BIBLICAL ELDERSHIP
by Alexander Strauch
by Alexander Strauch
Restoring the Eldership
to Its Rightful Place
in the Church
(Revised - Booklet)
to Its Rightful Place
in the Church
(Revised - Booklet)
This FREE HTML version booklet is an abridgment of
Biblical Eldership: An Urgent Call to Restore Biblical Church Eldership
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Biblical Eldership: An Urgent Call to Restore Biblical Church Eldership
You can also get the printed version of this booklet at 1.800.477.3239
http://www.lewisandroth.com/
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LEWIS
AND ROTH PUBLISHERS
Littleton, Colorado 80160-0569 U. S. A.
1.800.477.3239
Littleton, Colorado 80160-0569 U. S. A.
1.800.477.3239
About the Author:
Alexander Strauch lives with his
wife and four children in Littleton, Colorado. The author of The New
Testament Deacon: The Church’s Ministry of Mercy and The Hospitality
Commands, Mr. Strauch has been a teacher and an elder at Littleton Bible
Chapel for the past twenty-five years.
This booklet is an abridgment
of Biblical Eldership: An Urgent Call to Restore Biblical Church Eldership
by Alexander Strauch. Copyright ã 1987, 1997. All rights reserved.
Cover Design: Stephen T. Eames
Editors: Stephen and Amanda Sorenson
All Scripture quotations, except
those noted otherwise, are from the New American Standard Bible, The
Lockman Foundation 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, and are used
by permission.
ISBN 0-936083-15-8
THE PROBLEM
While attending a sacred music
concert, I received an insightful lesson in ecclesiology. As I walked into the
main foyer of the church where the concert was being held, I immediately noticed
the photographs and names of the senior pastor and his staff arranged in a
pyramid within a glass encasement. The senior pastor’s photograph was at the
top, his three associate pastor’s photographs were below, and the rest of the
church staff’s photographs completed the base of the pyramid. As I walked
further into the building and down a side hall, I saw another glass encasement
that contained the photographs and names of the church elders. I immediately
thought, What a superb illustration of how the church elders have been
pushed aside to a scarcely visible position in the church! This is quite
different from the New Testament model of eldership.
My first encounter with church
elders occurred when I was a young teenager preparing for confirmation. During
confirmation classes, I told the minister about my conversion to Christ, which
had taken place the previous summer at a Bible camp. He was so intrigued by my
youthful, exuberant testimony of Christ that he asked me to share my story with
the church elders. So I met with the elders and told them about my new
relationship with Jesus Christ. They sat speechless, looking totally puzzled. I
was saddened by their response because I realized that they didn’t understand
what I was saying. That experience left me with little confidence in the elders
or the church.
My next encounter with church
elders, however, was altogether different. While attending college away from
home, I was invited to a church that taught and practiced authentic biblical
eldership. The elders of this church took seriously the New Testament commands
for elders to be biblically qualified and to actively pastor the flock of God.
They provided strong leadership, loving pastoral care and discipline, sound
Bible teaching, and humble, sacrificial examples of Christian living. As a
result, they were highly esteemed by the church. The inspiring example of these
men first awakened in me a positive interest in the subject of church
eldership.
Later, while attending seminary, my
growing interest in eldership was vigorously challenged. During a class on
church polity, which stubbornly resisted any notion of an elder-led church, I
asked the professor, "But what do you do with all the scriptural texts on
elders?"
He quickly responded, "Numbers
of texts on elders mean nothing!"
I thought, but didn’t have the nerve
to express it publicly, Well, what does mean something? Your nonexistent
texts on clerics? This and other similar experiences served only to stir my
increasing conviction that eldership was a biblically sound doctrine that most
churches either ignored or misinterpreted.
Several years later, I was preparing
a series of sermons on the doctrine of the Church. When I came to the subject
of eldership, I was shocked to discover that there was no full-length book on
the subject. There were small booklets, journal articles, and chapters within
books, but no thorough treatment of the subject from an expository viewpoint.
This lack of exposition was hardly believable, especially when I considered the
elders’ primary role as leaders in the first churches and the number of
scriptural texts devoted to elders. It finally ignited my desire to write on
the subject of eldership.
I don’t believe any doctrine of Holy
Scripture should be neglected or defined out of existence. Yet this is
precisely what many churches have done to the biblical doctrine of eldership.
