American Research Journal of Humanities & Social Science (ARJHSS) is a double blind peer reviewed, open access journal published by (ARJHSS).
The main objective of ARJHSS is to provide an intellectual platform for the international scholars. ARJHSS aims to promote interdisciplinary studies in Humanities & Social Science and become the leading journal in Humanities & Social Science in the world.
Spiritual gifts are abilities given by the Holy Spirit to each believer to serve God and further the work of the church. The document discusses several spiritual gifts mentioned in the Bible like evangelism, teaching, and serving. It emphasizes that every believer has at least one gift and encourages members to discover their gifts so they can meaningfully contribute to the church's mission. The document also notes that while some gifts like preaching are more visible, other supportive gifts like serving and administration are equally important for the church's functioning and evangelism. Members are responsible for identifying their gifts and using them for ministry under the guidance of the Holy Spirit.
Rev. Curtis Boehm describes his preaching style as abductive, conversational, and focused on developing one key thought from the text over 5-6 weeks in a sermon series. He aims for sermons to be 15-20 minutes and enjoys using various media like images, videos, and songs to illustrate points. Recently, he has been trying to make every sermon more Christ-centered by allowing Christ's character and message to permeate regardless of the biblical book. He has no major concerns about a congregation using exclusively current Christian rock music for worship as long as the music and lyrics are thoughtfully planned and not all songs are equal in message.
This document discusses the history and vision of the cell church model. It begins by describing Pastor David Yongii Cho's experience of burnout in 1964 which led him to rediscover the church model seen in Acts, with an emphasis on small group communities meeting in homes in addition to larger corporate worship. This small group model was implemented in Cho's church in Korea and resulted in explosive growth to over 250,000 members, becoming the largest Protestant church. The cell church vision sees these small groups as integral communities that together form the body of Christ, with Christ's presence among them. While the model achieved great success internationally, it met with challenges when imported to the US due to cultural and structural differences.
This document contains responses from Rev. Curtis Boehm to questions about his preaching style, concerns about a congregation that uses exclusively contemporary Christian rock music, views on the importance of a permanent facility for a mission plant congregation, ways to address spiritual growth needs outside of Sunday service with a time-bound facility, approaches to communion in a mission plant setting, guidelines for confirmation, whether others would view him as a hands-on leader, barriers to reaching the lost in a traditional Lutheran setting, important characteristics of a successful mission plant, things he has learned about himself in ministry, and a note about his current situation with family and training.
This document summarizes key points from the book "Bonsai Theory of Church Growth" by Ken Hemphill. It discusses how churches can artificially limit their growth by keeping them in a small "pot" through factors like facility size, leadership capacity, and vision. It also outlines ways churches can "prune roots" and "pinch back new growth" through practices like trimming membership rolls, limiting opportunities for new people, and not adapting to new ideas. The summary stresses that churches need to understand their community's "soil" and remove artificial barriers to allow for natural and supernatural growth.
The document discusses Pope Benedict XVI's declaration of a Year for Priests beginning in June 2009 to honor St. John Vianney and support priests. It highlights the importance of the priesthood, especially the roles of celebrating the Eucharist and absolving sins. It addresses challenges today's priests face in secular culture and the need for strong formation, spirituality, and missionary zeal to remain faithful to their vocations.
Spiritual gifts are abilities given by the Holy Spirit to each believer to serve God and further the work of the church. The document discusses several spiritual gifts mentioned in the Bible like evangelism, teaching, and serving. It emphasizes that every believer has at least one gift and encourages members to discover their gifts so they can meaningfully contribute to the church's mission. The document also notes that while some gifts like preaching are more visible, other supportive gifts like serving and administration are equally important for the church's functioning and evangelism. Members are responsible for identifying their gifts and using them for ministry under the guidance of the Holy Spirit.
Rev. Curtis Boehm describes his preaching style as abductive, conversational, and focused on developing one key thought from the text over 5-6 weeks in a sermon series. He aims for sermons to be 15-20 minutes and enjoys using various media like images, videos, and songs to illustrate points. Recently, he has been trying to make every sermon more Christ-centered by allowing Christ's character and message to permeate regardless of the biblical book. He has no major concerns about a congregation using exclusively current Christian rock music for worship as long as the music and lyrics are thoughtfully planned and not all songs are equal in message.
This document discusses the history and vision of the cell church model. It begins by describing Pastor David Yongii Cho's experience of burnout in 1964 which led him to rediscover the church model seen in Acts, with an emphasis on small group communities meeting in homes in addition to larger corporate worship. This small group model was implemented in Cho's church in Korea and resulted in explosive growth to over 250,000 members, becoming the largest Protestant church. The cell church vision sees these small groups as integral communities that together form the body of Christ, with Christ's presence among them. While the model achieved great success internationally, it met with challenges when imported to the US due to cultural and structural differences.
This document contains responses from Rev. Curtis Boehm to questions about his preaching style, concerns about a congregation that uses exclusively contemporary Christian rock music, views on the importance of a permanent facility for a mission plant congregation, ways to address spiritual growth needs outside of Sunday service with a time-bound facility, approaches to communion in a mission plant setting, guidelines for confirmation, whether others would view him as a hands-on leader, barriers to reaching the lost in a traditional Lutheran setting, important characteristics of a successful mission plant, things he has learned about himself in ministry, and a note about his current situation with family and training.
This document summarizes key points from the book "Bonsai Theory of Church Growth" by Ken Hemphill. It discusses how churches can artificially limit their growth by keeping them in a small "pot" through factors like facility size, leadership capacity, and vision. It also outlines ways churches can "prune roots" and "pinch back new growth" through practices like trimming membership rolls, limiting opportunities for new people, and not adapting to new ideas. The summary stresses that churches need to understand their community's "soil" and remove artificial barriers to allow for natural and supernatural growth.
The document discusses Pope Benedict XVI's declaration of a Year for Priests beginning in June 2009 to honor St. John Vianney and support priests. It highlights the importance of the priesthood, especially the roles of celebrating the Eucharist and absolving sins. It addresses challenges today's priests face in secular culture and the need for strong formation, spirituality, and missionary zeal to remain faithful to their vocations.
This is a collection of writings that deal with the issue of Apostles and whether the gift has ended or still exists today. Many different convictions are shared in these writings.
Check out our first edition of the convocation newsletter, The Encouraging Word!
We will publish quarterly editions of the newsletter to our facebook page. Member clergy and lay leaders are welcome to contribute announcements, church bios (called "parish spotlights" in the newsletter), articles, poetry, theological musings, or letters-to-the-editor.
All submissions for the Winter 2013 Edition of The Encouraging Word are due by Nov. 27th, 2013. You can send them via facebook message, or you can email them to midsouthanglicanconvocation@yahoo.com.
This document discusses church discipline and maintaining spiritual health in the church. It begins by explaining that conversion does not guarantee perfect spiritual health, and churches have neglected church discipline, leading to widespread spiritual unhealthiness. It then outlines the biblical process for church discipline according to Matthew 18:15-20. This involves first privately and humbly confronting a brother or sister about their sin, with the goal of restoration. If they do not listen, additional steps such as involving others may be taken. Historically, churches practiced regular discipline, but it has largely been abandoned in recent decades.
Apostles/Evangelists of the First Three Centuries as Exemplars for Modern M...Robert Munson
This paper considers the challenge of defining the term missionary in a way that is useful--- neither excessively broad nor narrow in scope. It is suggested that rather than focusing on a definition for determining who is a missionary, which ultimately places attention on the boundaries of the term, a better choice is to focus on exemplars of missionaries. In an attempt to do this, the paper suggests that the pattern of apostles and evangelists of the first three centuries of church history provides such an exemplar. More specifically, since Paul and Barnabas are the most well-known and well-described of this group of ministers, they can serve as the exemplars for this group, and ultimately for modern missionaries. The purpose of this paper is not to determine who is a missionary and who is not, but rather utilize these exemplars to critique modern definitions of the term missionary. Through this, the author believes that a better understanding of the center, rather than the boundaries, of Christian missionaries and missions can be better understood.
Homily by Most Rev. Salvatore Peenacchio, the Apostolic Nuncio to India during the Episcopal Ordination of Most Rev. Ivan Pereira in Jammu on February 21, 2015
This document provides a summary of events from 2014 involving the Dominican Friars Central Province. It discusses the 50th anniversary of priesthood for Fr. Chuck Dahm and Fr. John McGreevy. It notes the ordination of multiple new Dominican priests. It also discusses the changing Dominican presence in Albuquerque, New Mexico and the growth of the Dominican Education Initiative there. Finally, it mentions the first profession of vows made by two novices in the Dominican Order. Overall, it reviews a year of growth, change, and renewal for the Dominican Friars Central Province.
11 Principles of a Successful Youth MinistryPhillip Ivey
This document outlines 11 principles of a successful youth ministry. The first principle is that student ministry is primarily a discipleship ministry aimed at helping students grow in maturity and faith. While evangelism is important, the main goal is equipping and discipling believers. The second principle is that student ministry is part of the broader local church and should not isolate students, but rather prepare them to engage with the whole church. The third principle is that student ministry must focus its energy and resources on its core objectives of discipleship, evangelism, fellowship, service, and worship, rather than taking on many secondary goals.
This document provides information about religious education opportunities in the Archdiocese of Hartford, including notices about upcoming events, programs for adults and youth, and contact information for staff. It highlights Religious Education Month and the Year for Priests, and provides an update from the Director as well as stories from seminarians and priests.
Resume - Kevin Logan - Ministry Resume 2014.10.10Kevin Logan
Kevin Logan is seeking a pastoral or ministry position where he can demonstrate God's kingdom and equip others for ministry. He has experience leading worship, prayer groups, cell groups, and providing pastoral care. He is ordained and has training from various Christian organizations in areas like leadership, discipleship, counseling, and operating in spiritual gifts.
Better than New: Christian Perfection as Informed by Wabi SabiRobert Munson
1. The document discusses how the Japanese aesthetic concept of Wabi Sabi, which emphasizes impermanence and imperfection, can inform understandings of Christian perfection.
2. Wabi Sabi sees beauty in aging, change, and repair rather than only in newness and flawlessness. This perspective is compatible with descriptions of perfection in the Bible which do not depict it as static.
3. Applying Wabi Sabi principles could mean recognizing beauty in Christians' repaired brokenness rather than hiding flaws, and seeing perfection as a dynamic process rather than a single ideal state. Uniqueness may then be a source of beauty rather than an impediment.
This document is a letter from the pastor of Good Shepherd Lutheran Church to the congregation. It discusses recent controversies involving interfaith activities by other Lutheran denominations. The pastor encourages members to study the ELCA's beliefs to better understand and articulate their theological stance of inclusive grace. He proposes a resolution for the synod assembly addressing interfaith prayer and cooperation. The letter also provides church updates and introduces new members who have joined.
