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Servants, Not Spectators
Friday, May 15, 2009

(By John MacArthur)

I have often spoken out against all the pragmatic and “seeker-sensitive” approaches to contemporary worship because they tend to diminish the proper place of preaching and replace it with quasi-spiritual forms of sheer entertainment (music, comedy, drama, and whatnot). Any trend that threatens the centrality of God’s Word in our corporate worship is a dangerous trend.

But one of the most disturbing side effects of the seeker-sensitive fad is something I haven’t said as much about: When one of the main aims of a ministry philosophy is to keep people entertained, church members inevitably become mere spectators. The architects of the modern megachurches admit that they have deliberately redesigned the worship service in order to make as few demands as possible on the person in the pew. After all, they don’t want the “unchurched” to be intimidated by appeals for personal involvement in ministry. That’s the very opposite of “seeker sensitivity.”

Such thinking is spiritually deadly. Christianity is not a spectator sport. Practically the worst thing any churchgoer can do is be a hearer but not a doer (James 1:22-25). Christ himself pronounced doom on religious people who want to be mere bystanders (Matthew 7:26-27).

Something is seriously wrong in a church where the staff does all the “ministry” and people are made to feel comfortable as mere observers. One of the pastor’s main duties is to equip the saints to do the work of the ministry (Eph. 4:12). Every believer is called to be a minister of some sort, with each of us using the unique gifts given us by God for the edification of the whole church (Rom. 12:6-8).

That’s why Scripture portrays the church as a body—an organism with many organs (1 Corinthians 12:14), where each member has a unique role (vv. 15-25), and all contribute something important to the life of the body. “And if one member suffers, all the members suffer with it” (v. 26).

I can’t read that verse without thinking of Dizzy Dean. He was a Hall-of-Fame baseball pitcher, whose career peaked in the 1930s. His 1934 season has never been excelled by any pitcher in history. Dean won thirty games that year, a feat that hasn’t been repeated since (though Dizzy himself came close, winning 28 games the following year). But in the 1937 All-Star game, he took a hard line drive off his toe, and the toe was broken. It should not have been a career-ending injury, but Dean was rushed back into the lineup before the fracture was completely healed, and he pitched several games favoring the sore toe. That led to an unnatural delivery that seriously injured his pitching arm. The arm never fully recovered. Dizzy Dean’s major-league career was essentially over in four years.

Something similar happens in any church where there are non-functioning members. The active members of the body become overextended, and the effectiveness of the whole body suffers greatly. Even the most insignificant member, like a toe, is designed to play a vital role.

That truth has been one of the main foundations of my approach to ministry for many years. When I first became pastor of Grace Community Church in 1969, I taught a series on Ephesians, and we spent a great deal of time studying the principle of Ephesians 4:11—that the pastor’s duty is to equip the saints, and it is their duty to shoulder the work of the ministry.

Our people quickly embraced that simple idea, and it transformed our church in a remarkable way. For one thing, we began to see dramatic growth. Within a matter of months, attendance on Sundays had ballooned to almost 1,000. About that same time, a well-known evangelical magazine asked a reporter to write an article about the growth of our church. He visited our services for several weeks, carefully observed how the ministry functioned, interviewed scores of people, and then wrote an article titled “The Church with 900 Ministers.”

That title perfectly summarized what has made Grace Church unique for all these years. Nowadays we have several thousand ministers, but the principle is still the same. Everyone is expected and encouraged to be involved in active ministry. Almost no one in our church would ever view ministry as the exclusive domain of professional clergy. If you want to be comfortable as a mere spectator, Grace Church is not the church for you.

I am not making a case for egalitarianism. Much less would I argue against the need for full-time vocational pastors who devote their whole lives to prayer, the study of the Word of God, and the training and equipping of the saints (cf. Acts 6:4; 1 Timothy 4:14-15; 5:17). The church needs leaders, and God has specifically called men to leadership and set them in places of authority in the church (cf. Hebrews 13:7, 17).

But the New Testament pattern is clear and inescapable: Every Christian is gifted and called to ministry. The spiritual gifts we are given are not for our own sake, but for the benefit of the whole body (1 Corinthians 12:4-7). “Having then gifts differing according to the grace that is given to us, let us use them” (Romans 12:6, emphasis added).

