Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Is Church Growth The Best Way To Make More Disciples In Your Neighborhood?


In addition to “how can we break through to the next size level?” we need to ask “is bigger really better in this situation?"

Because I minister to small churches, I’m often asked, “aren’t you worried, that by supporting small churches you’ll be encouraging churches that could grow, to stay small instead?”

Yes. That is a concern. One that I’ve addressed in Small Church Essentials, and in several posts including, Small Churches Are Not a Problem, a Virtue or an Excuse.

But I also have a question of my own. One that’s almost never considered. Namely, “aren’t you worried, that by promoting individual congregational growth, you’ll be encouraging churches that should stay small, to get bigger instead?”

That question is so foreign to us it almost feels wrong to ask, doesn’t it?

Before we go any further, let me state again that I’m not against church growth. I very much support it as an essential element in fulfilling the Great Commission. But true church growth isn’t just churches getting bigger, it’s the increase of Christians as a percentage of the population.

“How do we make more disciples?” is a far better question than “how do make our churches bigger?” When pressed, virtually every pastor I know would agree that disciple-making is what church growth is all about. But when we assume that addressing the church growth question will also answer the discipleship question we have our priorities backwards.

But we almost never consider the questions in that way. Instead, we make assumptions. And there may be no bigger assumption being made in church leadership today than this...

We assume that growing a bigger church is a better way to make disciples without ever asking if this is really true. Read More

Tuesday's Catch: Drifting Churches and More


Eight Warning Signs Your Church is Drifting from God’s Mission

Churches without purpose tend to drift. Like the flotsam and jetsam in the sea, a church adrift does little more than float along as aimless debris. I have yet to see a church drift towards God’s mission. The current of apathy always pulls away. It’s obvious to point out drifting churches as lacking purpose. But what causes this drift? What are some early warning signs of an unraveling in a congregation? Let’s look at eight practical indicators. Read More
Thom Rainer has also posted a podcast related to drifting churches on his blog.
Laypeople and the Mission of God, Part 2 – Reclaiming the Priesthood of All Believers

Every church must have a strategy and a process to equip people for ministry and mission. Thus, they create an environment where people are empowered and enabled to do ministry. Yet, and perhaps this is the greatest challenge in many churches, you have to recognize that there are many factors working AGAINST engaging all God’s people in ministry. Read More
Also see "Laypeople and the Mission of God – Killing the Clergy/Laity Caste System."
Seven Reasons to Consider Not Requiring Office Hours for Ministerial Staff

I’ve never liked the idea of requiring office hours for pastors and ministry staff. Ministry demands a “go” mentality. It’s hard to go when you have to sit at a desk all day. Assuming you have at least one person in a support role to answer phones and greet walk-ins, then you likely don’t need to require staff to have office hours. Here are a few reasons why I don’t require office hours for ministry staff. Read More

Is it Wise to Hire Family Members?

Don’t be too hasty to hire a family member because it’s quick and done. It’s convenient, but it is much more difficult to fire a family member than to hire one. Hire family after much thought and prayer, not under pressure or desperation, and hire because they are really good at what they do. There are several things you can do to help lower any impression of nepotism as well as safeguard against the potential realities of conflict from perceived favoritism. Read More

Monday, July 30, 2018

What Role Does the Holy Spirit Play in Salvation?


The Holy Spirit is truly ‘God the Evangelist,’ drawing sinners into fellowship with Christ. Here is how he works.

I live in Vancouver, Canada, where the wind rarely rises beyond a gentle breeze. But in Britain, where I lived before, gales would strip branches from trees, roofs from sheds, and make it hard to stand. The power of a hurricane or tropical typhoon is awesome. Yet, the wind is God’s picture of the activity of the person whom Charles Williams rightly and reverently called “our Lord the Holy Spirit.”

The biblical words for Spirit (ruach in Hebrew, pneuma in Greek) signify breath breathed or exhaled hard, such as when you blow up balloons, blow out candles or breathe hard as you run. The words also signify the blowing of the wind, which is sometimes barely perceptible, but at other times becomes a roaring, shattering thing—an overwhelming display of power. The Spirit’s action takes both forms, and many in between. The Spirit is God’s power in human lives.

Eighty years ago, a breath of revival struck the church in Manchuria. Missionaries wrote home these words: “One clause in the Creed that lives before us now in all its inevitable, awful solemnity is, ‘l believe in the Holy Ghost.’” I dare to hope and pray that we shall be impacted by that same “inevitable, awful solemnity.” Should a “Holy Ghost hurricane” hit us, there will be some disruption—I promise you that—but we, and our ministries, will be blessedly marked for life; not by chaos and darkness such as natural hurricanes bring but by light, order and Christlikeness. Read More
J.I. Packer is professor emeritus of theology at Regent College in Vancouver, British Columbia. This article originally appeared on Lausanne.org.

Practical Preaching Advice for Pastors and Lay Preachers #11


Dedicated to helping you grow as a minister of God's Word

9 Teaching Methods of Jesus

As pastors, if there is anyone we should emulate in our preaching and teaching it is Jesus! Right? So how did Jesus teach? Here are nine methods Jesus used that we can apply.... Read More

How to Preach to the Occasion

How do you preach at a wedding? How do you give a funeral message? How do you prepare a graduation or ordination address? Over the last few years I’ve had opportunities to speak at these special occasions. Here are some focus areas I’ve found that help get me in the right zone, rather than accidentally preparing another Sunday sermon. Read More

6 Traits Of A Biblically Faithful Preacher

God has called preachers to be faithful rather than successful. How can we be sure we are staying true to the call? Read More

Faithful Preaching amid Persecution

If we want to preach God’s Word without watering it down, we must embrace a proper perspective on persecution. But we live in an impatient and rebellious age, and sadly, even the church does not often have a healthy view of this subject. How, then, are we to find encouragement to preach faithfully in the midst of persecution? Read More

How To Give An Impromptu Speech When You Have Zero Prep Time

It freaks everyone out, but at some point or another, you’re going to be called to give an impromptu talk. Read More

How Sporadic Church Attendance Affects Preaching

Since the Bible calls us to be wise as serpents and innocent as doves, we must think strategically about how we preach in this climate. If the average church attender is only hearing twenty-six to thirty-nine sermons a year, how can pastors make the most of each opportunity so our people are being changed by God’s word? Read More

5 Great Benefits of Using Real Paper for Sermon Preparation

We’re big fans of Evernote around here. But we’re also big fans of old school tools that still work. In fact, we may be missing out on some big benefits if we continue not using real paper for sermon preparation. Read More

How To Plan A Preaching Calendar

There's too much at stake to wing it week to week. Here are four practical suggestions to help structure your months ahead. Read More

Three Reasons to Try Long-Range Preaching Planning

It is ok to work ahead. In fact, it is wise. Here are three kingdom-shaping reasons to approach sermon prep through long-range planning. Read More

Why You Should Share The Preaching Load

Busy teaching pastors need time away from the pulpit to study, pray, rest, and refocus on the goal. Read More

Sermon Content Is What Appeals Most to Churchgoers

According to a 2017 Gallup poll, "the content of the sermons could be the most important factor in how soon worshippers return." Read More
While this poll was conducted in 2017, there is a strong likelihood that its findings, perhaps with some variations in the numbers, hold true in 2018. This kind of research is not subject to the fluctuations seen in political polls. Its findings certainly hold true in the region of the United States in which I live--the Jackson Purchase in westernmost Kentucky. While other factors such as children's ministry, community outreach and volunteer opportunities, youth ministry, social activities, and worship music may play a part, sermon content is the biggest draw across denominational lines. Frequency of communion is not a major factor except to a tiny segment of the population.

