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What should be our attitude to hard-working pastors?

I don’t approve of plucking a verse out of context and ‘claiming it’ for a specific purpose. It seems almost irresponsible.

But that is what I did earlier this week.

And it was exactly what I needed in my position as a member of a church which was about to welcome a new pastor.

I was visiting a local Bible college. Another visitor there was speaking at chapel. He had worked overseas for years and had now been asked to impart his wisdom to us. I was sitting at the end of the second row from the back of the room, near the door, trying to be inconspicuous. I planned to slip away when the students and staff broke into prayer groups.

I had another meeting to get to, you see. In that meeting, a few of us would meet our new pastor. I admit that even though I was physically present in the college chapel service, my thoughts were focused on the following commitment. How can we support this new pastor, and what is ahead for our church in this ‘new season’?

A ‘life verse’

I dragged my attention back to the present. The speaker was wrapping up his talk and it was now ‘Question and Answer’ time.

A student asked, ‘How do you keep going during discouraging and difficult times?’

“Ask the Lord for a ‘life verse’,” the speaker said. “Then when times get tough, you can look back on it and be encouraged to persevere.”

I shot up a prayer. Despite my reticence to take a verse out of context and apply it to my life here and now without at least considering the original context, I prayed. “If there is anything you would point me to, Lord, please do show me.”

And somehow, imperceptibly, I felt drawn to 1 Thessalonians 5:12. Deep in the recesses of my mind, I guessed it would say something about ‘Rejoice, give thanks and pray always.” (See 1 Thessalonians 5:16-18.) That would be an eminently suitable ‘life verse’ … or ‘life verses’ to be strictly accurate.

It did not say that.

A verse (and a half) for this season

I punched the reference into the electronic Bible on my iPad, my mind still on the topic of our new pastor and this new season for our church.

I could hardly believe my eyes. This was the ‘perfect verse’ for me to meditate upon on this first day we officially came under our new pastor’s watch. I am including the first part of the following verse as well. I hope that fellow members of our church will spend time in this verse-and-a-half too, because I sense that this is God’s Word for us just now. I am writing this blog post in part so that I can share it with fellow church members.

Now we ask you, brothers and sisters, to acknowledge those who work hard among you, who care for you in the Lord and who admonish you. Hold them in the highest regard in love because of their work. 

1 Thessalonians 5:12-13a NIV

Yet although this verse may be spot on for our situation, I still can’t quite bring myself to apply it to a 21st century Australian church in Melbourne’s outer east without considering its original context.

1 Thessalonians – the authors

“We ask you…,” the verse begins. Who is the ‘we’?

Going back to the beginning of 1 Thessalonians, we see that the letter is written by Paul, Silas and Timothy.

Paul was a great first century missionary to the Gentiles, we know. He had once been known as Saul, a pious Pharisee, passionate for what he perceived as the purity of their people. Then the risen Lord Jesus had powerfully convinced him of his divinity and Paul’s life direction changed.

At one point, Silas had been a senior leader of the Christian community in Jerusalem and a prophet (Acts 15:22, 32). Leaders of the community there sent him to Antioch to clearly convey their decisions about Gentiles and the gospel (Acts 15:22). Some time later, Paul invited him to join him in his missionary endeavours after parting ways with his former co-worker, Barnabas (Acts 15:40).

Timothy was an emerging leader whose mother was Jewish and his father Greek. It wasn’t until he was an adult and about to embark on the missionary journey during which Paul wrote the letter to the Thessalonians that Paul circumcised him (Acts 16:3). Ouch.

Almost 2000 years ago, God specifically called Paul, Silas and Timothy to Macedonia through a vision, as well as keeping them time and again from travelling elsewhere. (See Acts 16:5-10.) The leading was SO clear, yet plenty of trouble followed them as they travelled throughout Macedonia. (See Acts 16 and 17.) God’s crystal clear leading doesn’t necessarily guarantee a smooth ministry experience.

If Paul had a ‘life verse’ to fall back on when times were tough, I expect that it would have been the words from God which he received in a vision in the Temple in Jerusalem following his conversion to Christ. (The words had been spoken by God to Paul, but the record not compiled until some time after he wrote the letter to the Thessalonians, most likely. So, strictly speaking, it wasn’t exactly a ‘verse’ at the time. But it was God’s Word.) Paul related the event to a crowd in Jerusalem after his arrest some time after sending that letter to the Thessalonians. He said, “Then the Lord said to me, ‘Go; I will send you far away to the Gentiles’ ” (Acts 22:21 NIV).

That didn’t go down well with the crowd in Jerusalem. But remembering God’s call on his life surely kept Paul going when times got tough.

1 Thessalonians – the recipients

“We ask you….,” the verse begins. Who are the ‘you’?

