Tape No. I-5043Page
The theme for our gathering together this morning is a special one for a special occasion. We are going to be ordaining elders here this morning and Iâm going to preach on the theme of elders before we actually go through the ceremony of ordination. To introduce this theme today Iâm going to read from one or two passages in the New Testament primarily in the book of Acts. Beginning at verse 21 it speaks here about the ministry of Paul and Barnabas. Acts 14:21:
âThey preached the good news in that city, and won a large number of disciples, then they returned to Lystra, Iconium, and Antioch, strengthening the disciples, and encouraging them to remain true to the faith, we must go through many hardships to enter the kingdom of God, they said. Paul and Barnabas appointed elders for them in each church and with prayer and fasting, committed them to the Lord in whom they had put their trust.â
Thereâs a very interesting transition in words there which I want to point out. When Paul and Barnabas on their return came to these cities where they had already preached and won disciples, the people whom they had won to the Lord are still referred to in the plural as disciples. But then through the leading of the Holy Spirit, Paul and Barnabas appointed elders for every group of disciples. For the first time the word church is used. I believe this indicates a very vital fact that itâs the appointment of elders that marks the scriptural transition from disciples plural, just a group, to a church, singular. The word for church in Greek, ekklesia, is a governmental word. In secular Greek from the time of the New Testament itâs used for the government of a city/state. Itâs used in Acts 19 for the governing assembly of the city of Ephesus. So, for there to be a church there must be government. The one decisive element in government is elders. So, here Paul and Barnabas returning to those who were still just groups of disciples constituted them churches in every city by this decisive act of appointing elders.
We see that they took it very seriously because they did it only with prayer and fasting. In other words, it was perhaps going to be the most important decision in the future destiny of those disciples. The ones who made the appointment did not enter into that decision without prayer and fasting.
Interestingly enough, in the previous chapter, chapter 13âwe donât need to turn thereâwe can see that the sending out of apostles was also the produce of prayer and fasting by the leadership of the church at Antioch. In my understanding, these are the two key ministries that must be present for a church or the church to function in any way thatâs scriptural or effective. Thatâs the apostles and the elders. The apostle being Godâs governing agent to the church at large, the universal church. The elder being Godâs governing agent in the local church. There must be a tie-in between apostles and elders.
As I understand it, really, the authority of God in the church is balanced between the apostles and the elders. The apostles exercising inter-church authority, the elders exercising authority within a specific local church. Between them they express in essence the government of God. Interestingly enoughâand you can check this for yourselfâthe only people recorded as appointing elders in the New Testament were apostles.
It somewhat amuses me to encounter groups of people, denominations, who will acknowledge the scriptural reality of elders but refuse that of apostles. Because, elders have no scriptural basis for appointment except by apostles. You really cannot have the one without the other. In a sense, they are self generating for itâs the elders that determine the apostles and send them out, itâs the apostles who appoint the elders.
The government of God is very delicately balanced. Itâs neither totally in the one nor in the other. Itâs like the husband/wife relationship in the family. You can put all the emphasis on the responsibility of the husband or all the emphasis on the responsibility of the wife. Each is scriptural but each is incomplete. A home only functions as itâs intended by God to function when both husband and wife fulfill their God given function. So it is with the church. It takes both apostles and elders, both the universal authority and the local authority working in harmony to produce God given results.
See, almost anything that God has ordained only works by the grace of God. Thatâs true of marriage. Christian marriage will never work except by the grace of God. God doesnât design things to work without his grace. In fact, I think he deliberately designs thing that only will work with his grace because there is no way to live the Christian life apart from the grace of God.
Letâs turn to Acts 20 for a moment and just read two verses. Verse 17 and verse 28. This refers to the elders of the church at Ephesus. Verse 17:
âFrom Miletus Paul sent to Ephesus for the elders of the church.â
I just want to read one thing that he said to them in verse 28 bearing in mind that heâs speaking to the elders of the church.
âGuard yourselves and all the flock of which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers, be shepherds of the church of God, which he bought with his own blood.â
Two words are used there which weâll return to: overseers and shepherds. So, there are three different titles. Elders, overseers, shepherds. But, theyâre all applied to the same person, theyâre not three different groups, theyâre three different descriptions of one and the same group. If we might for a moment consider the distinction I would say the word elder which means, in essence, a man who has a beard, denotes a certain measure of maturity both spiritual and natural. There are many people who would wish to follow the practice of the Jewish Sanhedrin and not appoint an elder under 30 years of age. I think there would be many benefits to making that not a law but a general principle. Thatâs therefore the particular significance of the word elder.
