About Andrew Schank

Andrew Schank is an Independent Baptist Missionary/Pastor who loves to blog about spiritual matters! His main ministry website is http://www.togetherinthegap.com. Andrew is also a contributing author to two other blogs/websites including http://linked2leadership.com and http://www.ifbkjv.com. Pastor Schank's Church website is http://www.greatcommissionbaptist.org

Tips For Pastors When Seeking Advice

It has been said that all we need to grow as believers is our Bibles and the Holy Spirit. I agree with that statement, but we have also been given pastors and teachers, by God, to help instruct us along life’s pathway. Just as the members of your congregation need help and advice from time to time, so do God’s men. The million dollar question is, “To whom do pastors go to when they need help?” The answer, of course, is God and other pastor friends. Specifically though… what kind of pastor friends should folks go to when needing advice?


Sometimes it is just as helpful to know who NOT to frequent for advice as it is to know who to go to. This post seeks to address this issue in a candid fashion. Though it may appear that I am a bit harsh, I am endeavoring to be “to the point” in my thoughts.

(Proverbs 11:14) “Where no counsel is, the people fall: but in the multitude of counsellors there is safety.”  (KJV)

Listed below are some important tips for pastors who are looking for advice from other men in the ministry!

#1 – Beware Of The Insulated!

One of the detriments of taking advice from some people is it’s lack of relevance. Some preachers are well established in a routine of ministry, and depending upon the size, scope, and style of one’s ministry, the advice given may not be very helpful. Sometimes these varying factors inhibit men of God from giving sound, relevant advice to other preacher friends.

For example, if a preacher is in a very populated urban ministry, then he is not a very practical source of help to a “country” preacher. This does not mean that no ideas can be exchanged. Quite the contrary! It just means that some points of advice will be totally irrelevant.

Another great example of this is when some preachers try to tell another preacher how to carry out their ministry. Some pastors think they know just exactly how a missionary ought to raise his support or how they should carry out their ministry on the field. Many of these same advice giving pastors have never had to raise one dime of monetary support to carry out ministry, nor have many of them participated in ministries overseas or in an area opposite their culture. While it is true that certain principles are immutable, it is commonplace to see God use a variety of methods to carry out these timeless precepts.

#2 – Beware Of The Agreeable!

Not only should one steer clear of insulated pastor friends, at times, one should also avoid agreeable ones as well. “YES” men should not be asked about certain issues because they will not be an objective source of instruction. Some advice, which is needed in ministry, should be direct and to the point. If you seek a close friend who is of an agreeable personality, then you are very likely to get an easy going answer. Fearing to hurt your feelings, the TRUTH will not be shared the way it could otherwise. Your friend may think a lot of you, but he may fail a bit in his advice.

#3 – Beware Of The Egotistical!

Some people don’t give good advice because their ego overshadows the admonishment. Not only is it hard to take advice from people with gigantic egos, it is usually accompanied with baggage that is not worth dealing with. What’s worse, you conclude your conversation feeling as though you were talked down to and possibly interrogated. It is just not worth the effort! Though some pastors are greatly used of the Lord, they have faults like anyone else. It is wise to be careful from whom we take advice, but this is especially true concerning those with huge egos.

#4 – Beware Of The Novice!

For some strange, yet all too common, reason younger pastors think they know absolutely everything about everything and if you don’t think so, then ASK one of them. “We all admire their zeal and we all have to start someplace” may be the disclaimer for dealing with this, but it does not serve one ounce of good when you need objective Biblical advice on certain issues. The older a pastor gets, the more he learns from his mistakes. One of the most common regrets, expressed from older pastors, is some of the advice they gave as a young preacher. It is awesome that we have a God that can straighten out poor advice!

Conclusion

As we conclude this post you might think I am being hard on preachers. I admit that without reservation. The truth is that I do so because I have made the exact same mistakes as presented. Maybe you can see yourself making these or variations of these in your ministry? If so, then change!

The point of this post has been to challenge each one of us to be extremely careful from whom we take advice. It can also be seen how we should NOTgive advice. Our actions have eternal consequences and it should behoove us to remember that when acting upon someone else’s instructions/advice.

