Leading God's people means seeking God's
guidance.
I'm a pastor by the grace and prankishness of
God.
I grew up pagan. My father was a thundering atheist and my mother a chaser of all things eastern: swamis, yogis, gurus. Dad was the "mocker" described in Proverbs, mom "the fool." I figured out what to do in any given situation by a combination of hard, spare logic (my dad) or mystical humbug (my mom). When I was 15, for instance, my mother talked me out of 50 hard-earned dollars to have my horoscope read by a "professional." What I received in turn was 12 pages of vague tripe, full of dark warning, bright promise, and gushing flattery. There was not one clear specific—do this, not that; go here, not there—among the whole lot.
At 21 I met Jesus. At 29 I became a pastor.
I had the wrong education—a bachelor's degree in fine art
with a major in writing, a master's in interdisciplinary studies, with a major
in American literature. I had virtually no training—a brief stint as a
volunteer helper in youth ministry. I had never sat on a church board or
committee. I still thought most Christians were, not just saints, but
saintly.
I had, in short, no way of figuring out what to do or how to
do it. That was 23 years ago.
I learned virtually everything on the job—preaching,
counseling, team-building, strategizing, budgeting, vision-casting,
peace-making. There was no trial run for any of this. I had to acquire every
skill needed for pastoring as I went, in real time, in the public eye. Nothing
was rehearsal.
What's been the one thing needed? What's been the
sine qua non, the irreplaceable necessity without which
all the other skills, traits, and gifts add up to zilch?
Discernment.
Figuring out what to do and how to do it in any given
situation.
My upbringing provided no help here. The church where I met
Christ did provide the basics for discernment. There I learned how to pray,
search Scripture, and seek counsel. But suddenly I needed discernment every day
and in every way. I wasn't simply privately discerning God's will for my own
life: I was discerning it with others and for others.
The basics only carry you so far. We still, as a leadership
team, often ended up stumped, combative, and confused. Sometimes, to break our
impasses, we resorted to using apparatus not much different from what I used in
my family of origin—that combination of hard, spare logic and mystical humbug.
We either acted like practical atheists or relied on gut feelings, hunches,
dreamscapes.
But I found a more excellent way. The way of discernment.
Here are four essentials.... Read
more
In the process of moving this article, I deleted the accompanying comment. This was not intentional. I saved the comment and I am posting it here.
"Mr. Macgranor said:
I have read these kind of articles recently, among Calvinists. I realize that what i am going to say is not necessarily on behalf of all of Arminianism. However, discernment should not be that difficult. Having said(typed)that; i further say, that -- Calvinist intellectualism falls to even the all-out Pelagius reality."
Sweet deal. Praise The Lord!
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