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Thursday, September 28, 2023

Process – Part 4a

quipping is similar, if not the same as training.  From that perspective....more at DTTB.

Note: I was out of it for several days when I got back from M D Anderson.  Not sure what was going on, but that is why this is late.

Equipping is similar, if not the same as training.  From that perspective let’s consider what is required to equip or train.  

Some context, I have been trained in aviation, both civilian and military.  I have been trained in mountaineering, backpacking, rappelling, and rock climbing.  I have been trained in theology and bible study.  Further, except for civilian flight, I have trained others in each of those disciplines.

One of my mentors was the director of the Navigator (ministry not flight) training center at Michigan State University and subsequently at The University of Tennessee.  We spent many hours talking about equipping, training people for ministry, from the perspective of what was required to do so and do it well.  As I listened to him and thought through the previous experiences that I had up to that point in my journey, all that he shared was validated by all of the training that I had received up to that point and all that I had after that also fit into his paradigm.

This will require more than one post to cover.  For these comments, I am using equipping and training interchangeably.

At a minimum training requires three things, instruction, observation, and critique.  I am going through Everyday Evangelism training at our church currently, and that training includes these three elements.

Instruction
The one being equipped must know both the subject matter and the processes that are used to apply the subject matter before they are able to attempt the task for which they are being equipped.  The information can be presented through lecture, reading material, recordings, pictures, or physical demonstration.  

If the equipping is well thought out all three learning styles, visual, aural, and kinesthetic (there are publications that claim more than three learning styles, in skimming these it seems to me that the other learning styles are either combinations of the three primary styles, or else subsets of one or more) will be represented in the equipping.  

For example, if one is giving information about how to tie a figure eight knot, one can explain the knot, while showing a picture of how to tie a figure eight, while demonstrating the method, and giving those learning a rope to attempt to follow the instruction.

Which is a great segue to the second part of equipping, observation, which we will examine in the next post.

Wednesday, September 20, 2023

Process – Part 4

Note: I am still at MD Anderson, so, there will not be a picture today either.  I will get caught up with the illustration when I get back to my home office

The next word in the process is “Equip”.  This is stated as the purpose of the leadership of the Body in Ephesians 4:11 – 16 (here at Bible Gateway).  Note the structural marker in the English, “for”, that word indicates purpose as well as the Greek word, “προς”, from which it is translated(1).  The implication is that the purpose of the leadership, those gifted to lead a community of faith, is not to do the work of service rather it is to equip those in the community to do the work of service.

Equipping is not the same as preaching, or lecturing.  I know that there are many who may rankle at this statement.  However, in what other part of life are you considered to have understood and been equipped with information because you heard a message on a topic?

In classes in primary, secondary, graduate, and post graduate studies, one is not considered to understand the information unless one passes the test.  In trade schools, one does not pass unless their work is examined and deemed to be acceptable.

It is only in the church that one is considered equipped without measurement.

There are exceptions to this but that has been my experience over the past 50 years.

Prove me wrong.

(1) Daniel B. Wallace, Greek Grammar beyond the Basics: An Exegetical Syntax of the New Testament (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1996), 380.

Tuesday, September 19, 2023

Process – Part 3a

Note: I am traveling; in Houston for my six-month checkup at MD Anderson.  One of the primary markers for Waldenstrom’s Macroglobulinemia (WM) is IgM (Immunoglobulin M); the normal range of IgM is 35 - 242 mg/dL.  When I was first diagnosed with WM, the IgM level was 1220, or 5 times higher than the high end of normal.  I got the results of blood work drawn this morning, and the IgM level was 233.  The first time since they have been measuring that it has been in the normal range.  That does not mean a cure, this is a chronic condition, at least for now, but something I never expected to see.  So, for those of you who have been praying, thank you, and praise to the Lord for gifting doctors and researchers, many of which do not believe in Him, to develop treatments that are effective in dealing with the emperor of all maladies, cancer.  Also, since I am away from my desktop there will not be a picture.

Last post I shared data for a word study I did on the words that were translated Establish.  Looking through the different usages of the words it seems best to understand Establish as laying a strong foundation for a believer’s relationship with our Lord.