Monday's Catch: Finding a New Church Home and More


5 Things to Look for in a New Church

Christians need a church family where they can encounter Jesus, deepen meaningful relationships, and make disciples of Jesus Christ. Yet visiting churches and checking out websites is time-consuming and often frustrating. I know what it’s like to visit a church and feel discouraged. I’ve also tasted God’s goodness and grace through the church. So keep looking! Here are five things I encourage you to seek in a church. Read More

The Five Stages of Recovery When Toxic People Leave the Church

Thom Rainer examines what happens in a church when toxic members leave. According to Rainer, "Essentially, for the church, it becomes short and mid-term pain for longer-term gain." Read More
The juxtaposition of the first two articles is coincidental. It is not my intention to suggest a connection.
The Most Difficult Leadership Misstep To Catch, (That Will Stall Out Your Ministry)

There is one leadership misstep that will stall out your ministry every time. If you need people more than you feed people, you will soon be leading from empty. Read More

Four Reasons Why Your Kids Need to See and Hear You Do Your Devotion

For many years now, I’ve asked students about their quiet time with the Lord. Frankly, many struggle with consistency, especially with prayer. Anecdotally, though, here’s what I’ve learned: the students who struggle least tend to have had parents who modeled quiet times for them. Sometimes they did that intentionally, but at other times it just happened. Their parents did their quiet time in a more public place, and their kids took note. Here’s why that matters.... Read More

Rwanda’s Relentless Drive to Secularize Claims 8000 Churches

More than 8000 Rwandan churches have closed this year as the East African nation’s government makes clear its aggressive secular stance. Read More

Image: The Church of the Holy Trinity, Houston, Texas

Saturday, July 28, 2018

The 2003 Reformed Episcopal Communion Office Revisited: A Reevaluation—Part 4


Read Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3.

By Robin G. Jordan

The Celebration of  Holy Communion

The idea of having two forms for the celebration of  Holy Communion is not original to the 2003 Reformed Episcopal Book of Common Prayer. This approach was adopted in the 1928 Proposed English Prayer Book and the 1929 Scottish Prayer Book. It was also adopted in An Australian Prayer Book (1978). It is not, however, the approach that was adopted in the 2019 Proposed ACNA Prayer Book.

This approach seeks to comprehend two different theological and liturgical schools of thought or Prayer Book traditions in the same book. In the case of the 1928 Proposed English Prayer Book it sought to comprehend in one book members of the Church of England who were satisfied with its existing liturgy and those who wished to revise the liturgy in the direction of the 1549 Prayer Book and make other additions and alterations to The Book of Common Prayer. The 1929 Scottish Prayer Book sought to comprehend the Scottish Prayer Book tradition and the English Prayer Book tradition in a single book. An Australian Prayer Book (1978) sought to comprehend Australians who wanted a modern language liturgy based on the 1662 Communion Office and those who wanted a modern language liturgy that was based on the recommendations for the revision of the liturgy made by the 1958 Lambeth Conference. On the other hand, the two forms that were published in the ACNA’s Texts for Common Prayer were not intended to comprehend different theological and liturgical views but were designed for different times of the week, one for Sundays and the other for weekdays.

The strongest critics of this approach were (and still are) those who want the Prayer Book to reflect their particular school of thought or Prayer Book tradition. They do not want to compromise with the other school of thought or Prayer Book tradition.

Among the drawbacks of this approach is one school of thought or Prayer Book tradition will push for changes that the other school of thought or Prayer Book tradition is not open to, and will not compromise on the changes for which it is pushing. One school of thought or Prayer Book tradition will press the other to make concessions but will not make concessions of its own. It may make token compromises but no substantial ones.

While this approach was not adopted in the 2019 Proposed ACNA Prayer Book, this is what has been going on in the process of compiling the 2019 Proposed ACNA Prayer Book. The result is a book that is Catholic Revivalist (or unreformed Catholic) in doctrine and liturgical usages. It is not a book that is representative of the theological and liturgical views of the different schools of thought represented in the Anglican Church of North America.

The 2003 Reformed Episcopal Communion Office seeks to comprehend the English Prayer Book tradition and the Scottish-American Prayer Book tradition. The first form of the Celebration of  Holy Communion is to some extent modeled on the 1662 Communion Office from the Prayer for the Whole State of Christ’s Church Triumphant on. The second form, “The Alternative Form for the Celebration of  Holy Communion,” is modeled to a much larger extent on the 1928 Communion Service, also from the Intercession on. In this article I am going to take a fresh look at the first form. I will reevaluate the second form in a separate article.

Among the things at which I will be looking is how each form successfully replicates the Communion Office upon which it is modeled. A constant temptation in Prayer Book revision is to make additions, alterations, and omissions that change the doctrine and liturgical usages of the model. As we shall see making additions, alterations, and omissions that are departures from the model is not necessarily a bad thing so long as the doctrine of the model is preserved.

Among the influences that shaped the 1662 and 1928 Prayer Books were the cultural, economic, geographical, political, social, technological, and theological environments of their times. The world has changed vastly in a number of ways since the seventeenth century and even the early twentieth century. What may have admirably served English congregations in the seventeenth and later centuries and American congregations well into the mid-twentieth century may not serve North American congregations as well in the second decade of the twenty-first century.

God places us in a particular time and place to serve him in that time and place. While we might like to hop on a time machine and return to the past, if it had been God’s will for us to serve us in the past, he would have placed us there. With this thought in mind let us proceed to the examination of the Celebration of  Holy Communion in the 2003 Reformed Episcopal Communion Office.

The directions that are titled “Concerning the Communion” and which precede The Celebration of Holy Communion (as the Liturgy of the Table is called in 2003 Reformed Episcopal Communion Office) are adapted from the 1979 Communion Office.

The Celebration of  Holy Communion begins with an Invitation to the Table. The invitation is brief and is addressed to all believers.
Our fellow Christians of other branches of Christ’s Church, and all who love our Divine Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ in sincerity, are affectionately invited to the Lord’s Table.
This invitation has been included in every edition of the Reformed Episcopal Prayer Book. It has no equivalent in the 1662 Prayer Book or the 1928 Prayer Book. It is an integral part of the Reformed Episcopal Church’s evangelical heritage and its longstanding commitment to an open table at which all believers are welcome. The Intercession follows this invitation.