The word overseer is a very familiar word in contemporary society. An overseer, a foreman, somebody who oversees a job and sees that it gets done. Thatâs the job. The qualification is elder, the job is overseer.
Then, âbe shepherds.â The same word is translated once in the New Testament pastor, itâs the same word and itâs only translated in the King James once in Ephesians 4:11. It occurs 18 times in the New Testament, 17 times itâs translated shepherd, once itâs translated pastor. Many people donât realize theyâre the same. Thatâs partly just due to the development of the English language. How many of you are musically minded and know what the Pastoral Symphony of Beethoven is about? Not many of you, I would guess. But, itâs a symphony about shepherd life. The two words mean the same.
The shepherd or the pastor, I would say, is the ministry. Itâs the God-given gift of a man to the church. The shepherd is the ministry, overseeing is the task, elder is the qualification. Elder, of course, is a relative word. In a group of children ranging between the age of 4 and 12 the children from 10 through 12 are elder. In this particular instance itâs pretty obvious that these people who were appointed elders had not been believers for more than at the most one year. But in the context of that group they were the elders.
One other passage weâd like to look at. Titus 1:5. Words of instruction from Paul to Titus who was fulfilling an apostolic function.
âThe reason I left you in Crete was that you might straighten out what was left unfinished, and appoint elders in every town, as I directed you...â
Thatâs rather a vivid translation. I think it brings out an important point. Until elders have been appointed in every town, something has been left unfinished. Paul says to Titus donât leave it unfinished. Iâve left you there primarily to appoint elders. Thatâs the primary purpose for which you are in Crete. Then he gives him a good many directions about how to do it.
With that background letâs speak a little bit about first of all, the qualifications for elders. What kind of person ought they to be? Since weâre in Titus weâll read on there the next four verses. Thatâs Titus 1:6â9.
âAn elder must be blameless, the husband of one wife, a man whose children believe and are not open to the charge of being wild and disobedient. Since an overseer [notice the two words are used interchangeably, elder and overseer] is entrusted with Godâs word, he must be blameless; not overbearing, not quick tempered, not given to much wine, not violent, not pursuing dishonest gain; rather he must be hospitable, one who loves what is good, who is self-controlled, upright, holy and disciplined; he must hold firmly to the trustworthy message as it has been taught, so that he can encourage others by sound doctrine and refuse those who oppose it.â
Weâll also look in 1 Timothy 3 which is the other main passage where the qualifications of elders are stated. The first 7 verses of 1 Timothy 3.
âHere is a trustworthy saying, If any one sets his heart on being an overseer, he desires a noble task. The overseer must be above reproach, the husband of but one wife, temperate, self controlled, respectable, hospitable, able to teach; not given to much wine, not violent, but gentle, not quarrelsome, not a lover of money; he must manage his own family well, and see that his children obey him with proper respect; (if any one does not know how to manage his own family, how can he take care of Godâs church?) He must not be a recent convert, or he may become conceited and fall under the same judgment as the devil. He must also have a good reputation with outsiders; so that he will not fall into disgrace and into the devilâs trap.â
Iâd like briefly to sum up those qualifications without going into them in elaborate detail. I see four main areas that are covered.
First of all, the area of personal holiness. The word that sums it up, I think, is above reproach or blameless. There must not be anything in the man that is obviously inconsistent with the gospel which heâs teaching. It covers various aspects of character. I would say one of the key words there would be self-control. He doesnât fly off the handle, he doesnât get angry quickly. He doesnât overindulge in food and drink. Heâs not motivated by desire for money. All these areas if you sum it up, I think the word would be self-control.
Thatâs one of the requirements of the Christian life. You donât need to turn there, 2 Peter 1, there are seven steps upward and one of the key steps is self control. I personally believe there are levels to which we cannot attain in the Christian life until we have cultivated self control. I think there are gifts and ministries God cannot commit to his people until they have learned self control. Thatâs the personal character.
