Wednesday, November 25, 2015

The Church and Training

What is the best way to train up pastors? I believe it to be in the context of the local church. I am not one to bash the seminaries even though there is quite a bit of low hanging fruit there to take a steady swing and knock it right off the tree. In fact, I would have liked to have taken advantage of educational opportunities earlier in my life. However, I am not ashamed of the course I took and feel that in many ways this may be preferable to the standard we have today. In fact, I believe that this may be the on course forward if things continue on as they are in this country.

What is a young seminarian to do when he leaves the hallowed halls of higher education, $40,000 in the hole and pastors a small church? Will he pastor a small church at all? There is a place for scholarship, and there is real danger to a people who will ignore the pursuit of it. There is a place for seminary. However, Paul did not instruct Timothy to start a school, but it was his primary focus to train up men and concentrate his energies in training up others for the ministry in the local church. 

I am forever grateful to my Dad, my former pastor, for his diligence in training me. For 10 years, he instructed and guided me in the scriptures, theology, and practical theology. He guided my reading and pointed me in the right direction with trusted authors, commentaries, and essential books. He, likewise, received his training from his faithful pastors. This is the normal way of training and I'm comfortable being in the good company of Baptists.

I had this thought confirmed recently when reading through Andrew Fuller: Model Pastor-Theologian, by Paul Brewster who said"
"Past generations of Baptists also assumed that congregational health traces back directly to the influences of pastors. For all the changes in worship services and styles that have occurred across nearly 400 years of Baptist history, the pastor’s sermon remains the focal event in the vast majority of these churches. During those moments in the pulpit, pastors set the theological tone for their congregations. James Petigru Boyce (1827–88), a towering figure in American Baptist theological education, recognized the vital connection between the theological soundness of pastors and the congregations they serve and influence. Speaking of pastors who were not well grounded in theology, Boyce said, “It is needless to say of these that the churches do not grow under their ministry; that, not having partaken strong meat, they cannot impart it.” Given that theology and church health are inseparable and that the primary theological influence in the church comes from the pastor, it is apparent that pastor-theologians are much needed today. But how will such men be formed for the Baptist ministry today? In the years before institutions for theological education were common in Baptist life, pastors almost invariably entered the ministry through an informal system of apprenticeship.10 Older men took on assistants in local church ministry and served as models of pastoral work. They also were involved in the theological formation of these men through programs of directed reading. Once these novitiates were deemed ready to serve on their own, they were presented as candidates to churches seeking pastors. Not infrequently, these apprentices would step into the role of the senior minister at their mentor’s death."

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