Re-evangelizing America with changes in our ministry roles

jesus pic

jesus picTo re-reach a changing American culture, the American Church needs a different understanding of ministry roles. I think that goes for the Baptists, the Presbyterians, and the non-denominationals as much as for the UMC.

No matter which (non-)denomination we come from, the assumption seems to be that called Christian ministers should all serve in some form of chaplain’s role. Or worse – as visionary CEO types or as entertainers.

If someone takes the role of evangelistic church planter, we expect that person to start the church and then become its chaplain (or CEO or entertainer).

What if we acknowledged, as the New Testament and early Methodism did, a distinction between the traveling preacher and the local pastor?

What is a Traveling Preacher?

The traveling preacher (you might also use the term evangelist or apostle) is always an outsider of sorts. An outsider who is intentional about knowing the community like an insider – caring about the people, understanding their language and customs. But still an outsider, because it’s known that he won’t be with the community forever. His role there is temporary, or more exactly, transient.

Paul traveled far and wide in the New Testament to fulfill his apostolic role. Early Methodist circuit riders were often assigned large territories and traveled hundreds of miles on horseback. Given the segmented nature of society today, a “traveling” preacher could never leave a particular city and yet move constantly between different people groups.

The preacher does not provide day-to-day pastoral care. (S)he preaches the gospel, leads people to Christ, and assimilates them into community (not necessarily in that order). In our shifting culture, this sort of work will require great courage (see this great charge to seminary grads by Tim Tennent). Those who have gone before us faced incredible challenges that most contemporary American preachers haven’t had to face.

She trains and appoints certain members of that community – we could call them elders – to provide the day-to-day pastoral care from there forward. And she probably continues to check in on them to correct, rebuke, and encourage.

What is a Local Pastor?

The local pastor, on the other hand, is an insider. Immersed in the community. No plans of leaving for anything bigger or better. It has a familial sense to it. When was the last time you saw someone leave their family for another because they got a more lucrative offer?

Family is about people, not systems. So it won’t do for someone to say, “The ____ denomination is my big family, and I go wherever I’m needed in it.” Sounds nice, but I’m not buying it.

I believe this is what we need. We have too few traveling, church planting preachers and too few local pastors.

You’re a “layperson” and wonder how any of this applies to you? We need you, too! And you don’t necessarily need to go to seminary or be ordained. In my Methodist tradition, the majority of John Wesley’s traveling preachers were unordained. And the UMC continues to train lay speakers and license local pastors.

If a particular organization puts up a bunch of red tape before you are allowed to proclaim the gospel, assimilate people into community, and teach them to worship together, I’d question which is more important, the organization or the task at hand.

We Need Traveling Preachers

So you say that you fit the traveler’s role? The reason that you move around from church to church is to provide an outsider’s perspective, to give encouragement, to train and support the local people who are really the lifeblood of the ministry. You might talk about how you never engage in a ministry that the “laity” aren’t doing side-by-side.

Great! We need you! Desperately.

You’ve acknowledged that you’re temporary, transient. You won’t be around for the long haul, so you’re helping others take on the bulk of the ministry. You’re ensuring that your people are providing each other with pastoral care and aren’t dependent on you.

Now one more thing: we need you to plant churches.

At least one every five years.

And I’m probably already shooting way low. I should have said every three years. Or maybe I should have said five new churches within eight months, and that before you get commissioned for ministry.

And we need you to do it while you continue those other roles of support, training, and encouragement for your existing congregation(s).

Too much? You’ve just said that the local people are doing the bulk of the ministry, that they’re not to be dependent on you. That can’t be your excuse.

Whatever the excuse is, we need you to get over it and plant new churches. Throughout history, church planting has without question been the most effective method of evangelism.

Just to sustain, a denomination needs to start new congregations each year equal to at least three percent of its current number of congregations. For the Kentucky UMC that would mean roughly 24 new congregations per year. And that’s to sustain!

I would take it this far… If you’re unwilling or unable to consistently (be it in five months or five years) plant new churches, I think you need to reconsider your role as a traveling preacher.

But maybe you say, “These aren’t excuses. Church planting isn’t my calling or gifting. I’m a pastor at heart.”

Great! We need you! Desperately.

Local Pastors

Be a local pastor. Immerse yourself in a community.

Make it clear that you have no intention of leaving. No larger paycheck, pulpit, or parsonage will convince you to leave this family for another. You are one of them.

Your leadership as an insider makes a difference. It makes an enormous difference to know that you aren’t just the pastor for hire until you get a different gig.