In Part 2 I outlined what I shared with the leaders in another country, as the basic elements to which we need to expose new believers.  While these were developed in the midst of a collegiate ministry in the US, in my experience in several countries and in reading through the Bible, they seem to be basic not just for collegiate ministry but for believers in any culture.  We are exhorted in many places in the New Testament to abide in the Word of God.  Jesus, specifically says that if we abide in His Word, we are His disciples John 8:31 – 32 (here at Bible Gateway).  Three of the eight disciplines, Quiet Time, Bible Study, and Scripture Memory, help one abide in the Word.

Jesus when asked by the disciples, taught them how to pray, Matthew 6:9 – 13 (here at Bible Gateway) (I have written about this here as well).  Further if we examine the prayers of Paul, we will find that he follows the outline that Jesus prescribed.  Further, in Philippians 4:6 -7 (here at Bible Gateway), we are exhorted by Paul to not be anxious but to pray, that again is not limited to the college campus.  

Nor is sharing one’s faith, making the most of the Christian meetings we attend, or the reality and impact of the Lordship of Christ on the life of a believer, something that is unique to any culture.  As a matter of truth, the Bible is counter to all cultures, the USA, college campuses, and whatever other culture you would like to suggest.

The point is – well let me emphasize it with something that happened this morning.  

When I come to MDA I typically fly and catch an Uber to the hotel that is connected to the hospital.  Each time I endeavor to engage the driver, many of which are immigrants, in a conversation that I pray to steer toward the gospel.  This morning my driver was from Benin, which is east of Togo, one of the countries the Lord as allowed me to serve.  In fact there were pastors from Benin in the Togo seminar.  

During the conversation the driver, Sam (not his name), indicated that he was a believer.  I asked what he was doing to be in the Word.  He pointed to his phone and told me how he used You Version to focus on one verse a day.  We talked about the importance of doing that and I asked him why he thought that many in churches do not do what he does.  He immediately responded that the leaders of the churches are not telling people to do so and not telling them how.

I am 100% certain that he has not been reading this blog.  Here is a believer from another culture who has come to the conclusion that many leaders of churches are not exposing or establishing those in their care to that which will create a strong foundation in their walks with God.

This stuff is important.  This stuff applies across cultures.  We need to be doing this

Friday, September 15, 2023

Process – Part 3

The purpose of Exposing and Engaging people into the disciplines that were outlined in the previous posts is to Establish them in the faith....more at DTTB.


The purpose of Exposing and Engaging people into the disciplines that were outlined in the previous posts is to Establish them in the faith.  Before someone jumps on this, I am aware that the Lord is the one who establishes us in faith.  However, based on the passage on which we are focusing, Ephesians 4:11 – 16 (here at Bible Gateway), He uses the people in the Body to build us up, or establish us.  

I had a mentor that habitually said that the word translated “establish” meant to stand on their own.  Thus, establishing was to help one stand on their own.  Since I was with that mentor, I have studied Greek at two different schools.  I haven’t been able to validate his take on that word.  I want to.  I like the illustration.  But I am committed to what the Word says, not what I want it to say.

I did a quick word study on Establish in the New Testament.  I am going to walk you through what I did so you can follow and then I will make some comments.  There are several documents that will be hyperlinked for you to use.

The process for the study is to look at the data and consider the other uses in context.  How does that help you understand the meaning of the word?

So, look if you wish, I will tell you what I saw in the next post.  We can compare notes.

Wednesday, September 13, 2023

Process – Part 2a

Last post we looked at some topics that a new believer or one who has recently taken responsibility for their walk with God might need to understand.  There is much more that can be said about this....more at DTTB.

Sorry for the delay on the posts, I was recovering from an IVIG and in hand-to-hand combat with Quicken and Citibank trying to get some tax data ready for my CPA.  Sometimes, like one of my mentors said, it takes a lot of time to live.

Last post we looked at some topics that a new believer or one who has recently taken responsibility for their walk with God might need to understand.  There is much more that can be said about this.  However, we will focus on just a few.  

One of the biggest obstacles to engaging believers in this way is the way pastors are trained in seminary.  Full disclosure, I have a ThM from Dallas Theological Seminary (DTS).  I graduated with honors, was the outstanding pastoral ministries student, and recipient of a merit scholarship in my 4th year.  I attended the seminary after serving almost 10 years in a parachurch campus ministry.  So, I both understand what seminary education is, and viewed it differently than most of those in my classes.  In some classes I was furiously taking notes while others were sleeping, because I would have killed to have had that information when I was involved in leading a summer training program for college students.