This letter is a response by Richard Joseph Krejcir to a pastoral search. Krejcir has over 25 years of experience in pastoral roles including teaching pastor, small group pastor, counseling, and other ministries. He has a passion for teaching God's word and connecting people to Christ. Krejcir has attained several relevant degrees including a Master of Divinity and Doctorate in Practical Theology. He has extensive training and experience founding ministries and engaging in social media to serve the Lord. Krejcir is looking for a long-term pastoral commitment and believes he would be a good fit for this church.
Fr. Bill Watters was interviewed about his journey to the priesthood and ministry. He discerned a call to the priesthood as a child influenced by priests and nuns. He attended a Jesuit prep school and was drawn to the Jesuits through reading about St. Ignatius. After ordination, he had various assignments including teaching, administration, and weekends assisting at parishes before becoming a pastor. He found spiritual direction, teaching, celebrating liturgy, and assisting the dying most fulfilling. When assigned to St. Ignatius Parish twenty years ago, he took initiatives to revitalize the parish from its weaker state at that time.
This document discusses the nature and categorization of biblical law, focusing on whether the Sabbath command is part of the "new covenant" and still binding. It outlines four categories of biblical law: moral, ritual/ceremonial, civil, and health. While these categories can be helpful if defined carefully, assumptions about a law's binding nature can influence its categorization. The document argues that identifying certain laws as "moral" refers to universal principles governing relationships. It notes the Ten Commandments exemplify but are not the only expression of moral law. The ritual/ceremonial laws regulated interaction with God and ritual purity. Many civil laws applied moral principles. Health laws promoted physical and spiritual well-being
A presentation that summarizes some aspects of Missionary Member Care with greater focus on the context of Protestant Missionaries who are sent out from Asian churches.
I. — Uniting with the Church . . 7
II. — Beginning Well 14
III. — The Christian Life: The Ideal 20
IV. — Living for God: Consecration 27
V. — Meeting Temptation: Conflict 36
VI. — Working for Christ : Service . 44
VII. — Helps: Personal Prayer ... 53
VIII.— Helps : The Bible 64
IX. — Helps : The Church and its Services . 75
X. — Some of the Duties 90
XL— Growing in One's Place : Providence 97
XII. — Preparation for Trial .... 104
Rhua Ministries provides spiritual covering and support to pastors, churches, and ministries. Their coverage aims to focus on spiritual needs rather than legal or hierarchical structure. They offer three levels of coverage - personal, ministerial, and congregational - depending on the ministry's needs. Their goal is to impart vision, provide counsel, and strengthen ministries through spiritual care and partnership while respecting each ministry's autonomy.
The document discusses implementing a five-fold leadership model in churches based on Ephesians 4:11, consisting of apostles, prophets, evangelists, shepherds, and teachers (APEST). It argues that most churches only focus on shepherds and teachers, neglecting the other roles. A mission-oriented church requires all five types of leadership to function at its best. The author's church, Mosaic, is restructuring its leadership team to represent each of the five roles of APEST in order to make the church more effective in its mission.
The document provides information about the roles of elders and deacons within the Reformed Church in America (RCA). It discusses that elders are responsible for the spiritual oversight of the congregation through nurturing spiritual growth, maintaining discipline, and overseeing preaching and the sacraments. Deacons' role is one of service and meeting needs of both the congregation and wider community through ministries of mercy, service, and outreach. The document aims to help elders and deacons at Bethany Reformed Church understand and carry out their roles within the RCA structure.
This is a collection of writings that deal with the issue of Apostles and whether the gift has ended or still exists today. Many different convictions are shared in these writings.
Check out our first edition of the convocation newsletter, The Encouraging Word!
We will publish quarterly editions of the newsletter to our facebook page. Member clergy and lay leaders are welcome to contribute announcements, church bios (called "parish spotlights" in the newsletter), articles, poetry, theological musings, or letters-to-the-editor.
All submissions for the Winter 2013 Edition of The Encouraging Word are due by Nov. 27th, 2013. You can send them via facebook message, or you can email them to midsouthanglicanconvocation@yahoo.com.
This document discusses church discipline and maintaining spiritual health in the church. It begins by explaining that conversion does not guarantee perfect spiritual health, and churches have neglected church discipline, leading to widespread spiritual unhealthiness. It then outlines the biblical process for church discipline according to Matthew 18:15-20. This involves first privately and humbly confronting a brother or sister about their sin, with the goal of restoration. If they do not listen, additional steps such as involving others may be taken. Historically, churches practiced regular discipline, but it has largely been abandoned in recent decades.
Apostles/Evangelists of the First Three Centuries as Exemplars for Modern M...Robert Munson
This paper considers the challenge of defining the term missionary in a way that is useful--- neither excessively broad nor narrow in scope. It is suggested that rather than focusing on a definition for determining who is a missionary, which ultimately places attention on the boundaries of the term, a better choice is to focus on exemplars of missionaries. In an attempt to do this, the paper suggests that the pattern of apostles and evangelists of the first three centuries of church history provides such an exemplar. More specifically, since Paul and Barnabas are the most well-known and well-described of this group of ministers, they can serve as the exemplars for this group, and ultimately for modern missionaries. The purpose of this paper is not to determine who is a missionary and who is not, but rather utilize these exemplars to critique modern definitions of the term missionary. Through this, the author believes that a better understanding of the center, rather than the boundaries, of Christian missionaries and missions can be better understood.
Homily by Most Rev. Salvatore Peenacchio, the Apostolic Nuncio to India during the Episcopal Ordination of Most Rev. Ivan Pereira in Jammu on February 21, 2015
This document provides a summary of events from 2014 involving the Dominican Friars Central Province. It discusses the 50th anniversary of priesthood for Fr. Chuck Dahm and Fr. John McGreevy. It notes the ordination of multiple new Dominican priests. It also discusses the changing Dominican presence in Albuquerque, New Mexico and the growth of the Dominican Education Initiative there. Finally, it mentions the first profession of vows made by two novices in the Dominican Order. Overall, it reviews a year of growth, change, and renewal for the Dominican Friars Central Province.
11 Principles of a Successful Youth MinistryPhillip Ivey
This document outlines 11 principles of a successful youth ministry. The first principle is that student ministry is primarily a discipleship ministry aimed at helping students grow in maturity and faith. While evangelism is important, the main goal is equipping and discipling believers. The second principle is that student ministry is part of the broader local church and should not isolate students, but rather prepare them to engage with the whole church. The third principle is that student ministry must focus its energy and resources on its core objectives of discipleship, evangelism, fellowship, service, and worship, rather than taking on many secondary goals.
This document provides information about religious education opportunities in the Archdiocese of Hartford, including notices about upcoming events, programs for adults and youth, and contact information for staff. It highlights Religious Education Month and the Year for Priests, and provides an update from the Director as well as stories from seminarians and priests.
Resume - Kevin Logan - Ministry Resume 2014.10.10Kevin Logan
Kevin Logan is seeking a pastoral or ministry position where he can demonstrate God's kingdom and equip others for ministry. He has experience leading worship, prayer groups, cell groups, and providing pastoral care. He is ordained and has training from various Christian organizations in areas like leadership, discipleship, counseling, and operating in spiritual gifts.
Better than New: Christian Perfection as Informed by Wabi SabiRobert Munson
1. The document discusses how the Japanese aesthetic concept of Wabi Sabi, which emphasizes impermanence and imperfection, can inform understandings of Christian perfection.
2. Wabi Sabi sees beauty in aging, change, and repair rather than only in newness and flawlessness. This perspective is compatible with descriptions of perfection in the Bible which do not depict it as static.
3. Applying Wabi Sabi principles could mean recognizing beauty in Christians' repaired brokenness rather than hiding flaws, and seeing perfection as a dynamic process rather than a single ideal state. Uniqueness may then be a source of beauty rather than an impediment.
This document is a letter from the pastor of Good Shepherd Lutheran Church to the congregation. It discusses recent controversies involving interfaith activities by other Lutheran denominations. The pastor encourages members to study the ELCA's beliefs to better understand and articulate their theological stance of inclusive grace. He proposes a resolution for the synod assembly addressing interfaith prayer and cooperation. The letter also provides church updates and introduces new members who have joined.
This letter is a response by Richard Joseph Krejcir to a pastoral search. Krejcir has over 25 years of experience in pastoral roles including teaching pastor, small group pastor, counseling, and other ministries. He has a passion for teaching God's word and connecting people to Christ. Krejcir has attained several relevant degrees including a Master of Divinity and Doctorate in Practical Theology. He has extensive training and experience founding ministries and engaging in social media to serve the Lord. Krejcir is looking for a long-term pastoral commitment and believes he would be a good fit for this church.
Fr. Bill Watters was interviewed about his journey to the priesthood and ministry. He discerned a call to the priesthood as a child influenced by priests and nuns. He attended a Jesuit prep school and was drawn to the Jesuits through reading about St. Ignatius. After ordination, he had various assignments including teaching, administration, and weekends assisting at parishes before becoming a pastor. He found spiritual direction, teaching, celebrating liturgy, and assisting the dying most fulfilling. When assigned to St. Ignatius Parish twenty years ago, he took initiatives to revitalize the parish from its weaker state at that time.
This document discusses the nature and categorization of biblical law, focusing on whether the Sabbath command is part of the "new covenant" and still binding. It outlines four categories of biblical law: moral, ritual/ceremonial, civil, and health. While these categories can be helpful if defined carefully, assumptions about a law's binding nature can influence its categorization. The document argues that identifying certain laws as "moral" refers to universal principles governing relationships. It notes the Ten Commandments exemplify but are not the only expression of moral law. The ritual/ceremonial laws regulated interaction with God and ritual purity. Many civil laws applied moral principles. Health laws promoted physical and spiritual well-being
A presentation that summarizes some aspects of Missionary Member Care with greater focus on the context of Protestant Missionaries who are sent out from Asian churches.
I. — Uniting with the Church . . 7
II. — Beginning Well 14
III. — The Christian Life: The Ideal 20
IV. — Living for God: Consecration 27
V. — Meeting Temptation: Conflict 36
VI. — Working for Christ : Service . 44
VII. — Helps: Personal Prayer ... 53
VIII.— Helps : The Bible 64
IX. — Helps : The Church and its Services . 75
X. — Some of the Duties 90
XL— Growing in One's Place : Providence 97
XII. — Preparation for Trial .... 104
Rhua Ministries provides spiritual covering and support to pastors, churches, and ministries. Their coverage aims to focus on spiritual needs rather than legal or hierarchical structure. They offer three levels of coverage - personal, ministerial, and congregational - depending on the ministry's needs. Their goal is to impart vision, provide counsel, and strengthen ministries through spiritual care and partnership while respecting each ministry's autonomy.