Even among churches that claim to practice eldership, elders have been reduced
to being temporary, lay, church board members, which is quite contrary to the New
Testament model of pastoral eldership. Although such churches may have an
eldership, it is not a biblical eldership.
Literally tens of thousands of
churches worldwide practice some form of eldership because they believe it to
be a biblical teaching.Unfortunately, because the advocates of eldership have
been so terribly delinquent in adequately articulating this doctrine, a great
deal of confusion and unbiblical thinking surrounds the topic among most
elder-led churches. There are persistent, crippling misconceptions about
eldership that hinder churches from practicing authentic biblical eldership.
This subject is too important to the local church to be bogged down in
confusion and error.
To help remedy this appalling
confusion over eldership, I wrote Biblical Eldership: An Urgent Call to
Restore Biblical Church Leadership. This book was aimed primarily at
churches that practice eldership but may misconstrue its true biblical
Christian character and mandate. This booklet briefly summarizes Biblical
Eldership. Hopefully it will whet your appetite to read the entire book,
but more important, it will motivate you to study further the biblical teaching
on eldership. Precious truths, no doubt, still await discovery.
BIBLICAL ELDERSHIP DEFINED
Despite what all the New Testament
communicates, the doctrine of biblical eldership has been sorely misunderstood.
Even churches that claim to be governed by a plurality of elders have redefined
eldership so that its original purpose and noble standing have, in practice,
been eclipsed by the ordained pastor and his staff. To clarify biblical
eldership in light of contemporary church practices, I present the following
five, distinguishing features of a New Testament, Christian eldership: pastoral
leadership, shared leadership, male leadership, qualified leadership, and
servant leadership.
Pastoral Leadership
When most Christians hear about
church elders, they think of an official church board, lay officials,
influential people within the local church, or advisers to the pastor. They
think of elders as being policymakers, financial officers, fund-raisers, or
administrators. I call these types of elders "board elders." People
don’t expect "board elders" to teach the Word or be involved
pastorally in people’s lives. Victor A. Constien, a Lutheran official and
author of The Caring Elder, illustrated this popular view of the elders’
role when he wrote, "Members of a congregation’s board of elders are not
assistant pastors. They assist their pastor. . . elders help facilitate
and strengthen the working relationship of the church staff."
Such a view, however, not only lacks
scriptural support but flatly contradicts New Testament Scriptures. A person
doesn’t need to read Greek or be professionally trained in theology to
understand that the contemporary, church-board concept of eldership is
irreconcilably at odds with the New Testament definition of eldership.
According to the New Testament, elders lead the church, teach and preach the
Word, protect the church from false teachers, exhort and admonish the saints in
sound doctrine, visit the sick and pray, and judge doctrinal issues. In
biblical terminology, elders shepherd, oversee, lead, and care for the local
church.
Therefore, when Paul and Peter
directly exhort the elders to do their duty, they both employ shepherding
imagery. It should be observed that these two giant apostles assign the task
of shepherding the local church to no other group or single person but the
elders. Paul reminds the Asian elders that God the Holy Spirit placed them
in the flock as overseers for the purpose of shepherding the church of God
(Acts 20:28). Peter exhorts the elders to be all that shepherds should be to
the flock (1 Peter 5:2). We, then, must also view apostolic, Christianized
elders to be primarily pastors of a flock, not corporate executives, CEOs, or
advisers to a pastor.
If we want to understand Christian
elders and their work, we must understand the biblical imagery of shepherding.
As keepers of sheep, biblical elders are to protect, feed, and lead the flock
and to help meet the flock’s many practical needs. Using these four, broad,
pastoral categories, let us briefly consider the examples, exhortations, and
teachings of the New Testament regarding shepherd elders.
Protecting the Flock: A major part of the New Testament
elders’ work is to protect the local church from false teachers. As Paul was
leaving Asia Minor, he summons the elders of the church in Ephesus for a
farewell exhortation. The essence of Paul’s charge is this: guard the
flock--wolves are coming:
And from Miletus he sent to Ephesus and called to him the
elders of the church . . . . "Be on guard for yourselves and for all
the flock, among which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers, to shepherd
the church of God which He purchased with His own blood. I know that after my
departure savage wolves will come in among you, not sparing the
flock; and from among your own selves men will arise, speaking perverse things,
to draw away the disciples after them. Therefore be on the alert."
(Acts 20:17,28-31a; italics added).
