A Pastor’s Life & Ministry
The pastor is unique in the life of a
church. He is the under - shepherd who carries the burden of leadership. Some
pastors feel compelled to please people, but a sincere pastor is always under
the pressure of pleasing the Lord.
Few church members understand their
pastor’s intense desire to please God. What burdens weigh on a godly pastor?
What responsibilities does the average pastor shoulder? The pastor carries the
responsibility to take care of himself, his family, and his church.
Robert Murray M’Cheyne was a scottish
pastor and preacher in the early nineteenth century. He gave his life to
serving Christ, but at the age of twenty-nine he passed away in a typhus
epidemic. On his deathbed, he said, “God gave me a horse and a message. I have
killed the horse and I can no longer deliver the message.” M’Cheyne felt a
sadness, not for the loss of his own life, but for the loss of opportunity to
preach the Gospel. He bore a heart of service and deep desire to teach the Word
of God to others. This is the heart of a pastor.
Today, the risks involved with the calling
of the pastor are increasing. Studies have shown that most pastors face high
levels of stress, work over sixty hours a week, and have struggled with
depression or burn out. But there have always been risks tied to
preaching—study the life of the Apostle Paul.
While we may not face religious persecution
today in America, that could change. But every sincere pastor would be willing
to give his life if it meant fulfilling his calling from God. Despite the
risks, the statistics, and the expectations, pastors desire to please God. What
are some of the burdens a pastor faces? What goes through the heart and mind of
a pastor?
A DEEP LOVE
FOR THE WORD OF GOD
A pastor thinks differently when he reads
his Bible. The average church member will read the Bible devotionally. Some
will deepen their reading with intense study. But the pastor centers his life
around the ministry of the Word. If a pastor does not love to plunge into the
Scriptures, he needs to have his heart checked. His primary job is preaching
the Word of God and preparing himself for those sermons.
This is why the first deacons were called
in Acts 6. The apostles saw the needs of the widows, but they knew it was not
proper to walk away from the ministry of prayer and the Word to meet those
needs themselves. They found deacons—godly servants—who could meet some
important needs while the apostles continued their study.
A pastor studies the Bible like a website.
On each webpage are links to other related webpages. Natural curiosity leads
the reader to a network of information on any topic of choice. A pastor will
look at Scripture in the same way. Verses are linked together with other
verses. With a passion to mine truth out of Scripture, a pastor will follow a
chain of references to understand the “full counsel of God.” Preaching is
communication, and God’s Word is the main message. The average Christian does
not fully understand the Bible, but the pastor’s job is to explain it.
PRAYER FOR
POWER
A pastor prepares his sermons through
intense study, but he knows that power in the presentation comes from the Holy
Spirit. If a pastor fails to pray fervently, he does not walk away from his greatest
source for power in ministry—he walks away from his only source for
power.
God gives His vision for the church to the
pastor through time in prayer. The pastor cannot delegate this crucial meeting
with God to anyone else, because God gives this vision only to His
undershepherd. It is imperative that a pastor has time for extended,
fervent prayer.
CONSTANT
PREPARATION
Along with continual prayer and Bible
study, a pastor is always looking for life examples of Bible principles. He can
find a seed thought in almost anything. Even when meeting a stranger on an
airplane, a spark of truth may spring from that conversation. If the pastor is
walking with God, the Holy Spirit will tell him, “Use this to teach the people
about Me.”
Jesus was always using everyday
circumstances to teach truth. One day Jesus set a child on His lap—just
greeting the children as someone who loves kids. But the disciples tried to
shoo the children away. They saw the children as an annoyance. Jesus used this
opportunity to teach the disciples about the faith of a child. The pastor
looks for truth in small events. Everything is an illustration of the Word of
God. He never knows when a new sermon may come along.
TRAINING
OTHERS
The constant preparation for preaching
is—at its core—part of the pastor’s burden to train others. He has a desire to
transfer knowledge from the Word of God to the next generation. This is done on
many levels. Some pastors train through the Sunday school. Some train their
ministry’s leadership team. God allows some ministries to begin a Bible
institute or even a full-time Bible college.
The pastor is responsible for training
others through his teaching and example. People learn as much from a model as
they do a lesson. Great teaching churches carry a contagious fervency—something
the student can carry into his life, his family, and his church.
LOVE FOR
FAMILY
No amount of training can replace the
pastor’s relationship with his family. If the pastor loses his marriage or
children, he has lost his ministry. The qualifications of a pastor are high.
But the pastor cannot demand that his marriage be good, nor can he can force
his children to please the Lord with their lives. He has to have the influence
of the Holy Spirit in his home.
The average pastor puts in over sixty hours
a week—a big job. It takes effort to make time for the family. He must be able
to recharge. One of the best things a church can do for their own spiritual
health is to allow the pastor the time to care for his family. Jesus went aside
for a while, and it’s necessary for a pastor to do the same.
There was a generation in fundamentalism
that could be best described as driven. Pastors were intensely focused
on the work of God, but some pastors lost their marriages in the process. This
is one of the greatest fears of a pastor.
THE BURDEN OF
FINANCES
It is important for the church to take care
of their pastor and his family because he carries the financial burden of the
church. All eyes are on the pastor to lead financially. He knows that if the
finances go bad, he will be the one who leaves. The church may hire accountants
and business managers to track the finances, but no one feels the pressure like
the pastor. The buck stops with him.
One of the best ways a church can help
their pastor is by meeting his family’s needs. Some pastors struggle with their
personal finances and may take advantage of the church’s generosity, but most
are willing to give everything they have to the ministry—life and finances. In
most independent churches, the pastor is one of the top givers. By
any amount, there may be church members who give more, but proportionally,
the pastor often sacrifices the most.
KEEPING
HIMSELF RIGHT
A pastor wants to produce for the Lord as
long as he can. He has the burden to stay sharp physically, mentally, and
spiritually. There have been men who have preached with tremendous health
problems, but a pastor must stay healthy for his family and church.
Time with God is vital for a pastor’s
spiritual health. A pastor never wants to walk to a pulpit feeling like he is
not right with the Lord. He may not have committed some wicked sin, but he
doesn’t want anything between himself and God. The responsibility to preach is
too great. When he steps behind the pulpit, the congregation thinks, “Bring it
to us. Pull the hot bread right out of the oven.”
Pastors are just people. They are all men
of flesh, but they want so much to be filled with the power of God. Very few
pastors feel they are up to the task, but they have a sincere desire to
faithfully serve God.
Pray for your Pastor; he needs it (i do).
Until then,
See u at the top,
Pastor Mike
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