The second requirement is the manâs family must be in order and he must be hospitable. In the early church, generally speaking, when Christians from one city arrived in another city they would go to the house of the local bishop or overseer or pastor and he would accept responsibility for their hospitality. Either taking them into his own home or finding another home where they would be accommodated.
Connected with that also is the requirement that the manâs family must be in order. He must effectively manage his own house. I think manage is a key word. The comment is if a man canât manage his own house, how can he manage the house of God, the church? That requires that the wife be in the right attitude and relationship to the husband and that the children be respectful and obedient.
As a matter of fact, Iâve learned by experience through visiting many homes of many believers over the years if the family is out of order you really never can have any real spiritual fellowship. Half the time is devoted to correcting the children or getting them out of the room or getting them out of trouble. The whole atmosphere is so restless that you just cannot really enjoy spiritual fellowship.
The third requirement is the spiritual equipment of this servant of God. I think the main emphasis there is on a thorough grasp of the basic truths of the gospel, the Bible. Not merely a grasp but a manifested commitment to them. It says that he must be able to pass on what he has been taught. I see two kinds of teaching ministry in the body of Christ. One is the ministry of the teacher to the universal body which is a ministry to which God called me. The public proclamation and explanation of scriptural truth in a systematic way. The other is the local teacher in the local body, the shepherd. He doesnât necessarily have to get all the truth for himself, he has to assimilate the truth which comes through the teaching ministry and be able to transmit it to his flock. He doesnât necessarily have to be a tremendous pulpit personality. Some people who are tremendous pulpit personalities are very ineffective shepherds. Some men who canât preach a tremendous sermon can take wonderful care of Godâs people.
I think unfortunately in our general section of the church, whatever you like to call it, we tend to be over-interested in pulpit personality. A man can preach like an angel and live like a devil, did you know that? Thatâs the most dangerous kind of man to have around.
It is very important that the man that leads Godâs people has a thorough grasp of basic truth. I donât think he needs to know who the antichrist will be. Thatâs not the important thing. He needs to know all about baptism, why, how, with what result. He needs to understand the operation of the gifts of the Holy Spirit so that when the gifts are operated in his congregation they can be operated decently and in good order. He needs to understand the basic requirements of a Christian home and family so that he can help the younger members of his flock as they enter into marriage to enter into it in a scriptural way and with success. Thatâs the kind of truth that he needs to have mastered and to be able to impart.
He needs also to be fearless in confronting the wolves, the false teachers, the people who try, as Paul says, to sneak into the flock and snatch away some of the sheep. Itâs usually the lambs that they try to snatch. It takes, in simple language, guts to be a shepherd. The shepherd sees the wolf coming and he goes out to meet the wolf. The man whoâs just hired for the job runs away and leaves the flock at the mercy of the wolf.
The fourth qualification is the man standing in the local community. He must be respected by the unbelievers. This is very important. Unbelievers donât believe the same way we do in the miracle of conversion. We believe that a man can be a drug addict one day and a saint the next. The world doesnât see it that way. If a man whoâs led a notoriously evil life immediately after conversion is made a leader in the flock, the world wonât understand that. And, they wonât accept it. When such a man goes to pay hospital calls or things like that or relate to the local community officials, they wonât respect him. It must be a man whoâs established a good reputation in the local community. Otherwise he cannot adequately represent Godâs people to that community. He is, in a sense, a sort of ambassador. As you know, every nation chooses its ambassadors with great care so they properly and adequately represent that nationâs government.
Another important requirement is that he must not be a new convert. He must have had some measure of grounding and testing. Iâve met many, many new converts whoâve been converted maybe one year. Everything has gone fine. Some of you have had this experience. God answers all their prayers, theyâre just on top of the world. They know how everything ought to be done. Meet them 5 years later, itâs different. God gives most of us a honeymoon period when we come to him but the honeymoon doesnât last forever. A lot of people who can enjoy the honeymoon canât stand the subsequent tests and they fall by the way. It has to be a person whoâs proved his commitment to the Lord and his ability to go through hardship. It was significant that it was at the appointing of the elders that Paul and Barnabas reminded the believers we must go through much hardship to enter into the kingdom of God. Thatâs a message that isnât overemphasized today but itâs still true. Hardship is part of what it takes to become an effective member of Godâs governing kingdom.