The rubric that precedes the Intercession comes from the 1928 Prayer Book. It includes provision for the priest to ask the secret intercession of the congregation for anyone who desires the prayer of the church. More recent Prayer Books also include provision for the priest to solicit last minute prayer requests from the congregation. Such provision allows for unexpected prayer needs that may arise, as well as circumstances which prevent anyone who desires the church’s prayer from notifying the priest ahead of the service. In this day of near instantaneous communication it is not entirely unusual for a prayer need to come to the attention of a member of the congregation after the service has started.

The Intercession itself comes from the 1662 Prayer Book.

It is noteworthy that the 2003 Reformed Episcopal Communion Office, like the 1662 and 1928 Communion Offices, assigns the reading of the Intercession to the priest. This is a late Medieval development from the days when chantry priests said the Mass for the dead, each at his own altar on a side aisle of a cathedral or parish church. In Seely Suffolk, or Holy Suffolk, where I lived as a child, churches were often built and endowed solely for this purpose in the Middle Ages. The county was called Seely Suffolk because had so many churches.

One of the consequences of this development was that the priest usurped an important duty of the deacon—to read the Prayers of the Faithful in the liturgy. Both in the Western and Eastern Churches the reading of the Intercession has been the duty of the deacon since ancient times—since the fourth or fifth century in the West. With the revision of its Prayer Book the Reformed Episcopal Church missed an opportunity to restore this ancient practice in its churches.

The Reformed Episcopal Church also missed an opportunity to permit the congregation to make an appropriate response such as “O Lord, hear our prayer” or “We beseech thee to hear us, good Lord” after each paragraph of the Intercession, and thereby to give the congregation a larger role in the liturgy.

These additions, while they would affect the liturgical usages of the model for this form of the Celebration of the Holy Communion—the 1662 Communion Office, would not substantially change its doctrine. They would involve more people in the liturgy which, after all, is the work of the people. They would also make the liturgy more participative and congregational and most importantly more engaging to young people.

One of the drawbacks of the traditional Anglican Communion Office, whether the 1662 or the 1928, is that it contains long segments of unrelieved text that the priest reads while the congregation kneels. First-time guests experience these parts of the service as boring. They are not accustomed to kneeling for long periods of time. They see no benefit in reading the texts silently to themselves while the priest reads them aloud. They have not been taught to “assist” the priest in this fashion and their attention is apt to wander. They may check their cell phones and adopt other strategies to relieve the monotony. They may doze off. A few may get up and walk out.

Bored people are not engaged people. While the object of our church services is not to entertain people, it is also not to bore them. Their purpose is to engage people in the worship of God. This means that they must attract and hold the interest of those attending them. For younger people, it means that they must provide lots of opportunities to actively participate. This involves building such opportunities into the liturgy and into our church services.

Adding appropriate responses that people can make after the paragraphs of a prayer is not new. The litany form is very ancient. The Kyries that we sing at the beginning of the liturgy were once a full-blown litany.

The use of short litanies in Anglican worship is not new either. It predates the 1979 Prayer Book and the trial services that preceded it. As early as 1929 the Scottish Episcopal Church adopted a “Shorter Litany” as an optional alternative to the Prayer for the State of Christ’s Church in its Scottish Communion Office. After each petition of this Shorter Litany the congregation responds, “Lord have mercy.” Three years earlier the Church of Ireland had, in its 1926 revision of the Irish Prayer Book, made provision for a General Supplication for use with the first Alternative Form of Evening Prayer. This short litany was one of two sets of prayers that could be used with this form.

The compilers of An Anglican Prayer Book (2008), which was a joint effort of the Prayer Book Society of the USA and the Anglican Mission in America, made provision for a locally-composed litany for use as an alternative to the Prayer for the Whole State of Christ’s Church in its Communion Office. This litany consisted of a series of biddings, each bidding concluding with the versicle and response, “Lord in your mercy; hear our prayer.”

The Intercession itself would also have benefited from the addition of the petition, “Prosper, we pray thee, all those who proclaim the Gospel of thy kingdom among the nations” or a similar petition. This petition follows the words, “Give grace, O heavenly Father, to all Bishops, Priests, and Deacons, and specially to thy servant N. our Bishop, that they may both by their life and doctrine set forth thy true and living Word, and rightly and duly administer thy holy Sacraments” in the 1962 Canadian version of the Prayer for the Whole State of Christ’s Church Militant. The addition of this petition would have helped the congregation to become more mission-minded and outward-looking.

The rubric that follows the Intercession is adapted from the 1928 Prayer Book. The Exhortation is also taken from that book. It is a shortened version of the third Exhortation of the 1662 Communion Office and has been a feature of the American Communion Office from 1789 on. In the 2003 Reformed Episcopal Communion Office it occupies the position that the First Exhortation occupies in the 1662 Communion Office—after the Intercession. Omitted from this abbreviated version of the third Exhortation is the reference to spiritually eating Christ’s flesh and drinking his blood and the description of consequences of receiving the sacrament unworthily. Their omission dilutes the doctrine of the third Exhortation and makes room for doctrinal views that are at odds with its doctrine.

I have not determined the source of the note following the rubric that precedes the Invitation to Confession. The rubric itself is adapted from the 1928 Communion Office. The note may have been composed particularly for 2003 Reformed Episcopal Communion Office. The Invitation to Confession is taken from the 1928 Communion Office and is a slightly altered version of the Invitation to Confession in the 1662 Communion Office, “devoutly kneeling” replacing “meekly kneeling upon your knees.” This version of the Invitation to Confession was a feature of the American Prayer Book from 1789 on.

The General Confession, the Absolution, and the Comfortable Words are taken from the 1662 Communion Office. The rubric that precedes each of these three elements is adapted from the corresponding rubric in the 1928 Communion Office.

The rubric preceding the Sursum Corda is adapted from the 1662 Communion Office. It substitutes “presbyter” for “priest,” which is also done throughout the entire Reformed Episcopal Communion Office. The Sursum Corda is taken from the 1662 Communion Office. It is also a feature of the 1928 Communion Office.

The rubric preceding the Preface is also adapted from the 1662 Communion Office. The Preface is taken from the 1928 Communion Office. The 1662 Preface has an asterisk in front of the words “Holy Father” snd a side note that states, “*These words [Holy Father] must be omitted on Trinity-Sunday.”

The rubric preceding the Proper Prefaces is adapted from the 1928 Communion Office, as is the rubric preceding the Ter-Sanctus. The Proper Prefaces are taken from the 1928 Communion Office. The text of the Ter-Sanctus, the thrice-Holy, is the same as the text of the Ter-Sanctus in the 1662 and 1928 Communion Offices.

The rubric preceding the Prayer of Humble Access is adapted from the 1662 Communion Office. The Prayer of Humble Access is taken from the 1662 Communion Office.

