Pastor and People

Great Blogging Friday

Friday, June 13, 2008 · No Comments

Some great websites and blog articles have passed over my computer screen this past week. I am sorry for the lack of blogging but my summer has proven to be more hectic than when I am in school. I promise to post more in the coming days. Until then, please visit the following articles for true encouragement. Have a wonderful weekend and Happy Father’s Day to all you dads!

- Dr. Mohler shares his recommended list for the summer:

Ten for the History Books — Summer Reading [Part 1]

Ten for the History Books — Summer Reading [Part 2]

Books for Guys — Maybe for Dad, Maybe for Son, Maybe for You

- You can watch the trailer for the 2008 Desiring God National Conference: The Power of Words and the Wonder of God

- John Piper talks about B.B. Warfield’s Supernatural Patience

- Owen Strachan is discussing The Spirituality of Sin: Flattery and The Spirituality of Sin: Greed

- Denny Burk discusses why he can’t be happy about Barack Obama’s Historic Candidacy

- Phil Ryken thinks the gospel is more important than life itself

- David Wells talks about his book The Courage to Be Protestant

→ No CommentsCategories: Albert Mohler · Articles · Audio Download · Book Recommendations · Books · Cultural Issues · John Piper

What Should a Worship Service Include?

Monday, June 9, 2008 · No Comments

The intricacies of a worship service are varied and many. Every church you visit will have components that are similar and different. No two worship services or experiences are the same. Hopefully the leadership of the church has put much thought and consideration as to the elements of the corporate worship service. Hopefully the pastor has thought seriously as to the best possible way to direct the people to God. Hopefully each song and musical exercise has been selected to bring praise to God not entertainment to the people. Hopefully the worship service has not been thrown together five or ten minutes before the service begins.

There is not a specific list of things a church service should include. However, each service should include certain things.

- Bible Reading. This is essential in each gathering of the church. I have personally been in services that the Bible is never opened or corporately read until the pastor ascends to the pulpit. It maybe 30 minutes until the Bible is even given attention. The Bible, being the center of our authority and guidance, should be the central focus of each worship service. Reading from the Old Testament, the Psalms, and the New Testament should be included each time the church gathers. Pick passages that coincide with the sermon. Choose appropriate Biblical texts that will lift your congregation in praise and adoration. Choose passages that point to Christ.

- Sermon. The second essential of each worship service is the sermon. Many churches leave the sermon off for other activities. I have been in services where personal testimonies are given, missionary presentations are delivered, and other various things. However, during the normal gathering of the church there should be proper exposition of the Scripture. Let me say very loudly, singing does not take the place of preaching. Make the sermon the central focus of the service. Oh, that your people would sit in great anticipation for the teaching and preaching of the Bible.

- Prayer. Prayer is a vital activity in the life of the church. Corporate prayer gives life to the church and brings the congregation into a worship experience because they are speaking directly to God. There is nothing more wonderful than a praying church besides a church that prays together. Do not tack on prayer at the beginning or leave it until the benediction, but carefully consider when and what to pray.

- Singing. This is not the place to discuss whether hymns or praise songs are more necessary or relevant; I will leave that for another time. Singing, no matter what terms you use, should be theologically correct, Biblically sound, Christ focused, and worship driven. Singing is a corporate expression of the church of their praise and thanksgiving to God. Singing is not man-centered or entertainment driven. Quite the contrary, singing is God-centered and should remain such. The pastor and the song leader should work closely together to choose songs that will edify and lift the eyes of the congregation heavenward.

- Fellowship. Whether fellowship around the Lord’s Table or the extension of a hand of welcome; Christian fellowship should compose each worship service and gathering of the church. Church is for Christians and should be the place we come together for edifying conversation and sweet fellowship.

These are just a few components that should be included in each worship service. The specific details of each listed would require much more thought. Keep in mind pastor: each time your congregation gathers it is your responsibility to lead your people, through Scripture, the sermon, prayer, singing, and fellowship into the very throne room of the living God.