Letâs consider briefly the functions of an elder. Iâm going to go back to some of the passages Iâve read and just read them quickly again. Acts 20:28, bearing in mind these words are spoken to elders.
âGuard yourselves and all the flock of which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers, be shepherds of the church of God, which he bought with his own blood.â
Let me make it just a by the way comment. You notice that it says God bought the church with his own blood? Who was it that bought the church with his blood? Jesus. But heâs called God. Itâs one of various passages which are very, very important. For instance, dealing with Jehovahâs Witnesses for one example, who believe that Jesus was not divine but created. There is a very important passage. God bought the church with his own blood.
However, thatâs just by the way. Notice the two functions there. Overseers and shepherds. Weâve spoken about them, we just mention that for the sake of thoroughness. To oversee is to manage, to see that things get done, to administrate. Everybody understands in the field of building construction what a foreman is. He doesnât do all the work but he sees that the other people do their work. A shepherd who does all the work himself is not a success. In fact, heâs a failure. Itâs his business to train others to do the work. A congregation that says we hired, let him do it, has got no concept of what itâs all about.
Then to shepherd. I think if I were to be asked for one word that goes to the heart of shepherding it would be the word care. The shepherd is the one who cares. He cares about Godâs people. Not because heâs paid, not because he has a position but because he has a caring heart. Itâs very remarkable how Godâs people will gravitate to such a man. Itâs possible to make a human appointment which isnât a divine choice and say, âThis is your shepherd, heâll look after you.â But you put such a man beside another man whoâs got a shepherdâs heart and you will find invariably Godâs people will go to the man who has a heart. Thatâs what humanity needs more than anything else today.
Iâve probably put out as many teaching tapes as almost any preacher on this continent. But I tell Godâs people remember, a tape could do a lot for you but it canât shepherd you. You need a man of flesh and blood who cares, whoâs there when your marriage falls apart. Before I got an unlisted phoneâwhich was a good many years ago nowâI used to get phone calls from all over the nations. âBrother Prince, what must I do?â Usually it was a lady about her husband. Sometimes it would be, âMy husband has demons.â I used to answer, âMost husbands have demons. Relax.â In the end I used to say to them, âDonât you have a shepherd? Donât you have anybody you can go to? Why do you have to phone 1,500 miles across the continent?â And the answer was they didnât have a shepherd. I would like to tell you my personal opinion. The majority of Godâs believing people in this nation today do not have shepherds. They may have ministers, they may attend churches, but they really donât have somebody who cares, whoâs available. I have spoken to countless people. I was speaking to one young woman here last night. I could see I couldnât solve her problems, she needs a shepherd. Everybody will flock to a visiting minister because heâs got a reputation and because they can tell him things they wouldnât want to tell somebody in the locality. He cannot meet your need. There are many things he can do for you but care for you, shepherd you, he cannot do.
If you want to know what it means to have a shepherd, turn to Psalm 23, the Lord is my shepherd. We wonât turn there now. Look at the various things that a shepherd does. The one that impresses me most is this and David is speaking to the Lord as his divine shepherd.
âYea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil; for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.â
See, when you walk through the valley of the shadow itâs not enough to have a nice cassette player and a good teaching tape. You need a person to walk with you. Notice two things the shepherd has. He has a rod and a staff. For me, the rod speaks discipline, the staff speaks comfort. Discipline goes before comfort. Lots of people will run to a man for help when theyâre in trouble but when he tells them that they need to straighten their lives out and get their marriage in order and their finance in order, then they donât want to listen.
Iâve been dealing with a number of men in leadership recently and I have suggested to several of them you spend too much time on people who are not willing to meet Godâs conditions. Lay down the conditions and then see how they respond. A lot of people want sympathy. Sympathy is a disease, did you know that? Thereâs a great deal of difference between compassion and sympathy. Compassion is divine and it inspires to action. Sympathy just wipes away the tears and says, âThere, there, poor you.â A lot of people just lap it up. People who want sympathy cannot really be shepherded. If thatâs all they want, theyâre wasting the manâs time.
Thatâs, in my opinion, the real essence of the shepherding relationship. When the sheep is going through the valley of the shadows, you go with them. Donât tell me a cassette or a book can do that, they canât. You need a person. Woe to you if you get to the threshold of the valley and you donât have a shepherd. Then itâs a bit too late to start looking around and say, âWho has God put in authority over my life?â
Now, the valley of the shadow of death is not just dying. Many, many times we go through that shadow here in life. In fact, sometimes dying would be an easy way out.