According to Paul’s required
qualifications for eldership, a prospective elder must have enough knowledge of
the Bible to be able to refute false teachers:
For this reason I left you in Crete, that you might set in
order what remains, and appoint elders in every city as I directed you, namely,
if any man be above reproach . . . holding fast the faithful word which is in
accordance with the teaching, that he may be able . . . to refute those who
contradict [sound doctrine] (Titus 1:5,6a,9; italics added).
The Jerusalem elders, for example,
met with the apostles to judge doctrinal error: "And the apostles and the
elders came together to look into this [doctrinal] matter" (Acts 15:6).
Like the apostles, the Jerusalem elders had to know the Word so that they could
protect the flock from false teachers.
Feeding the Flock: Unlike modern, church-board elders,
all New Testament elders were required to be "able to teach" (1 Tim.
3:2). Listing elder qualifications in his letter to Titus, Paul states,
"[The elder must hold] fast the faithful word which is in accordance with the
teaching, that he may be able both to exhort in sound doctrine and to refute
those who contradict" (Titus 1:9). In an extremely significant passage on
elders, Paul writes about some elders who labor at preaching and teaching and
thus deserve financial support from the local church:
Let the elders who rule well be considered worthy of double
honor, especially those who work hard at preaching and teaching. For the
Scripture says, "You shall not muzzle the ox while he is threshing,"
and "The laborer is worthy of his wages" (1 Tim. 5:17,18; italics
added).
Paul reminds the Ephesian elders
that he has taught them and the church the full plan and purpose of God:
"For I did not shrink from declaring to you the whole purpose of God"
(Acts 20:27). Now it was time for the elders to do the same. Since elders are
commanded to shepherd the flock of God (Acts 20:28; 1 Peter 5:2), part of their
shepherding task is to see that the flock is fed God’s Word.
Leading the Flock: In biblical language, to shepherd a
nation or any group of people means to lead or govern (2 Sam. 5:2; Ps. 78:71,
72). According to Acts 20 and 1 Peter 5, elders are to shepherd the church of
God. So, to shepherd a local church means, among other things, to lead the
church. To the church in Ephesus, Paul writes, "Let the elders who rule
[lead, direct, manage] well be considered worthy of double honor" (1 Tim.
5:17a). Elders, then, are to lead, direct, govern, manage, and otherwise
care for the flock of God.
In Titus 1:7, Paul insists that a
prospective elder be morally and spiritually above reproach because he will be
"God’s steward." A steward is a "household manager,"
someone with official responsibility over the master’s servants, property, and
even finances. Elders are stewards of God’s household, the local church.
Elders are also called
"overseers," which signifies that they supervise and manage the
church. Peter uses the verb form of overseer when he exhorts the elders:
"Therefore, I exhort the elders among you . . . shepherd the flock of God
among you, exercising oversight" (1 Peter 5:1a,2a). In this
instance, Peter combines the concepts of shepherding and overseeing when he
exhorts the elders to do their duty. Hence we can speak of the elders’ overall
function as being the pastoral oversight of the local church.
Helping to Meet the
Flock’s Many Practical Needs: In
addition to the familiar, broad categories of protecting, feeding, and leading
the flock, elders are also to bear responsibility for meeting the practical,
diverse needs of the flock. For example, James instructs sick members of the
flock to call for the elders of the church: "Is anyone among you sick? Let
him call for the elders of the church, and let them pray over him, anointing
him with oil in the name of the Lord" (James. 5:14). Paul exhorts the
Ephesian elders to care for the weak and needy of the flock: "In
everything I showed you that by working hard in this manner you must help
the weak and remember the words of the Lord Jesus, that He Himself said,
‘It is more blessed to give than to receive’ " (Acts 20:35; italics
added).
As shepherds of the flock, the
elders must be available to meet the sheep’s needs. This responsibility
includes: visiting the sick and comforting the bereaved; strengthening the
weak; praying for all the sheep; visiting new members; providing counsel
for couples who are engaged, married, and/or divorcing; and managing the many,
day-to-day details related to the inner life of the congregation.
Hard Work and Sacrifice: When the church eldership is viewed
as a status or board position in the church, there will be plenty of
volunteers. When it is viewed as a demanding, pastoral work, few people will
rush to volunteer. One reason there are so few shepherd elders or good church
elderships is that, generally speaking, men are spiritually lazy. That is a
major reason why most churches never establish a biblical eldership. Men are
more than willing to let someone else fulfill their spiritual responsibilities,
whether it be their wives, the clergy, or church professionals.