As in the case of the Intercession the Reformed Episcopal Church missed an opportunity here to make the liturgy more engaging. The practice of those who are going to receive the Holy Communion to join with the priest in the Prayer of Humble Access has become a common practice in Anglican churches. A number of the more recent Anglican service books such as An Australian Prayer Book (1978), An Anglican Prayer Book (2008), and A Prayer Book for Australia (1999) have regularized the practice. They permit the priest to say the prayer the name of all who are to receive the communion or all to join with him in the prayer.

When few people were able to read and fewer people owned books, it made sense for the priest to carry the weight of the service with the help of one assistant—the parish clerk. But in the twenty-first century when the bulk of the North American population is literate and many people have access to whole libraries of books through electronic hand-held devices, it no longer makes sense. The Scriptures teach that we only need one mediator with God and that mediator is Jesus Christ himself, God’s only Son who shares his divine nature. The priest may offer prayers on the behalf of a congregation but he does not offer these prayers as a mediator, which would be to usurp the mediatorship of our Savior and Lord, but as the “tongue” of the worshiping assembly. When he speaks, it is the assembly speaking. This concept of the role of the priest was known to the early Church fathers.

Tradition assigns certain prayers of the liturgy to the priest, chiefly the Collect of the Day, the Absolution, the Prayer of Consecration, and the Blessing. Different members of the assembly may offer the other prayers of the liturgy or the whole assembly may offer them. We no longer live in an age in which these prayers must be memorized (albeit it would not hurt us to commit them to memory.)

If we remember our church history lessons, it was not our Anglicans forefathers who enveighed against the participation of the congregation in services of public worship, it was the Puritans. It was the Puritans who called for the abolition of The Book of Common Prayer. It was the Puritans who insisted that the role of the minister was to pray, read the Scriptures, and preach and the role of the congregation was to listen, to add their Amen to the prayers, and to sing Psalms. It was also the Puritans who spoke and wrote against the practices of lay baptism and of one of the communicants making the general confession in the name of the other communicants and caused their removal from The Book of Common Prayer. Both practices had precedence in the Bible and in primitive Catholic practice. The Puritans maintained that baptizing infants and adults and making the general confession in the name of the communicants were the prerogative of the clergy.

The rubric that precedes the Prayer of Consecration is adapted from the 1662 Communion Office. As well as substituting “presbyter” for “priest,” it also uses contemporary language as do the other rubrics in the 2003 Reformed Episcopal Prayer Book.

The exordium, “All glory be to thee…,” that begins the Post-Sanctus of the Prayer of Consecration is not a feature of the 1662 Consecration Prayer. It is traceable to the Scottish Non-Juror Prayer Book of 1755. It is has been a longstanding feature of the American Prayer of Consecration since 1789 when the Protestant Episcopal Church adopted a modified version of the Scottish Non-Juror Consecration Prayer of 1764. The 1662 Prayer of Consecration begins with the words, “Almighty God, our heavenly Father, who of thy tender mercy didst give thine only Son Jesus Christ to suffer death upon the cross for our redemption….”

This exordium does smooth the transition from the Sanctus to the Post-Sanctus and was incorporated into the contemporary language versions of 1662 Consecration Prayer in The Holy Communion, First Order in An Australian Prayer Book (1978) and A Prayer for Australia (1999). The remainder of the Prayer of Consecration, including the rubrics for the Manual Acts and the concluding Amen is taken from the 1662 Consecration Prayer. “Presbyter” is substituted for “priest” in the rubrics for the Manual Acts.

Among the features of the 1662 Prayer of Consecration is that it does not include the Invocation of the Holy Spirit’s descent upon the elements, an oblation of the elements, and the Prayer of Oblation, which are features of the 1928 Consecration Prayer and the 1764 Scottish Non-Juror prayer on which it is based. With some minor changes—the addition of the title, “The Prayer of Consecration,” the Manual Acts, and the concluding Amen, the 1662 Prayer of Consecration is essentially the 1552 Consecration Prayer, which was also used in the 1559 Elizabethan Prayer Book and its 1604 Jacobean revision.

Archbishop Thomas Cranmer omitted the Invocation and the Prayer of Oblation from the 1552 prayer because he had come to the conclusion that the Invocation was not Scriptural and also suggested a change in the substance of the bread and wine. He also concluded that the Prayer of Oblation might be misinterpreted as teaching the medieval doctrine of the sacrifice of the Mass. This is how Bishop Stephen Gardiner interpreted these features of the 1549 Canon in his critique of the 1549 Communion Office.

The oblation of the elements had been previously omitted from the 1549 Canon due to its long association with the medieval doctrines of Transubstantiation and the sacrifice of the Mass.  The rubrics of the 1549 Order of Holy Communion also prohibit the priest from elevating the consecrated Host or showing it to the congregation for that reason, as well as the association of these practices with the adoration of the sacramental species.

One of the criticisms leveled at the 1662 Prayer of Consecration is that it contains no Epiclesis. But this criticism is unfounded. While the 1662 Consecration Prayer does not contain a full-blown Epiclesis of the Eastern variety, it does contain an Epiclesis:
Hear us, O merciful Father, we most humbly beseech thee; and grant that we receiving these thy creatures of bread and wine, according to thy Son our Saviour Jesus Christ’s holy institution, in remembrance of his death and passion, may be partakers of his most blessed body and blood.
An Epiclesis in most primitive form is simply a petition addressed to God, calling upon God to perform a specific action. An examination of the 1552, 1559, and 1604 Baptismal Offices show that the Prayer over the Water in the Font in these rites contains a similarly worded Epiclesis, asking that those baptized in the water may receive the fullness of God’s grace and remain in the number of his faithful and election children for ever. The Noah’s Ark Prayer earlier in these rites maintains that God has sanctified all water for the purposes of baptism through the baptism of his Son, Jesus Christ, in the water of the River Jordan. For this reason the prayer contains no petition for God to sanctify the water in the font. Such a petition was added to the 1662 Baptismal Offices in imitation of the 1637 Scottish rites but it was unnecessary. It asked God to sanctify what he had already sanctified.

The rubric immediately following the Prayer of Consecration in the Celebration of Holy Communion in the 2003 Reformed Episcopal Church is taken from the 1928 Communion Office. It has been a feature of the American Communion Office since 1789. A hymn that was included in the early hymnals of the Protestant Episcopal Church for use at this juncture in the service was Isaac Watt’s “Come, let us join our cheerful songs,” a metrical version of the Dignus es, a canticle taken from the Revelation to John.

According to Edward Lambe Parsons and Bayard Hale Jones in The American Prayer Book: Its Origins and Principles this rubric gives “some color of liturgical authorization” to the practice of singing the Agnus Dei at this juncture as the Agnus Dei may be described as a “hymn.” However, the practice of singing a hymn, much less the Agnus Dei, is not consistent with the spirit of the 1662 Communion Office, which like the 1552, 1559, and 1604 Communion Offices proceeds immediately to the Distribution of Communion with no intervening devotions between the consecration of the elements and their distribution.

