Introduction
Do you want a recipe for disaster at the workplace? Make sure people
are confused about the role of a key workerhis job description,
who he reports to, and whose evaluation matters most. You'll have a mess
on your hands in no time!
One of the biggest reasons for disaster in a church is confusion about
the role of the preacher-leader. Unless those who play this role and the
others in the church both have a biblical understanding about what their
role should be and how they should be evaluated, there will be disorder,
disunity and ineffectiveness.
The Corinthians were confused about the role of the preacher-leaders
that worked among them (including Paul and Apollos), and this confusion
was causing serious problems in the church. Using himself as the example,
Paul in this passage explains the role of the authentic preacher-leaderhis
job-description, whose job-evaluation matters most to them, and how they
can benefit from his ministry.
Their job description (vs 1-2)
Read vs 1-2. Paul uses two metaphors which were familiar to the Corinthians
to describe the job of the preacher-leader.
SERVANT ("under-rower"): galley-slave of Roman war-ships
who must watch the captain and instantly obey
[1] >> SPARTACUS
This metaphor emphasizes the fact that Christian leader-preachers
are under the direct authority of Jesus Christ in their work. They
are to follow his orders and his orders only.
STEWARD ("housekeeper"): the manager-slave of a wealthy person's
estate who distributes needed care to the owner's other slaves.
[2] Airline stewards or stewardesses serve the passengers
according to the directions of the pilot. They have been entrusted
with valuable information and commodities which they are responsible
to dispense.
This metaphor repeats the idea of being directly and solely under
the authority of Christ, but emphasizes their primary role as dispensing
something valuable from Christ to his people.
What do they distribute? The "mysteries of God"the truths
of God revealed in his written Word and nowhere else (especially the New
Testament): what God is really like, what our real dilemma with him is,
who Jesus is, how his death and resurrection provide forgiveness when
we humbly put our trust in him, and how his indwelling through the Holy
Spirit enables those who receive Christ to know God personally and provides
them with power to live life as he designed it. This is the great deposit
of truth revealed to us (GOSPEL HERE).
Of course, every Christian has the privilege and responsibility
to communicate God's mystery to others (1 Pet. 2:9; 3:15).
But God has gifted and called some to do this in a leadership role and
as their primary ministry. And they are required by him to be faithful/trustworthy
in carrying out this responsibility.
This is what God has called me (and others in this church) to do.
Through these meetings, through classes, through what I write, and through
other means, my primary responsibility is to consistently communicate
the riches of the gospel according to my understanding of how Christ
wants me to do this.
And because this is my job-description, I do not fit into the traditional
role of the "pastor." This is why I usually say "no"
to people who ask me to do hospital visitations. This is why I do
very few weddings and funerals. This is why I am usually not available
for pastoral counsel (spontaneous or scheduled). It's not that we
view these matters as unimportant. We have trained and deployed many
people in the church to fulfill these ministries, but I don't feel
responsible to do them because I must be faithful to what Christ has
called me to dopreach and teach his Word. Through the years,
many have expressed surprise and disappointment that we refuse to
play this role, but we won't do it because then we couldn't fulfill
this ministry.
Having explained the preacher-leader's job description, Paul now explains
their job evaluation . . .
Their job evaluation (vs 3-5)
Paul, like every preacher/leader, faced several actual sources of evaluation.
But Paul which evaluation mattered and which ones to ignore. He mentions
four such job-evaluations in vs 3-5.
CHURCH MEMBERS (vs 3a): Preacher-leaders are always being evaluated
by the people who receive their ministry. While this can be a valuable
source of feed-back, how a preacher-leader views and responds to their
evaluation has huge implications for the health of the church.
In many churches, the church or the church board views the pastor
as their employee and their evaluation of his job as the most important.
Some are very up front about this (STEDMAN'S STORY OF YOUNG PASTOR:
"This is our church and we expect you to do and teach what we
want you to, not what you think you ought to do.") Others are
more devious (PASTOR'S "LOCUS OF HOSTILE POWER:" "I
want you out, I'm trying to get you outand I'll deny I ever
had this conversation with you.")
Paul emphatically rejects this arrangement (read vs 3a). His language
is amazing blunt: "I know you're evaluating me and I know what
your evaluation isand I want you to know I don't think it's
very significant." He does not say this because he is arrogant,
or because he is a tyrant. He says it humbly but he means every word
of it.
The preacher-leader is not the property of the congregation! They
do not set the agenda for him! His role is not to serve the congregation,
but to fulfill his role as a servant/steward of Christ by teaching
them the mysteries of God. You cannot be an effective preacher-leader
unless you serve Christ rather than the people you're leading.
Those who view the church as their employer usually leave because
they wear out, or become what Paul calls "ear-ticklers"those
who are adept at telling people what they want to hear instead of
what God says. This is a betrayal of the preacher-leader's responsibility
to Christ as a steward.
SOCIETY (vs 3b): " . . . or any other human
court" refers to society's job evaluation. This is another powerful
voice with which the preacher-leader must reckon.