Biblical eldership, however, can’t
exist in an atmosphere of nominal Christianity. There can be no biblical
eldership in a church where there is no biblical Christianity. If a biblical
eldership is to function effectively, it requires men who are firmly committed
to living out our Lord’s principles of discipleship. Biblical eldership is
dependent on men who seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness (Matt.
6:33), men who have presented themselves as living and holy sacrifices to God
and view themselves as slaves of the Lord Jesus Christ (Rom. 12:1,2), men who
love Jesus Christ above all else, men who willingly sacrifice self for the sake
of others, men who seek to love as Christ loved, men who are self-disciplined
and self-sacrificing, and men who have taken up the cross and are willing to
suffer for Christ.
Some people say, "You can’t
expect laymen to rear their families, work all day, and shepherd a local
church." That statement is simply not true. Many people rear families,
work, and give substantial hours of time to community service, clubs, athletic
activities, and/or religious institutions. The cults have built up large lay
movements that survive primarily because of the volunteer time and efforts of
their members. We Bible--believing Christians are becoming a lazy, soft,
pay-for-it-to-be-done group of Christians. It is positively amazing how much
people can accomplish when they are motivated to work toward a goal they love.
I’ve seen people build and remodel houses in their spare time, for example.
I’ve also seen men discipline themselves to gain a phenomenal knowledge of the
Scriptures.
The real problem, then, lies not in
men’s limited time and energy but in false ideas about work, Christian living,
life’s priorities, and--especially--Christian ministry. To the Ephesian elders,
Paul says, "You yourselves know that these hands ministered to my own
needs and to the men who were with me. In everything I showed you that by
working hard in this manner you must help the weak and remember the words of
the Lord Jesus, that He Himself said, ‘It is more blessed to give than to
receive’ " (Acts 20:34, 35). How do working men shepherd the church and
still maintain a godly family life and employment? They do it by
self-sacrifice, self-discipline, faith, perseverance, hard work, and the power
of the Holy Spirit. R. Paul Stevens, author and instructor at Regent College in
Vancouver, British Columbia, sets us on the right track when he writes:
And for tentmakers to survive three full-time jobs (work,
family and ministry), they must also adopt a sacrificial lifestyle. Tentmakers
must live a pruned life and literally find leisure and rest in the rhythm of
serving Christ (Matt. 11:28). They must be willing to forego a measure of
career achievement and private leisure for the privilege of gaining the prize
(Phil. 3:14). Many would like to be tentmakers if they could be wealthy and
live a leisurely and cultured lifestyle. But the truth is that a significant
ministry in the church and the community can only come by sacrifice.
Shared Leadership
Shared leadership should not be a
new concept to a Bible-reading Christian. Shared leadership is rooted in the
Old Testament institution of the elders of Israel and in Jesus’ founding of the
apostolate. It is a highly significant but often overlooked fact that our Lord
did not appoint one man to lead His church. He personally appointed and trained
twelve men. Jesus Christ gave the church plurality of leadership. The
Twelve comprised the first leadership council of the church and, in the most
exemplary way, jointly led and taught the first Christian community. The Twelve
provide a marvelous example of unity, humble brotherly love, and shared
leadership structure.
Shared leadership is also evidenced
by the Seven who were appointed to relieve the Twelve of the responsibility of
dispensing funds to the church’s widows (Acts 6:3-6). The Seven were the
prototype of later deacons. There is no indication that one of the Seven was
the chief and the others were his assistants. As a body of servants, they
worked on behalf of the church in Jerusalem. Based on all the evidence we have,
the deacons--like the elders--formed a collective leadership council.
The New Testament reveals that the
pastoral oversight of many of the first churches was committed to a plurality
of elders. This was true of the earliest, Jewish-Christian churches in
Jerusalem, Judea, and neighboring countries as well as many of the first
Gentile churches. Interestingly enough, Protestants don’t challenge the
plurality of deacons in an effort to create a singular deacon, yet many
challenge the plurality of elders. It is odd that most Christians have no
problem accepting a plurality of deacons but are almost irrationally frightened
by a plurality of elders that is far more evident in the New Testament. Despite
such fears, a plurality of leadership through a council of elders needs to be
preserved just as much as a plurality of deacons.