→ No CommentsCategories: The Church · Worship

The Missionary Vision of Jonathan Edwards

Wednesday, June 4, 2008 · No Comments

Many consider Jonathan Edward only as a theologian and pastor and give no credence to the fact that he was constantly concerned with the spread of the gospel around the world. They see his deep commitment to Calvinism and the sovereignty of God as a hindrance to his missionary vision. However, from the time he was a pastor of a small congregation in New York from 1722-23, his missionary zeal has been a flame in his heart. Edwards reflects on twenty years prior in his Personal Narrative, written probably in 1740. He notes of his early days as a believer:

I had great longings for the advancement of Christ’s kingdom in the world. My secret prayer used to be in great part taken up in praying for it. If I heard the least hint of anything that happened in any part of the world, that appeared to me, in some respect or other, to have favorable aspect on the interest of Christ’s kingdom, my soul eagerly catched at it; and it would much animate and refresh me.

…I very frequently used to retire into a solitary place, on the banks of Hudson’s River, at some distance from the city, for contemplation on divine things, and secret converse with God; and had many sweet hours there. Sometimes Mr. Smith and I walked there together, to converse of the things of God; and our conversation used much to turn on the advancement of Christ’s kingdom in the world, and the glorious things that God would accomplish for his church in the later days.

Private prayer, conversation with others, and mediation were avenues by which Edwards gained a heart for the spread of the gospel around the world. His Calvinism spurred him to trust enough in the complete sovereignty of God to accomplish the missionary purpose. Edwards was a theologian, pastor, revivalist, and missionary.

→ No CommentsCategories: 18th Century · Jonathan Edwards · Missions

Book Review: The Savage, My Kinsmen

Monday, June 2, 2008 · No Comments

The Savage, My Kinsmen by Elisabeth Elliot

In January of 1956, the world received with shock the news that five American missionaries had been speared to death in the Equadorian jungles by Auca Indians - reportedly the most savage tribe on earth. Years later, it became clear that what seemed to be the tragic ending of those missionaries’ dreams was only the first chapter of one of the most marvelous missionary stories of the twentieth century.

The Savage, My Kinsman tells the story, in beautifully written text and pictures, of Elisabeth Elliot’s venture into Auca territory three years after the death of her husband, Jim Elliot. Elisabeth and her daughter Valerie, then tree years old, returned to the jungle along with Rachel Saint, the sister of one of the other slain men. The linguistic work of these women brought Christ’s message of salvation to the tribe that had killed their loved ones. They became the first to enter the Auca territory and live to tell the story. This is a courageous story of family, love, and above all, trust and confidence in a sovereign God to open doors of opportunity for the gospel.

Summary

The Savage, My Kinsmen chronicles one of the greatest missionary stories of the twentieth century. It begins by recounting the horrific news of five missionaries who had been speared to death on a beach in the territory of the Auca Indians. The family members of these men were overwhelmed with the news but were previously aware of the danger knowing that this tribe was said to be the most dangerous on earth.

After much praying, thinking, and weighing the options, Elisabeth Elliot decided to venture into the Auca territory to build on what her husband began. She, along with her daughter Valerie and Rachel Saint, began to meet the people, observe their daily lives, and learn the language. Through years of language study with the Dayuma, Mintaka, and Mankamu, Rachel Saint and Elisabeth create a filing system and recordings in order to learn the language of the Aucas. Years of service and labor among these Indians proved to be worthwhile as they saw them come to the knowledge of Christ. Their acceptance of the gospel was without question an act of God and a movement of the Holy Spirit. It was out of the death of the five missionaries that life began to flow to the Auca people through the witness of Elisabeth Elliot and Rachel Saint.

Elisabeth recounts the story of when she first entered the village of the Auca people. She said the Aucas were the personification of death in her mind as she could only associate them with the death of her beloved husband. It was possible, in her mind, that death also might be the fate of both her and her daughter Valerie. She describes the first Auca people she came in contact with. They were naked besides a cotton string around their hips, with large holes in their earlobes which were filled with disks of balsa wood.