The document discusses implementing a five-fold leadership model in churches based on Ephesians 4:11, consisting of apostles, prophets, evangelists, shepherds, and teachers (APEST). It argues that most churches only focus on shepherds and teachers, neglecting the other roles. A mission-oriented church requires all five types of leadership to function at its best. The author's church, Mosaic, is restructuring its leadership team to represent each of the five roles of APEST in order to make the church more effective in its mission.
The document provides information about the roles of elders and deacons within the Reformed Church in America (RCA). It discusses that elders are responsible for the spiritual oversight of the congregation through nurturing spiritual growth, maintaining discipline, and overseeing preaching and the sacraments. Deacons' role is one of service and meeting needs of both the congregation and wider community through ministries of mercy, service, and outreach. The document aims to help elders and deacons at Bethany Reformed Church understand and carry out their roles within the RCA structure.
1. The document discusses how churches should actively involve trained members in evangelism and witnessing work instead of just having them attend seminars.
2. It emphasizes the importance of sharing ministry responsibilities and finding roles for all willing members, using Moses as an example of recognizing the need for delegation.
3. Matching members' talents, experiences, and backgrounds to the people they will minister to is recommended for effective outreach.
THE ART OF EFFECTIVE CHURCH USHERING TRAINING MANUALAmb Steve Mbugua
This manual will help you build a great ushering, security, protocol, sanctuary keepers, hospitality and catering team.
Your ushers can make or break your worship service.
The difference between a grumpy, distracted, and untrained usher compared to a cheerful, engaged, and “serve you with a smile” usher is huge and the conversion from weak to a strong team will be made easier using this manual.
I’ve always loved the ushering team; it has always been one of my favorite ministries to lead.
The usher’s role is so important but often undervalued, under trained, and less than organized.
Your ushers are a tremendous force in setting the tone for worship and helping to prepare the people to hear and respond to the Word of God.
This manual will equip your team to serve with the right attitude, passion, love, wisdom, understanding, skills, revelation and spirit of excellence.
This document discusses the qualifications and responsibilities of church ushers. It begins by defining an usher as a spiritual ambassador for the local church who serves God by helping to create an atmosphere conducive for worship. Some key qualifications mentioned include being a good communicator, well-groomed, confident, able to multitask, patient, and having a big heart to welcome all people. The document outlines characteristics like communication skills, appearance, confidence, and patience that make for an effective usher. It emphasizes that ushers play an important role in setting the tone for worship and representing the church.
In the simplest terms, “vocation” means a “call.” In general terms your vocation is what God calls you to do with your life. Everyone is called to know, love and serve God in this life, in order to be happy with him forever in heaven.
The document provides guidance on perpetual evangelism and witnessing. It discusses how witnessing should continue throughout one's life rather than stopping after a period of time. It also emphasizes the importance of creating a nurturing environment for new believers and training others to witness. Additionally, it addresses reclaiming former members and minimizing factors that cause people to leave the church. The overall message is that churches must focus on continual outreach, incorporation of new members, and retention to effectively spread the gospel.
Masterful Mentoring - The Role of Mentoring in the Local ChurchJonathan Dunnemann
The document provides an overview of mentoring, defining key terms and exploring the history and purpose of mentoring. It discusses how mentoring has been used for centuries as a way for skilled workers and artisans to pass on their knowledge to apprentices. The document then defines mentoring as helping another person grow through a relationship where one person has more experience. It explores definitions of a mentor and what roles mentors play in guiding and supporting less experienced individuals. The overall summary is that mentoring is an age-old practice for developing skills and has historically been, and continues to be, important for leadership development in many fields including the church.
Pastoral councils are groups that represent the local faith community and work collaboratively with pastoral leaders to discern pastoral issues, develop creative solutions, and engage in pastoral planning. Effective pastoral councils are focused on the mission of the Church, open to learning, and integrate both the hierarchical and communal aspects of authority in the Catholic tradition.
This document is a chapter from a book about discerning God's call. The chapter focuses on the call to pastoral ministry. It describes the pastoral call as a noble and important high calling, as pastors lead God's most precious creation - the church. It also notes that the pastoral call is primarily a calling of character, as pastoral qualifications in the Bible emphasize virtues like being respectable, gentle, self-controlled, and having a good reputation. The chapter aims to elevate the importance of the pastoral calling and address why some resist this call.
This document describes the author's discipleship journey. It discusses how he initially struggled to be a disciple due to a lack of dedication to reading and learning. He realized he needed a mentor and decided to study under teachers at his church. Over time he gained more opportunities to study theology and the Bible at college. While the church provided resources and teachers, there were also challenges like members quarreling. Currently he teaches at Bible schools and advises churches to open their own schools to equip disciples to do evangelism. His goal is to prioritize discipleship making in his future work with the church.
These are notes from a simple introductory course on Church Planting. The majority of the course notes presented here are based upon J. D. Payne’s Planting Apostolic Churches.
RESPECTING HUMAN SEXUALITY report on our 1st year subject Gender and Developm...jeromeyano
This document discusses several key aspects of evangelization and catechesis according to Catholic teaching:
1. Evangelization involves proclaiming Christ and the Gospel through both words and actions to invite conversion, while catechesis involves initiating disciples into full Christian life through teaching doctrine.
2. Evangelization aims to make disciples who then evangelize others, while catechesis helps disciples mature in faith, prayer, virtue and service.
3. The process of evangelization and catechesis involves stages of relationship building, explicit proclamation, and ongoing discipleship formation.
This document discusses education inequality in Ivory Coast in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. It identifies types of conventional education inequalities related to school attainment, distribution, completion, and learning outcomes. While efforts have been made to promote equality and equity, inequalities persist. The use of media education during COVID-19 in Ivory Coast revealed gender and regional inequalities. There were both similarities and differences between conventional and media-based education inequalities. Media education helped reduce some inequalities but also created new ones related to access and resources. Addressing issues like school locations, inequity, and rural-urban divides could help promote more equal education opportunities.
This document summarizes a research paper that examines how a lack of local legitimacy has undermined the effectiveness of UN peacekeeping missions in the Horn of Africa region. It finds that host governments and conflicting parties often perceived missions as inappropriate or partisan, reducing cooperation. When local actors see missions as illegitimate, they are less likely to comply or support them. The document analyzes how legitimacy deficits influenced specific missions, like UNOSOM in Somalia in the 1990s, which failed in part due to a lack of consent from powerful Somali warlords. Overall, it concludes that a lack of local legitimacy has made missions unable to resolve conflicts and promote sustainable peace in the region.
STUDY ON THE DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY OF HUZHOU TOURISMAJHSSR Journal
ABSTRACT: Huzhou has rich tourism resources, as early as a considerable development since the reform and
opening up, especially in recent years, Huzhou tourism has ushered in a new period of development
opportunities. At present, Huzhou tourism has become one of the most characteristic tourist cities on the East
China tourism line. With the development of Huzhou City, the tourism industry has been further improved, and
the tourism degree of the whole city has further increased the transformation and upgrading of the tourism
industry. However, the development of tourism in Huzhou City still lags far behind the tourism development of
major cities in East China. This round of research mainly analyzes the current development of tourism in
Huzhou City, on the basis of analyzing the specific situation, pointed out that the current development of
Huzhou tourism problems, and then analyzes these problems one by one, and put forward some specific
solutions, so as to promote the further rapid development of tourism in Huzhou City.
KEYWORDS:Huzhou; Travel; Development
UR BHatti Academy dedicated to providing the finest IT courses training in the world. Under the guidance of experienced trainer Usman Rasheed Bhatti, we have established ourselves as a professional online training firm offering unparalleled courses in Pakistan. Our academy is a trailblazer in Dijkot, being the first institute to officially provide training to all students at their preferred schedules, led by real-world industry professionals and Google certified staff.
1. American Research Journal of Humanities Social Science (ARJHSS)R) 2019
ARJHSS Journal www.arjhss.com Page |1
American Research Journal of Humanities Social Science (ARJHSS)
E-ISSN:2378-702X
Volume-02, Issue-02, pp-01-13
February-2019
www.arjhss.com
Research Paper Open Access
The Work of the Pastor
Dr. Fordson Vincent Chimoga
Dean/Senior Lecturer School of Humanities and Social Sciences P. O. Box 660391 / Monze, ZAMBIA
ABSTRACT: It has always been my passion to write about Pastoral Work. Being a pastor myself, I feel that
the work of the pastor has not been properly comprehensively defined and written. In this article I strive to
write about what the pastor‟s work is all about. First for one to be called a pastor, must receive an equivocal call
from God because no one can become a pastor unless he/she has been called by God. After one has received
call, he/she begins the work of ministering to self because the call is based on a sound relationship with God.
The relationship is not static but dynamic on daily basis by fervent prayers and study of the word of God. If
ministry to self is not there, a pastor cannot receive the call from God because the one who receives a call is the
one who is already having a relationship with him. The most important is not just the call from God but
maintaining it is more crucial. Secondly, the pastor must start and continue to minister to his/her family. The
family must provide love, care and adequate time to his family. The family should not get the leftover of the
pastor‟s family after being exhausted ministering to the church members. If the family relationship with the
pastor sours, he/she cannot maintain the call because the family that is stunted spiritually can weaken and
eventually destroy his call to minister even when one claims to have a call from God. Thirdly the pastor must
nurture the church members by visiting, counseling, preaching and teaching the word and praying with them.
The members are his/her employers; therefore he should allocate time to minister to them not in a hurriedly
manner but steady and straightforward manner. The members can either continue the pastor or destroy him/her
depending on whether they are growing spiritually or not. It is important for the pastor to minister to his
members meaningfully because their spiritual growth determines the success or failure of a pastor. These three
aspects of ministry for a pastor are crucial for the continuity of a pastor‟s calling and work. The three
responsibilities of pastor stand on equal footing and must not be neglected.
I. INTRODUCTION
This article on the work of the pastor covers a number of several responsibilities that deals with what
he/she must spend time on and sometimes to be spent. First in this article I will define the term pastor. It is
important to know what the term pastor means before devoting time writing about what the pastor ought to do.
Secondly I will endeavor to point out from the Biblical point of view that the title pastor carries a connotation of
sacredness. It is important to know that pastoral work is sacred and the persons claiming to be pastors must
uphold and maintain sacredness. Thirdly, I will examine the writings of other authorities about the work of the
pastor. Several questions will be asked and answers sought such as what have they written and is their
authenticity in what they have written. The good lessons, if any will be derived and added to enrich this article.
Fourthly, the article will examine the work of the pastor that is spiritual formation. Spiritual formation though
some pastors do not view it as work, in this it is presented as work. The reason it is work it because it play a
major role helping the pastor to maintain spiritual vitality throughout his ministry and without which he ceases
to be a minister of the gospel. Finally the summary and conclusion is written to show that the work of the pastor
enormous and that it requires strategizing on the part of the pastor to cope. One of the strategies of that is being
heighted is the involvement in spiritual formation.