And you should probably work to have as many other local pastors on board as possible. This is no one-(wo)man show. This is especially important if we continue thinking this way. Who are your next day-to-day pastoral leaders? They are in your midst. Don’t wait for someone to be sent/hired from somewhere else.

My own Methodist heritage has great examples of how important a located pastor is. In a brilliant article (you must click and read in full), Don Haynes says, “The keys to our staying power were the located elders, local preachers and Sunday school superintendents.” He calls these local elders “the pillars and backbone of local churches.”

Some of you are in systems that will easily allow you to declare you’re with a local church for life. Others will have a harder time. But it’s not impossible.

“I gave my word to go where the Bishop sends,” says the Methodist elder, “I can’t tell my people I’m with them for good.”

You do have options. Is your character in good standing? Do you intend to discontinue service in the itinerant ministry? Then request honorable location — a remnant from our history of locating elders. See paragraph 359 of the Discipline.

We haven’t been using this to allow people to become “local elders,” but show me why it can’t be used that way.

Yes, you’ll create all kinds of problems for the system. People may refuse you. At the least, you certainly may not be able to keep the same sort of pay and benefits. (Were you expecting anything less?) But if your heart and gifting are truly about being a local pastor, why don’t you be one?

What do you think? Could this change in how we handle ministry roles help? Disagree and want to tell the world why? (Click here to share with people on Facebook, or here to share on Twitter.)

John Wesley never heard of a traveling pastor

traveling preacher

This post may only interest my Methodist friends. Indulge me. I’ll get back to broader themes soon.

If you’re a Methodist, you may be surprised to see how clearly John Wesley distinguished between the itinerant ministry and pastoral ministry. He insisted that he wasn’t appointing pastors, but preachers. Look at what he says in his sermon “The Ministerial Office”:

So, the great High-Priest of our profession sent apostles and evangelists to proclaim glad tidings to all the world; and then Pastors, Preachers, and Teachers, to build up in the faith the congregations that should be found. But I do not find that ever the office of an Evangelist was the same with that of a Pastor, frequently called a Bishop. He presided over the flock, and administered the sacraments: The former assisted him, and preached the Word, either in one or more congregations. I cannot prove from any part of the New Testament, or from any author of the three first centuries, that the office of an evangelist gave any man a right to act as a Pastor or Bishop. I believe these offices were considered as quite distinct from each other till the time of Constantine.

Let’s highlight two of those points. According to Wesley:

1 – Pastor, Bishop… same thing. Wesley wouldn’t concede any differentiated role between pastors and bishops. It’s hard to make a strong argument for the distinction in the NT either. In other places, Wesley makes his feelings about bishops loud and clear — the people called Methodists should “put a full end to this!” Let the Presbyterians have their bishops, but let the Methodists know their calling better.

2 – Pastor, Evangelist… big difference. He said he could not prove from any part of the NT, or any time until Constantine, that the offices of evangelist and pastor were one in the same.

You should go read that whole sermon if you’re interested in these things. You’ll see a full, deeply theological explanation of ministry orders according to Wesley.

Wesley associated the pastors of the New Testament with priests in the Old Testament. He described them as the “ordinary, established, institutional ministers of the church.”

Meanwhile, he associated Methodist preachers with the prophets of the Old Testament. They were extraordinarily called to the work of itinerant evangelism: “It is true extraordinary prophets were frequently raised up, who had not been educated in the ‘schools of the prophets,’ neither had the outward ordinary call. But we read of no extraordinary priests” (see this in “Ought We to Separate from the Church of England?”).

Wesley did not believe he was appointing institutional ministers of the church for the ordinary work of the church. Wesley was raising up extraordinary leaders as traveling evangelists and apostles “to proclaim glad tidings to all the world.”

John Wesley never heard of a traveling pastor. Pastors were the local ministers, building up congregations in their faith. Wesley was calling traveling preachers to proclaim glad tidings to all the world.

The question for Methodists today: what is the point of our traveling ministers? Are they sent “to proclaim glad tidings to all the world”? If so, we should take a closer look at what they’re actually doing, because it looks more like that ordinary pastoral ministry. Whatever the case, it seems that we have blurred two roles that Wesley was at pains to keep distinct.

You may ask what we do with Thomas Coke and Francis Asbury, and the American ministry that followed. If you want to talk about that, we can use the comments section for it. In short, I think much of what Wesley had taught and fought for elsewhere got undermined when he ordained these two.

Yet we still see in the early American ministry that the traveling preachers were not pastors. You should go to this brilliant article by Don Haynes to see more. He shows that circuit riders weren’t pastors and also argues that “local elders were the pillars and backbone of local churches.”

Next: a proposal for better ministry today.

