How pastors guard the flock
While many are familiar with William Wilberforce, leader of the anti-slavery group in England known as the Clapham Sect, fewer know his pastor, John Venn of Clapham Parish. Venn is one of the better-kept secrets behind Wilberforce's success.
Here's the back story.
On most weekends for many years, Wilberforce and his fellow abolitionists met in Clapham, a village outside of London. There they developed their strategies for, as they put it, "reforming the manners and morals of all England."
But on Sunday mornings, Wilberforce and the others always paused to worship at John Venn's church. As the years passed, John Venn's preaching and pastoral wisdom influenced them in no small way.
"The whole Clapham sect looked up to (John Venn) as their pastor and guide," writes Marcus Loane, "and he was thus intimately linked with their thoughts and plans … both as a friend in their homes and as a pastor in his pulpit."
Venn, Loane continues, "was a master in the art of advice when called upon to speak his mind. Men of all kinds came to him for counsel for he had a well-stored mind and a well-furnished memory, and he was an independent if not original thinker. He was both a preacher at whose voice men wept or trembled, and a friend to whom they turned for help and comfort; he was a guide to the lost and a host for the weary … for he had a rare and noble talent for laying down duty or clearing up doctrine in the light of common sense and gospel glory."
John Venn has always been one of my heroes. He was the consummate pastor, a shepherd, a spiritual guardian of his people. Let's explore what that role means for us: shepherd and guardian. Read more
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