Elisabeth soon learns that if she is going to live with the Aucas she must do exactly what they do - and nothing else. Her days were filled with writing down their language so she could give them the Bible and educating Valeria through correspondence courses. Their time was spent in a small straw hut with a hammock swinging between two beams of wood that made a nice relaxing place. This story is filled with ups and downs that only missionaries experience and can understand. It is filled with stories of triumph and disappointment, praises and hardships. It is a story of love.

Critical Evaluation

The Savage, My Kinsmen is written from the perspective of a grieving wife that turns into a God-sent missionary to those who murdered her husband. The reader can actually hear Elisabeth Elliot speaking from her heart through these pages as she speaks of her dependence upon God for everything while living with the Auca Indians. This book tells of the journey into the dark jungles of South America in a real autobiographical way. The reader learns who Elisabeth Elliot is and her work among the Auca people. It is almost like reading a diary or journal.

Another advantage of this book is the pictures that fill its pages. They show the daily life and faces of the people Elisabeth Elliot learned to love and care for. They show a daughter growing up in a foreign territory and the contrast of her curly blonde hair against the savage warriors. The pictures add a quality to this book that nothing else can add. The reader automatically sympathizes with the condition and work that lay before the feet of both Elisabeth Elliot and Rachel Saint.

This reviewer has read many accounts of the five missionaries that were killed on ‘Palm Beach’ by the Auca Indians but The Savage, My Kinsmen is another type of book. It shows another side to the story that many Christians know and love. It shows how the work of Christ and His kingdom must continue even after tragedy and lose. It shows how the gospel must be shared even with those we despise in our hearts. This book is a story of grace; grace in the life of Elisabeth Elliot and grace given by Christ to the Auca Indians.

Conclusion

The Savage, My Kinsmen is a work that I would recommend for anyone desiring a closer look at foreign mission work in a hostile part of the world. It is well written from a first-hand perspective which gives credence to its content. It will prove to be inspirational, eye-opening, and enjoyable to all who read it. Elisabeth Elliot and her family are examples to all missionaries and those who desire to do mission work. She is clearly a Godly woman who can teach us, drawing from years of experience, that complete and total surrender is the only way to serve God and make an impact upon his kingdom.

→ No CommentsCategories: Book Recommendations · Book Review · Books · Evangelism · Missions

Baptists and Elders

Friday, May 30, 2008 · 1 Comment

I am pleased this week, while on vacation, to have Jeff Cavanaugh as a guest blogger on Pastor and People. Jeff is someone I have grown to appreciate not only as a theologian, thinker, and writer but also as a dear friend. I trust you will enjoy his posts and be encouraged by his words.

Baptists and Elders by Jeff Cavanaugh

In today’s evangelical world, it seems most people don’t give a lot of thought to how the Bible says that the church should be governed and led. For those in established denominations, those conversations are several hundred years in the past. For those in non-denominational churches, the assumption seems to be that whatever works or is most effective is generally what should be done. As Mark Dever makes clear in the last chapter of Nine Marks of a Healthy Church, however, God has in fact given us a pattern for church leadership in His Word, the Bible. Those of us who value the Bible and intend to submit to its rule in all of faith and life would do well to understand and follow the Biblical model of church leadership.

First of all, leadership within the church is to be understood in a congregational context. That is, the congregation as a whole has final responsibility and authority for the most important and clear things in the life of the body, such as matters of doctrine and discipline. Within this congregational context, however, we are to submit to the leadership of a plurality of godly men-elders-who demonstrate good and godly character, knowledge of God’s Word, ability to teach, and concern for the good of the whole church. These men should have spiritual gifts that they are dedicated to using to build up the congregation. They exercise various roles in relation to the church-bosses, examples, suppliers, and servants. Biblical church leadership reflects God’s character as it shows a model of Christians submitting to the authority God has in himself and the authority he has delegated to church leaders on earth.

So, if your church doesn’t have elders who lead in this way, is that really such a bad thing? What’s the problem with, for example, the way most Baptist churches are structured with a pastor (the sole elder, in a sense) and deacons which serve with a mix of spiritual leadership and meeting physical needs? Are there any good reasons for a church to undertake the challenging task of changing its leadership structure? As a matter of fact, there are several real and potential problems with such a structure, not all of which are listed here.