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How to become an evangelist

peace with god

A guest post from Aaron Mansfield, one of the best evangelists I know. When I began writing about evangelism, I told you that I’m not very good at it (though I’m working on it). Aaron is. Much better for you to get wisdom from him than from me. This is great, practical encouragement. Enjoy!

Teddy asked me to write a few words on how a person can become an evangelist–not in a caricatured sense, but in the real sense of someone who shares the Good News that Jesus died for our sins.

I’ll start by saying I do not have the spiritual gift of evangelism. The gift of evangelism is not necessary to do the work of evangelism. There is no excuse for a believer who does not share his or her faith.

There are some immediate hindrances to evangelism that seem almost insurmountable. You have to get over them. You have to come to the point where you accept that the gift of salvation that you have is simply more important than your fears or worries.

  1. “I think it is intrusive to tell someone about my faith.” What if any of the Apostles thought that? “I know He said to go into all the world, but we can’t really interrupt people’s privacy to tell them about the Kingdom–” if Christians thought this way, you would not be a Christian. No one would have told you.
  2. “People will think I am weird.” That’s the least of your worries. They already do think you’re weird. You believe a man’s tragic death 2000 years ago has something to do with you and the fabric of the universe. You believe He was resurrected from the dead and He sent a spirit to guide us since then. You are already weird. Weirder than you know.
  3. Fear of rejection. It will happen. A lot. But Jesus was honest about this: “narrow is the way that leads to eternal life and few find it.”
  4. “You can’t just do evangelism. You have to make disciples.” (As if evangelism can exist without discipleship, but that’s another issue…) This is the worst excuse there is because it sounds holy. My experience is that people who say this are not making disciples, either. If they’re doing it without “evangelism” then someone else did the work of winning them to faith. Do both.
  5. “We should build relationships first.” This, too, sounds holy, but it’s a complicated excuse to allow us to call “hanging out” evangelism. After a few months of playing golf or whatever, you’re going to tell them about Christ? You’re already worried people think you’re weird… And… is it biblical? In the New Testament, no one waits to tell the Good News. It’s too important to wait.
  6. “I don’t know what to say.” We can fix that, and now.

To engage in effective evangelism, you have to have your heart broken for people who do not know Christ. They go to Hell without Him. They have no benefit of His peace, joy, and righteousness. I fear that this, finally, is the stumbling block: We do not really believe that Jesus is as important as He is. Ask God to break your heart. It is a terrible process, but a joyous result.

And then what? The story is so simple, so plain. We want to dress it up, complicate it. Don’t. Here it is:

1. God loves you. And He has a plan for your life (John 3:16-17, John 10:10)

2. Your sin has broken the relationship with Him. (Romans 3:23)

3. Because He loves you, He sent Jesus to die for your sins, to be the bridge back across the broken relationship. Jesus is the only way back to God. (John 14:6)

4. Trust Jesus, that He will do for you what He says. Repent of your sin and have faith that He has died for your sins and was resurrected to life, and you, too, will be resurrected to new life. (Mark 1:15, Romans 10:9, John 5:24)

It’s just that simple. [You will also have to get over whatever it is in you that thinks this is cheesy. I had to get over the resentment of “this isn’t cool.” You have to get over it not being very sophisticated.]

There is a bit more. You have to practice these “steps.” Repeat them to a friend or family member until you know them well enough to repeat on demand.

Then, tell the Good News! Perhaps there is a friend or coworker who needs Jesus. Or just a stranger you meet and start chatting with. My favorite “pick up line” (ha ha) is “Do you know what it means that God loves you?”

Can I embarrass you even further? While we’re being weird here, you need some tracts. I suggest two: biblica.com has my favorite, “The Bridge.” I have used it successfully to lead to faith adults, youth, and even a guy who didn’t speak English.

The other one is Billy Graham’s “Steps to Peace With God.” Get it from BillyGraham.org He starts in that most Methodist place: the love of God!

You can use either tract with your basic explanation of the Good News, but I suggest using both.

Pro-Tip: put a sticker on the back of the tract with your contact info and your church’s worship time. You can leave them laying around, for someone to read later: you don’t have to talk to everyone. If you do get a chance to personally witness to someone, get their contact info and follow up with an invite to church, an offer to go get them–at least meet them outside the door.

Please email me (pastor.aaronmansfield@gmail.com) with any questions you have, and also let me know how it works out–the good and the bad! If you’re going to do evangelism, you have to know going in that it is hard and often disappointing. An evangelist needs a lot of encouragement–and I would love to encourage you in that work!

Start telling the Good News and don’t stop once you’ve started!

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