
came up for a vote. “All those in favor of building a boat in Noah’s driveway signify by
show of hands.” The vote came in eight in favor of the idea and several million against.
Following the Great Big Boat Caper, G-d
instructed the flood survivors to spread out and fill the earth. The majority decided that
they preferred to stay at Bavel in the plain of Shin‘ar and build a skyscraper, and we see
how well that worked out.
Bavel later became known as Babylon. Not only is Babylon
used in the Bible as a euphemism for all that is evil, but it is also a country that has
been causing G-d’s people grief ever since. Maybe you are familiar with the
current King of Babylon. His name is Saddam Hussein. And Babylon is the direct root of all
the false religions of the world, but that’s a different lesson.
[Nimrod, the king of Bavel, was elevated to deity after
his death; Bavel was to become known as Babylon, which caused Israel so much grief later.
Nimrod was later known by many names, including Baal, Bel, Baalat, Molech, Merodach, Mars,
Jupiter, and Saturn. His mother was likewise elevated to the position of the fertility
goddess under various names, including Ishtar, Aphrodite, Astarte, Ashtoreth, Cybele or
Sybil, Diana, Europa, Isis, Semiramis, and Venus. She was given the title of “Queen of
Heaven” and the Emperor Constantine, who was the high priest of the Roman form of the
Babylon Mystery Religion, later blended her feast day with the Bible to create the holiday
that is still known by her name, Ishtar, with its bunnies and eggs and other fertility
symbols. And when some who call themselves “Christians” refer to our Lord’s mother as “the
Queen of Heaven” they are not talking about Miriam at all, but rather they are referring
to this fertility goddess, Ishtar. All of that confusion and grief to G-d’s
people came about as a result of “the majority” refusing to obey the command of G-d
to “spread out and fill the earth” after the flood.]
A few hundred years later G-d told Avraham
that he would be given a son, but Mr. and Mrs. Avraham had a meeting with a servant named
Hagar, and together they decided that they had a better idea for creating a nation.
G-d intended to provide a nation from Yitzhak, but Avraham wound up with a nation
from Ishmael. About 4,000 years later, that committee’s decision resulted in the destruction
of the World Trade Center.
A little more than 400 years after the Ishmael disaster,
another committee voted 10 to 2 against following G-d’s instruction to go in
and take the Promised Land, and G-d made sure that everyone who followed that
decision died in the wilderness, and of their entire generation only Joshua and Caleb were
allowed to enter the Promised Land.
Fast-forward 2,000 years. The majority decided that Yeshua
wasn’t the Messiah that G-d had promised through the prophets. The up side is
that Gentiles were brought into the Holy Community. The downside is that Israel has lived in
dispersion for 1,878 years from the year 70 to the year 1948.
And a few weeks after Israel corporately (though certainly
not individually) rejected their Messiah, and after Yehuda [Judas] defected, the remaining
Shliachim voted for Mattityahu to take his place. But G-d’s choice was not
Mattityahu. G-d’s choice was a rabbi named Sha’ul who may have actually been a
member of the Sanhedrin when they sent an innocent man to the cross [another unfortunate
majority vote]. Even the majority vote of the Shliachim — the Apostles — was wrong.
Fast-forward another couple thousand years to the end of
the book of the Revelation, and we find the majority of nations deciding that it’s time to
end this Israel thing once and for all. And you know their vote gets overruled in the end.
If in the Scriptures the majority opinion is always
wrong, why do some of the members of the Holy Community today insist on believing that
somehow their majority opinion is the correct one?
We have 6,000 years of Biblical and post-Biblical history
to show us that G-d’s way of running things is totally different than man’s way
of running things. And we sit in our congregations and piously claim that “we are in the
world, but we are not of the world.” We say, and rightfully so, that HaSatan, the Deceiver,
is the G-d of this world, and that we want to live differently than the rest of
the world.
Then why in the world do we insist on trying to make our
congregations look like corporations? Why do we try to run G-d’s family by
following the same policies and procedures that we use to run our worldly businesses? Why do
we follow the lead of unbelievers and try to pattern the Holy Community after the business
community?
As I was discussing these concepts with a friend a couple
of weeks ago, the subject came up of the way congregations call a pastor, and even that
process is almost never done the way the Bible says it should be done.
Typically when a congregation is in need of a Pastor, they
form some kind of committee. Sometimes that committee is called a search committee;
sometimes it’s called a personnel committee. But that committee is typically charged with
collecting resumes and reviewing them to find out which of the many applicants for the job
is best suited to what they want “their” pastor to look like.
When they finally find an applicant that looks good to the
committee, that person is invited to “candidate” for the position. That means that he comes
to the congregation where he is submitted to a series of interviews. Depending on how many
layers of management there are in the congregation, the candidate must satisfactorily
navigate his way through as many as three or more interviews. If the various committees and
boards like what they see so far, the candidate is invited to come preach one or two
sermons. If he adequately tickles the ears of the congregation, presents just exactly the
correct amount of showmanship, and doesn’t say anything that puts anyone under conviction of
any kind, he receives an offer of employment. There is usually a contract of some kind
involved, which defines what the pastor’s new employers expect from him in the way of office
hours, detailed ministry responsibilities, and other information about how his performance
is to be evaluated.