I am convinced that the underlying
reason many Christians fear the plurality of elders is that they don’t really
understand the New Testament concept of plural elders or its rich benefits to
the local church. New Testament eldership is not, as many think, a high-status,
church-board position that is open to any and all who desire membership. On the
contrary, an eldership patterned after the New Testament model requires
qualified elder candidates to meet specific moral and spiritual qualifications
before they serve (1 Tim. 3:1-7).The qualifications of such elder candidates
must be publicly examined by the church (1 Tim. 3:10). The elders selected must
be publicly installed into office (1 Tim. 5:22; Acts 14:23). They must be
motivated and empowered by the Holy Spirit to do their work (Acts 20:28).
Finally, they must be acknowledged, loved, and honored by the entire
congregation. This honor given by the congregation includes the provision of
financial support to elders who are uniquely gifted at preaching and teaching,
which allows some elders to serve the church full or part time (1 Tim.
5:17,18). Thus a team of qualified, dedicated, Spirit-placed elders is not a
passive, ineffective committee; it is an effective form of leadership structure
that greatly benefits the church family.
A Council of Equals: Leadership by a council of elders is
a form of government found in nearly every society of the ancient Near East. It
was the fundamental, governmental structure of the nation of Israel throughout
its Old Testament history (Ex. 3:16; Ezra 10:8). For Israel--a tribal,
patriarchal society--the eldership was as basic as the family unit. So when the
New Testament records that Paul, a Jew who was thoroughly immersed in the Old
Testament and Jewish culture, appointed elders for his newly founded churches
(Acts 14:23), it means that he established a council of elders in each local
church.
By definition, the elder structure
of government is a collective leadership in which each elder shares equally the
position, authority, and responsibility of the office. There are different
names for this type of leadership structure. More formally it is called
collective, corporate, or collegiate leadership. In contemporary terms, it is
referred to as multiple church leadership, plurality, shared leadership, or team
leadership. I use these terms synonymously throughout this booklet. The
opposite of collective leadership is unitary leadership, monarchical rule, or
one-man leadership.
First Among a Council of
Equals: Leaders Among Leaders: An extremely important but terribly misunderstood aspect of
biblical eldership is the principle of "first among equals" (1 Tim.
5:17). Failure to understand this principle has caused some elderships to be
tragically ineffective in their pastoral care and leadership. Although elders
are to act jointly as a council and share equal authority and responsibility
for the leadership of the church, all elders are not equal in their giftedness,
biblical knowledge, leadership ability, experience, or dedication. Therefore,
those among the elders who are particularly gifted leaders and/or teachers will
naturally stand out among the other elders as leaders and teachers within the
leadership body. This is what the Romans called primus inter pares,
which means "first among equals," or primi inter pares, which
means "first ones among equals."
The principle of "first among
equals" is observed first in our Lord’s dealings with the twelve apostles.
Jesus chose and empowered all of them to preach and heal, but He singled out
three for special attention--Peter, James, and John ("first ones among
equals"). Among the three, as well as among the Twelve, Peter stood out as
the most prominent ("first among equals").
As the natural leader, the chief
speaker, and the man of action, Peter challenged, energized, strengthened, and
ignited the group. Without Peter, the group would have been less effective.
When surrounded by eleven other apostles who were his equals, Peter became
stronger, more balanced, and was protected from his impetuous nature and his
fears. In spite of his outstanding leadership and speaking abilities, Peter
possessed no legal or official rank or title above the other eleven. They were
not his subordinates. They were not his staff or team of assistants. He wasn’t
the apostles’ "senior pastor." He was simply first among his
equals, by our Lord’s approval.
The "first-among-equals"
leadership relationship can also be observed among the Seven who, as we’ve
seen, were chosen to relieve the apostles of certain responsibilities (Acts 6).
Philip and Stephen stand out as prominent figures among the five other brothers
(Acts 6:8-7:60; 8:5-40; 21:8). Yet, as far as the account records, the two held
no special title or status above the others.
The concept of "first among
equals" is further evidenced by the relationship of Paul and Barnabas
during their first missionary journey. They were both apostles, yet Paul was
"first among equals" because he was "the chief speaker" and
dynamic leader (Acts 13:13; 14:12). Although clearly the more gifted of the two
apostles, Paul held no formal ranking over Barnabas; they labored as partners
in the work of the gospel. A similar relationship seems to have existed between
Paul and Silas, who was also an apostle (1 Thess. 2:6).
