« Home | the golden years & keifer sutherland » | Reactive Christianity » | MI.GA.2006.3 » | From the guys at Odyssey » | MI.GA.2006 » | an artistic cultural intpretation » | Some "Ps" from Dan Kimball » | Pastoral or Missional? » | Yet Another Episode in a Continuing Saga » | in the know » 

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!

3 comments

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. :)

Post a Comment

In The Beginging

The First Post

Who's Migrating

If you'd like to contribute
email Randy
Free Website Counters
Free Website Counters
hits since 3.29.06