II. DEFINITION AND FUNCTION OF “PASTOR.”
According to source: www.ehow.com-retrived on 11/10/2018, “A pastor is an individual who provides
spiritual leadership for a church community.” Sometimes a pastor can evangelize an area where there is no
church. He plants a church through his ministry to the people that are not believers in Jesus Christ. Other times,
he can go and minister to the people who are already believers in God. In this case he strengthens them
2. American Research Journal of Humanities Social Science (ARJHSS)R) 2019
ARJHSS Journal www.arjhss.com Page |2
spiritually by providing spiritual leadership. Whatever the situation, a pastor is someonewho provides spiritual
leadership to a church community. He has no other business but that of raising secular communities into
becoming Christian ones and nurturing them to continue abiding in the teaching of Jesus Christ. He is a firm
believer in God and through his intercourse with him; he gains wisdom and courage to continue strengthening
believers in Jesus Christ.
According to CTSFW-https://www.ctsfw.edu retrieved on 11/10/2018 asks the question, who is a
Pastor? The response is as follows: “The one to lead worship. The one to preach the sermon.The one to give us
Christ‟s Body and Blood. The first one to the hospital.And finally the last one at the graveside.” This definition
is more on describing the functions of the Pastor. The Christians are not looking for technical definition of a
Pastor. For them a Pastor is the one who leads worship at church or any place worshiping God is taking place.
He is the one who preaches the sermon. He is the one who leads at Holy Communion, and also gives the bread
that represents the broken body of Christ on the cross and he is the one who gives the wine that represents the
spilled blood of Jesus on the cross to the believers. He is the one who goes to the hospital first as soon as his
church members are sick and admitted to the hospital. He is the one who leaves the grave yard last after burying
a deceased believer.
These functions of a pastor are well articulated and they describe the work of the Pastor very well. I wish
modern pastors can learn from the list of these functions. Unfortunately modern pastors are more theoretical
than practical and as a result, Christians do not receive the practical ministry they need such as visiting them in
the hospital when they are sick, comforting them when they lose their beloved one. Planning and leading
worship is left to the members who do nothave passion to lead believers into real worship experience. Sermons
are shallow and unrelated to the needs of the believers. It is time for the modern pastors to stand up and carry
out the functions due to them; otherwise they will lose their jobs.
The Pastor is one who wears many hats according to Christian Leaders Institute at
https://www.christianleadersinstitute.org/what-is-pastor (retrieved on1st November 2018. How is this possible?
They justify this argument as follows:
“On Sunday mornings he‟s the preacher. He‟s the one that brings the word of God to the congregation
that God has entrusted to him. Pastors spend much time praying over and planning their sermons. He visits
people who are in need. He counsels people who are hurting physically or relationally. He attends meetings at
the church to determine its future and direction.”
It is true that a Pastor wears many hats. However, the pastor must be careful so that his ministry is not
that of trotting from one place to the other. He should plan how he can manage to provide quality service to all
facets of ministry. First, he must minister to himself by ensuring that he lives in close intimacy with the Savior.
Second, he should be available to meet the needs of his immediate family. Third, he should adequately minister
to the members of his church or district. This is not an easy task to carry out. It requires that the pastor give his
entire life to ministry. It is a full time job that should not be mixed with other businesses.
Jason Jackson (https://www.christiancourier.com/articles/1178-what-is-a-pastor) defines a pastor in
responding to the question “what is a Pastor?” in this way. He used the following New Testament Scriptural
passages namely Ephesians 4:11, Acts 20:28, and 1 Peter 5:2. First let me examine his definition using
Ephesians 4:11. He writes: “Paul discusses various roles that Christ placed in the church. He intends for
„pastors and teachers‟ to serve in the church. The expression „pastors and teachers‟ identify a single group.” In
other words a pastor in his ministry in the church, he naturally also fulfills that role of being a pastor by
teaching. Teaching is part and parcel of the pastoral responsibilities he/she is carrying. Every true pastor will
carry out his pastoral ministry through his/her ability to teach. If he does not teach, his pastoral role cannot be
effective; he needs to teach in order to be successful. Homer A. Kent using the same line of thought adds this
way: “Pastors and teachers are named as one grammatical unit (by the use of just one article in the Greek text)”.
He continues to write that “Pastors (i.e., shepherds), as they care for the flock, are also teachers.” In other words
pastors and teachers are inseparable in terms of function.
Second is the Scriptural passage in Acts 20:28. Jackson explains it this way, “Paul again refers to
pastors. Here, however, he used the verb form of the word, which is translated „to feed‟ (ASV) or „to care for‟
(EVS). Pastors feed, tend, and protect the church. They are to do all the things that a shepherd would do for a
flock.” In other words a pastor must know his bible so well so that he can use its messages to both preach and
teach his members so that they do not starve spiritually speaking. A pastor who does not know the bible very
well produces stunted growth among members and as a resultbacksliding will be a way of life.
Third is the Scriptural passage 1 Peter 5:2 Jackson uses to define the term pastor, which says: “Shepherd the
flock of God which is among you, serving as overseers, not by compulsion but willingly, not for dishonest gain
but eagerly (NKJV).” His explains as follows: “Likewise, Peter instructs these servants to „act like shepherds‟
as they „oversee‟ the flock of God (1 Peter 5:2). This exhortation is addressed to the „elders‟ (1 Peter 5:1).
3. American Research Journal of Humanities Social Science (ARJHSS)R) 2019
ARJHSS Journal www.arjhss.com Page |3
III. THE WORK IS OF A SACRED NATURE.
Fortunately the Bible discusses the work of the pastor as sacred and holy different from other
professions in the world. The qualifications of a pastor revealed in Titus 1:6, 7: 1 Tim 3:2 are sacred and the
one who claims to be one must be “above reproach”. What does it mean to be above reproach? Is there any
person in the world who is above reproach? Accordingly to the counsels Paul gives to young men Titus and
Timothy are focusing on them living lives that are above reproach. Thinking seriously about the work of the
pastor, one will not be pompous but humble and encourages total dependence upon God. It is God who can turn
a sinner into a saint. A saint is one who is should be above reproach. There are seventeen qualifications of a
pastor the Apostle Paul points out to Titus and Timothy according to https//www.acts29.com/biblical-
qualifications-of-a-pastor-retrived on 1st
November 2018.
1. The first one, “A pastor must be devoted to his wife; one-woman man (Titus 1:6; 1 Tim 3:2). The
pastor‟s marriage illustrates Christ‟s love for His church—His bride (Eph. 5:22 ff.). A Pastor must love his wife
exclusively with his mind, will and emotions and not just his body.” It is true a pastor must be devoted to his
wife; he must be a one-woman man. What does this statement mean? Dobson (2000) explains it this way: “The
stability of marriage is a by-product of an iron-willed determination to make it work. If you choose to marry,
enter into that covenant with the resolve to remain committed to each other for life.” (p. 268). The commitment
of a husband and wife to each other should start from the day of marriage until death causes termination of the
covenant of marriage because one of the spouses has died. This is more serious to the pastor; he must be more
commitment to his marriage than any of the husband on earth because of his sacred office he carries. I share
this experience in my marriage because I have been marriage to my wife for thirty-five year to date. For us to
have been marriage for such a long time it requires commitments that are based not only on human ingenuity but
total dependence upon God. When Jesus‟ admonishing in Matthew 7 about asking him whatever we want from
him is really true because his promises are fulfilled to those who ask in faith and should not be done once but
daily reliance upon Jesus in order for him to guide and make marriage to succeed.
2. “A pastor‟s children must be in submission, though not perfect (Titus 1:6; 1 Tim 3:4-5). If a man does
not know how to manage his own family, he will not know how to take care of God‟s church. The first flock for
a pastor is his own family as a Pastor Dad. A pastor‟s qualification for the church starts in his home
management as he leads them up in the discipline and admonition of the Lord (Eph. 6:4).” First and foremost
the first congregation or place of ministry for the pastor is his family, specifically his children and wife. How
does he fulfill this responsibility? First it is through his exemplary life. It means that a pastor must be
hardworking, self-discipline and organized. He should be a mentor to his children. Secondly, he should spend
quality time instructing his children in both spiritual realms and practical things such as cleaning themselves and
surrounding. Children should be taught how to clean eating utensils after their meals regardless of gender.
Thirdly the Pastor should engage the children and the entire family into worship in the morning and evenings.
Eating times also should begin with prayer. The prayer should be short and only at the beginning and not at the
end of the meal. Fourthly the pastor should pray privately alone for his wife and children. Children are not
small stones which you can collect and put in a heap. Children have emotions, moods and other things that
make them happy or unhappy. The pastor behind the scenes must pray for each of these children. I identify
myself in this because I still pray today for my children. I used to prayin a general prayer for our three children,
but as time went by due to changes that I used to see in them, I started offering individual prayers for them.
They are mature and one is married but I still pray for them individually.
3. “A pastor is a faithful steward (Titus 1:7). Here the term used is overseer (Greek episkopos). It is not
another office, but a functional title of the elder. It is what he does; He is a steward, a manager of God‟s
resources and Jesus‟ flock. He takes responsibility, but not ownership.” A pastor is not just a steward but must
display faithfulness in stewardship. He is not the owner of everything he manages including himself. There are
many things a pastor is called to manage. He should manage himself, wife, children, time, money, church
members, properties for the church, etc. To many all the listed things are not easy. He needs to delegate like
the counsel Jethro gave to Moses recorded in Exodus 18. However, he should not just delegate, he should
follow through to ensure that the people assigned to take up certain tasks are doing so. It is not good to trust
people too much. He should supervise everybody assigned to carry certain tasks regardless of their
trustworthiness they display.
As a steward, the pastor should ensure that both the interior and the outside of the church buildings are kept
clean and cared for. He should also manage the local church leaders to ensure that church building is well built
and that they should have proper toilets for both men and women. Venues of meetings outside the church must
be managed properly. Sometime these venues have snakes and the pastor must see to it that the grass and shrubs
are cut and the surrounding is kept clean. The equipment too must be kept nicely after use such as PA systems,
generators, tools, etc. to be used in the future. Some pastors who are not good stewards are always buying
equipment to place them because they get lost most the times are being used.
4. American Research Journal of Humanities Social Science (ARJHSS)R) 2019
ARJHSS Journal www.arjhss.com Page |4
4. “A pastor must be humble—not arrogant (Titus 1:7). A pastor must constantly demonstrate the gospel
by admitting when he is wrong and assuming responsibility and restoring relationships.” What does it mean for
a pastor to be humble? Let me give you an example. A pastor is subject to the decisions of the organization
such as conference that employs him. From time to time a pastor is transferred from one area of ministry to
another. A pastor should not refuse; he should be humble by accepting to work anywhere as long as there are
people to minister to. Some place are developed while other are not, it does not matter, it should go regardless
and she should tell his family in advance how church is, it is not permanent. I am writing from experience on
this point because I have served as a church pastor, department director at the conference level, I also served as
president of the conference. In all these portfolios I was replaced and now am serving as a lecturer at the
university training pastors because I hold a doctorate in ministry. I know of some pastors who left ministry
because they refused to be transferred from one church to another. The conference has no option but to
terminate the work of the pastor. That pastor whose was terminated lacked humility. If he was humble, he
would not have left employment. It is important for the pastor to be humble.