Enhanced by Zemanta
_____________________________________

Would you consider purchasing…

482518: Spiritual Discipleship: Principles of Following Christ for Every Believer Spiritual Discipleship: Principles of Following Christ for Every Believer

By J. Oswald Sanders / Moody Publishers

As J. Oswald Sanders points out, true discipleship is more than intellectual assent to a belief in Christ—it involves the whole person and lifestyle.
Those with only a superficial belief will soon fall away from the faith, but Sanders says a true disciple would rather be presented with a difficult challenge than a soft option. Disciples are charged with the task of training themselves to be godly, because it is their responsibility to remain spiritually fit. Ever-fresh topics in this time-tested volume include:

  • the disciple’s second chance
  • the disciple’s ambition
  • the disciple’s senior partner
  • the disciple’s olympics
  • the disciple’s right
  • the disciple’s maturity

In addition, a “For Reflection” guide is included, making this book ideal for both individual and group study.


We Need Stickability

This outline reminds us that we need to be faithful in our place of service in God’s perfect will. We should be careful to not get sidetracked from God’s purpose for our lives. We should be involved in God’s BEST for our lives!

Title: “We Need Stickability!”

Text: II Timothy 2:3-4

(2 Timothy 2:3-4) “Thou therefore endure hardness, as a good soldier of Jesus Christ. No man that warreth entangleth himself with the affairs of this life; that he may please him who hath chosen him to be a soldier.”  (KJV)

Introduction:

•    In World War II, on the night preceding D-Day, the Allied forces flew in paratroopers well behind the front lines in hopes to divert attention from their main objective: NORMANDY.
•    For quite some time, the Allies were building up forces in Great Britain. The Germans never suspected that the Allies would cross the channel anywhere but at the narrowest point. Instead they crossed at the widest, which was NORMANDY.
•    I mention these facts about the war of the greatest generation because what the Allies successfully accomplished is what Satan tries to do to each Child of God!
•    If he can divert our attention from the main objective, which is the Will of God, then he has mimicked the allied forces of WWII and has sidetracked our usefulness.
•    God needs for his children to have stickability.
•    This is what Paul tells Timothy in our text.

Proposition: There are three things I want us to see tonight about the need for stickability!

I.    Notice The Picture Our Text Paints!

A.    Our text paints the picture of a foot soldier’s life.

B.    Paul was trying to convey that we are soldiers of the cross and we should be able to endure hardness!

C.    He points to the fact that we should not get distracted by things in this life that would hinder us from pleasing God!

D.    Distractions like:

i.    Material things
ii.    Problems at work and at home
iii.    Political situations – President Obama

E.    Paul does not say that these things will not be hard for us, but admonishes us to endure them!

II.    Notice The Example Of Our Lord!

A.    There is no greater example of enduring hard times than the one found in our Lord Jesus Christ!

B.    None of us can imagine what it was for Christ to suffer for us!

C.    Consider what was said of Him in Hebrews

(Hebrews 12:2) “Looking unto Jesus the author and finisher of our faith; who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is set down at the right hand of the throne of God.”  (KJV)

III.    Notice The Lives Of Many Bible Characters!

A.    David reflects upon the hard times he faced when he penned Psalm 60.

(Psalms 60:3) “Thou hast shewed thy people hard things: thou hast made us to drink the wine of astonishment.”  (KJV)

B.    Muse upon Hebrews chapter eleven.

C.    We should realize that these people endured a great fight, and we can to!

D.    I like what Pastor Billy Ball said when went full time in the ministry. He was struggling and he felt like God told him to say “By faith… Billy Ball” when he read chapter eleven of Hebrews!

E.    There is one common denominator about these heroes of the faith: they all had stickability!

Conclusion:

•    Sinner be saved!

•    Christian strive for stickability! Endure hardness!

 

Enhanced by Zemanta

Pastor, Decisions You Make Have Eternal Consequences

I know for a fact that when we, as men of God, make most decisions, we do not think in the terms of “Eternal Consequences”. Regardless of our state of mind when making decisions, they do have ramifications that reach far into the future. Let us consider a few things in this post that will help us think about how we make decisions.

