Saturday, November 27, 2021

PT-6 "Explanation of Pastor/Teachers" (Eph. 4:11)

SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 3/27/2019 10:09 AM

 

My Worship Time                                                 Focus:  PT-6 “Explanation of Pastor/Teachers”

 

Bible Reading & Meditation                                                 Reference:  Ephesians 4:11

 

            Message of the verse:  “11 And He gave some as apostles, and some as prophets, and some as evangelists, and some as pastors and teachers,”

 

            Just a note to say that I continue to quote from John MacArthur’s commentary on this important subject, and will do so until all of it is quoted.

 

            “Presbuteros is used nearly twenty times in Acts and the epistles in reference to a unique group of leaders in the church.  From the earliest beginnings of the church it was clear that a group of mature spiritual leaders was designated to have responsibility for the church.  The church at Antioch, for example, where believers were first called Christians, sent Barnabas and Saul to the elders at Jerusalem with a gift to be distributed to the needy brethren in Judea (Acts 11:29-30).  It is therefore clear both that elders existed in the church at that very early date and that the believers at Antioch recognized their authority.

 

            “Since the church at Antioch grew out of the ministry at Jerusalem, elders probably existed there as well. It is likely that Paul himself functioned as an elder at Antioch before he stepped out in the role of apostle.  He is listed in Acts 13:1 as one of that church’s teachers.  Elders played a dominant role in the Council of Jerusalem (see Acts 15: 2, 4, 22, 23; 16:4) and they were obviously very influential in the foundation of life in the early church.

 

            “As Paul and Barnabas began to preach in new areas, and as the church began to extend itself, the process of identifying church leaders became more clearly defined.  And throughout the New Testament, as the church developed, leaders were called elders.

 

            “In general usage, therefore, elder seems to be the most appropriate term for our day, since it is free of many of the unbiblical connotations and nuances of meaning imposed on bishop and even pastor throughout much of church history.

 

            “As early in the biblical narrative as Acts 14, we see that one of the key steps in establishing a new church was to identify and appoint elders for church leadership.  ‘And when they had appointed elders for them in every church, having prayed with fasting, they commended them to the Lord in whom they had believed’ (Acts 14:23).

 

            “Nearly every church we know of in the New Testament is specifically said to have elders.  We are told, for example, that ‘from Miletus [Paul] sent to Ephesus and called to him the elders of the church’ (Acts 20:17).  It is significant that the church at Ephesus had elders, because all the churches of Asia Minor—such as those listed in Revelation 1:11—were extensions of the ministry at Ephesus.  We can assume that those churches established their leadership after the pattern in Ephesus, namely, that of a plurality of elders.

 

            “Peter wrote to the scattered believers in ‘Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia,…I exhort the elders among you…shepherd the flock of God’ (1 Peter 1:1; 5:1-2).  Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, and Bithynia were not cities, but rather territories.  Peter was therefore writing to a number of churches scattered all over Asia—all of which had elders.

 

            “What is the role of a pastor-teacher?  As the apostolic era came to a close, the office of pastor-teacher emerged as the highest level of local church leadership.  Thus it carried a great amount of responsibility.  Elders were charged with the care and feeding, as well as the spiritual guidance, of the entire church.  There was no higher court of appeal, and no greater resource for knowing the mind and heart of God with regard to issues in the Church.

 

            “First Timothy 3:1 says, ‘It is a trustworthy statement:  if any man aspires to the office of overseer [episkopos], it is affine work he desires to do.’  In verse 5, Paul says that the work of an episkopos is to ‘take care of the church of God.’  The clear implication is that a bishop’s primary responsibility is that of being caretaker for the church.

 

            “That general responsibility involves a number of more specific duties, perhaps the most obvious of which is to oversee the affairs to the local church.  First Timothy 5:17 says ‘Let the elders who rule well be considered worthy of double honor.’  The Greek word translated ‘rule’ (proistemi) is used to speak of the elders’ responsibilities four times in 1 Timothy (3A:4, 5, 12; 5:17), once in 1 Thessalonians 5:12 (where it is translated, ‘have charge over’), and once in Romans 12:8, where ruling is listed as a spiritual gift.  Proistemi literally means ‘to stand first,’ and it speaks of the duty of general oversight common to all elders.

 

            “As those who rule in the church, pastoral elders are not subject to any higher earthly authority outside the local assembly.  But their authority over the church is not by force or dictatorial power but by precept and example (see Heb. 13:7).”

 

            It looks like to me that Lord willing, I will be able to finish this section in our next SD.  I can say that the churches that I have attended do not call those who MacArthur refers to as “Elders” but are called “deacons.”  I remember reading something in another of MacArthur’s books about church rule and he stated that the government of the church is not as important as those who are involved in that government.  For instance if a church has good deacons which help the Pastor’s in ruling the church are good godly men wanting to follow what the Scripture has to say then it really doesn’t matter to me whether they are called deacons or elders.  The opposite is also true that if the church is ruled by “deacons” and they don’t follow the Word of God then their name means nothing.

 

Quotation for today and this time it is from David Jeremiah:  “Wisdom is development. Wisdom is discipline,  Wisdom is discernment, Wisdom is Dignity, Wisdom is Discretion, Wisdom is depth of understanding, Wisdom is devotion to God.”

 

3/27/2019 10:46 AM 

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