5. “A pastor must be gentle—not quick-tempered (Titus 1:7; 1 Tim 3:3). No man will be of any use in the
kingdom that is quick-tempered. The difference between how Jesus demonstrated anger is that He was angry at
the abuse of others in the name of religion and the dishonoring of God. We get angry at how it affects us.” It is
important for a pastor to be gentle and not quick tempered. How is this possible? It is possible by God‟s grace.
God would not demand anything out of the pastors when he knows it is impossible. Now since he requires it, it
is possible, he gives pastors wisdom to be gentle. Let me give my example again on this point. Many times
when I was a front line pastor, I performed my duties even that of preaching with anger. I did not show it to
anyone but it was stressing me inside. I contained anger by the grace of God. I offered a quick prayer to God so
that he could help me not react to my angered emotions right away. Prayer has helped to contain my anger.
One time I even preached with smiles when I was angry. After preaching however, I called the person who
angered me and I talked seriously and was relieved. It is not good to postpone the anger for a long time, it can
lead to stress and from this to depression, it becomes a sickness.
6. “A pastor must be sober—not a drunkard (Titus 1:7; 1 Tim 3:3). This is not just overindulgence in
alcohol but is idiomatic for any behavior that fuels addictive responses.” How is this possible? A pastor is a
Christian before he becomes one. He/she must accept Jesus and personal savior. Jesus stops the old ways of
life at the time he experiences an encounter with Him. He becomes a new creation according to 1 Thessalonians
4. He continues reliance upon God from the time he met Jesus into the life of a pastor until he dies. Therefore,
there is no way a pastor who is a Christian can be a drunkard. Drunkardness should not be talked as one of the
practices a pastor is involved in. He must be sober and a mentor to his flock.
7. “A pastor must be peaceful—not violent (Titus 1:7; 1 Tim 3:3). A pastor is prone to inflict violence
through his words. He is to be a peacemaker.” How will a pastor be peaceful? A pastor is expected to be
peaceful by everybody he ministers to including his family. It is possible for a pastor to be peaceful by God
grace or enabling power of God on his life. This enabling power from God for peaceful life is obtained through
his daily surrender to Him. He needs to be prayerful and feed on his word the Bible. The Lord will transform
him from not being peaceful to peacefulness. He will show peacefulness his behavior, and his family and the
entire flock will know that he is one. He should also be peaceful to the larger flock that is the church members.
He should avoid such practices as openly belonging to a political party because those who do not subscribe to
his party will not feel that the pastor is ministering to their own interests. He should not condone tribalism but
should be inclusive by loving everybody and during church election to ensure that all tribes in the church are
represented in leadership. These good practices will promote peace and will help the church to grow.
8. “A pastor must have financial integrity—not greedy for gain (Titus 1:7; 1 Tim 3:3; 1 Peter 5:3). A
pastor is to be upright in his financial dealings and not accused of pursuing money over the Kingdom of God.”
Money and what money can buy is a snare to the pastor. The pastor wants to be like everybody else socially and
economically. The pastor wants to live in good house with electricity and water. The pastor wants to drive a
good and representable car. How can he maintain financial integrity? He should again depend upon the Lord?
The Lord will give his the wisdom to live within his means and to avoid debt. Banks now are advertising for
loans through conferences that employ pastors. Sometimes these bankers are invited to a pastor‟s meeting to
promote loans. Pastors cannot resist this offer. Most pastors get loans to buy cars. But car are depreciating
very fast. It is better for the pastors to get loan to buy land or build a house. A house once completed If the
pastor does not stay in it he can rent it out. It is important for a pastor to start right away planning for the future.
He is not allowed to borrow from church members because in future he will fail to administer discipline on
them. A pastor also should be transparent in the way he spends money with his wife especially. In fact he
should spend his money in collaboration with his wife.
9. “A pastor must be hospitable (Titus 1:8; I Tim 3:2). A pastor‟s home is to be open for others to enjoy.
A pastor‟s home is not a heaven on earth, but rather a place of ministry.” The house the pastor lives cannot be
hospitable if he himself is not one.He is supposed to be kind to everybody. This type of a job is tough, but it is
5. American Research Journal of Humanities Social Science (ARJHSS)R) 2019
ARJHSS Journal www.arjhss.com Page |5
manageable buy the grace of God. The teachings of the Bible are clear “It is more blessed to give than to
receive” (Acts 20:35). A hospitable pastor will not run out of supplies because God will replenish where he is
taking to give others. He should not worry about tomorrow when he is sharing because God will take care of
the rest. In fact once the members get used with the pastors‟ generosity and visiting his house, they will also
start bringing foods to the pastor as they visit. I experienced this in my first district of pastoring. The church
members new my home and came several times to visit and most times when they visited, they brought food to
me such as chickens, groundnuts, fruits, vegetables, etc.
10. “A pastor must be a lover of good (Titus 1:8). A pastor genuinely loves what is good. He does not
just think he should love it.” It would not be right for a pastor to detest what everybody says it is good. A
pastor, by the grace of God must be a good person. He should cooperate with people and show that he supports
them in what they are doing. For example if the church members have a passion to assist the needy people with
used clothes in their community, a pastor should not only encourage but participate in donations. He should not
just wait for the church members to initiate, but he should be the one to initiate and spearhead the good program
and activities. He should also appreciate them for the good things they are providing in the community.
11. “A pastor must be self-controlled (Titus 1:8; 1 Tim 3:2). Self-control is a characterization of every
area of a pastor‟s life: diet, time, mouth, exercise, relationship, sex, and money.” This is a good characterization
of a pastor. A pastor must keep his body weight under control by being temperate in what he eats and the time
he eats. A pastor should not have a big stomach because of over eating. He should actually eat more fruits and
vegetables than animal flesh. He should if possible avoid flesh diet in whatever forms so that he can keep
himself fit in carrying out the Lord‟s work. A pastor also should use his time wisely and if he does, he will be
successful. He will minister adequately to himself, family and the church members. A pastor also should
control his sexual drive by the grace of God. It is important that he marries and should confine his sexual needs
to his wife. He should not just look at his enjoyment sexually but that of his wife as well. The pastor also
should take time to exercise his body by jogging or walking briskly every day. He should take time to exercise
because his job is sedentary and if not careful he can easily be hypertensive. Finally the pastor must have good
relationship with people around him and should avoid favoritism and tribalism by visiting and caring just for a
few.
12. “A pastor must be upright (Titus 1:8). He has integrity in his relationships and in how he treats
others.” To be upright is to be honest and reliable. He should keep the promise he made when he was joining
ministry. Unfortunately, some pastors are involved in campaigning for positions in the conferences once there
are evaluations that take place every three years. This is not being upright. The pastor must not cheapen
himself by asking his pastors and members to vote for him. Sometimes he succeeds and sometimes he does not.
This is using human means to occupy certain positions in the conference. Pastors are not supposed to do so.
They are to be upright and are required to prepare people for the heavenly Kingdom. But if they are involved in
campaigning, they are instead leading people to hell, which is the opposite of the call to ministry.
13. “A pastor must be holy (Titus 1:8); His life is devoted wholeheartedly to Jesus externally and
internally.” It is a serious qualification and taken literally most so called pastors will not measure up to their
position of being pastors. Most of the pastors in this requirement are found wanting. There is need to evaluate
themselves and focus not on earthly things but on God. Holiness belongs to God and for a man to be one must
not do anything God does not approve. He must walk with God like Enoch of old. Lack of holiness has killed
pastoral work, it has just become like any secular profession. There is hatred among pastors, backbiting,
politicking, tribalism, etc. which are not supposed to happen among pastors.
14. “A pastor must be able to teach (Titus 1:9; 1 Tim 3:2). All of the other qualifications are character
qualities. This is the only ability-based requirements. He is to be able to teach sound doctrines, not just be able
to communicate in an excellent manner. His teaching can be one or two, to twenty, to a hundred or to a
thousand. Most of the churches in Crete were houses. The elders were to defend the faith once delivered to the
saints against the numerous false teachers that arose.”Besides focusing on the pastor‟s character, he must also
improve his abilities in teaching. A pastor can possess the ability to teach, but these abilities can be improved
through learning some skills to teach under knowledgeof a trained teacher. Teaching is important because this
is the only way the church members can be grounded into the true of the Bible.
15. “A pastor must be spiritually mature (1 Tim 3:6). Positions of authority without spiritual maturity lead
to the trap of pride. When pride grows in a man, sin abounds.” Spiritual maturity is not static but a process. It
needs to nurture by the pastor himself by spending quality time in prayer and Bible study. Spiritual maturity can
also be experienced through involvement in ministry. The ministries the pastor is involved in are preaching and
teaching from the bible, praying for sick, counseling etc., will enable the pastor to experience spiritual maturity.
“A pastor must respectable (1 Tim 3:7). That does not mean that everyone must like him or even appreciate
him. It means that there is no credible witness to an ongoing sinful behavior.” Respectfulness is not earned
through a title but through good behavior demonstrated by the pastor. If a pastor is upright and honest in the
way he does things or the way he carries himself, he will earn respect from the people. Respect cannot be
6. American Research Journal of Humanities Social Science (ARJHSS)R) 2019
ARJHSS Journal www.arjhss.com Page |6
forced on the people. Respect is earned and people automatically respect the pastor because his honest life
impact on them.
16. “A pastor must be an example to the flock (1 Peter 5:3). Elders are examples of biblical expressions
sexually, time management, marriage, parenting, worship, relationship and any other way. A pastor should be
someone your sons could pattern their life after and the kind of a man your daughter should marry.” A pastor
who is a leader of the flock must live an exemplary Christian character so that church members can pattern
theirs to him. Unfortunately this does happen rarely because pastors fail to uphold righteousness in their
character. It is important for the pastors to strive by the grace of God to live exemplary lives.