First, and most importantly, it simply isn’t the model that Jesus has ordained for His church in the Bible. If we believe in the inerrancy, authority, and sufficiency of Scripture, we have a duty to follow its dictates in every area where it speaks to our lives and our churches. Polity-church government and leadership-is one area where the Bible does clearly tell us what to do, and we should obey. Remember that because of the congregational nature of the church, obeying the Bible as a congregation is something for which we all are responsible, and for which we are all to blame if we don’t.

Second, when men-like a board of deacons-who are not recognized by the congregation as elders have a share in the leading of the congregation, there can be an unhelpful confusion regarding who actually is in charge. On one hand, the pastor, who has the responsibility of preaching God’s word as an elder, should naturally be seen as one who should be looked to and obeyed as a leader. On the other hand, God never intended that a single man should bear the whole burden of leading a congregation, and a pastor who is appropriately humbled by God’s word will naturally turn to others-such as deacons-to help him with that burden.

Third, there can be an unhelpful confusion regarding the role that deacons are to play in the church. The New Testament is fairly clear-and Baptists historically understood-that deacons are not the ones who are to be in charge of the teaching and leadership of the church. They aren’t required to be skilled in understanding and teaching the Word of God as elders are, and they have another role that is clearly outlined in the Bible. They are to serve the physical and organizational needs of the church, taking the burden of “waiting tables” off of those whose duty it really is to devote themselves to prayer and the ministry of the Word.

Fourth, when the pastor and the deacons both have a degree of spiritual leadership, it can sometimes produce a tension-at worst, an outright struggle-between them over the leadership of the church. While this is certainly possible with elders as well, it is less likely where the pastor understands himself to be-and is understood by the congregation as-only one of several elders, each with an equal share of the burden of ministry, and each with a duty to respect and submit to the others.

Fifth, when there is not a plurality of elders in the local church, the pastor almost always finds himself with an impossible load, as the entire burden of the ministry is on his shoulders. He is particularly vulnerable to criticism for initiatives he might take to lead the church in new directions. If the church is larger than even just a few dozen members, it can be nearly impossible for the pastor to know the congregation well enough to care for them spiritually as an under-shepherd of the flock should.

So, for obedience to the Bible, for clarity on who’s in charge, for clarity regarding the role of deacons, for unanimity in leadership, and for the relief of the pastor, consider leading your church to adopt a plurality of elders. These are just a few reasons, and there are many more. Making that sort of move may be difficult, and so it should be approached deliberately, with great wisdom and much faithful teaching of the congregation. If done wisely, however, regaining the Biblical model of plural eldership can have great fruit for your church and for the whole Bride of Christ.

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Jeff Cavanaugh is pursuing a Master of Divinity at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. Originally from central Ohio, he graduated from Patrick Henry College with a degree in Government. Before moving to Louisville, he spent some time in Washington, D.C. where he interned at Capitol Hill Baptist Church and worked for the White House handling presidential correspondence. He is a member at Third Avenue Baptist Church and hopes to pursue pastoral ministry after finishing seminary. He is married to a wonderful wife, Andrea.

 

→ 1 CommentCategories: Baptist · Elder · Guest Blogger · The Church

Book Review: The Bruised Reed by Richard Sibbes

Thursday, May 29, 2008 · 1 Comment

I am pleased this week, while on vacation, to have Jeff Cavanaugh as a guest blogger on Pastor and People. Jeff is someone I have grown to appreciate not only as a theologian, thinker, and writer but also as a dear friend. I trust you will enjoy his posts and be encouraged by his words.

Book Review: The Bruised Reed by Richard Sibbes

Jesus Christ, the Son of God and the second person of the Trinity, is presented in Scripture as an inescapably fearful figure. The vision of Him that John records at the beginning of Revelation left John on his face as though dead, and considering Christ as the great Judge who will destroy His enemies at the last day has caused many more men to be utterly abased and driven to despair. But, strangely, gloriously, Jesus is also the Comforter, the Wonderful Counselor and Good Shepherd who is wondrously tender with His sheep. It is this tender, comforting side of Christ’s nature that Richard Sibbes is primarily concerned with meditating on in The Bruised Reed, and it is indeed a wonderful meditation.

