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| Copyright © 2004 by The Voice of Prophecy |
| David B. Smith |
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P.O.
Box 53055 |
| September 6, 2004 |
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SUMMA CUM LAUDE SAINTS #1
A GIFT-WRAPPED PREACHER There was a poignant little cartoon in a recent copy of Leadership magazine, and it showed a table with a big sign on it: “Criticize the Pastor: $5.” Well, you could probably add a couple of zeros there, and still have some takers, but at five bucks a shot, there on the table were piles and piles and mega-piles of money. And a lady sitting there is saying to a man with a stricken, beat-up look on his face — obviously the pastor in question — “Well, we got the church paid off. You want to try for a women’s fellowship hall too?” Well, friend, seeing as how I’m a preacher too, I can show you some of the black-and-blue marks where somebody thought that Pastor Melashenko would make a good punching bag. And even people I thought loved me have, on occasion, taken Proverbs 27:17 a bit too far. That’s the one where it says: “Iron sharpeneth iron; so a man sharpeneth the countenance of his friend.” And I’ve felt like saying to them, “Why don’t you sharpen
up your sword on some other Melashenko? Go improve my brother Eugene for
a while, and leave me alone.” So today, as we continue here in this amazing
book of the Bible, Paul’s epistle to the Ephesians, I’m very thankful
to find a word from the Lord commending the preachers. “And He [Jesus] gave some, apostles; and some, prophets, and some, evangelists; and some, PASTORS and teachers.” Right away we notice something interesting. Clearly
Jesus is involved in the process of men and women moving into these five
roles: apostle, prophet, evangelist, pastor, and teacher. There’s an old
book in the archives of my denomination which suggests that Satan hates
preachers. So it’s good news to hear that Jesus cares about them. And
we wonder: does Christ give a person the gift of being a pastor, or does
He give the pastor to the church — as a gift? Or both? And from the context
of Ephesians 4, it’s plain that the answer IS both. We studied last week,
going back to verse 8, that the ascending Jesus Christ, after His resurrection,
gave gifts to men, meaning to His Church. Friend, if there was a godly
person standing in the pulpit of your church last Sabbath or Sunday morning,
it’s because God gave that person the gift of pastoring, and then gave
that pastor himself, or herself, to your congregation. “To Christ we owe it that we have ministers of the gospel.” That’s something to think about, isn’t it, the next time you’re tempted to spend five dollars slicing up the preacher. And I also appreciate what Dr. Foulkes himself adds, when he writes: “The Church may appoint men to different work and functions, but unless they have the gifts of the Spirit, and therefore are themselves the gifts of Christ to His Church, their appointment is valueless.” Is it possible that a person might receive — from God
— a gift in one of these five areas . . . and yet the Church itself, the
conferences and presbyteries and dioceses and hiring boards, when God
intends to give that person as a gift to the Body of Christ, fails to
receive it? Could we misread God’s signals and not accept a preacher whom
God intended to be a preacher? I’m sure that has happened many times in
this imperfect science of knowing the will of our heavenly Father. “The expression [gifts of Christ to His Church] also ‘serves well to remind ministers that the gifts of the Spirit are not for the enrichment of oneself but for the enrichment of the Church.’” Friend, as a lay person you probably have some thoughts
about that, sitting in your “radio pew” this Monday. I can tell you this:
the preacher thinks about it too. When I’m tempted to enrich myself —
by autographing books, by traveling to a nice place, by putting a price
tag on pastoral services — it’s very helpful to remember that a pastor
gets his gifts from Jesus. And just as the faithful steward in some of
Jesus’ parables asks for an accounting of those gifts, that happens here
too. “I am the Good Shepherd: the good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep.” Hebrews 13:20 closes with this magnificent benediction: “May the God of peace, who through the blood of the eternal covenant brought back from the dead our Lord Jesus, that great Shepherd of the sheep, equip you with everything good for doing His will.” And Dr. Francis Foulkes, picking up on those verses, admonishes us: “[Jesus] is ever the CHIEF Pastor under whom men are called to ‘tend the flock of God.’” With a boss like that, I don’t suppose a few black and blue bruises, or e-mails from the $5 Complaint Table, are going to hurt too much. |
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