IV. OTHER AUTHORITIES ON PASTORAL WORK.
The first authority on pastoral work is Ellen G. White the author of voluminous books on Christian
living. She is believed by many people to be a prophetess. Her counsels on Christian living are used by
educators, medical doctors, scientists, pastors, dietians, etc. The first counsel to pastors I want to bring in is the
one that White (1947) states: “Wake up the church members that they may unite in doing a definite and self-
denying work”(p. 216). On this statement White (Ibid) was admonition pastors to involve church members in
evangelizing cities and villages. Pastors should not feel that they are the only ones to evangelize. She
encouraged pastors to train members to learn how to get involved into self-denying work. In other words the
work of God requires that the one who gets involved working for God must stop other engagements that are just
for enhancing pleasure. It takes self-denial and sacrifice to devote time and efforts to spread the gospel to the
lost when there is no pay. Most times doing evangelization has no immediate monetary benefits, but God in his
wisdom he blesses and rewards those who work for him at his own time. Therefore, Christians are called upon
to share their time with God by evangelizing to masses of people who have not known Jesus as their personal
Savior.
Secondly White (1972 writes: “Everyone who has received the truth must go to God for his individual
self, and decide to live by every word that proceeded out of the mouth of God, and do true service for God” (p.
127). The emphasis White points out to Pastors is that they should tell everyone who is a Christian to learn on
their own to approach God in prayer and thereafter whatever they have greened in communion with God, they
must use it to render true service to God. The true service to God each individual is supposed to render is that of
spreading the gospel about Jesus to every living human being who have not yet received it. There is no much
time left to evangelize, therefore by involving every believer the gospel will spread wider and quicker. Sin also
is multiplying in the lives of many people and if not hastening to spread the gospel, the unbeliever will die
before they come to repentance, thus why every believer must be involved in teaching and preaching the gospel
of Jesus Christ. God‟s concerned about saving the unbeliever before probation closes and never to open forever.
Thirdly White (1980) gives this counsel to experienced men in the Lord and in spreading the gospel.
She wrote as follows: “Let the experienced men take the young men who are preparing for the ministry and go
forth into new territory to proclaim the message of warning” (p. 156). New territories are those areas in which
people have not heard the gospel of Jesus Christ. Some of these areas are also infested with non-Christian
religions such as Hinduism, Islam, etc. People in those areas are groping in darkness because they have not
heard about the Savior Jesus Christ. Therefore, experienced men should take with them inexperienced men and
stay there while teaching and establishing centers of worship starting first by meeting their physical needs and
thereafter spiritual need. This method works better because the young and the old work together by staying
temporary in those unreached territories to teach and preach the gospel of Jesus. At other times the young that
had been trained can venture by themselves to enter other unbelievers‟ areas because of the training they
obtained from the experienced evangelists.
Fourthly, White (1875) charges that pastors should not neglect the youth in the work of spreading the good
news. The youth are energetic and longer span of life to work for God than older ones. They should be trained
at all cost to work for God. It is a huge mistake to overlook them in working for God. Pastors should initiate
and encourage the training of the youth for the gospel work. White (Ibid) admonishes as follows: “The highest
of all work is ministry in its various lines, and it should be kept before the youth that there is no work more
blessed of God than that of the gospel minister” (p. 049). Who else besides the youth should know about the
highest work in the world of evangelizing the lost people of the world in terms of the gospel? The youth being
young, strong and innovative, must not be neglected. They must be told that evangelizing is the most important
work in the world, and thus why they must be involved. They will be encouraged to that the work they are
doing is the most important work in the world.
Fifthly White (1932) points out the reason why ministers are not so much involved in laboring for those
who do not know the truth. She unfolds the reason as follows: “When the ministers understand the great
blessing to be derived from laboring for those who know not the truth, they will leave the churches, after
impressing upon them the importance of devising plans and methods whereby they can do within their borders
the same kind of work that the ministers of the gospel are doing in the regions beyond” (317).Those ministers
7. American Research Journal of Humanities Social Science (ARJHSS)R) 2019
ARJHSS Journal www.arjhss.com Page |7
who understand the great blessing of laboring for the lost, they will devise plans that will help to strike the
balance between ministering to the existing members and those that are lost. The reason sometimes ministers
are just ministering to those already in the church is lack of understanding. The Holy Spirit is always to help
ministers so that they can work in the balanced way for the believers already and those that lost.
Another writer who contributed quite a bit about the work of the pastor is C. Peter Wagner. Wagner
(1994) considers the pastor as the main person who enables the local church to grow. He wrote: “In America,
the primary catalytic factor for growth in a local church is the pastor. In every growing, dynamic church I have
studied, I have found a key person whom God is using to make it happen” (p.185). This is not only true in
America, but also in Africa. I have been associated with church growth studies for more than thirty-five years
and I do testify also that the pastor is the most important person in the local church or district to bring about
growth in the local church whether in faithfulness of the members in tithe returning or in bringing new members
into the church. The pastor dreams and thereafter shares the dreams to the church members. The church
members are always willing to work with the pastor as long as what he wants them to do is clear and doable.
One time as a district pastor I spent two weeks training church officers from an usher to the church elder. They
came to one church where trainings were going on in batches such as of elders alone, deacons alone, etc until all
were trained. After the training, the church members worked in an amazing way that in joyousness of
appreciating the way they were working and implementing the things they learnt I broke. I have not forgotten
that experience to this day. At another time they came together in one accord to build a good camp meeting
enclosure. They worked so well that all the specifications for the camp meeting enclosure were followed. I
believed and still does from that day that the pastor is the key factor in bringing about growth in local church or
district. The opposite is also true, if the pastor is not dreaming, mobilizing and training the laity in doing
ministry, the church will not grow just its head is not growing.
Wagner (Ibid) points out also that leadership of the local church hinges on the pastor. Church like any other
organization needs strong and visionary leadership for her to be healthy. He wrote: “Vital Sign Number One of
a healthy church is a pastor who is a possibility thinker and whose dynamic leadership has been used to catalyze
the entire church into action for growth” (p. 185) God has called the pastor to lead the church in all her facets.
Both church members and congregations must multiply when the pastor is providing not just leadership but
strong leadership. He should thoroughly train the church members and empower them for action. The pastor
should remember that the church members are always more in number than himself. The commitments and
zealousness he demonstrates to members can be transferred to the church members and the activities of growth
will treble, meaning that if a pastor was winning ten people in a month, the members will win one thousand
people in a month. There will be tremendous growth in a short time when more members are involved.
Another church growth advocate who believed that the pastor is the chief catalyst for church growth is
C. Kirk Hadaway. He studied congregations who broke away from their mother churches for various reasons.
He did not focus on condemning them for breaking away, but on what happened thereafter. The broke away
group of church members were given a pastor to lead them and right away things begun to happen in a positive
way in local churches. Hadaway (1991), “found that one of the key components of the pastoral leadership for
breakout growth was vision.” He continued:
“They inherited churches with problems and were unable to force any issues because they had not
earned the right to do so. Instead, they played the role of the catalyst—sharing their vision with the church,
linking it to latent purposes which members still shared, creating a sense of excitement, and providing
encouragement to those in the church who could see the vision and who were willing to work for it” (p. 91).
Hadaway (Ibid) came up also with several characteristics of growth that pastors emerge. The first one he points
out is vision. In line with Hadaway‟s thinking Barna (1992) alsowrote: “Without a Vision, the People Perish”
(p. 186) in which he addressed the most critical issue of pastoral leadership today. Rainer (1993) adds:
“Society and the church are changing today more rapidly than any time in history. While theological
truths must remain constant, the church must ask if it is being left behind by technological and societal
revolution. If the world does not understand the church, if the church is not relevant to the world, then the
unchangeable message of the gospel is never communicated to the test”(p.186).
How does the pastor get to know God‟s vision? This is important question and it needa good answer.
Rainer (Ibid) responded this way: “The pastor must know himself—his gifts, passions, talents, values, attitudes,
experiences, and assumptions.” Rainer (Ibid) continues: “The pastor must also know the church he serves.” It
is important first for the pastor to know himself and why he is a minister of the gospel. He could have been a
farmer, lawyer, teacher, carpenter, etc, but none of the above. Why? God called him not to accomplish his
selfish ambitions but to honor him, therefore, all his gifts, passions, talents, values, attitudes, etc. should be
utilized to the glory of God. He should surrender all to God by accepting full gospel ministry. His needs and
wants will be fulfilled and met by God as he labors for Him. Finally, he will know God‟s vision by knowing the
church he serves. Each has a vision and a mission statement. Does the pastor embrace them? Does he
understand the reason for the church‟s existence? He should know the church he serves and should do so
8. American Research Journal of Humanities Social Science (ARJHSS)R) 2019
ARJHSS Journal www.arjhss.com Page |8
according to her mission. He cannot force his mission on the church. This is one of the reasons some pastors
quit being pastors. The church cannot change her mission because of a pastor who does not believe its mission.
The best at that moment is to quit and do something else that he is passionate for than to change the mission of
the church.
The second characteristic that emerges from the pastor is initiating. Rainer (Ibid) admonishes as
follows: “A church growth leader must initiate action toward the God-given vision. The leader does not wait for
something new to happen; he is making it happen!” If the pastor is quite, comfortable, unconcerned, satisfied
with status quo, the church members will do the same. There will be no innovations in that church. The church
instead of growing will be decreasing bit by bit. The pastor will not even notice that the church is not growing.
But if he is visionary and he initiates it, the church will start elevating as if it is flying. The church will start
moving as the pastor causes it to move. He is important to bring all forms of growth in a local church because
he is an initiator.
The third characteristic that emerges from the pastor is sharing the ministry. Church members cannot
do ministry alone unless they are taught and empowered to do so by the pastor. Unfortunately, some pastors do
the work of ministry all by themselves. This is not good for the church, members and the pastor himself. Why?
The church will remain stagnant and will never grow. The structure of the church will not grow both
quantitatively and qualitatively. If the color of church building is white, it will remain in that color for years; in
fact it will be fading away because no one is going to repaint it. Secondly, the church members also will remain
stagnant, no additional members joins the church. In fact when members die, they will be irreplaceable. The
church instead of growing in membership will be losing due to death and sicknesses. Lastly, the pastor himself
will not be growing spiritually and exposure. It is not good for the pastor to keep pastoring one church for many
years. He must move to other congregations and this will be a learning ladder for him. Three to five years in
one church is alright but not forever. Some pastors are insecure to share ministry with others, Rainer (Ibid)
points out this as follows:
“Pastors must overcome the insecurity that says: „Nobody can do the ministry but I! This attitude
reflects a condescending view of laity or a fear that the pastor will be perceived as failing to do his job. Some
pastors fear that they will lose recognition and admiration from members if they share to others to do the work
of ministry” (p.187).
The fourth characteristic of a pastor that emerges is that of being a rancher. Schaller (1977) was the
first to mention that a pastor is a rancher over fifteen years ago. After Schaller (Ibid) discovered, Wagner (Ibid)
commented as follows: “It fits the bill perfectly. Notice that in a church led by a rancher the sheep are still
shepherded, but the rancher does not do it. The rancher sees that it is done by others” (p.59).How does this
work? A rancher is person who rears a lot of cows. He employs and trains young men especially to do the
actual work of shepherding on his behalf. He is main rancher but he does not Shepard them himself, he does so
through other people. This is how the pastor should minister to his church members. He should train and
empower leaders who in turn will do the Shepherd of the rest of the members of the church. He serves as the
main leader from time to time he checks to see that the rest of members are ministered by the leaders he trains
and empowers to do the work.