Cranmer’s removal of such devotions from the 1552 Communion Office was intentional. They suggested that Christ was substantively present in the consecrated elements. If it was the intention of the compilers of the 2003 Reformed Episcopal Prayer Book that the Celebration of  Holy Communion in the Communion Office was to fully embody the doctrine of the 1662 Communion Office and its reformed predecessors, this rubric should have been omitted.

As I noted in my previous article, where hymns and anthems are used in the 1662 Communion Office is largely determined by custom. When the Agnes Dei is sung in that office, it is usually sung during the distribution of the consecrated elements as a communion hymn or anthem, not before their distribution.The origin of this practice can be traced to the rubrics of the 1549 Communion Office which direct that "in the Communion tyme the Clarkes shall syng" the Agnes Die. 

It is also worthy of note that the 1928 rubric permitting the singing of a hymn after the Prayer of Consecration and before the Distribution of the Communion does not lend any color of liturgical authorization to the practice of reciting the Agnes Dei immediately after the Prayer of Consecration.

While the Words of Distribution are taken from the 1662 Communion Office, the rubric that precedes them is adapted from the 1928 Prayer Book, substituting “presbyter” for “priest.” What is noteworthy about these rubrics is that they restrict the distribution of the consecrated elements to the priest. The 1662 rubrics use the term “minister” which has historically been interpreted to include deacons and more recently licensed lay readers. These ministers are licensed to administer the chalice while the priest distributes the Bread.

The first two rubrics that follow the Distribution of the Communion are adapted from the 1662 Communion Office.

The 1662 form for consecrating more bread and wine has been criticized by liturologists who favor a full-blown Epiclesis of the Eastern variety for appearing to adopt the late medieval view that the Words of Institution consecrate the communion elements. They do not mention that the Sarum Rite has an implicit Epiclesis and ignore the Lutheran practice of using the bare Votum—Words of Institution—in place of a Prayer of Consecration. The historic Anglican view, however, is that the whole prayer, indeed the entire service, consecrates the elements and not just the Words of Institution.

In the opinion of these critics of the 1662 Prayer of Consecration, the prayer is defective because it lacks an oblation of the elements and a Prayer of Oblation as well as the type of Epiclesis that they favor.

Among these critics were the eighteenth century Scottish Usager Non-Jurors who believed that our Lord offered himself for the sins of the world not on the cross but at the Last Supper, viewed the Eucharist as a reiteration or representation of Christ’s sacrifice and not as a commemoration of that sacrifice, and maintained that without an Epiclesis invoking the Holy Spirit’s descent upon the bread and wine, the consecration of the elements was not valid. It is to this tiny sect that the origin of the American Prayer of Consecration tradition may be traced. It was a modified version of their Prayer of Consecration that the Protestant Episcopal Church adopted in 1789. In the American version of their Consecration Prayer the word “there” in the phrase “made a full, perfect, and sufficient sacrifice, oblation, and satisfaction, for the sins of the whole world” is restored and the words “we receiving these thy creatures of bread and wine, according to thy Son our Saviour Jesus Christ’s holy institution, in remembrance of his death and passion, may be partakers of his most blessed Body and Blood” are substituted for the words “they may become the body and blood of thy most dearly beloved Son.”

Defenders of the 1662 Consecration Prayer have countered that our Lord did not instruct the disciples at the Last Supper to offer the bread and cup to God but to eat the bread and drink the cup in remembrance of him. Where the Scriptures refer to Jesus as blessing the bread and cup, he was giving thanks to God as can be seen from a comparison of the Matthew, Mark, Luke, and Paul’s accounts of the Last Supper. He was observing the Jewish custom of blessing God as a form of thanksgiving over the bread at the beginning of the meal and over the cup toward the end of the meal. While we find many instances in the Bible of biblical figures asking God’s blessing on people, we find no examples of them asking God’s blessing on inanimate objects. While the Bible records several occasions when the Holy Spirit descended upon people, it records none when the Holy Spirit descended upon an inanimate object.

For the foregoing reasons a Prayer of Consecration, if the prayer does include an invocation of the descent of the Holy Spirit, it should be upon the communicants, not the communion elements. A notable example of such an invocation is found in the Kenyan Prayer of Consecration in Our Modern Services (2008). For the same reasons the 1662 Canadian Prayer of Consecration contains this phrase “And we pray that by the power of thy Holy Spirit, all we who are partakers of this holy Communion may be fulfilled with thy grace and heavenly benediction” rather than a petition invoking the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the elements.

I may be wrong but the third rubric following the Distribution of the Communion appears to have been written specifically for the 2003 Reformed Episcopal Communion Office. The words that the priest uses to introduce the Lord’s Prayer are taken from the 1928 Communion Office.

The rubrics that accompany the two Post-Communion Thanksgivings are particular to the 2003 Reformed Episcopal Office. The first rubric describes the first thanksgiving as “the Prayer of Oblation.” The second rubric requires the priest to say the second thanksgiving as well as the first. Both rubrics are noteworthy departure from the 1662 rubrics.

Evan Daniels in his 1878 edition of The Prayer Book: Its History, Language and Contents takes the view that the first form of thanksgiving in the 1549, Scottish, and American liturgies is the conclusion of the Prayer of Oblation. The second form, he notes, was composed in 1549 and is derived partially from Hermann’s Consultation. He further notes:
In the first we show our gratitude by the dedication of our souls and bodies, now newly cleansed from sin, to the service of God; in the second, by praying that we may continue faithful members of that mystical body into which we have been incorporated, and of whose holy fellowship we have just had such a blessed experience.
In his 1901 edition of the same book he offers a different view of the first thanksgiving but by then he had come under the influence of the Scottish-American view of this prayer. But at the time of his 1878 edition of the book his view of the two thanksgivings was in line with what was regarded as the received understanding of these two prayers.

Charles Neil and J.M. Willoughby in the 1913 edition of The Tutorial Prayer Book refer to the two forms as the “first alternative thanksgiving” and the “second alternative thanksgiving.” In their discussion of the first thanksgiving they note:
This Prayer formed a part of the Canon in 1549, and opened with a sentence stating that “we do…celebrate and make here… the memorial” the word “oblation” being carefully avoided, as applicable to the “one oblation once offered.” In 1552 this whole sentence was omitted, the remainder of the Prayer being made the first alternative Thanksgiving.
Neil and Willoughby further note:
SL [Scottish Liturgy] restored the 1549 wording and position, calling the Prayer in a Rubric “this memorial or prayer of oblation,” but the example was not followed in 1662.
In its description of the first thanksgiving as “the Prayer of Oblation” the first rubric shows the influence of the Scottish-American liturgy and not the English.

The 1662 rubrics give the priest the option of saying one or the other of the two thanksgiving as did the 1552, 1559, and 1604 rubrics. So do the rubrics of the Communion Office in the 1918 Canadian Prayer Book, the Order for the Administration of the Lord’s Supper or Holy Communion (1662) in the 1928 Proposed English Prayer Book, the Communion Office in the 1958 Free Church of England Prayer Book, and the Holy Communion, Order Two, in Common Worship (2000). The Holy Communion, Order Two, is substantially the 1662 Communion Office.