The shepherd is the one who cares, the one who cares enough to discipline. Thereâs an idea current in the world today that parents who discipline their children donât love them. The opposite is true. Parents who donât discipline their children donât love them. Itâs much easier to say, âGo on, do your own thing,â than it is to say, âYouâre making a mess of your life and I wonât permit you to do it.â This translation is a little free but Iâll read it and maybe adjust it.
âThe elders who direct the affairs of the church well are worthy of double honor, especially those whose work is preaching and teaching.â
Most of the translations use the word ârule.â The elders who rule the church well are worthy of double honor, especially those who work hard at teaching. There are two more functions. To rule and to teach. Ruling is primary, teaching is secondary. The scripture implies there there may be elders who rule but donât really teach. It says if you have an elder who rules and teaches, count him worthy of double honor.
Let me point out that that double honor is in part financial. Letâs have no nice spiritualizing of that because the next verse says the laborer is worthy of his reward. Iâll come back to that a little later.
So, the function of the elder is to rule. The trouble is we have to have an absolute revolution with Godâs people today to convince them that they need to be ruled. And Charismatics are the worst! âIâm free, donât bring me into bondage, donât tell me what to do. The Holy Spirit tells me.â When I hear people talk like that I just wait to see how soon theyâll need to be picked out of the ditch. Thatâs an arrogant attitude and God never blesses arroganceânever. Even if what such a person says were true, which it isnât, God could not bless that attitude.
Second in this passage, fourth in our list, teaching. Weâve already spoken about that, thereâs no need to go into it at length. Not brilliant inspired sermons necessarily although thank God for them. But basic, practical, down-to-earth, day-by-day teaching. How to get your finance in order. Most Christians need teaching on that. Very, very few Christians today have their finances in scriptural order. Most Christians are far too much in debt. Iâve learned by experience just giving people advice doesnât get them out of debt. In some cases you have to get a hold of their checkbook and say make me a budget. Donât write a check till Iâve approved it. Thatâs bondage, brother, isnât it? But it gets people out of debt.
The Bible says the borrower is the slave of the lender. Thatâs a very true remark. Youâre in debt, youâre not living free, youâre a slave. God doesnât want his people in slavery. Thatâs one of the tasks of the shepherd, the elder, to see that Godâs people truly live free. If you owe more money than you can reasonably pay and youâre continually struggling to make ends meet, youâre not free. You can speak in tongues as much as you like but youâre a slave. Thatâs not the way God wants His people. But it takes authority to get people out of that. Iâm talking from personal experience, Iâve dealt with people. Just playing a cassette to them wonât do it. It requires a cassette with two feet and a voice and hands.
We go on to Hebrews 13:7.
âRemember your teachers who spoke the word of God to you, consider the outcome of their way of life, and imitate their faith.â
I see again two functions. The first, to speak Godâs word. I donât believe thatâs necessarily the same as teaching. I believe that to speak Godâs word means to be able to tell Godâs people this is what God is saying to us right now. This is Godâs directive now word for us as a people. God may have one word for the people in Florence, another word for the people in Charlotte, another word for the people in Raleigh. God may be saying something quite different and distinctive to each section of His people. Itâs the leaderâs responsibility to hear what God is saying to him and his people, to speak the word of God. We need to build a building, we donât need to build a building. We need to spend time in prayer and fasting. We need to give ourselves to evangelization. There are many different directive words that God will speak to his people. You canât do them all at once, youâll live in total confusion if you do. The leader has to know whatâs the now word. Is it prayer and fasting? Is it evangelization? Is it move into a bigger building? Is it send out messengers of the gospel to other nations? There are many different possible directive words of God that may come to Hs people. The leader is the one who has to hear and transmit Godâs word to His people.
Then it says imitate their faith. Thatâs very important. A leader has to set an example of faith. I donât know that thereâs anything more important than that. You have to live a life that challenges Godâs people to follow you because they see your faith and they see that it works. All the teaching in the world wonât change that unless it comes out of faith, unless itâs motivated by faith. People donât want just a message, they want an example. God says you must have leaders whose faith you can imitate.
Just one more function in Hebrews 13:17.