In my experience, it is not difficult to motivate gifted people to minister. The gift of mercy, for example, might practically be defined as the desire combined with the ability to show mercy. A person truly gifted to teach wants to teach. All the average person needs is encouragement and opportunities to employ his or her gifts. If faithful leaders properly train, equip, and guide people to the right ministry opportunities, the church will flourish.

If you are a church leader, I hope you have embraced your duty to equip people for ministry. It is, after all, one of your main duties—if not the single most important task for leaders in today’s church.

If you’re a lay person, I hope you’ll find a place where you can use your gift in the work of the ministry. Maybe you’ll be used by the Lord to start an epidemic of lay ministry in your congregation.

Posted by Pulpit Magazine   |  Tags Ministry, Spiritual Growth

15 Responses to Servants, Not Spectators


Posted by William du Plooy   |  Friday, May 15, 2009   

AMEN!

This is one of the reasons I see the NECCESSITY for missions and Churches to raise up Elders as diciplers and Overeers to guide Individually members of the Body; just as Christ had 12 Close diciples and then evenmore intimately 3 men whom He raised up and trained to be shepherds to lead His flock.

If we only seek salvation to be brought without spiritual growth being actively encouraged in teh Body; it would soon wither and die - Indeed this is a miracle of God that His Church does prevail dispite our human inadequacies and sloth.

Thank you Pastor John, Grace Community Church is a model of the Biblical Church and I for one appreciate and love the Elders who serve there in their positions of spiritual Oversight, but I am equally encouraged by my lay brethren and sisters who deny themselves to take up their responsibilities to serve our King, His Body and the unregenerate.

Your fellow bondslave for the glory of our Triune YAHWEH Alone,
W

Posted by Annette Vellenga   |  Friday, May 15, 2009   

Might I put this in our church newsletter?
it's distributed to about 40 people with three copies made for visitors.

Posted by Chris P   |  Friday, May 15, 2009   

First let me say that I respect John MacArthur greatly. I've lisetend to and read his books for many years. My family listens to his podcast almost every Sunday.

Maybe it is just me, but something is still missing. When the church gathers a Grace (or any other church) on Sunday, of the several thousand that may attend, how many are truly ministering/using their gifts for the edification of the body?

You have the lone pastor standing on a stage, usually behind a puplit, looking down on the congregation.

You have a music leader, or worship team or choir standing on the stage, looking down on the congregation.

You have multiples of people sitting in their seats for 1-2 hours watching and listening to what is coming from the stage/pulpit.

How is this still not a spectator sport?

Yes the body is to minister and edify throughout the week. But when the church gathers on the Lord's Day is it fitting, proper and biblically correct for one person to do most of the functioining? I think the answer is no.

What happens if Pastor MacArthur (or any other pastor) is preaching or when finished preaching another brother stands up ("decently and in order") and shares some addtional truth about the scripture, and then another and then another stands up and gives testimony of how this teaching is impacting him at this very moment and seeks to praise God for it. Or what happens if one is so convicted by the message, that they seek to ask forgiveness to the body for some offense? What would happen is someone was hurting during the message or after and someone came and ministered to them, prayed for them right there in the midst of the service/gathering? What would happen if after the congregational singing someone stood up ("decently and in order") and sought to praise God and/or edify the church with a song? WOULD THIS BE ALLOWED? Would it be encouraged? If not, then the Sunday gathering/Lord's Day service is still a spectator sport.

Posted by Russell Carroll   |  Friday, May 15, 2009   

Why do you know so much about "seeker-sensitive" churches? How do you know "one of the main aims of a ministry philosophy [who's seeker sensitive] is to keep people entertained"? What makes you think that a more traditional worship experience produces more works and better fruit in the saints who attend?

Posted by William du Plooy   |  Friday, May 15, 2009   

Chris P,

I appreciate what you say and believe that the Brethren, brethren have a very good system which holds the tradition of the Synagogue very well. It is NOT to be discounted completely.

I can however assure you that there are Multiple Elders presenting Multiple sermons and teachings at GCC on the LORD's Day and I am sure that the LORD's Day is spent very well in smaller accountibility between Multiple Elders after the Main services at GCC. (I would not believe that anyone would be discouraged from sharing the Scriptures or their testimony - in fact is is well know that GCC has week upon week of Baptismal Testimonies being witnessed, as evidence of what YAHWEH is doing there).