The rubrics of the Communion Office in the 1926 Irish Prayer Book and the Holy Communion, First Order in An Australian Prayer Book (1978) give the priest the option of saying one of the two thanksgiving or both. The rubrics of the Holy Communion, First Order, in A Prayer Book for Australia (1992), however, return to the 1662 rubrics and give the priest the option of saying one or the other but not both.

It is not an uncommon practice for congregations to join with the priest in these Post-Communion Thanksgivings. Several Anglican service books have regularized this practice. The rubrics of The Prayer Book of the Church of England in South Africa (1992) direct the priest and the people to say the Lord’s Prayer and one of these thanksgivings together. The rubrics for The Order for Holy Communion, “English” Order 1662, in An Anglican Prayer Book (2008) give the “minister” the option of saying one or both of these thanksgivings alone or with the congregation. Its predecessor, Services in Contemporary English from The Book of Common Prayer of 1662 (2006), gave the minister the option of saying one or both of the thanksgivings and the congregation the option of joining in the first thanksgiving at the word, “Here we offer…,”and the second thanksgiving at the words, “As we humbly ask….”

Saying both Post-Communion Thanksgivings drags out the service which should move to a rapid conclusion after the Distribution of the Communion. What I wrote earlier about long segments of unrelieved text is applicable here. Judging from the length of the exhortations and prayers contained in their liturgies, kneeling for long periods of time must not have caused the eighteenth century Non-Jurors to wince with pain from leg cramps but the young people that we may be hoping to attract to our churches may not be made of as stern a stuff as these dilettantes of the long service. Today’s younger generations have shorter attention spans than past younger generations. Nor would they take kindly to a church-warden cuffing them when their attention wandered as might have happened in the eighteenth century. The longer our services are the less likely they are to return for a second visit. Many older Anglicans who attend our services also have joints problems and a number of them have undergone hip or knee replacement surgery.

My earlier comments about making the service more engaging are also applicable. With the two Post-Communion Thanksgivings the Reformed Episcopal Church missed another opportunity.

It would be interesting to know what was the thinking behind the decision to require the priest to say both thanksgivings and how much the Scottish-American view of the first thanksgiving as a prayer of oblation influenced that thinking. In any case this requirement injects into the 1662 Liturgy of the Table a theology that is different from that of the 1662 Prayer Book. The result is a Liturgy of the Table that has the structure of the 1662 and contains material from the 1662 but does not fully embody the doctrine of that rite.

The rubric that precedes the Gloria in Excelsis is adapted from the 1928 Prayer Book and permits the singing of “some suitable hymn” as an alternative to the Gloria. This permission has been a feature of the American Prayer Book from the 1789 book on. Cranmer moved the Gloria to a position after the Post-Communion Thanksgivings in the 1552 Communion Office apparently in the imitation of the hallel Psalm that Jesus and the disciples sung at the conclusion of the Last Supper. The Restoration bishops retained the Gloria in this position in the 1662 Communion Office. “The provision of a Hymn as a substitute for the Gloria in Excelsis,” Parsons and Jones note, “was introduced in 1789 because of the frequent difficulty of getting the Gloria sung under pioneering conditions.” This alternative is particularly useful in small churches which do not have a choir and struggle to sing the Gloria without its leadership. It enables these churches to sing a metrical version of the Gloria or some other suitable hymn of praise at this juncture. If the church has not sung the Doxology at the offertory, it can sing the Doxology as an alternative to the Gloria. The Doxology is one of the suggested alternatives in The Hymnal (1940). Singing a hymn is preferable to the dismissal practice of reciting the Gloria. While the rubric may represent a departure from the original wording of the 1662 rubric, it retains the spirit of the 1662 rubric, which is to conclude the Liturgy of the Table on a note of joyful praise.

The rubric preceding the parting blessing is adapted from the 1928 Communion Office. The 1662 rubric does not direct the people to kneel. A far more ancient custom than kneeling for the parting blessing is the custom of bowing the head. The deacon would direct the people to bow their heads for God’s blessing and then the bishop would intone the blessing with a hand outstretched toward the people. The practice of making the sign of the cross is a later one. The parting blessing serves as the dismissal of the people, and except perhaps for a final hymn as a recessional any devotions after the blessing are inappropriate. The rubric that immediately follows the parting blessing permits the singing of such a hymn. Neither the 1662 Communion Office nor the 1928 Communion Office has a corresponding rubric. As I have previously noted, custom largely determines where hymns are sung in the 1662 Communion Office.

The 2003 Reformed Episcopal Church, unlike the 1662 and 1928 Prayer Books, makes no provision for Ante-Communion, and the Collects that follow the1662 Communion Office are omitted. So are the rubrics which follow that office. The only exception is the 1662 adaptation of the rubric on kneeling, sometimes called the “Black Rubric.” While its language is not as strong as the original rubric on kneeling, it denies that Christ is substantively present in the consecrated Bread and Wine and maintains that the communicants, in kneeling to receive the consecrated elements, do not adore the sacramental species.

This view is consistent with the historic Anglican doctrine that at their consecration the substance of the bread and wine are not changed; the bread remains bread and the wine, wine. While Christ is not substantively present in the consecrated elements, he is present spiritual in the hearts, the innermost selves, of the communicants. He is truly present there. His presence is not imagined. It is real. When the communicants receive the Bread and the Cup, they feed upon Christ in their hearts. This feeding is spiritual and the means by which it is accomplished is faith. The act of receiving the elements invigorates and strengthens the communicant’s faith, thereby enabling him to receive spiritual nourishment from Christ and to appropriate the benefits of Christ's atoning sacrifice on the cross.

A communicant who lacks a vital faith in Christ may eat the Bread and drink the Cup but he receives no benefit from doing so. The critical spiritual transaction that accompanies the eating and drinking is missing. Rather he eats the Bread and drinks the Cup to his own damnation. For this reason Anglicans have placed a strong emphasis upon worthy reception of the Holy Communion. The requirements for such reception are summarized in the Invitation to Communion:
Ye who do truly and earnestly repent you of your sins, and are in love and charity with your neighbours, and intend to lead a new life, following the commandments of God, and walking from henceforth in his holy ways; Draw near with faith, and take this holy Sacrament to your comfort….
As can be seen from this examination of the Celebration of  Holy Communion in the 2003 Reformed Episcopal Communion Office, it does not fully comprehend the English Prayer Book tradition but incorporates numerous features from the Scottish-American Prayer Book tradition. Some of the additions, alterations, and omissions are minor; others are not. Any church using this option in the 2003 Reformed Episcopal Communion Office is not using the Celebration of Holy Communion from the 1662 Communion Office but a revision of that Liturgy of the Table strongly influenced by the Scottish-American Prayer Book tradition, particularly the 1928 Communion Office. It is a revision that has a number of weaknesses that I have, for the most part, identified. As the same time it is still closer to the 1662 Communion Office’s Liturgy of the Table than the Liturgy of the Table in the long and short forms of the 2019 Proposed ACNA Communion Office. With some judicious tweaking it might serve the Anglican Church in North America as well as the Reformed Episcopal Church far better than the 2019 Proposed ACNA Communion Office’s Liturgy of the Table. The two forms for the Liturgy of the Table in the 2003 Reformed Episcopal Communion Office are certainly more comprehensive than the Liturgy of the Table in the long and short forms of the 2019 Proposed ACNA Communion Office. The latter decidedly leans toward the Liturgy of the Table of the Roman Rite.