Sibbes’ text is from Isaiah 42:

Behold my servant, whom I uphold; mine elect, in whom my soul delighteth; I have put my spirit upon him: he shall bring forth judgment to the Gentiles. He shall not cry, nor lift up, nor cause his voice to be heard in the street. A bruised reed shall he not break, and the smoking flax shall he not quench: he shall bring forth judgment unto truth.

From this passage, and especially verse three, Sibbes elaborates beautifully on the person and offices of Christ as the Servant of God who treats His people with the utmost care as He sustains and purifies them, bringing forth “judgment unto truth.” The bruised reed, Sibbes says, represents a man who is in misery because of his sin and is despondent but for the hope he has in Christ. Christ will handle this person, bruised by his sin, gently, until through the misery he is purged of sin. Likewise, the smoking flax stands for a Christian in whom, though the flame of the Holy Spirit is kindled, it is weak, and the fumes of sin’s effects make him miserable. In the same way, Christ will not quench this believer, but will fan into flame the spark that he possesses until it grows and burns away all sinful impurities and he becomes a bright light shining forth the glory of God. As Jesus is so gently shepherding us, he is bringing forth the judgment of His gracious kingdom in us and through us, and one he will have brought it forth to victory and His kingdom will be consummated.

Everyone who struggles with sin-and that means every true believer-should find this book tremendously encouraging and comforting. There are times when each of us is in misery because of his own sin and its cancerous effects in our lives. In these times, we need more than anything else what Sibbes provides: a meditation on Christ and His work in our lives. Focusing on Christ, not on ourselves, is key to finding comfort and assurance when we feel particularly “bruised.”

Perhaps the only criticism that may justly be offered against The Bruised Reed is that it is not as narrowly exegetical as he seems to be at first blush, or as one would normally expect from a sermon. Sibbes lays out a wealth of comfort, encouragement, inspiration, and truth in these pages, but it is not always clear that it all comes from the Isaiah text. A great deal of the significance Sibbes finds in the images in this passage seem to be related to the meaning of the text primarily in an allegorical way, rather than literally or typologically. For example, his image of sparks (from the flax) by nature flying upwards as a symbol of the “Spirit of grace carry[ing] the soul heaven-ward and sett[ing] before us holy and heavenly aims,” does not seem to be the originally intended meaning of the passage. Additionally, some of the other passages he cites throughout the text don’t seem to closely support the point he intends them to make. For example, he uses 1 Corinthians 3:17, making a point about a Christian being “a sacred thing,” when the context of the passage clearly indicates that it refers to the corporate body of the church, not to individual Christians.

For all this inexact application and occasional stretching the meaning of the text (and it is really a minor problem), the book is still packed chock-full of wonderful nuggets of truth that I will be meditating on for some time to come. One of the more helpful is a point that he makes throughout the book, speaking to the man who is so painfully aware of his sin that it makes him miserable, and causes him to question whether there really is any true faith and repentance in him. He says,

Fire, where it is present, is in some degree active. So the least measure of grace works, as springing from the Spirit of God, who, from his operations, is compared to fire. Even in sins, when there seems nothing active but corruption, there is a contrary principle, which breaks the force of sin, so that it is not boundlessly sinful, as in those that are carnal.

Even when sin is so hideously present that it seems to obscure all else-when the fire cannot be seen because of all the smoke-still we can find comfort in that the awareness of sin and conviction is itself an evidence of grace. Were there no Spirit within us-no fire-we would feel no conviction and misery-no smoke. So then, in some ways misery because of sin is something for which to thank God, because in it we know that He has given us new life and is busy refining us into the image of Christ, painful though the process may be.

____________________

Jeff Cavanaugh is pursuing a Master of Divinity at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. Originally from central Ohio, he graduated from Patrick Henry College with a degree in Government. Before moving to Louisville, he spent some time in Washington, D.C. where he interned at Capitol Hill Baptist Church and worked for the White House handling presidential correspondence. He is a member at Third Avenue Baptist Church and hopes to pursue pastoral ministry after finishing seminary. He is married to a wonderful wife, Andrea.