The fifth characteristic of a pastor that emerges is good steward. A pastor who is a key leader of the
congregation cannot just be a steward but a good one. Rainer (Ibid) explains: “Stewardship usually refers to
responsibility to God with money and material gain. Good leaders must also develop good stewardship of their
time, their prayerful lives, their work and leisure habits, their Bible study, and their family” (189). This is truer
of the spiritual leader because good stewardship does not come about naturally but by help that comes from
God. A pastor is a spiritual leader and as such he must first manage himself, thereafter others, money and
material things. Someone said leadership is influence and as such he should not force followers to follow him
but must be attracted to him. What can make followers follow him? It is his being a good steward in time
management, quality prayerful live and bible study, and enjoying a proper family life. He should be living and
experiencing a successful life.
Finally the sixth characteristic of a pastor that emerges is confident, decisive, and optimistic. Rainer (Ibid)
explains:
Because a visionary church growth pastor will have developed a vision from God, he can respond to
situations with confidence and decisiveness. In fact decision-making will become increasingly easier as the
vision or plan for the church unfolds. A visionary pastor is optimistic about the future because God has given
him a clear picture of that future. There is a goal to be reached and a prize to be received (Phil. 4:14).
How can you have a leader who is not confident, decisive and optimistic? Such a leader will not have
followers and eventually will cease to be one. It is important to leaders to display confidence because it attracts
others like magnet. Followers need a leader who knows why a leader is and who can inspires them. It is not
good to have a leader who is a failure himself in what he has been doing. What stories is he going to tell? What
benefits is he going to bring to the organization? Is he optimistic and visionary? All these questions properly
9. American Research Journal of Humanities Social Science (ARJHSS)R) 2019
ARJHSS Journal www.arjhss.com Page |9
answered will give the type of image the leader is going to bring to the people he wants to lead. Otherwise he
should sit back and continue doing the routine he has been doing that do not inspire anyone.
There are also two authors namely Williamson & Allen (1991) who have contributed to the work of the
pastor. According to them the work of the pastor is teaching theologically the church members for the purposes
of improving their spirituality to avoid declining. There are three critical questions asked by them to show the
seriousness of teaching members in the local church they point out as follows: “What should be the image,
model, or role of the clergy? How should Christian pastors understand what the church properly expects and
needs from them? What is the central task of the ministry” (p.7)? The last question they answered it in this
way: “we prefer to state quite plainly that the central task of ministry is teaching the Christian faith” (Ibid). The
ministry here is the one spearheaded by the pastor. The pastor‟s main task in the church is to teach members the
Bible so that its principles can be used to ignite spiritual vitality in their lives.
They continue to defend themselves in these words as follows: “We ask the question about the central
task of ministry because we believe it is one of the matters at the heart of the present crisis in the church”
(p.7).In other words the present crises of church members in the church lie at lack of holistic teaching. If pastors
were to take this task as the most important in their ministry, more than 50% of the problems would be solved.
Most members are hovering in the dark, not knowing what is morally right or wrong and why it is so and how to
overcome. The Bible properly studied and taught would solve most dilemmas faced by our church members.
Like the Bereans church members (Acts 17:11) are members would be more noble and growing because they
spent time searching the scriptures and internalizing the Biblical principles greened.
Williamson & Allen (Ibid) spent time pondering the problem of lack of teaching ministry among
churches which are supposed to be nurtured by the pastors. They suggested this : “We suggest that only a
serious revival of ministers‟ understanding of themselves as teachers of the Christian faith will address the
problem of the „secularization from within‟ that is so characteristic of mainline churches today and so much at
the heart of their lack of a distinctive Christian identify” (p.9). The problem we have now is that there is no
way of combating secularism that gets in the church from outside because the church members are not grounded
in things of the scriptures. Unfortunately secularism from outside gets in the church and bear fruit because the
members do not know how to deal with it. There is need for the pastors to call for revival amongst themso that
they recommit themselves to God and the task he has given them of teaching the members everything he has
commanded according to Matthew 28:18-20.
What type of teaching are Willimason and Allen (Ibid) suggesting the pastors must engage in? Is it just
the ordinary teaching of imparting knowledge from the teacher to the student? It is not according to them.
Here is what they described it: “To some extent, our failure to teach the Christian faith in a compelling and
lively way has contributed to our decline.” The teaching they are talking about is the “compelling and lively”
one (p. 12). To compel according to Oxford dictionary is to “force or oblige someone to do something.” The
pastor is someone who knows what the church members need, therefore in his teaching; he is compelling them
to put into practice what they have been learning. He does not just compel but he teaches lively with
earnestness and illustrations.
What are pastors called to teach? This is another question Williamson and Allen (Ibid) are stressing. Here is
their explanation: “If churches are to teach the Christian faith, they will have to engage in theological education.
Pastors will have to become pastor-teachers who take it as their task to convey the excitement and depth of the
Christian faith to their parishioners” (p.13). In other words the theological education should be systematic
starting a lower level to higher levels so that the members are grounded into the Christian faith. The purpose of
this is to come up with members who have strong Christian faith based on the teachings of the Bible. They will
understand why they are Christians and as such will continue growing on their own using what they have learnt
from the pastor. The goal is to have members who know and understand the times they live so that when Christ
comes for the second time will be found ready to meet him.
What is teaching according Hadden (1969) the colleague of Williamson & Allen (Ibid)? Teaching
according Hadden (Ibid) is “the reinterpretation of the Christian faith in ways that are adequate to the
contemporary situation in which the church finds itself and defensible in the light of the Christian faith, ways
that are arguably Christian. In other words, teaching means theological education in the church” (p.14). The
issue here is contextualizing the Biblical text which was written 2000 years to the contemporary setting in which
people live today in the 21st
C is what teaching is according to Hadden. If this is what teaching is then it would
definitely make an impact in the lives of church members. The pastor‟s responsibility is big and challenging, it
requires hard work and commitment to Jesus and his ministry.
Is there an example of a Bible character who valued teaching? Sure, there are many. But for the sake
of demonstration of this idea, I will use the example of the Apostle Paul. Williamson and Allen (Ibid) have this
to say about Paul: “Paul views the teaching of the gospel as having a critical place in the Christian community.
This can be seen in two ways: in his discussion of the teaching role in the church, and in his use of the letter as
an instrument of instruction. These two ways are demonstrated in Rom. 12:6-8; 1 Cor. 12:28-30, 1 Cor. 12:8-10
10. American Research Journal of Humanities Social Science (ARJHSS)R) 2019
ARJHSS Journal www.arjhss.com Page |10
and Eph. 4:11. He showed that teaching is an important role of communicating eternal truth to human beings
whether they are already Christians or not. For those who already Christians will be strengthen in their faith
while the others who are not will receive new light that will enable them to choose to follow Jesus. The second
way to show that Paul exhorted teaching in his ministry was the letters he wrote to his churches such as
Corinthians, Ephesians, etc.instructing step by step how they would strive in the belief in the Lord without
giving up. Fortunately these lectures were detailed and in such a way that the receipts would understand and all
the questions related to their faith were answered.
There are two authors namely Miller & Jackson (1994) who have contributed to the work of a pastor as
a counselor. Is the role of the pastor as a counselor important? Miller & Jackson (ibid) explains:
“Members of the clergy are called upon to play many roles in modern society—to be priest and
prophet, administrator and pastor. Within each of these are many specific and demanding areas of expertise.
One pastoral role ever in demand is that of the counselor, the one to whom a person turns at life‟s moments of
distress, despair, and decision” (p.1).
Unfortunately a pastor whether trained counselor or not church members call upon him for counseling
when distressed with many issues. This is a role that a pastor does not choose but it is one by popular demand.
It is therefore important to have some kind of training in counseling before a pastor is over whelmed with
unresolved challenges.
Miller & Jackson (Ibid) give several reasons why people despite their religious affiliation turn first to the pastor
for counseling. But for illustration purposes will site one reason. It goes as follows:
“One obvious answer is that the pastor is accessible. In contrast to the confusing maze of professional
helpers, the pastor is a known quantity, a familiar and reassuring face in a world crowded with strangers. There
is already a kind of relationship with the pastor, making it easier and safer to take the risk of asking for help.
From a pragmatic standpoint, the pastor is also more financially accessible to the average person, as the fee for a
fifty-minute hour approaches or exceeds $100 in the office of the typical metropolitan psychologists or
psychiatrist” (p.2).
At this juncture it is important to define counseling. What is counseling? Miller & Jackson (Ibid)
define as follows: “Counseling is a special kind of helping relationship. It follows from an agreement between
two people to enter into a relationship whereby one (the counselor) applies special skills to assist the other in the
resolution of a personal or interpersonal problem. If the counselor sees more than one person at a time, as in
family counseling or group counseling, this special relationship exists between the counselor and each
individual” (p.3).
Another writer who has written about the work of the pastor is Charles William Steward. Steward‟s (1961)
concern is about a pastor being a marriage counselor, not just counselor in general sense like Miller & Jackson
(Ibid) emphasized. He writes as follows: “Marriage counseling is an inescapable function of the pastor since he
maintains standards of marriage, administers the sacraments, is called during family crisis … and is involved in
the attitudes and responsibilities of the members of the family throughout the total life span” (p.18).
It is true a pastor cannot escape the role of being a marriage counselor. Many young men and women
are getting married every weekend today than in the past years. Pastors are called to conduct marriages in the
churches because church weddings are regarded as holy. In one church I know in Lusaka almost every Sunday
there are one or two wedding taking place. The pastors are busy in providing premarital counseling and
conducting wedding. Besides conducting marriages, pastors are also busy counseling couples with challenges
that need mending and guidance. Sometimes some problems in marriage are so bad that the pastor has to
experience their divorce. I experienced one, but because I was attached to both of them it also affected me
emotionally. I tried my level best but to no avail. Once the couples decide to separate it is hard to change their
minds. Sometimes I allow them to separate for a month or two to give them time to reflect in case they can
resolve the problem. But if there is no remedy regardless of time to reflect, they are allowed to go to court to
file a divorce.
The last work of a pastor I want to write about is spiritual formation. According to Tasker (2000)
“Spiritual Formation is a process of learning to live life as it was always meant to be—living in the presence of
God, with God at the center of our lives, so that who we are with ourselves and with others and world depends
on who we are with God” (p.19).Another definition is worth considering by Maxson (1999) “Spiritual
Formation is the movement of the entire life towards God, opening every area of life to intimacy with God, and
allowing Him to do His will”(p.19).