On the one hand, he must understand society and how to communicate
to people in that society. Paul was acutely sensitive to the societies
in which he worked, and he was a master at communicating the gospel
to that culture (more on this in chapter 9). On the other hand, he never
looked to society's response to determine his success or effectiveness,
or he will betray his master.
Today we hear much of the "market-driven" church and "market-driven"
preaching and leadership. The idea is not just that the preacher-leader
should study those in his community so he can learn to effectively communicate
the gospel to them. In many cases, it is that he should tailor his product
(the content of his communication) to what the consumer wants. But if
we accept society's identification of their deepest problems, if we
try to dress society's answers up in Christian and biblical language,
we have sold out our responsibility to Christ in order to curry the
fickle favor of our culture.
For example, many in our society have erroneously bought into the
idea that material wealth rather than material sacrifice and generosity,
and positive self-esteem rather than humility before God is the key
to a healthy life, that people are more victims and addicts who need
compensation and therapy more than responsible sinners against God
who need his forgiveness. And how do many preacher-teachers respond?
By dishing this ideology up in sermons and books. Book marketers tell
us that "anything with 'pain' or 'addiction' or 'inner healing'
or 'self-esteem' sells." So what do Christian spokesmen write??
Christ's stewards are responsible to help his people to maturity as
per Eph. 4:14, which means teaching the "whole counsel of
God" and evaluating and critiquing society by God's Word, not changing
God's message to fit the culture!!! This is why we stick with a NORMAL
DIET OF EXPOSITORY PREACHING (w/ occasional topicalsome of which
expose the culture like Den's series).
SELF (vs 3c,4a): All preacher-teachers analyze their own performance.
It is impossible not to do this. But Paul says (read vs 3c). What does
he mean by this?
Paul prized a "good conscience"the knowledge that he
was not in revolt against Christ's authority in his life. That's why
he says vs 4a. We should all do this (see 2 Cor. 13:5 for
salvation; 1 Cor. 11:28,31 for sanctification). But he realizes
that his own verdict on the success of his ministry is not the
one that ultimately counts. Why is this?
Because I can't see the big picture/long view or what's happening in
people's hearts, I sometimes think I'm succeeding when I'm not, and
I sometimes think I'm failing when I'm succeeding. My emotions also
fluctuate and affect my evaluation. I can't help but evaluate how I'm
doing, but my main focus should be to keep communicating Christ's message
to the best of my ability and trusting him for the results.
CHRIST'S (read vs 4b-5b): Here is the job evaluation that counts. Paul
speaks of two ways Christ evaluates the preacher-leader.
THIS LIFE (vs 4b): conviction, correction, affirmation through Word,
prayerful reflection, through others, etc.
NEXT LIFE (vs 5b): Christ will walk me through my whole ministry for
him and give his full evaluation of it. I'm sure I'll be surprised to
some extent (BOTH WAYS). This is sobering, but not frightening if you
understand grace and stay responsive to his present evaluation.
How to benefit from their ministry (vs 5,6)
Paul doesn't say this to "put them in their place" as a power-trip.
He says it "for your sakes." You will profit most from preacher-leaders
when you understand these things and allow them to play their roles freely
(cf. Heb. 13:17b). To that end, Paul gives them two warnings.
Judge their behavior and doctrine, but don't judge their motives.
You should judge morality and doctrine. You have been given
God's Word for this purpose, and you are commanded to evaluate the
moral behavior and doctrinal content of all people, but especially
those who claim to speak for Christ (Matt. 7; 1 Jn. 4:1ff.;
1 Tim. 5:19,20; Titus 1:9). Failure to do this is inexcusable
(SWAGGART; HINN).
But, given that the preacher-leader conforms to the biblical requirements
in morality and doctrine, you should not judge his motives.
To do this is to "go beyond what is written." They must
make difficult decisions about what and when and how to communicate.
Give them the benefit of the doubt in these decisions, and you will
benefit from their ministry.
Promote unity instead of rivalry between them. Churches are
split all the time over this issue. Members choose their favorite and
flatter him and subtly vilify the other leader(s). Often the leaders
get puffed up by such flattery and wax suspicious of their fellow-workers.
Satan works through this kind of attitude to try to divide leaders
who should work together. Countless people have done this with Dennis
and me, and also to other leaders in this church.
Instead, be grateful you have such a provision. Listen to each as
God's steward and receive from them what God wants to give you.
Footnotes
[1] " . . . the
lowest deck of a war galley was made of single rows of benches on both
sides of the ship where the rowers sat. Then on a little deck raised
up above them all so that each rower could see him was the captain of
the ship. It was the rowers task to do what he said. If he wanted the
ship to move then they were row; if he wanted them to stop they had
to stop instantly. Their whole business was to obey his orders."
Ray Stedman, Expository Studies in 1 Corinthians: The Deep Things
of God (Waco: Word Books, 1981), p. 88.
[2] "The steward (oikonomos)
was the major domo. He was in charge of the whole administration
or the estate; he controlled the household staff; he issued the supplies;
but, however much he controlled the household staff, he himself was
still a slave where the master was concerned." William Barclay,
The Letters to the Corinthians (Philadelphia: Westminster Press,
1977), p. 36.