âObey your leaders and submit to their authority: they watch over you as men who must give an account...â
The other translations say they watch over your souls. Thatâs a tremendous responsibility. I think a major aspect of watching over the souls of Godâs people is praying for them. As we were in the city of Raleigh yesterday, one of the men who was with us who is not here today pointed out the largest Methodist church in the city. He told us from his own previous acquaintance of the man who used to pastor that church and had a membership of over 3,000 members. That man spent every morning in prayer in a rather secret room in the church which few people knew about. He never went anywhere before 10 a.m. unless it was a critical emergency. He had the names of all the members of his church, their children and their photographs. Every morning he prayed over that dossier of names and photographs. That was his first task each morning.
Interestingly enough, the comment was made heâs never been to seminary but he had the largest Methodist church in the area. Is that cause and effect? We donât know. Why did he have the largest church? One reason I would guess was he cares. Theology is no substitute for caring. When you say, âBrother, Iâll pray for you,â people get to discover whether your prayers amount to much. Itâs easy to say Iâll pray but if nothing happens people think it doesnât make any difference whether he prays or not. If you pray and things start to happen, those people will be back on your doorstep. âThank you for praying. Now would you pray about the next problem?â
Seven functions. Iâm only going to just recapitulate.
First, to shepherd.
Second, to oversee.
Third, to rule.
Fourth, to teach.
Fifth, to speak Godâs word, Godâs now word.
Sixth, to set an example of faith.
And seventh, to watch for the souls of the people committed to him.
How are elders appointed? I have just two more sections and weâll close. Letâs turn back to Acts 20 for a moment. This is one of the key passages. Acts 20:28.
âGuard yourselves and all the flock, of which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers...â
The initiative is with God. Itâs the Holy Spirit who initially determines that a man shall be an overseer. Actually, if you study the apostleship of Paul as itâs presented in the whole New Testament itâs very interesting. He said he was an apostle of God the Father by Jesus Christ the Son. But it was the Holy Spirit who indicated that. It was through the laying on of the hands of his fellow ministers in the church at Antioch that he was actually sent forth as an apostle. Thatâs really a pattern of everything that happens in the church. It starts with God the Father, it comes through Jesus Christ the Son, itâs communicated to the church by the Holy Spirit and itâs made effective by the believers in the church. Very interesting, though Paul was chosen to be an apostle by God the Father through the revelation of Jesus Christ on the Damascus road, though he had such a dramatic conversion and such a tremendous ministry, if you study the record he was never called an apostle until his fellow ministers recognized his calling and sent him out with the laying on of hands. Itâs one thing to be called, itâs another to be recognized. Recognition by Godâs people is an essential part of a total function.
Here Paul says the Holy Spirit made you overseers. How many of you know the Holy Spirit has no hands? He has no feet. The Holy Spirit does it but is made effective as he finds human instruments to carry it out. So, in the other passages that we read in Acts 14:23 it says:
âPaul and Barnabas appointed elders in every church...â
Does it mean the Holy Spirit didnât do it? No. But it means the Holy Spirit made effective through their cooperating with him and through something that was done publicly and visibly in the church. When Paul wrote to Titus in Titus 1:5 he said:
âAppoint elders in every church.â
Does that mean that the Holy Spirit had nothing to do with it? No. It means the Holy Spirit made the decision but it was communicated and made effective by the act of Titus.
How is the appointment made? If you want to take the whole history, itâs from God the Father. Everything starts from God the Father. Heâs the source of everything. It comes through Jesus Christ. Itâs communicated to the church by the Holy Spirit. Remember, Jesus Christ is Lord over the church. The Holy Spirit is Lord in the church. The Lordship of Jesus over the church is never more effective than the Lordship of the Holy Spirit in the church. Thatâs the measure of the Lordship of Jesus over it. Itâs from God the Father through Jesus Christ the Son by the Holy Spirit through human agents. Thatâs when it becomes fully effective.
The recognition of a manâs ministry has got a lot to do with its being effective. Jesus said he that receiveth a prophet how? In the name of a prophet shall receive a prophetâs reward. Itâs important that if a man comes as a prophet from God you recognize him as a prophet. The one who receives a prophet in the name of a prophet shall receive a prophetâs reward.
