• So, today I get another 5-7 letters at the end of my name (as if I needed more) and I still do not have employment.

    I also am beginning to think I should pray to start a Church plant here in the city, and several people are mentioning that I should.  So, I need to pray for God to raise up a core team of like minded people  to raise up this Church, as well as the funding and faith for me to actually begin this kinda work.

    I’d appreciate prayers to that end.

  • Okay, I know that the title is a false dichotomy. The problem is that I don’t think most know that it’s a false dichotomy, hence the reason I’m writing this.

    In my travails to find a method of paying for food while I hopefully preach the Gospel in St. John’s after finishing my MDiv, I have had many conversations with pastors, and people in authority over denominations.

    The most common question I get is what my goals are for future ministry. While I don’t always say it this way, my only desire is to prayerfully preach the Gospel of Jesus Christ accurately to people who need to hear it. The reason for this goal is simple, it’s what a pastor does. Yes, there is counseling, and visiting, and a host of administrative tasks, but all of those stem from the God-empowered accurate expression of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

    It’s important to remember that the task isn’t one of creativity (save in the means by which you preach it). The message is set, and we don’t get to change it. The Gospel is good news that we do not create, we simply report. Otherwise, we have a good story and not good news. The Gospel is a good story, but not one I wrote. I am called to accurately interpret the scriptures (yes, there is interpretation, but again, it is bounded by accuracy… I interpret what is actually there) to people who are around me, and if a pastor, to those entrusted to me.

    This led, in at least one case, to a rather strange conversation about false teaching, theology, and the pastoral call. The man I was speaking to believed strongly in “love” as the central tenet of the Gospel (quite true, but open to misinterpretation), and felt that as long as we were doing good, we were preaching the Gospel.

    He was wrong, of course. Good works are a proper and necessary effect of believing the Gospel (and if you are not moved to it by the Gospel, I doubt that you have heard it rightly), but it is not the Gospel itself. The Gospel is what we see in scripture as Christ crucified for our sake, that we might become fit worshipers of a gracious God. God becomes my surpassing treasure, and the good news is that there is a means of getting that eternally in Jesus Christ, through only the work of God for the glory of God.

    This led to another short exchange about the question of false doctrine (which he referred to as debating about words). Indeed, there is fruitless theological discussion. There are many important distinctives between denominations that are not central to the Gospel, and we should not treat those with fundamental seriousness. But there are some questions that are central to the Gospel. For example, the statement that good works is preaching the Gospel actually subverts the Gospel. It makes good works for the benefit of others the goal of the Gospel. Thus the ultimate “good” of the good news becomes humanity, or society, but not God. Indeed, it is a close cousin of another false belief that says we are justified by our good works.

    This is a central disagreement, where questions of baptism, the tribulation, the sequence and relative value of Spiritual giftings, (while important) are not.

    Discerning between the two, using the witness of scripture in the unity of the Church (meaning the company of believers now and throughout history), is proper theology. In essence, theology is about discerning the accuracy of the Gospel we preach. In this sense it is important.

    I was little surprised then when the same man claimed then that theology wasn’t that important overall, or that it was too academic. Indeed, bad theology is that, though I would say that he was engaging in that version of theology as we spoke. He was choosing to interpret the revelation of God in a way that ignored the center of the Gospel. He was engaged in bad theology. Had it been good theology, he would have taken the time to question whether what he was saying accorded with scripture. That is good theology, and so far from being academic, it is at the crux of a pastor’s work.

    Good theology, the theology that is completely Biblical (meaning using the whole of scripture), helps the pastor to preach the Gospel rightly. That is intensely practical for people in congregations, as it is only the Gospel of Jesus Christ that saves.

    We are primarily messengers, and only theologians insofar as it makes us better messengers. We dare not reverse those, as if the message serves only our own private theology, we end up preaching a lie.

  • Some thoughts by John Piper on what a pastor needs to do in the pulpit. What think ye?

  • Aid Work: An aid project in Haiti, done by some local medical professionals (I attended their sing along “Sound of Music” fund raiser).

    Books: Tim Challies reviews a new book that challenges teens to rebel against low expectations of them (the authors have a website called “the rebelution“.

    Culture and Church: Lifeway research finds that the unchurched prefer neo-gothic cathedrals to modern style Churches.

    Zimbabwe: As the electoral mess continues, the US contemplates sanctions.

  • So now I’m in that weird time between actually having finished my coursework and  the graduation ceremony in which I get more paper to put on my wall and cover the unsightly wallpaper.

    Now I have to go find work. So many people have ideas about what I should do. I should join a Church that can actually afford to pay an intelligent and educated MDiv, i should use my law degree to find government work, I should go on and do my PhD. And I think I should just find some kinda work for the short term while I figure it out (after all, i like to eat).

    Anyway, I appreciate prayers from any so inclined, and I’d appreciate random donations of cash from those who aren’t. :-)