→ 1 CommentCategories: Book Recommendations · Book Review · Books · Guest Blogger · Jesus · Puritans · Richard Sibbes

The Reformation of the Church, pt. 2

Wednesday, May 28, 2008 · No Comments

I am pleased this week, while on vacation, to have Jeff Cavanaugh as a guest blogger on Pastor and People. Jeff is someone I have grown to appreciate not only as a theologian, thinker, and writer but also as a dear friend. I trust you will enjoy his posts and be encouraged by his words.

The Reformation of the Church, pt. 2 by Jeff Cavanaugh

The Reformation also resulted in a more biblical understanding of the pastor and his role in the church. In the Roman Catholic Church, the priest was believed to have important supernatural or magical powers, and he was a crucial part of mediating the grace of God to laymen. In the Eucharist, it was held, the priest re-sacrificed Christ by transubstantiating the elements of bread and wine into Christ’s actual body and blood. The priest was also supposed to have the power to grant absolution after hearing confession and assigning penance.

In the Reformation, the role of the priest shifted from performing the Eucharist to the preaching of God’s Word. Since Protestants no longer believed that the sacraments had salvific power, they understood that the priest couldn’t forgive sin or directly administer the grace of God the way Catholics believed he could. Rather, they understood that since salvation comes through faith alone and that faith comes by hearing the Word of God, the priest’s-now the pastor’s-most important duty was preaching the life-giving Word to the people.

This new focus on preaching meant that the standards for being a clergyman in a Reformed church were far different than those for being a priest in the Catholic Church. Though Rome may have had stricter official requirements, many Catholic priests were scarcely literate, since the mere recitation of the liturgy required little education and virtually no knowledge of the Scriptures. In contrast, to be ordained as a minister of the Word of God required thorough knowledge of the Bible and true theology, and substantial training in preaching and exegesis. Pastors were also expected to be examples of personal holiness and devotion to God, which was a stark contrast from the extreme moral degradation of the medieval Catholic clergy.

Finally, the Reformation had important implications for Protestants’ understanding of the nature of the sacraments. Whereas Rome had seven sacraments (baptism, confirmation, communion, confession, marriage, holy orders, and last rites), the Reformers rejected all but baptism and the Lord’s Supper, as these were the only ones instituted by Jesus in the New Testament. Though faithful administration of these were considered to be a mark of a true church, they were no longer considered essential for salvation. God’s grace in Christ’s atonement, they understood, was applied to the believer solely through faith, not by performance of any works.

The Protestant view of the Lord’s Supper differed from the Catholic doctrine of the Eucharist primarily in their rejection of transubstantiation, though Protestant views varied. Luther continued to believe in the real physical presence of Christ’s body in the elements of the supper, though he understood this to be brought about by the faith of the communicant and not by the magical powers of a priest. Calvin and Zwingli denied Christ’s physical presence in the supper, understanding that Jesus’ physical body was at the right hand of God the Father in Heaven and instead teaching that Christ was spiritually present in the Supper and that the believing communicant fed on Christ in his heart.

The Reformers also rejected Rome’s belief that baptism regenerated the individual (usually an infant) to whom it was given. Though the Anabaptists in the Radical Reformation adopted believers’ baptism immediately, they were marginalized and persecuted throughout most of Protestant Europe. The Magisterial Reformers retained belief in infant baptism and articulated a new doctrine of covenant theology that understood baptism to be the sign of covenant membership and parallel to circumcision in the Old Testament. In the seventeenth century some Reformed Protestants began to embrace believers’ baptism, and Baptists eventually became one of the three major Reformed factions in England, with the Presbyterians and episcopalian Anglicans.

These three areas-the church, the role of pastors, and the sacraments-were perhaps the most notable of the doctrinal changes of the Reformation. They were tremendously important for the way the new Protestant churches developed and how they came to understand the Christian faith. They are perfect examples of the significance of the Reformers’ recovery of the gospel of justification by faith alone, and they are a wonderful picture of how Christ works to reform and perfect His Church.