Finally, and this is very, very important, I hope your attention isnât flagging, weâve talked about the functions and responsibilities of elders. I trust youâll see I attach great importance to this. Iâm not in a hurry. You could sit through some movies for two and three hoursâthis is more than a movie. I want to speak now about the responsibilities of the sheep, the people of God. What are their responsibilities toward their shepherd? Responsibility is always two ways, you know that. Parents have responsibilities toward their children but children have responsibilities toward their parents. Those who rule us have responsibilities towards us who are ruled but we have responsibilities towards our rulers. So it is with the relationship between the elder and the people. The elder has his responsibilities, the people have their responsibilities. The thing will not function the way it should unless both parties discharge their responsibilities.
What are the responsibilities of the people? Iâm only going to look at one chapter and thatâs Hebrews 13 and just pick out certain key statements. Hebrews 13, first verse 7 and then verse 17 and then verse 24. Then there will be two other passages Iâll refer to briefly. Hebrews 13:7.
âRemember your leaders who spoke the word of God to you: consider the outcome of their way of life, and imitate their faith.â
There are two requirements. Remember and imitate. Why does it say remember? Obviously because itâs possible to forget. One of the things that helps a man in his service is recognition, that heâs not just taken for granted, that you remember you have a leader, you have an elder, you have somebody who cares for you. One obvious way to remember is what? Remember in prayer. Remember to pray every day for your leaders. Always lift them up to God in prayer. Thatâs remembering them.
Then it says imitate them, follow their examples. Donât just be hearers of the word but put it into practice.
Then we go on to Hebrews 13:17.
âObey your leaders, and submit to their authority...â
Two more clear requirements. Submit, obey. You might wonder why it says both submit and obey. I believe I can answer there. Obedience is an outward act. Submission is an inward attitude. Sometimes people obey but they donât really submit. Youâve heard the story about the little boy in church who was misbehaving. His father was sitting by him and the little boy wanted to stand up in the pew and the father kept pushing him down. He would stand up again and his father would push him down. Eventually the father held him down. The little boy said, âIâm sitting down on the outside but Iâm standing up on the inside.â See, thatâs obedience without submission. Lots of Godâs people may be sitting down on the outside but theyâre still standing up on the inside. We have to submit to authority even when we donât obey it. There may be times when we have to say my conscience will not permit me to do what youâre telling me to do but Iâm still submitted to you, I still recognize your authority. Iâm not refusing you, Iâm not rejecting you, Iâm not rebelling against you. I am simply obeying the dictates of conscience.
The apostles had to do that when they were told not to preach any more on the name of Jesus. They recognized the authority but they said in this particular case we cannot obey you. They submitted, they accepted their punishment. They were still submissive when they werenât obedient. I think one of the things that enables Godâs people to prosper is a spirit of submissiveness. I believe we all need to cultivate it.
As Jay quoted at the beginning, I believe the primary submission is one to another. Submit yourselves one to another. I personally believe that even in the husband/wife relationship itâs mutual. The husband submits to the wife, the wife submits to the husband. Neither lords it over the other, neither manipulates or dominates the other. Within that mutual submission there is the particular function of the husband to act as head over his wife. I believe it should be so with all the people of God. Our submission should be mutual, we should respect one another, defer to one another, honor one another. Not be obstinate, self assertive, determined to prove that weâre right. Very many times it really doesnât matter very much whoâs right.
I have friends who are a married couple, I will not give their names. Both of them are very fine committed Christians. They love one another but theyâve had problems in making their marriage adjustment really work. One day they were having a discussion about something and the husband said to the wife, âWell, as a matter of fact, straight out I agree, youâre right. Iâm happy to agree because I know it means so much to you.â That spoke to the wife as nothing else had ever done. She thought heâs telling the truth. It means too much to me that Iâm right. Unfortunately, we Protestantsâand I suppose most of you here are from Protestant backgroundsâwe have a religious tradition of about three or four hundred years that the thing that really matters is to be right. No. The thing that really matters is to have a right attitude of the heart. Many of us know people who are right in their opinions and totally wrong in their attitudes. Isnât that so? Theyâre the worst to deal with. God, send them to another church is my prayer! Unfortunately, he doesnât always answer!