Image: The Church of the Holy Trinity, Houston, Texas

Why the God of the Qur’an Cannot Forgive Sins

The Holy Qur'an
Almost every system or religion proposes some sort of love. From systems in the east to the west, they feature some concept of love. Both the Qur’an and the Bible do so. They both teach that God is loving. But, what do they mean by love? And, what is it about the God of the Qur’an and the God of the Bible that renders them loving? Most assertions of love remain in realm of abstract or human-to-human benevolence. How can we tangibly measure love?

Today’s post is our sixth and final part of a series studying various differences between the sacred book of Islam, the Qur’an, and that of the Christianity, the Bible. In part one, we looked at a brief introduction to Quranic Islam, observing the development of the Quranic text. In part two, we noted the major differences between the God of the Qur’an and that of the Bible. Third, we studied nine differences between the Jesus of the Qur’an and the Bible. In part four, we observed the differences between the doctrine of salvation in the Qur’an and the Bible, noticing that the Qur’an teaches a works-based righteousness. Part five covered the difference between the integrity of the Qur’an and the Bible, noting a catastrophic conundrum for Quranic Islam. Finally, we examine the differences between the love of the God of the Bible and that of the Qur’an. Read More

7 Spiritual Realities of God's Church


The Bible is full of descriptions and metaphors of how God sees the church. Each one helps us to understand a facet of the church’s spiritual identity and God’s love, care, and communion with the body of believers. Read More

Related Posts
Why Go to Church When I Can Watch Online?
Make a Difference in Your Church by Serving Passionately

3 Reasons Greeters Ministries Are Still Relevant in 2018


You might be wondering if a greeter ministry is still relevant in 2018. Do we even need greeters any more?

It’s a fair question. Shouldn’t we expect everyone in the church to be friendly to guests? Why do we have to ask people to do what they should be doing anyway?

Perhaps in an ideal world with an ideal organization with ideal people such an approach would work. But that’s not our world, and that’s not our church. We, therefore, greatly need greeter ministries for three reasons. Read More


Related Post
5 Training Experiences to Help Your Team Feel Like First-time Guests

How quickly we forget what it is like to visit a new church for the first time.

Should Churches Go Into Debt?


How to Know if the Blessing is Worth the Burden

Should churches go into debt? This question often elicits passionate responses from people at various points on the yes/no spectrum. The passion is often driven by a desire for their church to make the best decision to advance the gospel in their community and around the world.

And this is a good thing.

DEBT IS NOT A SIN, BUT THE BIBLE ISN’T EXACTLY A FAN OF DEBT

This point needs to be made at the start. Some treat taking on debt as sinful. It’s not, at least on its own.Psalm 112:5 tells us, “Good will come to the one who lends generously and conducts his business fairly.” God would not reward someone (the lender) who is knowingly participating in the sin of another (the debtor). Read More
The Episcopal church where I served as senior lay reader for 15 years suffered a major split over debt. Most of the members of the vestry wanted to reduce or retire the debt on the church's multipurpose building and its Christian education center, which doubled as a child development center and pre-school during the week. The rector, on the other hand, wanted to undertake a major building project. He was feeling the pressure of preaching and presiding at three celebrations of the Holy Eucharist on Sunday mornings and a monthly celebration of Holy Communion and a healing service on Wednesday nights. He thought that a larger new sanctuary which would accommodate the church's rapidly growing congregation would be the solution of his problem. With additional seating and more parking he could return to two services on Sunday morning. No one considered hiring an assistant or associate rector or even a part-time priest to relieve him of some of his workload as had my previous church had done when its congregation became too large for one pastor to manage. Perhaps they did and the rector did not like the idea of sharing the workload with someone else.

I was on vacation when everything came to a head and came back to a church which a number of my friends had left. At the bishop's insistence the church had hired a consultant and the consultant had identified as one of the problems that the rector was not equipped to lead a large, growing church and had recommended that he receive further leadership training. The rector was willing to undertake this training. However, the members of the vestry who had opposed the construction of new sanctuary demanded his resignation. At the vestry meeting at which they made this demand other members of the congregation voiced their support for the rector and objected to their demand. The rector refused to resign. The members of the vestry opposed to the construction of a new sanctuary resigned, as did the music director and the choir and the director of the early childhood development center and preschool. A third of the households that attended the church also left.

The resignation of the vestry members and the departure of their supporters relieved the pressure on the rector to undertake the much needed training. Due to the decline in attendance the church went back to two services on Sunday mornings and the Wednesday night service was cancelled. After this split the church plateaued and then began to stagnate and decline. Six years later the rector moved on. By then what had been a thriving parish had become a diocesan-supported mission again. Debt and conflicting visions of a church's future I have read are two major causes of church splits.

Friday, July 27, 2018

8 Benefits of Silence and Solitude


We leaders live in a world that bombards us with incessant visual stimuli and noise. And it’s easy to become addicted to such noise without even realizing it. Our so called time saving technology such as smart phones and high speed internet access relentlessly remind us that we can get more done in less time so we have more time to get even more done. As a result we are addicted not only to noise, but to hurry. As John Ortberg writes, “Hurry is not just a disordered schedule. Hurry is a disordered heart.” [1] Leaders desperately need what the ancients called silence and solitude to help us lead at our best. I suggest 8 benefits of building this discipline into your life. Read More

10 Thoughts about Change in the Church


Today, I’m thinking about change in the church. Join me in this discussion.... Read More

Related Articles:
9 Ideas for Leading a Church through Change
8 Reasons Older People Struggle with Change
7 Reasons We Old People in Church Need to Be Willing to Change
"How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time."-- Thom Rainer

Why Most Small Churches Don’t Use (Or Need) An Organizational Chart


When small churches follow a strict Org Chart, people end up filling positions instead of operating within their talents, gifts and passion.

Does your small church have an Organizational (Org) Chart?

If you don’t, relax. You probably don’t need one.

If you do, brace yourself. You may want to get rid of it because they tend not to work in small churches like they work in large churches. In fact, some of the problems that you think are people related may in fact be Org Chart related.