Russell;

Go to your local "christian bookstore" or logon to any modern day "christian" website; the evidence is out there for all to read and see.
It does not take a deviner to know what is happening in the world at large. Being discerning is a major task of every Christian's life but Spiritual Oversight is a Biblical Requirement for the Elders/Pastors/shepherds/Overseers who MUST give a more strict account to the LORD for the care of Hs Body, with which they are charged.

I think this also gives a clear reason for Expository Preaching by qualified Elders as a Divine responsibility - GCC has never belittled Bible Study or indivual Edification in the truths of Scripture or of true Spiritual experiences.
In fact GCC Elders have done well to study and talk openly about issuse in Q&A and in Studies on Church History andthe people the LORD has been well pleased to use for His glory Alone.

As always your fellow bondslave for the glory of our King and Master Alone,
W

Posted by William Toyer   |  Friday, May 15, 2009   

Correction (admittedly nit-picking): Denny McLain of the Detroit Tigers won 31 games in (I believe it was) 1968.

Thanks for the great article, much needed albeit unpopular in these last days!

Posted by Russell Carroll   |  Friday, May 15, 2009   

AND McLain was not in the roster the first 10 days of the season! I was there, man. Thanks for the great reminder, William.

Posted by John Hunsucker   |  Friday, May 15, 2009   

Amen to the article. In my understanding all believers are both gifted and have God-ordered things that they should accomplish in life (Eph 2:10). Pastors who have the primary focus of "equiping ministers" do have a far different approach to all that they do as compared to the orator/preacher who is followed as an excellent speaker and a popular personality. I believe that most popular preacher are passionate for God and are used by God "to feed the flock" so a sharp edge of criticism is not fitting. Saved people tend to serve naturally even if that is not the emphasis of the pulpit ministry. But that said, the biblical model of the church as a functioning body composed of many parts seems to suffer when there are a performers and spectators. How "the equiping of ministers" approach appeals to believers is that it gives them freedom of participation (encouragement to serve) and an awareness of significance as a living part of the body. It seems to me that the centrality of Christ as the only true foundation (1 Cor 3:11; Col 1:18) is developed in the practical sense by giving centrality to the scriptures ("The Word" is one of Christ's titles). I appreciate the article, it does make me think and evaluate my approach.

Posted by Rob Leriger   |  Sunday, May 17, 2009   

Is one considered a spectator when he sits down for a meal at a dinner party? No, he is an active participant. Even if he doesn't say one word.

We focus to little on our responsibilities as recipients of a sermon.

When you look at a congregation who listens Bible open, pen in hand, and taking notes as if what was spoken mattered greatly, you would never confuse them with mere spectators.

Posted by don sands   |  Sunday, May 17, 2009   

And Denny ended up in jail, I think. He had a shot at a great career, without a line drive off his toe.

This post is spot on. All the jojnts and ligaments in the body need to work together. And all the memebers of the Body, the arms, the legs, and even the toes, need to be functioning for the Body to be able to live with a fullness.

Posted by Russell Carroll   |  Monday, May 18, 2009   

A tragic end to the greatest season in history. My family has prayed for him while in prison and we tried to correspond with him. BTW Calvinists and Evangelicals really do agree on election. I totally understand that it is only God, by His choosing, that will draw Denny into the kingdom.

Posted by William du Plooy   |  Monday, May 18, 2009   

Calvin was an astute Evangelical...
If you are in any doubt I would suggest studying his personal life to see his evangelistic and Biblical fervour...
He preached the Gospel so often that the gretest Evangelists are today in great shame, in view of the work that John Calvin did.

BTW - There are many distortions of what is not Historical Calvinistic thought or theology.

Posted by William Stroup   |  Thursday, May 21, 2009   

Strangely enough, I agree with Dr. MacArthur and with Chris P above. I'm beginning to feel like a Dufflepud from Narnia.

Posted by William du Plooy   |  Monday, Jun 1, 2009   

http://teampyro.blogspot.com/2009/06/calvin-writer.html

Just a short treatise concerning Pastor-Theologian-Preacher-Evangelist John Calvin (And that is only some of the offices of responsibility he executed well by the grace of our Almighty Father).

Posted by David Aponte   |  Thursday, Sep 10, 2009   

I hear it often stated by some pastors, "Lord give us more souls" and I believe this to be appropriate. However, with growth comes "more responsibilty" and those who are caring for these souls become more taxed. And thus it is of utmost importance to properly feed and train the laity, in order that they may help in whatever capacities God has them in His church, to the praise of Him who saves! Very good article, thanks . SDG!



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