Submit, obey. Two dirty words. Another friend of mine was preaching one day on discipline and heâs one of these people who really believes in living healthy, eating the right things. He stood up on Sunday morning and heâs going to speak about discipline and wanted to introduce it in a dramatic way. He said, âTell me, whatâs the dirtiest word in contemporary English?â One of his dear sisters said âwhite sugar.â His message was spoiled, he never could get off the ground. Well, what Iâm saying is submit and obey are two dirty words in modern society. But theyâre in the Bible. In that sense the Bible has got a lot of dirty words in it, did you know that? Please understand the sense in which I say that.
We turn to 1 Timothy 5:17 for the last two responsibilities. We could look in various places but I donât want to spend too much time. 1 Timothy 5:17. Weâve looked here before, weâll look again.
âThe elders who direct the affairs of the church well are worthy of double honor, especially those whose work is preaching and teaching. For the scripture says, Do not muzzle the ox while it is treading out the grain. And, the worker deserves his wages.â
Thereâs one requirement which I think can be stated in two words. The requirement is honor. Again, honor is something that we have almost forgotten how to pay. Contemporary society scarcely honors anybody. Maybe a few movie stars, somebody like that. I think itâs very significant that we talk about paying honor. Iâve come to the conclusion that it if it doesnât cost me something Iâm not really honoring somebody. If it just suits me to be nice to them thatâs not really honor. But when I show them honor at my expense, thatâs honor. Thereâs very little of it. As a matter of fact, things have changed even since I came to this country. I immigrated by accident to the United States in 1963. First I was in the northern part of the States mainly in Minneapolis, the state of Washington, the State of Illinois. But then about 1968 when I got involved with Jay Thurston I began to come to the south. With my British background I was amazed. It was much more like being in England being in the south than it was in the north. The thing I noticed was honor, respect. Children said yes sir to their father and yes maâam to their mother. People showed me an honor that I seldom received in the north. I tell you, the south has changed a lot in the last 15 years. There isnât much of that left. Honor is a diminishing commodity in this world today. Thatâs one of the ways the church has got to be different from the world. We should delight to show honor to Godâs servants. Honor those that have the rule over you.
Then it says count them worthy of double honor. Shall I tell you a little interesting mathematical fact? If you double zero you still have zero. Did you know that? There has to be something there to start with if itâs going to be doubled.
Itâs very clear from the contextâwhich I invite you to examine for yourselvesâPaul is not talking merely about formal declarations of honor. âBrother, we admire you, we esteem you.â Heâs talking about the nitty-gritty. Finance, money. All over the world if you donât know a foreign language well the first word you normally pick up is the word for money. Disente they say in East Africa. Foloose in Arabic. Kasef in Hebrew. When you get to European nations they talk in thousands of krona, marks. Money is a very well understood commodity. It dominates the thinking of many people. Money is a way of showing honor. So, Paul says if a manâs doing a really good job, double his salary, thatâs what it means. Honor him. Donât just speak sweet words. Show you mean it.
Itâs really interesting to me, Iâm watching your faces. I think most of you have never been confronted with that. The Bible is such a down-to-earth book. Iâm always troubled by people who always make everything so spiritual. Nothing has any real meaning. Do you hear people talk in church, they say, âMoney doesnât matter.â The moment they get outside the church building their attitude changes. They know it matters. They spend most of their lives working for it and worrying about it. The people who say it doesnât matter are the ones who worry most.
I am saying that the man of God who rules faithfully the people of God is to be honored. Part of that honor is financial. Not all of it but part of it. I donât have time to go into this but let me point out that it says in the book of Proverbs âHonor God with your substance.â What we give to God is honoring to God. In Matthewâs gospel Jesus chided the Pharisees because they took honor away from their parents because they didnât support their parents financially. In Acts 28 when Paul and his company left the island of Malta it says âthe natives honored us with many honors and supplied all we needed.â In every one of those cases: to God, to parents, to ministers of the gospel; honor is something tangible and material. So it is here.
Let me sum up and we close on a good note. Six responsibilities of those who are ruled, shepherded, pastored, cared for.
Number one, remember. Primarily in prayer.
Number two, imitate.
Number three, submit.
Number four, obey.
Number five, honor.
Number six which is the by-product of number five, support financially.
Those are the basic obligations of Godâs people. The more each party fulfills its obligation the more the other party will be blessed. Itâs mutual. Itâs like a husband/wife relationship. It never works properly unless both parties do their share.