If both the candidate and the hiring committee come to an
agreement on all of the details and conditions, the candidate is hired.
Now, if you’re running a company and hiring an individual
for a particular position, that’s probably not too bad a procedure.
But for a local congregation of the Family of G-d,
that process is totally unacceptable!
In the first place, the true Pastor is not — he can not
be — an employee of the congregation. He’s not even an employee of the Board of Elders or
Board of Deacons. The federal government, part of HaSatan’s world organization, recognizes
that fact; why can’t G-d’s people recognize it? Under current IRS regulations a
Pastor’s income from the congregation is not reported on an employee’s form W2, but on form
1099 like all other independent contractors.
The Bible has a name for a man who is an employee of a
congregation. That name is “hireling” — and we have already discussed what Yeshua says about
the hireling. But to review briefly:
Yeshua said:
11“I am the good
shepherd. The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep. 12The hired hand
[or hireling], since he isn’t a shepherd and the sheep aren’t his own, sees the wolf
coming, abandons the sheep, and runs away. Then the wolf drags them off and scatters them.
13The [hireling] behaves like this because that’s all he is, a hired worker; so
it doesn’t matter to him what happens to the sheep.” (Yochanan 10:11-13)
Another time, Yeshua said:
“No servant can serve two masters; for either he will
hate the one, and love the other, or else he will hold to one, and despise the other.”
(Luke 16:13, NASB)
Secondly, that implied employer-employee relationship
suggests that the Pastor is to be held accountable to the congregation. As Bible Teacher
Steve Brown likes to say, “That’s a lie from the pit of hell, and it smells like smoke.”
I challenge you to show me a single passage of Scripture
which even remotely suggests that the Pastor is accountable to the congregation he serves!
A true Pastor is accountable only to G-d and
to the Elders who commissioned him. In a congregation with multiple Elders, the Elders are
accountable to each other, and they are each in turn accountable to G-d.
A true Pastor cannot be subject to the
congregation and at the same time be subject to the Lord. And the Pastor has a choice to
make: whether to be submitted to the Lord, or to be submitted to the congregation.
The only time that I can ever envision a Pastor
being subject in any way to the congregation is in the event that he falls into sin and the
Elders fail to hold him accountable. Then the congregation would be forced to follow the
procedure outlined in Matthew 18:15 and following.
Now, you might well ask me, “If ‘the way we’ve always done
it’ is not the correct procedure for calling and interfacing with a Pastor, then how
does a congregation call a pastor?” I’m glad you asked that question!
Here’s how I think it’s supposed to work. This is only my
opinion, and you can either take it or leave it. But it is an opinion that I have gradually
developed over many years of contemplation and study, and I believe that it will stand up to
the scrutiny of the Bible. And I would encourage you to take everything that I am telling
you today and be good little Bereans, and search the Scriptures to see if what I am saying
is true. I’m not going to take the time to read all of the Scriptures that have led me to
this opinion, but I will mention some of the key verses.
Also remember what I said earlier about the terms Elder,
Pastor, Shepherd, Bishop, and Overseer being used interchangeably in the Brit Chadasha to
refer to the same office.
First of all, I believe that a true Pastor is irrevocably
called by G-d to a lifetime of service in that capacity, whether or not he is
actively leading a congregation.
In 2 Timothy 1:8-11 Rav Sha’ul tells Timothy that “God has
saved us, and called us to a holy calling” and that he, Sha’ul, for the sake of the gospel
“was appointed a preacher and an apostle and a teacher.”
In Romans 11:29 he says that “the gifts and the calling of
G-d are irrevocable.” Once he accepts the call to service, a true Pastor, or
Elder, can never turn back.
Sha’ul’s letters to Timothy and Titus tell us several
things about the Elder or Pastor/Teacher.
• They tell us
that if someone aspires to the office of Elder, it is a fine work that he desires to do.
• They tell us
that the spiritual qualifications of an Elder are extremely high.
• They tell us
that the Elder is not to be commissioned or ordained until he has been thoroughly examined
and tested.
• They tell us
that Elders are to be appointed by other Elders for every congregation, not elected, called,
or hired by a congregation.
• They tell us
that we are to look for potential Elders among the Deacons [servants] of our own
congregation.
• They also tell
us that any accusation against an Elder must be directed only to other Elders, and must be
supported by the eye-witness testimony of two or three witnesses.
Based on these and other Scriptures, I believe that once
he has been called, trained, tested, and commissioned or ordained to an irrevocable
life-time of service, the Pastor is to be appointed to a local congregation by other
qualified Elders, whether within or outside of the local congregation.
I also believe that if, in subjected obedience to the
Ruach HaKodesh, the Elders have appointed the Pastor to a particular congregation, the
Pastor is to stay with that congregation for the rest of his life or until he is called to
another congregation by the clear calling of the Ruach HaKodesh and the agreement of the
other Elders.