#1 – Self-Centered…

(Psalms 119:133) “Order my steps in thy word: and let not any iniquity have dominion over me.”  (KJV)

When making a decision from a self-centered, self-promoting or self-preserving motivation, then rest assured that it can come back to bite you. By definition, a decision from these areas are built upon a sinful foundation. Good decisions can help you, increase your reputation and keep you alive, but these benefits should not be the motivating factor. Sound Biblical precepts should be the inner framework of any decision we make as preachers, especially ministry decisions!

#2 – Appeasement…

(Galatians 2:11-14) “But when Peter was come to Antioch, I withstood him to the face, because he was to be blamed. For before that certain came from James, he did eat with the Gentiles: but when they were come, he withdrew and separated himself, fearing them which were of the circumcision. And the other Jews dissembled likewise with him; insomuch that Barnabas also was carried away with their dissimulation. But when I saw that they walked not uprightly according to the truth of the gospel, I said unto Peter before them all, If thou, being a Jew, livest after the manner of Gentiles, and not as do the Jews, why compellest thou the Gentiles to live as do the Jews?”  (KJV)

As a spiritual leader, there are times when we are tempted to make a decision to appease a person or persons. Good decision making must remain objective and not ensnared by fear or familiarity. As a snowball gets bigger the farther it rolls down a hill, so do appeasements in ministry. There is no end as to how large a mess we can make. As hard as it is to fight this temptation, God’s men must persevere! Don’t appease men, but seek to please Christ!

#3 – Short Sighted…

(Luke 14:28-32) “For which of you, intending to build a tower, sitteth not down first, and counteth the cost, whether he have sufficient to finish it? Lest haply, after he hath laid the foundation, and is not able to finish it, all that behold it begin to mock him, Saying, This man began to build, and was not able to finish. Or what king, going to make war against another king, sitteth not down first, and consulteth whether he be able with ten thousand to meet him that cometh against him with twenty thousand? Or else, while the other is yet a great way off, he sendeth an ambassage, and desireth conditions of peace.”  (KJV)

Often, we make decisions in haste and in the heat of the moment. Many times we do not consider the minister who will fill our shoes down the road. Throughout the years, many churches have been hindered by great and notable men of God who made short sighted decisions. May we do our best to consider those who travel in our footsteps when we make our decisions.

#4 – Impractical…

(James 1:5)  “If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him.”  (KJV)

(James 1:13) “Let no man say when he is tempted, I am tempted of God: for God cannot be tempted with evil, neither tempteth he any man:”  (KJV)

(James 1:17) “Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning.”  (KJV)

Spiritual maturity tends to minimize impracticality in decision making, but not always. We must remain practical, but not too practical. Vision is great, but it must be balanced. Many a preacher has limited himself because of decision after decision being made from a “pie in the sky” mentality! Yes, we need vision, faith and spiritual drive, but when leading, we must consider those who follow us! It suffices to say that we must exercise godly wisdom.


#5 – Indecisive…

(2 Timothy 1:7) “For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind.”  (KJV)

Timidity can be a huge liability in leadership and especially when making decisions. If the pastor will not make a decision, then someone will! It is not uncommon to see a spiritual leader sticking his finger to the wind to see which way he should go, when he is too timid. It is one thing to be cautious, but it is an entirely different thing to be indecisive. Be courageous and walk with God!

Conclusion

The bottom line in decision making is to be sure that we do what God wants us to do! If this is our motivation, then we will be balanced. Even though we will not get it right 100% of the time, we can get it right most of the time. The most important thing to remember is what we decide to do has far reaching ramifications that stretch into eternity!

Share your thoughts in the comment section below!

_____________________________

Would you consider purchasing…

482279: Spiritual Leadership: A Commitment to Excellence for Every Believer Spiritual Leadership: A Commitment to Excellence for Every Believer

By J. Oswald Sanders / Moody Publishers

Charles Colson called it “the best book on Christian leadership I’ve read.” Discover why this timeless classic continues to equip tomorrow’s ministers—and challenges today’s shepherds—toward greater effectiveness! Revised and updated, Sanders’s hard-hitting study explores the essential qualities of a godly leader—and offers sterling examples from Scripture and Christian history. Includes study guide.
In these pages, J. Oswald Sanders presents the key principles of leadership in both the temporal and spiritual realms, illustrating his points with examples from Scriptures and the biographies of emenent men of God.

Enhanced by Zemanta
  • join our mailing list
    * indicates required

    Powered by MailChimp