For the most part Seminary education is pulpit focused.  There are exceptions, but for the most part the focus is on preparing one to speak and or teach.  To validate this, under the logo for DTS are the words “κήρυξον τὸν λόγον” from 2 Timothy 4:2 (here at Bible Gateway), there and in your Bible that is probably translated “preach the Word”, I would translate it differently, but that is for another time.  The point is, the focus is the pulpit or the lectern.  Graduates leave with the notion either implicit or explicit that their preaching or teaching is the only thing that will cause people to grow in the Lord.  All of the students in my first preaching class, but me, expressed that conviction verbally before the class.

So, it is a paradigm shift for a pastor to focus on having those in their care personally engaging in their personal walks and to work to do that.  There is a sense that the people cannot do what the pastor can do as well as the pastor can.  Therefore, the pastor may be reticent to let them try.  Pastors have told me this.  

Do not construe what is written here as I am against pastors or think that what they do is of little use.  Nothing could be further from the truth.  The pastor is the primary vision caster for the body.  What he emphasizes sets the tone and direction for that local body.  

How he handles the Word of God is both important and can encourage personal engagement if he shares how he got what he says out of the Word of God.  Lifting the hood, referred to in a previous post.

I feel like I am rambling a bit, so I am going to shut this down and pick up the next part of the process in the next post.

Saturday, September 9, 2023

Process – Part 2

 

After a non-believer is exposed to the gospel or a believer is exposed to the reality of their personal responsibility for their walk with God, assuming the non-believer choses to trust Christ and the believer accepts the responsibility for their relationship....more at DTTB.

After a non-believer is exposed to the gospel or a believer is exposed to the reality of their personal responsibility for their walk with God, assuming the non-believer choses to trust Christ and the believer accepts the responsibility for their relationship with Christ what does one do in the process of equipping them in the work of service?

Note, in Ephesians 4:11 – 16 (here at Bible Gateway), it says “He gave some prophets, some evangelists, and some pastors and teachers, FOR (this is a structural marker telling us the purpose for which “He gave” those leaders – emphasis added) the equipping of the saints FOR the work of service, TO (another structural marker that also indicates purpose, you could read it “in order to”) the building up of the body of Christ.”  This is so important.  Think about that for a moment.  In a lot of cases we expect the leaders of the church to do the work of service, after all by tradition, training, and job description, that is what we expect.  But, if we take this passage seriously, if they are not equipping the members of the church to do the work of service, the ministry, they are not doing what the Lord expects.  Ponder that.  How does that inform or alter your view of your leadership or what you expect out of your membership in your church?

The next word in the process is “Engage”.  How do we engage a new believer or a believer who has embraced their responsibility for their relationship with Christ?  What do they need to know?  I asked this question of a group of leaders in another country, I asked what one coming to Christ out of their culture would need to know to begin a strong relationship with Christ.  Here are the topics that they felt were important:

Who is Christ The Attitude of a Believer Testimony
What is Sin Marriage Prayer
How to Grow in Faith Parenting Spiritual Gifts
Love Believers and the World Word of God
Grace Different Religions Devotional/Quiet Time
The Trinity Gospel Baptism
Spiritual Warfare Church Work in the Church
The Second Coming Bible Study Renew One’s Mind
Prayer for Him

There are a LOT of good things on that list, emphasis on LOT.  Without going into detail about the culture, I suggested that we focus on a shorter list which included some of their ideas, while explaining why these were important basics, they eagerly agreed to this:

How to Pray How to Share Your Testimony
How to Have a Devotion or Quiet Time Scripture Memory
How to do Basic Bible Study The Lordship of Christ
How to Get the Most out of Christian Meetings Assurance of Salvation

We spent the rest of our time together working on packages that would motivate a person in each of these areas, get them started in the discipline, keep them going in that discipline, and help us determine when it was theirs.

The point of this story is that leaders need to give guidance on what is important in what order.  In what is critical to engage a new or newly responsible believer.  The original list has important topics.  However, the pared down list are good first steps, prerequisites needed in order to tackle the longer list.

