Thursday, June 28, 2007

Leadership Gifts in the Church

Let's talk about he subject of church leadership, in particular, about the gifts associated with it and how they come into expression over the life of a church. Despite the relative clarity of the scriptures about the subject, there seems to be a lot of fog surrounding it, so I'll add my two cents over my next couple of posts and hopefully not add any dry ice to the bucket.

Today, almost everyone exercising church leadership is called a pastor, as if the responsiblity and authority of church leadership (bishop/elder) tracked congruently and exclusively with the gift of pastor/teacher. That is unfortunate because I think it clouds the scripture and confounds our practice. I don't see that as what was ocurring in the biblical church, nor is it what is suggested in Ephesians 4.

In that passage we are told that leadership could come from any of four (or five depending on your take on the passage) gifts or, perhaps, even a combination of those four/five gifts. All four are are the subjects of the leadership action which prepares God's people for works of service, so that the body of Christ may be built up. Properly applied, this passage means a church could be led (bishop/elder) by an apostle, or a prophet, or an evangelist, or a pastor/teacher. That is, in fact, what happens in practice, regardless of whether or not our theology describes it that way.

Although we call them pastor if they lead a church, their true gift is going to make itself known in the execution of their duties. A church "pastored" by an evangelist is likely to stress the invitational message reaching the unbelieving. A church "pastored" by a prophet is likely to stress the revelatory message. A church "pastored" by an apostle is likely to stress getting the church planted. A church "pastored" by a pastor/teacher is likely to stress discipleship. I think that actually explains the imbalance we often see in a church's ministry.

Our response to one-sided church emphases is sometimes to criticize, i.e. "the pastor is too focused on ______ ministry." However, I think churches need to understand the nature of church leadership as I've sketched it out here and patiently work with their leaders to get gifts expressed that their pastors do not operate in. If pastors and church folk work together, I think balance in ministry can be achieved. I do not believe that diversity in leadership gifts is meant to produce handicapped churches, as it often seems to, but instead full-bodied expressions of the manifold grace of God.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Abso-flippin-lutley!

I just HATE being called Pastor, and it being assumed that I have a pastoral gifting. Really! Maybe I do? I really don't know. But God hasn't confirmed it yet so what gives anybody else the right? And there's loads of other gifting bubbling around inside this particular jar of clay.

The leadership qualification is more about character and faithfulness than gifting. I may be flying in the face of convention but I don't even see any Biblical instruction that those with ministry gifts are to lead as elders - only to serve the church so that it is built up. Of course many who have a matured ministry gift have the character and faithfulness qualifications for eldership, but it doesn't follow that they have to be elders, and it doesn't follow that elders have to have a ministry gift.

To assume that anybody who is a "leader" or an "elder" is a "pastor" is just plain ridiculous to anybody whose read their Bible.

Thanks for writing on this!