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Sunday, July 07, 2013

No More Classes... move to the street!



More churches have began to put more emphasis on ministry beyond their walls. Many pastors have found that getting a church to be more focused on “ministry for others than ministry for us,” is difficult.  Why is it so difficult? One reason is that ministry to people groups in the community is awkward for most churches because they have little experience with most of the people groups in the community.

At the same time it has been encouraging to see more and more churches begin equipping classes. 

There are reasons that churches struggle to run effective equipping classes:

(1)  Churches tend to equip lay people the same way that the clergy were equipped, by putting them into class rooms.
(2)  They focus student’s attention inward. People are more likely to find their ministry passion by looking outward at a people group than they are inward at their spiritual gift or personality profile.
(3)  Once the class is finished most people are still not aware of their ministry passion.
(4)  When people do not have a ministry passion of their own churches tend to provide a list of existing ministries for them to choose from. When that happens people tend to respond as volunteers, (willing), more than they do servants, (compelled).
(5)  With an inward focus there can be too much emphasis put on discovering one’s spiritual gift. That is a problem because:

A.   There is no consistent list of spiritual gifts being taught. The number of gifts being taught in different classes ranges from seven to thirty seven or more.
B.  Once someone has identified their spiritual gift they often need help translating the gift into practical ministry.
C.    The difference between gifts and talents is often blurred and confusing.
D.    Spiritual gifts, like other difficult and unclear subjects in scripture, can degenerate into turf for “Witch Doctors and Medicine Men.”

Whatever a particular church’s position on the gifts is, when someone leaves that church and goes to another they are likely to find that the gifts are treated differently. Passion, on the other hand does not have the same problems. One does not need to go to a class to discover their passion. God has programmed all of us to be passionate about one or many issues or types of people. To discover that passion we need to be encouraged to look outside of ourselves. The cool thing is that when we pursue our passion we will exercise our gift or gifts. Gifts do not need to be understood or analyzed, they need to exercised.

1 comment:

Wayne said...

This is so true and insightful!

Two things I'd add:

1. Many of the problems that ministries in churches experience are because of the false dichotomy of the "sacred" and the "secular". There's no such distinction in a believer's life. None.

2. Other problems are caused by a blind spot that many pastors have: they don't believe in the Protestant Work Ethic. That is, they don't believe that all work, done for God, is equal. Deep down, they believe that their calling, "The Ministry" is a higher calling, and it comes across to the congregation.

A Parable: A father, an ex-Marine, has two sons. The first son comes to him one day and announces that he is enlisting... in the Air Force. His father shakes his hand and congratulates him. "It's good to serve your country, son. You've made an honorable choice."

As this son is leaving, the father's second son comes into the room and announces that he, too, is enlisting... in the Marines. "SEMPER FI! THE FEW THE PROUD! You make me proud son!", at which point the father starts singing the Marine Anthem.

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