____________________

 

Jeff Cavanaugh is pursuing a Master of Divinity at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. Originally from central Ohio, he graduated from Patrick Henry College with a degree in Government. Before moving to Louisville, he spent some time in Washington, D.C. where he interned at Capitol Hill Baptist Church and worked for the White House handling presidential correspondence. He is a member at Third Avenue Baptist Church and hopes to pursue pastoral ministry after finishing seminary. He is married to a wonderful wife, Andrea.

→ No CommentsCategories: Church History · Doctrine · Guest Blogger · John Calvin · Martin Luther · Reformation · Reformed

The Reformation of the Church, pt. 1

Tuesday, May 27, 2008 · 2 Comments

I am pleased this week, while on vacation, to have Jeff Cavanaugh as a guest blogger on Pastor and People. Jeff is someone I have grown to appreciate not only as a theologian, thinker, and writer but also as a dear friend. I trust you will enjoy his posts and be encouraged by his words.

The Reformation of the Church, pt. 1 by Jeff Cavanaugh

The Protestant Reformation was a world-shaking event. It changed the structure of society wherever its doctrines took root, and the recovery of the Gospel which was its central focus brought millions of people out of spiritual darkness and into the light of Christ. The doctrine of justification by faith alone, which Luther called “the article by which the Church stands or falls”, was at the center of the radically different Protestant understanding of what it meant to be a Christian. Three important areas of thought were particularly affected by sola fide: the understanding of the church, the pastor and his role, and the sacraments.

First, the Reformation turned upside down the doctrine of the church. In medieval Roman Catholicism (and in the Roman church to this day), the church was understood to be the visible structure of priests, bishops, cardinals, monks, nuns, and other ordained officials who all owed allegiance to the Pope, the Bishop of Rome and the Vicar of Christ. The Nicean attributes of the church-one, holy, catholic, and apostolic-were abused by Catholic theologians foundational to the claim that Rome’s visible structure was the only true church and that salvation could only be found in obedience to Rome and her dispensation of the sacraments.

The Reformation changed all this. The Reformers came to understand that ultimately, the bride of Christ is made up not of bishops and cardinals, but of those who truly repent of their sins and believe in Jesus Christ. Their understanding that the Roman church was corrupt and fundamentally apostate from the Gospel was revolutionary, for it showed them that a true church was distinguished by faithfulness to the Gospel, not allegiance to the Pope.

The Reformation also began to change how the church understood its relation to the world. The Roman Catholic Church had proclaimed its sovereignty over all merely human governments, and for much of the Middle Ages it did indeed control the political life of much of Europe. After the reformation, however, the Augustinian understanding of the distinction between spiritual, heavenly power and earthly power came to be understood once more. In England and elsewhere, the situation was in fact reversed and the secular monarch was considered to be the head of the national church as well. It would be some time later that congregationalism would lead to the disestablishment of religion and the modern understanding of a separate church and state.

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Jeff Cavanaugh is pursuing a Master of Divinity at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. Originally from central Ohio, he graduated from Patrick Henry College with a degree in Government. Before moving to Louisville, he spent some time in Washington, D.C. where he interned at Capitol Hill Baptist Church and worked for the White House handling presidential correspondence. He is a member at Third Avenue Baptist Church and hopes to pursue pastoral ministry after finishing seminary. He is married to a wonderful wife, Andrea.

→ 2 CommentsCategories: Church History · Doctrine · Guest Blogger · John Calvin · Martin Luther · Reformation · Reformed · The Church

Advice to Young Ministers

Monday, May 26, 2008 · 5 Comments

You have just announced your calling into Christian ministry as a preacher of the gospel. Now what?