This letter was written to Thessalonian Christians. The city we now call Thessaloniki is located in modern-day Greece, in a region still called ‘Macedonia’. Greek Macedonia, comprised of the regions of Western, Eastern and Central Macedonia, borders the neighbouring country known today as the ‘Republic of Macedonia’ or ‘North Macedonia’.

Map courtesy of Google and BBC, and from an article online – https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-46971182 accessed 1 May 2022

Despite dramas there, culminating in the new believers whisking Paul and his companions out of the region, a church was established. It was made up of “some of the Jews … a large number of God-fearing Greeks and quite a few prominent women” (Acts 17:4 NIV).

It was to these followers of the risen Jesus – men and women, Jews and Gentiles – that Paul wrote. He urged them “… to acknowledge those who work hard among you, who care for you in the Lord and who admonish you. Hold them in the highest regard in love because of their work” (1 Thessalonians 5:12-13a NIV). We are not given clues as to the identity of any specific individuals he had in mind, but clearly he was referring to leaders in that community.

To acknowledge

Acknowledge those who (1) work hard among you, (2) who care for you in the Lord, and (3) who admonish you,’ we read in 1 Thessalonians 5:12. I added the emphasis on the main verb and the numbering of the three clauses which describe those leaders whom the original recipients were to acknowledge – obviously.

It seems more than reasonable that this exhortation is as relevant for followers of Jesus in Mooroolbark in 2022 as it was for those in Europe back in perhaps about 50AD.

It is easy enough to acknowledge those who work hard among us and who care for us in the Lord. Especially when we benefit. We admire people who work hard. We like to feel cared for and valued.

Acknowledging those who admonish us isn’t comfortable though. How dare anyone admonish us?! It is easier to ignore them, at best, or react with hostility and perhaps even withdraw from the community.

At the moment, we are all just beginning a ‘honeymoon period’ with our new pastor. The time will come, though, when admonishment is appropriate. Perhaps the problem will be obvious to all and the need for correction will be clear. But perhaps it will be about something less obvious such as an ungodly attitude or a critical spirit.

When that day comes, may we … may I … remember this verse and acknowledge the one whom God has placed in leadership over us. He won’t be perfect anymore than any of us are perfect, but he is our God-given leader for this season of time.

To hold (someone) in the highest regard in love

‘To hold (someone) in the highest regard in love’ – what a convoluted concept. Those we admire, we hold in high regard. We love for a variety of reasons, and at times we love simply because we choose to and not even because our hearts feel fuzzy. Paul, Silas and Timothy urged Thessalonian Christians to hold their leaders in the highest regard in love, combining both concepts into one.

On what basis were those early Macedonian Christians to do this? It was because of the work of their leaders amongst them. “Hold them in the highest regard in love because of their work” (1 Thessalonians 5:13a), we read.

That was then. This is now. May we hold our new pastor in the highest regard in love because of his work amongst us. May we speak well of him when with others even if we are tempted to slip into criticism or complaint. (Conflict may need to be dealt with at times, but appropriately and not behind backs.) May we always assume positive intent on his part, even when we don’t understand what is going on. And may we love him and his family well, in actions as well as words.

A new season

A new season

Paul, Silas and Timothy originally penned those words to first century believers on the other side of the world. Having considered the context back then, I am now satisfied that this passage of Scripture is as relevant for us today as it was for them. I’m not taking a passage out of context and applying it to my own situation willy-nilly.

And so, as we begin a new season in the life of the church, it is my hope and prayer that we will acknowledge the man God has sent to work hard among us, to care well for us … and to admonish us when necessary. May we hold him in the highest regard in love because of his work.

It won’t always be easy. He will struggle at times just as we fail here and there too.

When difficult times come, may I, for one, look back at the day God ‘gave me a verse’ there in the second back row of the space used as a chapel at the Bible College. May I respond in obedience when times are tough.

And may my fellow brothers and sisters in the Lord do likewise.

3 replies on “What should be our attitude to hard-working pastors?”

What an excellent post. Due to so many recent evangelical leaders failing it’s almost tge holding high of a pastor is unwise…. And what’s more in our baptist system with congregational government so tough on a pastor because it doesn’t take much and that constitution can take over and just because of a minor – even non theological issue a pastor can go. I recall a pastor from my very first church so I was 5 years old. He was all but blind, I still remember he read the Bible with a big magnifying glass… after we move to Blaxland, some members of the old church got a posse together as they felt the pastor was looking at them when he preached… and they took offence… I’d say those words he was preaching must of quite challenging to those members, yet they got a group together and he left.
I think pastoral ministry is tough, and that verse is so wise and full of counsel

What a wonderful post encouraging the church to fulfil an often ignored principle within the Body of Christ. Your words came across with compassion, conviction and humility. We pray for your new season and your new pastor.

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