Now this may really surprise you, but I see nowhere in the
Scriptures that the congregation is to pay the Pastor a salary. A salary implies an
employer-employee relationship. What I see in the Scriptures is that the congregation is to
provide for all the needs of the Pastor and his family so that he may devote 100% of
his attention to meeting the spiritual needs of the flock. A Pastor who is concerned about
where his next car payment or basket of groceries is coming from simply cannot devote his
attention to his pastoral duties.
Here’s a really radical idea for your consideration! I
even believe that the congregation should have one full-time, fully-supported Pastor for
every 15 families in the congregation.
Oh, my! What congregation could ever afford that???
It’s really easy. Just do the math. A congregation in
which every single family brought the full tithe into the storehouse could easily afford to
support one full-time Shepherd for each 15 families. The tithe of 10 of those families would
provide the Pastor and his family with a lifestyle equivalent to the average lifestyle of
the congregation, and the tithe of the remaining 5 families would meet the other expenses of
maintaining the facility and other ministry expenses, with some left over to support worthy
ministries outside of the local congregation.
Now that we have established that a tithing congregation
can actually afford a fully-staffed ministry, where do the additional Elders or Pastors come
from?
Remember that one of the responsibilities of the
Pastor/Teacher is to be a talmid, a disciple, of Yeshua, striving to become what
Yeshua is. Likewise, the members of the congregation are to be talmidim, disciples,
of the Pastor, striving to become what he is. As the Pastor becomes more and more like
Yeshua, the congregation, following his example, will likewise become more and more like
Yeshua.
As the men of the congregation become more and more like
the Pastor’s example, and as they grow and become more and more spiritually mature, and as
they learn how to “rightly divide the Word of Truth” through the practical experience of
sharing in the various teaching ministries of the congregation, some of these men will be
called and gifted by Ruach HaKodesh to assume the office of Elder within the congregation.
And as the congregation continues to grow and prosper, it will easily be able to provide for
the needs of one full-time Elder for every fifteen families.
It would also not be beyond the reach of a fully-tithing
congregation to completely support [including both the support of his family and
his tuition and books] a worthy young man [or a not-so-young man] as he attends Bible
college and/or seminary in preparation for either serving that congregation as one of its
Elders, or even as an emissary of Yeshua sent out from that congregation to serve elsewhere
in the Family of G-d.
The congregation then becomes a fully self-sustaining
organism whose head is Adonai Yeshua. And that congregational organism will then reproduce
itself in exactly the same manner that G-d designed all other organisms to
reproduce — by division and continued growth.
For example, assume the congregation grows to the point
where there are 10 full-time pastors serving 150 families. The organism divides and becomes
two fully mature and healthy congregations of 75 families and 5 full-time elders each. The
outreach potential of the single congregation has just potentially doubled.
“But we’ve never done it that way, and we don’t know
anyone who is doing it that way!”
That’s exactly my point! As the Body and Bride of Messiah,
we have everything upside down! And if we are going to please Yeshua, we have to turn it
back right-side up. We have to dare to be different. We have to have the courage to tell the
majority that they are wrong and that the handbook that G-d gave us for the
operation of the Holy Community is right.
What I have shared for you this morning is my
vision. It may not at all resemble the vision that G-d has given your Pastor
for this particular congregation. But, you see, that’s really OK. Because G-d
has called your Pastor, and not me, to be the Shepherd of this flock. And G-d
has given him, and not me, the vision for this congregation.
God has truly blessed this flock with a Shepherd who
faithfully listens to the voice of the Chief Shepherd, who strives to be a talmid of
the Great Shepherd, and who is willing to risk it all by taking the high road and making the
tough and unpleasant decisions that need to be made for the benefit of this flock.
And our responsibility, yours and mine, as long as we are
members of this flock, is to follow the leading of our G-d-appointed Shepherd.
We may not always understand where he is leading us or why he is leading us in a particular
direction. Your Pastor is a reasonable man. If you have a question about where he is
leading, all you have to do is ask, and he will explain to the best of his ability. But
sometimes G-d doesn’t tell the Shepherd all the details, and sometimes not even
the Shepherd understands fully where, or why, or how the Great Shepherd has called him to
take the flock.
The point is that we don’t always need to understand.
God has appointed Shepherds to lead. G-d has
appointed Sheep to follow. G-d has appointed the Holy Community to live not as
an organization, but rather as a living, self-replicating organism whose head is Yeshua and
whose members corporately and individually strive to learn their spiritual gifts and perform
their own G-d-appointed function for the perfection of the entire Body of
Messiah.
What specific ministry functions have you been called to
perform within this Body? If you don’t know, I strongly suggest that you contact your Pastor
today, and he will help you find out what Ruach HaKodesh has called you and equipped you to
do for Messiah.
Except where otherwise indicated,
Scripture quotations on this page are from
The Complete Jewish Bible
The Complete Jewish Bible
- Copyright 1998 by David H. Stern.
Published by Jewish New Testament Publications, Inc.
Distributed by Messianic Jewish Resources Int'l.
All rights reserved. Used by permission.
For usage information, please read the
Complete Jewish Bible Copyright
Statement.

http://www.familybible.org/Teaching/Theology/Followship.htm
was last revised at
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Friday, 24 October 2008
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