Need to press pause.  We will expand this a bit in the next post.  Let me know your thoughts.

Friday, September 8, 2023

Process – Part 1a

As I was thinking through this post, it occurred to me that there are two groups of people that need to be exposed to the truth....more at DTTB.

As I was thinking through this post, it occurred to me that there are two groups of people that need to be exposed to the truth.  Yesterday we talked about the reality that as believers we need to expose those who do not know Jesus to the truth of the gospel.  However, there is another group that needs that truth.  Those who already know Jesus and have not yet taken responsibility for their own relationship with Jesus.

These are the ones (borrowing the language of Mark 4:3 – 20 (here at Bible Gateway)) who have trusted Christ but have not yet engaged in consistent spiritual disciplines to enable them to grow in their relationship and knowledge of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.  

There can be several reasons for this.  No one has ever told them that should.  That can be the result of leaders in their community of faith that feel like they are the only ones who can reliably understand the Word and thus, making it their responsibility to feed those in their charge.

Or, they have been told that they should take responsibility for their walk with God, but no one has told them how.  For example, many people have been told to have a devotional, a quiet time, but many have never been told or shown how.  Same with Bible study, many have been told to be in personal Bible study, but no one shows them how.  I call these types of things unfunded mandates.  We expect people to figure it out for themselves.  I will share an example of why that does not work well, in a later post.

Thinking about “equipping the saints for the work of service” the first step in that is to expose people to the disciplines.  That can be a simple as the pastor on Sunday taking a minute to lift the hood and explain how he got what he is saying from the Bible.  Does not take long.  Or just mention a simple way to start a quiet time.  This is much better done in a small group, and even more effectively one on one.  But the idea is to take equipping seriously and began to intentionally think of ways to expose those you have a privilege to lead to that process.

Note that nowhere in your experience of education or training for your job did the transfer of information look like what we typically do in a church.  That is someone lecturing for 20-90 minutes on Sunday morning, with no measurement of what you have understood and that is intended to prepare you for your degree or certification in your trade.  Didn’t happen.  If it did I do not want you to work in your area of expertise on anything.

Thursday, September 7, 2023

Process – Part 1

There is a lot in Ephesians 4:11 – 16 (here at Bible Gateway).  The illustration I lead with yesterday was one simple attempt to summarize the application....more at DTTB.

There is a lot in Ephesians 4:11 – 16 (here at Bible Gateway).  The illustration I lead with yesterday was one simple attempt to summarize the application of this passage in the Body.  I have used the illustration more times than I can count over the past 16 plus years. 

The idea is that we engage believers in the Word, we establish them so they can stand on their own (which, by the way is the meaning behind the Greek word we translate establish), then we equip them to engage others.  It is simple.  As I have thought through it over the past few years, I came to realize that it was too simple.  Thus, the revised, unpopulated illustration above.

The biggest challenge with the original version is it was focused on believers.  The assumption behind the illustration is that the starting point was a group of believers that wanted or needed to grow in their walk with God or their understanding and application of the Bible.  While that is still an important challenge, it leaves out one of our primary tasks as believers, sharing the great news of salvation by grace through the life, death, resurrection, ascension, and ongoing intercession for us of Jesus Christ.

So, the first change is to start with the word “Expose” as one of the starting points of the illustration.  

As believers, followers of Christ, we are to embrace and carry out the Great Commission, Matthew 28:18 – 20 (here at Bible Gateway).  The imperative in that passage is “make disciples,” or another way to think about it is to make learners, people who would become those who give their lives to learn about and follow Jesus.  

Note that it is the job of the leadership of the Church, the apostles, prophets, evangelists, shepherds, and teachers to equip the saints, each individual in the Body to do the work of service.  That work of service includes and starts with exposing people to both the gospel and the Body of Christ.

We share the gospel, but we also share ourselves and our community.  Why, because of John 13:34 – 35 (here at Bible Gateway).  There is much more to say about this in Ephesians 4, that we will deal with in a later post, but at this point the message is that the love expressed in the body for one another, is validation of the truth of the gospel to which we expose people.

I am struggling not to share more here, but I need to stop.  We will cover this all in more detail as we progress.  If any of this raises questions for you, please let me know in the comments, and I will either answer them there or make sure we cover it in subsequent posts.

