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As promised, here is part 2 of "Seven Biblical Ways God Wants YOU to Support Your Pastor." In this edition of Cadre Connection we'll discuss...
[Note: Please freely share this article with as many people as you want in any form you desire. When you do, please let us know you are using it (info@cadreministries.com) and please include the author and website address (www.cadreministries.com)] If you missed Part 1, click to view it now: READ PART 1 >> III. Give Your Financial Resources Part of our biblical responsibility to our pastors is to make sure that they are paid well. As Paul says, those pastors who serve “well are worthy of double honor” (I Timothy 5:17). What is this “double honor”?
Whatever view you take, you cannot escape the fact that this passage clearly shows us that one of our responsibilities to our pastors is to pay them well, for “the worker deserves his wages” (I Timothy 5:18). Money… it’s the last thing to arrive at church and the first thing to leave. Often, when church powerbrokers are unhappy with a pastor (usually over an issue of preference or style that has wrongly been elevated to a level of biblical importance), they cast their vote of accusation by not giving anymore. The Bible calls this “robbing” God (Malachi 3:7-12). It is a clear indication of spiritual immaturity when someone plays games with giving. Those who use money in an attempt to manipulate a pastor are only showing their lack of discipleship and spiritual maturity no matter how old they are or how long they have been members of the church. In the church today we have way too many long-tenured, affluent, spiritually immature members who use their money—not to bless God’s work—but as a means to try to manipulate pastors for their selfish agendas. This is NOT the spirit of biblical giving. Biblical giving focuses on giving to God—not to a church, organization, or person. Yet, it seems that many Christians lose this biblical focus. Hence, the ecclesiastical money games begin. So how can we keep our focus on giving to God? I do a little mental exercise that helps me to remember that my giving is to God—and this may be something you want to try. Since I am paid monthly, we give our “tithe” on a monthly basis. (Before I was paid monthly, I was paid weekly—very weakly!) When it’s time to put that check into the offering, I imagine that the moment I release it, the check zooms up to Heaven before the throne of God—and then comes back down into the offering plate—smoking—as if hot off the altar of God. Why? 1) Because my attention span is short, and I need to do stuff like this to keep my brain in the service—and 2) I want to make sure that I always remember that my giving is to God—through the church—not just to the church—and not just to a person or a group of people. Now, according to the Bible, part of giving to God via the church is making sure that our pastors have their material needs taken care of sufficiently. We don’t give to pastors. We give to God—and part of that giving goes to take care of the needs of our pastors. How much should we pay our pastors? We often ask this question not
because we want to pay what a pastor is worth or deserves, but because
we have miserly motives: we want to know the minimum we can pay the
pastor without losing too much credibility or respect. This unbiblical
attitude reminds me of a story of a pastor who wasn’t paid particularly
well—not because the church didn’t have the money—but
because the deacons held to the erroneous idea that pastors should be
poor to keep them humble and dependent on God. So one day the pastor—who
had a background as an electrician—wired a 220 voltage to the
front pews where the seven deacons of the church sat every Sunday morning.
He put a control switch in the pulpit. On Sunday morning, he stood in
the pulpit and said, “Before we start our service this morning,
we have a little church business to take care of.” The seven deacons
in the front pew looked at each other in surprise and then suspiciously
back at the pastor. The pastor continued, “I make a motion to
increase the pastor’s pay 25 percent. Is there a second?” Seriously, how much should our pastors and other church staff be paid? If your pastor serves well, you will want to take seriously ALL the ways you can offer “double honor”—and you can start by blessing your pastor with extra monetary gifts! The Bible says the worker is worthy of his wages! If this type of abundance thinking does not fit with your economic philosophy when it comes to paying a pastor, then I suggest you scrap YOUR economic philosophy and adopt God’s as found in I Timothy 5:17-18. To do less than “double honor” for a pastor who serves well is to violate the Word of God. (See point VI for additional practical ways you can show “double honor” to pastors who serve well.) Based on this biblical principle, I challenge you to ask yourself if you can honestly say:
IV. Refuse to Gossip About Your Pastor Because leadership in the church requires our pastors to speak God’s truth to us, many times pastors are the recipients of the bloody back stab of gossip from church folks. Unfortunately, the sting of gossip and unfair accusations are a normal part of what it means to be a church leader. Therefore, Paul admonished Timothy, a pastor/elder, not to entertain an accusation against other pastors/elders—unless the accusation is brought by two or three witnesses. But what about those of us who are NOT pastors/elders? How should we handle an accusation brought against a pastor? The next time you are in a group of “Christian” people and someone starts to bad mouth a pastor (and there will be a next time), don’t give the accusation the dignity of a listening ear! Instead, ask the person who initiated the talk about the pastor if he/she has talked directly to the pastor he/she is talking about. According to Jesus in Matthew 18:15, the first step