Spiritual Formation is not an optional for a pastor. It is important for a pastor to be involved in
spiritual formation on daily bases to maintain spiritual vitality in ministry. If a pastor stops growing spiritually
it means that he has ceased to be a pastor even though physically he is still one. The effects of not growing
spiritually will be manifested in the worldly practices and tendencies the pastor will be involved in such as not
being honest to his/her spouse, carelessness in money spending, fighting for positions in the church, increased
hatred among fellow workers especially those in higher positions, backbiting becoming a way of life, etc.
11. American Research Journal of Humanities Social Science (ARJHSS)R) 2019
ARJHSS Journal www.arjhss.com Page |11
What should be involved in spiritual formation so that a pastor can avoid declining spiritually? The first
spiritual formation activity a pastor must be involved is praying. A pastor must pray not casually but
meaningful sometimes praying for one or two hours per period. Bounds (1982) list few examples of Christians
in recent history who spent much time in prayer. For example Martin Luther, he wrote: “If I fail to spend two
hours in prayer each morning, the devil gets the victory through the day. I have so much business I cannot get
on without spending three hours daily in prayer.” He had a motto: “He that has prayed well has studied well”
(p.45).
Another one Bounds (Ibid) mentions is Robert Murray McCheyne. He said: “I ought to spend the best
hours in communion with God. It is my noblest and most fruitful employment, and is not to be thrust into a
corner. The morning hours from six to eight, are the most uninterrupted and should be thus employed” (p.46).
This man took prayer seriously because prayer made him to continue serving as a pastor with earnestness and
zeal day in and day out without being ashamed. Prayer gave him energy to both teach and proclaim the gospel.
He spent the best time of the day in prayer. He prayed in the morning time when he was not tired but fresh to
communion with God.
Bounds (Ibid) give another example of a prayerful man. His name was Joseph Alleine. It is said that he “arose
at four o‟ clock for his business of prayer until eight. When he heard other tradesmen going about their
businesses before he was up, he would exclaim: „Oh, how this shames me! Does my Master not deserve more
than theirs‟”(p.45). According to him prayer was not just one of those things that need to be done. It was really
business that needed planning and strategizing with quality time and efforts. Most businesses fail because they
do not have proper planning. Since prayer is a big business, it should be planned properly so that it does not
fail.
The last example of a prayerful man is Jesus. In Mark 1:35, it says: “And rising very early in the morning,
while it was still dark, he departed and went out to a desolate place, and there he prayed.” In Luke 6:12 the
Bible says: “In those days he went out to the mountain to pray, and all night he continued in prayer to God.”
There are many other Bible references that demonstrate that Jesus was a man of prayer. Prayer was practiced in
his life from early childhood to his end of his ministry. In fact he prayed while he was hanging on the cross
before he breathed the last breathe.
A pastor therefore must learn that effective prayers require quantity time spent in it. Bounds (Ibid)
examples are worth noticing including that of Jesus. The pastor should not just talk about prayer, but he must be
practicing it. He should wake up early morning like Jesus communing with God on daily bases in order to
maintain vitality in his ministry of preparing men and women, boys and girls for the coming of Jesus.
It is important for a pastor also to allocate time to pray with his family. The family is referring to is his
wife and children. Sometimes because of family challenges such as intimacy, financial, communication, etc.,
may not make prayer times and sessions palatable. Sometimes the wife may not want to have prayers with the
husband who is a pastor. The pastor should not force prayers on his family. He should exercise patience and
when the environment is not conducive he can suspend temporary and resume having prayers later. The pastor
should always remember that the devil does not want him to have prayers with his family. He should not give
up, but heshould be patient. He should continue also to love, care and provide for his family. These things done
to the family on daily bases will remove obstacles to smooth prayer experiences.
The second spiritual formation activity a pastor must be involved in is Bible study. This Bible study is
not for making sermons to preach, it is for nurturing his spiritual life. He should spend time to meditate on
God‟s words so that his life can be spiritually rejuvenated. It is not to be done once a week but daily
consistently. Seventh-Day Adventist Minister‟s Handbook (2009) has this important statement on reading as
follows: “Reading helps keep the relationship with God fresh and informed. Consider Scripture as the physical
form of His communication to humanity and the primary source of devotional study and prayer” (p.20).
One of the major reasons a pastor should spend quality time in prayer and Bible study is to avoid
burnout. A pastor is not immune to discouragements and the only way he can overcome is through his deep
involvement in spiritual formation especially Bible study. Rainer (Ibid) sheds light on this as follows:
“Burnout is more common than most pastors admit. Without a dynamic relationship with God through
daily renewal in prayer and time in God‟s Word, the pastor will find his own energy quickly expended. The
leader must remember that he can only do everything through Christ who gives him strength (Phil. 4:13)” (p.
192).
A pastor should remember that the devil is unhappy with him and everything he attempts to do. There
is no way he can overcome on his own satanic traps and snares. He needs a dynamic relationship of prayer and
Bible study to manage to overcome satanic powers. He should not relax on this issue. The devil is active and
serious at throwing traps and snares on anyone who is trying to exalt God in his or her life including the pastor.
A pastor is more in danger because of his calling and passion he has of dispelling darkness from the lives of
people. A pastor is like John the Baptist “pointing sinners to the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the
world” (John 1:29).
12. American Research Journal of Humanities Social Science (ARJHSS)R) 2019
ARJHSS Journal www.arjhss.com Page |12
The third activity of spiritual formation a pastor should be involved is witnessing for Jesus. The pastor is the
“light of the world” and the “salt of the earth” like Jesus‟ declaration on the disciples of his day (Matthew 5:13-
16). A pastor is to attract people living in evil practices to righteous practices mostly by his godly life he lives
and sometimes by confronting them in preaching the gospel face to face. He has to be passionate about carrying
out the Great Commission of preaching the gospel to every tongue, tribe, people and nation.
Several methods can be used in witnessing for Jesus. A pastor can witness to others about Jesus
through personal evangelism. Personal evangelism is sharing the good news to the people by talking to them on
one to one basis. This method is very effective because relationships in the process are developed that
strengthen commitments to Jesus. People who are won to Jesus in this method tend to look to the pastor as their
mentor. The second method is public evangelism. In this method the pastor preaches publicly to groups of
people the gospel of Jesus. He asks people to make decision by appealing to them on daily basis on the Biblical
topics he presents to them during the evangelistic meetings. Sometime these meetings are conducted in a
selected area for three weeks. During the last week one of the sermons preached is on baptism. This sermon is
tailored in such a way that people are invited to accept Jesus inclusive of how he was baptized. Most times
several people give themselves to Jesus and baptism. A baptism is arranged on the last day and hundreds of
people become Christians.
V. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION
The work of the pastor is enormous and cannot be done through human effort. A pastor is husband to
one woman and he has to work hard to maintain successful relationship with her by personal efforts and daily
dependence upon God. A pastor is also a father of children. Some pastors have few children two or three and
others have many children sometimes more than ten children. All these children should rear according to the
ways of the Lord. The pastor must be example to them in practical manner of life and in the fear of the Lord.
Raising such a number of children requires commitment and hard work. If he does not manage his family
properly, how can he manage the people of God?
A pastor also is a scholar and a teacher. He should be educated at least to first degree. As a pastor he
studies dead languages such as Greek and Hebrew. He studies also principles of biblical interpretation and
church growth. He studies also church leadership and administration and other challenging courses that require
him to study hard. Preaching is at art too which he must master. It is not easy, but he should stand out as a
scholar. He is not only a scholar but he learns to impart knowledge to others. He is examined in all the courses
he takes in theology in order to complete a degree. The requirements for one to be a pastor are not easy, but he
has to meet them.
Pastors are also leaders sometimes leading seven to ten thousand people. It is not easy but it is part of
his work as a pastor. Spirituality or dependence upon God is not enough to carry out leadership functions very
well especially these days that most disciplinary issues end up in the court of the law. What does this mean? It
means that a pastor must have advisors and some training in legal disciplined so that he knows how to tackle
disciplinary issues.
A pastor also must conduct weddings, funerals, baptisms, etc. He has so many responsibilities. He is
also a counselor and troubled people from all walks life come to him to seek help. He cannot do everything at
the same time. He needs to strategize and make at itinerary of how and when he will carry out the enormous
tasks he has. Besides all this he is a husband and a father to several children. In spite of all this, he needs on
daily basis to spend quality time in prayer to God and in His study of his words.
REFERENCES
[1] Barna G. Without a Vision, the People Perish. Glendale, CA: Barna, 1992.
[2] Bounds, E.M. Power Through Prayer. New Kensington, PA: Whitaker House, 1982.
[3] Dobson, J. Complete Marriage and Famly-Home Reference Guide. Wheaton, Illinois: Tyndale House
Publisher, Inc. 2000.
[4] Hadaway, K.C. Church Growth Principles: Separating Fact from Fiction. Nashville: Broadman, 1991.
[5] Maxon, B. Principles of Leadership for Spirituality. Washington, D.C.: General Conference of
Seventh-day Adventists, Stewardship Department, 1999.
[6] Miller, W.R & Jackson, K.A. Practical Psychology for Pastors. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prince-
Hall, Inc. 1995.
[7] Seventh-day Adventist Minister‟s Handbook. Silver Springs, Maryland: The General Conference of the
Seventh-day Adventists, 2009.
[8] Schaller, L.E. Survival Tactics in the Parish. Nashville: Abingdon, 1977.
[9] Steward, C.W. The Minister As Marriage Counselor. Nashville, Tennessee: Abingdon Press, 1961.
[10] Tasker, M.C. Spiritual Formation- Unexpected Surprises for Pastors. Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews
University, 2001.
13. American Research Journal of Humanities Social Science (ARJHSS)R) 2019
ARJHSS Journal www.arjhss.com Page |13
[11] Wagner, C.P. Leading Your Church to Growth. Ventura, CA: Regal, 1984.
[12] Williamson, C.M. & Allen, R.J.The teaching Minister. Louisville, Kentucky: Westminister, 1991.
[13] White G. E. The Story of Redemption. Washington, D.C. : Review and Herald Publishing Association,
1947.
[14] A New Life (Revival and Beyond). Payson, AZ: Leaves of Autumn Books, 1972.
[15] Selected Messages Book3 (3SM). Washington, D.C. : Review and Herald Publishing Association,
1980.
[16] Testimonies for the Church, Volume 3 (3T). Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press Publishing
Association, 1875.
[17] Medical Ministry. Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press Publishing Association, 1932.
[18] www.ehow.com- retrieved on 11/10/2018.
[19] CTSFW-https.//www.ctsfw.educ retrieved on 11/02/2018.
[20] https://www.christianleaderinstitute/what-is-pastor- retrieved 1st November 2018.
[21] https://www.christiancourier.com/articles/1178-what-is-a-pastor-/retrieved 1st November 2018.
[22] https//www.acts29.com/biblical-qualifications-of-a-pastor-retrieved on 1st
November 2018.