Wednesday, September 6, 2023

Process Introduction

Bobby Clinton is a professor of leadership at Fuller Seminary.  I met him for breakfast in Pasadena when Jenny and I were transitioning out of the Navigators....more at DTTB.

Bobby Clinton is a professor of leadership at Fuller Seminary.  I met him for breakfast in Pasadena when Jenny and I were transitioning (read I got fired – long story there) out of the Navigators.  He has several good books, one of which is Having a Ministry that Lasts: By Becoming a Bible Centered Leader.  In that work Professor Clinton says that while you cannot master the Bible, you need to be familiar with all the books, and you need to focus, master, the books and passages that are central to your ministry.  I have found that advice rock solid.

One of the passages that draws me in time and time again is Ephesians 4:11 – 16 (here at Bible Gateway).  I have studied the passage multiple times and have used it in working with pastors and individuals in ministry, most recently as I served as interim pastor in our church with some of the staff.

This passage has informed much of what I do to equip fathers to lead their families and the pastors I have had the opportunity to serve overseas to lead their churches.  

I was preparing to work with an individual in India this morning and was looking for one of the illustrations that I have developed in part through interacting with this passage.  I leafed through my last 4 journals and did not find it and then remembered that I had expanded the illustration during my last study in Ephesians.  

As I reviewed this, I felt the need to share that here.  It will take at least five posts and possibly more to share what I want to share on this.  The diagram above is the starting point.  I will explain and expand it in the next several posts.

Spend some time thinking through that diagram and working through Ephesians 4:11 – 16 (here at Bible Gateway), and share with me what you think and see.  I would very much like this to be a dialog.

Tuesday, September 5, 2023

No Retirement

Typically, in prepping for an entry here I will review what the Lord has shown me in past journals....more at DTTB.

Typically, in prepping for an entry here I will review what the Lord has shown me in past journals.  I was reviewing my journal from the first few months of 2021 and shifted gears.  The purpose of this blog is to encourage men as they engage in the task of building into the lives of their sons and daughters.  

For any of us to be successful in that endeavor, we must intentionally abide in the Word of God.  Equipping our children for life is a ministry.  We are not able to minister to anyone if we are not consistently in the Word of God.

Typically, we think of getting our children successfully out of the house and off the payroll.  That is about 18 years old, when they are both considered adults and, or possibly off to college, or working in a trade.  At our church when children are dedicated, the parents are given a jar that holds the number of marbles corresponding to the number of months they have with their child until their 18th birthday.  Only challenge?  We are still their dads and moms after they are 18.

My children are considerably older than 18, - 42, 40, 38, and 35.  We now have ten grandchildren ages 13 – 2.  The job, rather than getting easier, has expanded significantly.  We cannot be as directive as we may have been in the past.  But we are still responsible for Deuteronomy 6:5 – 6, 10 (here at Bible Gateway).  We are still responsible to model the Christian life for our family.

That means that my wife and I must still be intentionally in the Word.  Intentionally pushing ourselves to grow in our knowledge of Him.

There is no retirement from being a parent.

Sunday, September 3, 2023

The Means of Success

Nehemiah knew what brought him success.  Look at Nehemiah 2:8, 18, 20....more at DTTB.

Nehemiah knew what brought him success.  Look at Nehemiah 2:8, 18, 20:

  • ...the good hand of my God on me...
  • ...the hand of my God had been favorable to me...
  • ...the God of heaven will give us success...therefore we His servants will arise and build...

Nehemiah knew that it was the Lord that both enabled and gave success.  The Lord gave the means to be in the position to rebuild the wall and would also lead to the end of the project.  He is both the means and the end of any and all that we do.

I was going to say that He is both the means and the end of all that we do for Him but the reality is that He is the means and the end of all we do.  

Read John 1:3, “All things came into being through Him, and apart from Him nothing came into being that has come into being.”  

And just to make it clear John repeats this in John 15:5, which you probably have memorized: “I am the vine, you are the branches; he who abides in Me and I in him, he bears much fruit, for apart from Me you can do nothing.”

So, what can we do, what success can we have apart from Him?  Zero, zilch, nada.

Trying to do otherwise, may look good for a while, but it will end very badly.