to dealing with interpersonal conflict in the church is a private one on one meeting: “If a brother sins against you, go and show him his fault, just between the two of you. If he listens to you, you have won your brother over.” (Note that Jesus is talking about issues of sin—not issues of style or preference. More on this critically important point in the next section.) So, the next time someone starts to verbally chew on your ear about a pastor, you need to lovingly hold that person accountable to Matthew 18:15. You need to stop the accusing person—in mid-sentence—and ask, “Have you talked to the pastor one on one in private first?” If not—and my experience is that there is a STRONG chance that there was not even an attempt to meet one on one with the accused pastor in private—then you need to support your pastor by holding the accusing person accountable to Matthew 18:15. I strongly suggest you try lovingly and firmly saying something like this, “One week from today, I am going to ask you if you have talked to the pastor in private. If you haven’t, I will call the pastor and ask the pastor to contact you.” If the accusation against a pastor is being brought by two or three witnesses (not supporters of the one accusing—but actual witnesses)—then the witnesses should present their case before the other elders/pastors—not to you or anyone else inside or outside of the church! If you say, “Well, I’m just listening to the complaint about the pastor,” I say to you, Proverbs 17:4: “A wicked man listens to evil lips; a liar pays attention to a malicious tongue.” Based on this biblical principle, can you honestly say, “I refuse to listen to or spread gossip about my pastor”? V. Lovingly and Privately Correct Your Pastor Lest you wrongly believe that I think loving and supporting a pastor should be a cotton candy experience (all sweet fluff), let me clarify that the Bible embraces the idea of loving confrontation over issues of sin. In matters of sin, we must be willing to risk the relationship by speaking God’s truth in love. Galatians 6:1 says, “Brothers, if someone is caught in a sin, you who are spiritual should restore him gently. But watch yourself, or you also may be tempted.” As strange as this passage (and others like it) sound to our culture’s scream for tolerance and unquestioned acceptance, the Bible clearly indicates that confrontation, when done correctly, is HEALTHY in relationships. This includes our relationship with our pastor. To be faithful and true in my exegesis of this passage in I Timothy 5:17-20—I must point out that verse 20 (“Those who sin are to be rebuked publicly, so that the others may take warning”) is written to Timothy—a pastor/elder on how to deal with sinning pastors/elders. That is, this is instruction to a church leader on how to deal with another church leader who is sinning. Paul tells Timothy (a pastor/elder) that those pastors/elders who sin are to be rebuked publicly. Again, this is how pastors and elders are to deal with a fellow pastor/elder who is sinning! If you are not an elder or pastor—I don’t believe you have any business publicly rebuking a sinning church leader. However, you do have a responsibility as a brother or sister in Christ if you see another brother or sister sinning—and that includes a sinning pastor. As stated previously, Matthew 18:15-17 is your mode of operation. And if a second step of reconciliation needs to be taken because your pastor will not listen, I suggest you judiciously involve two or three elders/pastors—not members or attenders. I must be quick to point out that you have no basis for correcting anyone if your issue is a personal preference—not something the Bible clearly calls a sin! In issues of sin, the Bible tells us to lovingly and privately go one on one and confront (Matthew 18:15; Galatians 6:1). In issues of personality or style, the Bible tells us to bear with one another and love one another (Colossians 3:13)! So, based on this biblical principle, can you honestly say, “I lovingly and privately correct my pastor on issues of sin and offer grace on issues of preference”? VI. Help Your Pastor to Flourish at Home First The Focus on the Family survey of pastors found this about the home lives of pastors:
Therefore, we must find PRACTICAL and TANGIBLE ways to rally to our pastors and their families! Let me suggest SEVEN:
Please don’t sit there as you read this and assume that someone else from your church will help your pastor prioritize family life. I challenge you and your family to make it a family project to love and support your pastor’s family—and to promote your pastor’s success—by doing something practical and tangible (perhaps something above)… this week! A pastor’s time with family IS a deeply spiritual issue—for “If anyone does not know how to manage his own family, how can he take care of God's church?” (I Timothy 3:5, bold mine). Can you honestly say that you are fulfilling this biblical principle? Can you honestly say before God and others, “I do everything in my power to make sure my pastor flourishes in family relationships (spouse and children)”? VII. Obey and Submit to Your Pastor’s Leadership God fully expects us to obey and submit to the leaders of our church. And note well that our leaders will stand before God and give an account of their leadership over us. God’s cog-to-cog functional design for the church requires:
But let’s be frank, the leadership and followership in most churches today rarely work like well-oiled cogs. Often in the church it’s like someone has thrown the wrench of self into the cogs of our ecclesiastical machinery! Sometimes it is a leadership problem, and other times it is a follower problem. Sometimes it’s a leadership problem. If you have been given the oversight of a church as a pastor or elder—then please read the following very prayerfully. Addressing the need for BIBLICAL leadership—not the current CEO model of leadership being followed by so many church leaders today—Alexander Strauch writes, “What is of supreme importance to God… is the way in which elders shepherd God’s people. God measures success by the spirit in which elders handle people, solve problems, and perform their duties—not so much by outward results. Thus, humility and servanthood are at the very heart of Christian leadership. We must understand that it is possible for a church to be governed by a body of elders, yet be totally unscriptural because of the manner in which the elders operate. Like Pharisees or worldly rulers, the elders may wrongly separate and elevate themselves above the people. The elders may serve chiefly to satisfy their egos. They may serve because they need to dominate people. But only elders who operate in humble servanthood are true, biblical elders” (Biblical Eldership). The truth is that many churches are not formidable forces for God in their communities precisely because some pastors and elders don’t exercise a biblical, Jesus-like leadership with the very people they claim to lead. What would happen in our churches if pastors and elders strived to be “true, biblical elders” as defined by Strauch above? Sometimes the breakdown is an obedience/submission problem on the part of the congregation. John MacArthur writes, “In many churches today, the congregation rules the leaders. This sort of government is foreign to the New Testament. Church leaders are not to be tyrants, because they do not rule for themselves, but for God. But the command is unqualified: ‘Obey your leaders and submit to them.’ It is the right of such men, under God and in meekness and humility, to determine the direction of the church, to preside over it, to teach the word in it, to reprove, rebuke, and exhort…. Just as church leaders are to rule in love and humility, those under their leadership are to submit in love and humility…. When you do not have Spirit-filled leaders who rule well or submissive people who follow well, you have chaos and disunity in the church and open doors to all sorts of spiritual problems” (Commentary on Hebrews). The truth is that many churches are not formidable forces for God in their communities precisely because some followers don’t exercise a Hebrews 13:17 type of obedience and submission to the Christ-like leadership God has provided for them. What would happen in our churches if the followers REALLY obeyed and submitted to strong, caring, and Christ-like leadership from pastors and elders? As a follower, can you say with complete integrity, “I obey and submit to the leadership and oversight of my pastors/elders”? Conclusion: Will YOU Take the Pastoral Covenant
Challenge Right Now? Here’s how you can get started: 1. Download the covenant of seven biblical ways God wants YOU to encourage and support your pastor (they are both one page long). WORD DOC 2. Study the Scripture verses one by one to discover
what God has to say to YOU about encouraging and supporting your pastor.
RESPONSE: If God used this article to speak
to your heart in some way to encourage you or to remind you of an important
ministry lesson, please take a quick moment right now to share it with
us at
Did you miss last month's Cadre Connection? My Encounter with Moses: CLICK TO READ:
Way Cool Pastor Appreciation Stuff You Can Use Use the following external link from Focus on
the Family to appreciate your pastor:
Lighten Your Pastor's Load by Recruiting, Motivating, and Retaining Volunteers in the Church
For more info or to order online, click here For details about hosting a Recruiting, Motivating, and Retaining Volunteers
in the Church WORKSHOP, e-mail
Meet Neil and Kristy Sullivan--Awesome Volunteers in Peoria,
IL! From ten-year-old Aubrey: "I like Mr. Neil because he is very funny--and he can be serious too. I like Ms. Kristy because she brings us donuts every Sunday morning when we are doing our puppet ministry for the children." From twelve-year-old Billy: "Neil and Kristy are a blast. They know how to have fun doing ministry. I love the practices every Tuesday night as much as I love doing performances for our children's ministry on the weekends." From thirteen-year-old Emily: "Neil and Kristy are great because they are excellent teachers and they love us. I love serving in the puppet ministry because we get to make a lot of kids laugh and help them learn about God at the same time. Aubrey, Billy, and I have grown as people and as puppeteers since we've joined the puppet ministry. I am so glad that Neil and Kristy are our leaders!" Neil and Kristy, thank YOU for the time you strategically invest in training our kids to love Jesus--and to serve Him. You are two of the best volunteers in the church! A Call for You to Brag on an AWESOME Volunteer in Your Church!
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Cadre: Assisting local churches in becoming the best volunteer training organizations in the world. Cadre is a not-for-profit ministry [501(c)(3)] that exists to make you wildly successful at becoming what God has called you to become as you serve others in your local church and community. We serve as support-based, God-dependent missionaries to come alongside volunteers and those who care for volunteers in the church (globally) to help accomplish their God-given mission. Eph. 4:10-17 We provide free monthly online training for volunteers in the church (Cadre Connection), for volunteer Jr. High Youthworkers (Batteries Included), and for Student Leaders (Spiritual Caffeine). Visit www.cadreministries.com to preview our recent free training or to sign up to receive training in your email-box monthly. For more information about bringing a certified Cadre trainer to coach and train the volunteer teachers, leaders, and youth workers in your church, contact info@cadreministries.com For Cadre training sources visit http://www.cadreministries.com/store
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