  1. Be sold out and focused on the glory of God. Make the exaltation of God’s glory the focus of all future ministry endeavors.
  2. Make the gospel of Christ the central theme and message of your ministry.
  3. Dedicate yourself to love and study the Word of God with all your might. You will be a student of Scripture for the rest of your life. Fall in love with God’s Word. Never study for a sermon but study to know Christ better.
  4. Be dependent upon the Holy Spirit in all you attempt. Sermon preparation, prayer, preaching, and all ministry endeavors will be governed by the Holy Spirit who will enable you to achieve each one.
  5. At the beginning of your ministry be consumed with a love for the nations and the work of missions around the world.
  6. Develop a biblically and doctrinally sound library. One of your greatest tools in ministry will be the books around you. Make a book wish list for your family and friends.
  7. Dedicate yourself to the reading and study of one or two theologians in church history. Understand the thought, writing, and devotion of these men that have walked before you. Men like Jonathan Edwards, John Bunyan, Charles Spurgeon, Richard Sibbes, John Owen, John Calvin, and Martin Luther.
  8. Surround yourself with good mentors. Pastors and other men who you look up too and can trust to direct you in the right way.
  9. Keep a journal. Even though I have consistently kept a journal for the past several years, one of my greatest regrets is not having a written record from the beginning of my ministry. Make journal keeping a life long discipline.
  10. Don’t neglect those in the nursing homes and shut-ins. One of the greatest treats of my life was a nursing home ministry I was apart of in college.
  11. Choose a proven, biblically dedicated and doctrinally sound seminary to receive your training.
  12. Practice the spiritual disciplines and do not neglect your own personal walk with Christ. Ministry is the greatest and highest calling in the world; it is also the toughest. Therefore, it is necessary to keep watch over your own soul.
  13. Don’t get “big-headed”. There is a tendency for young ministers to become overly confident and prideful. Stay away from such things.
  14. Stay alert and on guard at all times for the subtle ways of the enemy to knock you off your feet. Ministers still sin and still endure temptation. Don’t think you are immune lest you are caught off guard.
  15. Pray, pray, pray, and then pray some more.
  16. Listen to good preaching of good preachers.
  17. Attend pastoral conferences to familiarize yourself with other brothers in Christ.
  18. Surround yourself with like-minded friends. You can’t take on the world by yourself. But with a group of dedicated friends you can make a large impact for the Kingdom of Christ.
  19. Don’t neglect personal evangelism. Consistently tell others about Christ and His gracious provision on the cross.
  20. Love people. One of the greatest aspects in your ministry will be the love and care you show to all people. Follow the example of Christ in this area.
  21. Do not be consumed or focused on new trends or fads in the church. Be instead a faithful student of church history and learn how God blessed past generations and ministries.

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Posterity in Paint

Friday, May 23, 2008 · 1 Comment

“I must study politics and war that my sons may have liberty to study mathematics and philosophy. My sons ought to study mathematics and philosophy, geography, natural history, naval architecture, navigation, commerce, and agriculture, in order to give their children a right to study painting, poetry, music, architecture, statuary, tapestry, and porcelain.”

- John Adams

The movement of the paint brush is one of God’s greatest talents and blessings to man. Brush strokes that evoke emotion and feeling when stared at long enough. Vivid colors that come together to form that which is familiar and recognizable. Behind every brush is an artist that has carefully thought through every swish of the bristles and color applied to the canvas.

My good friend Timothy Williams, a senior at the University of Louisville, has a talent that has been a great blessing to me. Timothy has been an inspiration to me in many areas of life but most especially in his painting. Timothy’s work follows in the impressionistic style with visible brush strokes, play with color and light, and personal interpretation of the subject matter.

He has recently finished a painting series entitled, Posterity. This series of 7 includes famous buildings and homes of the Revolutionary War period. From the spire of Independence Hall to the serenity of Peacefield, where John Adams spent his retirement years, Timothy has captured the essence of this period in every color. Out of my love for American history and desire to see Timothy’s work spread abroad, I would like to feature these 7 pieces in the sincere hope that you would receive as much joy from them as I have.

Independence Hall

Mount Vernon

Peacefield

Monticello

Carpenters’ Hall

First Senate Building

Virginia Governor’s Mansion

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For more information about these and other pieces by Timothy Williams please leave a comment in the space provided below.

→ 1 CommentCategories: Art