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November 21, 2006 

Why Jesus Couldn't Be A Pastor

Perry Noble just wrote a great blog post on Seven Reasons Why Jesus Could Not Have Been A Pastor In Many Churches... It resonates well with a postmodern, apostolic view of the pastoral role. Enjoy!

Jeremy (or any of the contributors),

Could you please define and clarify the "apostolic view of the pastoral role" as you see it?

Hey, David. I would say Acts stuff. Basic disciple making. How does that happen? First by being Christ follower, not just a believer. Living like Jesus did. Healing, helping, restoring. That's what I would say. Perry points out where I think most of us as pastors are. We're more like polotians than prophets.

I'd definitely agree with Randy, and even clarify it a little bit more:

I think the pastoral role in many churches is has become limited because of a lot of issues: PC, church politics, etc... and in many churches there are unpspoken expecations that the pastor is not a leader meant to lead the church back to its Acts 2 apostolic ethos, but as a status-quo keeper who keeps the boat from being rocked and certainly shouldn't rock the boat for fear of repercussions from a board or cabinet or congregation. When I say an "apostolic view of the pastoral role", that's my knowledge-frame that I'm referencing... The pastor being an apostolic leader to help the church fulfill a missional calling, not a hireling.

Thanks for the question, Dave. I'll try to be more clear in the future. :)

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