In small churches, having an Org Chart can cause more frustration than they’re worth. Read More

Related Articles:
Want Real Church Growth? Don’t Fill Your Building, Empty It
When People Leave: The Private Pain Of The Small Church Pastor
Let’s Ask Better Questions About Church Size

A Few Humble Suggestions for Reformed Worship Services


As Christians, we set aside the first day of each week as a day of worship. We gather together as communities to worship God through what we call “church services.” One of the struggles we may encounter is related to doing roughly the same thing in the same way week after week. We may begin to lose sight of the beauty of Christian worship through its sheer weekly repetition. Today I want to offer a few humble suggestions to pastors or others involved in planning services that may serve to add an element of freshness to a service, but without adding elements that are desperate, distracting, or flat-out ridiculous. Read More

Friday's Catch: The Adaptable Church and More


How to Grow an Adaptable Church

Here’s how our church rejected the false dichotomies that were keeping us stuck, and embraced Spirit-led change. Read More

Success and the Church Planter: A Response to This American Life

American church planting does...borrow a lot from American corporate culture. We need to have serious conversations about the idolatry that has been adopted into church planting along the way. Read More

Love Your Church’s Young Adults

Ruth Baker explains how we have young adults all wrong. Read More

Singles: A Vital Part of Our Churches, Part 2

It’s time to stop looking upon single people with suspicion and instead thank God for them. Read More

Seven Reasons People Give More to Their Church - Rainer on Leadership #453 [Podcast]

Money is a subject too many pastors avoid—but they shouldn’t. It’s important to preach and teach on biblical stewardship. Today Thom Rainer and Jonathan Howe explain seven ways that can lead to increased giving. Listen Now

Seven Keys for a Pastor to Lead Well

What are some basic keys for pastors, in particular, to lead well? Read More

Toddlers Are Not Too Young for Jesus

Jaquelle Crow reviews The Beginner's Gospel Story Bible, a resource for introducing young children to the truths of God's Word. Read More

5 Inspiring Stories about Evangelism [Video]

Five women share how the Lord is using them—in the midst of their everyday lives—to bring the truth of the gospel to friends, family, and neighbors. Watch Now

Intelligent Designer Babies? Christians Tell Pew Their Views on Gene Editing

Most believers favor CRISPR medical technology for fixing health conditions before birth, but not after it. Read More

Thursday, July 26, 2018

4 Steps to Spiritual Survival for Bi-Vocational Pastors


All faithful pastors regularly feel pressured to their limits. Here's how to thrive in your weakness.

The alarm rings at 5 a.m. on Wednesday morning. He fumbles down the stairs. Shower, coffee, Bible, prayer, and out the door to work. Today will be a long day. He starts his delivery route at 6:30 a.m., does the first leg of his route and comes back to the warehouse. He changes into a suit, and drives to a funeral home. Phil had cancer, and passed away a few days before. He officiates the funeral, seeking to serve the family and proclaim the gospel.

After the graveside service, he returns to the warehouse for the second leg of his delivery route. He finishes around 4:30 p.m., just in time for a quick dinner with his wife and kids, before leaving the house again to lead prayer meeting at the church, and have a meeting with one of the deacons about the Thanksgiving potluck that weekend. He gets home at 9 p.m., debriefs with his wife, and collapses in bed. Tomorrow will be full, too. He is behind on Sunday’s sermon.

Welcome to bi-vocational pastoral ministry. Read More

How to Know You Are Not a Church Revitalizer or Replanter- Revitalize & Replant #051


Being a revitalizer or replanter is not for everyone. Today ThomRainer and Jonathan Howe discuss seven considerations to help you decide whether it might be for you or not. Read More

3 Ways to Graciously Engage KJV-Only Believers


Don Carson pled with them for realism 40 years ago, and James White urged them to trust modern translations 20 years ago. But I sense that conservative evangelicalism has now given up on critiquing King James Version-onlyism.

But there are tens or perhaps even hundreds of thousands of KJV-only Christians around the world, and a new generation is taking leadership in the movement.

It’s time to make another gentle appeal.

But what else can be said? I urge a threefold strategy focused on English translation, not Greek textual criticism. This is the best way to love—and persuade—our KJV-only brothers and sisters. Read More
One of the challenges that pastors seeking to revitalize their church face is transitioning the church to the use of a more recent translation of the Bible in public worship. In the case of Continuing Anglican churches some jurisdictions like my own permits the use of several more recent translations of the Bible and the bishop may authorize additional translations; other jurisdictions require the use of the King James Version only. For many young people the archaic language and grammatical structures of KJV present a substantial obstacles to reading and understanding the Bible and may deter them from attending a church where the KJV is the only authorized translation that may be used in public worship. To them the Jacobean English of the KJV is a foreign language. It presents an even greater barrier for foreign exchange students and others for whom English is a second language.

Thursday's Catch: The Mission of God and More


What’s the Mission of God? See the Church

The church should be at the heart of mission, and that happens naturally and inevitably in church planting. Read More

7 Signs Your Church Is Honestly…Mediocre

One of the problems many churches face these days is that they’re neither great at things or terrible at things. They’re honestly just...mediocre. Read More

Singles: A Vital Part of Our Churches, Part 1

Singles make up half of our churches, so we best learn to treat all people—married or single—equally. Read More

If You Have to Choose Between Clarity and Creativity

If you have to choose between clarity and creativity, choose clarity. Another way to say it is: Be sure your creativity doesn’t distract from your clarity. Read More

9 Things to Do When You've Stopped Loving Your Congregation

I’m afraid it happens. The congregation we once loved has brought pain, and it’s hard—if not impossible—to love them now. If that’s where you are, here are some suggestions I pray will help.... Read More

5 Things That Make Your Worship Feel Fake

We have all been there. Everything may sound fantastic, look attractive, was planned with purposeful intent. But, something just doesn’t seem right. You feel fake vibes when hoping for authentic ones. Regardless, what makes a worship service fake might be boiled down to a few things even though there may be many things we can put on a list. Read More

8 Attributes of Spiritually Safe Environments

We talk a lot in next generation ministry about creating environments that are physically safe, as we most certainly should. Thankfully, background screens and two adult rules have become the norm. We give attention to bullying and making sure we have emotionally safe environments. These are important topics, but since our number one mission should be to train children spiritually, it is imperative that our environments are spiritually safe. What do spiritually safe environments look like? Read More

Hate Sin and Its Effects

We must hate sin. Jesus wants us to hate sin and its effects. We cannot domesticate sin like it is our pet, but rather, we must hate it and its effects. Read More

When Re-Conversion Is Easier than Repentance

Re-conversion offers many evangelicals the emotional catharsis of acknowledging sin without the social shaming or awkwardness that comes when people who claim to be Christians acknowledge sin. If you weren’t really a Christian but you are now, wonderful! Enter into our joy. But if you actually are a Christian and you have to talk about sin that you’re not entirely sure how to address, well, how close should we stand next to you? How contagious is it? Read More

Why Christianity Must Be Both Personal and Public

There are personal and public aspects of our faith—our private devotion fuels our public expression. Read More