Finally, the
"first-among-equals" concept is evidenced by the way in which
congregations are to honor their elders. Concerning elders within the church in
Ephesus, Paul writes, "Let the elders who rule well be considered worthy
of double honor, especially those who work hard at preaching and teaching. For
the Scripture says, ‘You shall not muzzle the ox while he is threshing,’ and
‘The laborer is worthy of his wages’ " (1 Tim. 5:17,18). All elders must
be able to teach the Word, but not all of them desire to work fully at
preaching and teaching. The local church should properly care for those who are
specially gifted in teaching and spend the time to do so. Let us be clear about
the fact that it is the spiritual giftedness of the elders that causes the
church to grow and prosper spiritually, not just the eldership form of
government per se.
This doesn’t mean, however, that
elders who are first among their equals do all the thinking and decision making
for the group, or that they become the "pastors" while the others are
"merely elders." To call one elder "pastor" and the rest
"elders," or one elder "the clergyman" and the rest
"lay elders," is to act without biblical precedence. To do so will
not result in a biblical eldership. It will, at least in practice, create a
separate, superior office over the eldership, just as was done during the early
second century when the division between "the overseer" and
"elders" occurred.
The advantage of the principle of
"first among equals" is that it allows for functional, gift-based
diversity within the eldership team without creating an official, superior
office over fellow elders. Just as the leading apostles, such as Peter and
John, bore no special title or formal distinctions from the other apostles,
elders who receive double honor form no official class or receive no special
title. The elders, then, who labor in the Word and exercise good leadership
are, in the words of Scripture, "leading men among the brethren"
(Acts 15:22).
Male Leadership
There is much about biblical
eldership that offends churchgoing people today: the concept of elders who
provide pastoral care, a plurality of pastors, and the idea of so-called
"lay" or nonclerical pastor elders. Yet nothing is more objectionable
in the minds of many contemporary people than the biblical concept of an all-male
eldership. A biblical eldership, however, must be an all-male eldership.
For the Bible-believing Christian,
the primary example of male leadership is found in the person of Jesus Christ.
The most obvious point is that Christ came into the world as the Son of God,
not the daughter of God. His maleness was not an arbitrary matter. It was a
theological necessity, absolutely essential to His person and work.
During His earthly ministry, Jesus
trained and appointed twelve men whom He called "apostles" (Luke
6:13). Jesus’ choice of an all-male apostolate affirmed the creation order as
presented in Genesis 2:18-25. Luke informs us that before choosing the Twelve
Jesus spent the entire night in prayer with His Father (Luke 6:12). As the
perfect Son, in complete obedience and submission to His Father’s will, Jesus
chose twelve males to be His apostles. These men were God the Father’s choice.
Jesus’ choice of male apostles was based on divine principles and guidance, not
local custom or traditions.
As we’ve seen, the Twelve followed
the example of their Lord and Master by appointing seven men, not seven men and
women, when they needed to establish an official body of servants to care for
the church’s widows and funds (Acts 6:1-6). Thirty years after Christ’s ascension
into heaven, Peter wrote to the churches of northwestern Asia Minor and
exhorted his Christian sisters to submit to their husbands in the same way the
"holy women" of the Old Testament age did (1 Peter 3:5). He also
exhorted husbands to care for their wives and reminded them that their wives
were fellow heirs "of the grace of life" (1 Peter 3:7). Thus Peter
continued to follow His Lord’s example and taught both role distinctions and
male-female equality.
The biblical pattern of male
leadership continued throughout the New Testament era. Regarding the marriage
relationship, Paul could not have stated more pointedly the divine order of the
husband-wife relationship. In complete agreement with Peter’s instruction on
the wife’s marital submission, Paul teaches that the husband is empowered and
commanded to lead in the marriage relationship and that the wife is instructed
to submit "as to the Lord." The following texts speak for themselves:
- "Wives, be subject to your own husbands, as to the
Lord" (Eph. 5:22).
- "But as the church is subject to Christ, so also
the wives ought to be to their husbands in everything" (Eph. 5:24).
- "For the husband is the head of the wife, as
Christ also is the head of the church" (Eph. 5:23).
- "Wives, be subject to your husbands, as is fitting
in the Lord" (Col. 3:18).
- "But as for you, speak the things which are
fitting for sound doctrine . . . that they [older women] may encourage the
young women to love their husbands, to love their children, to be
sensible, pure, workers at home, kind, being subject to their own
husbands, that the word of God may not be dishonored" (Titus
2:1,4,5).
Just as Paul teaches male headship
in the family, he teaches male headship in the local church (1 Tim. 2:8-3:7).
Because the family is the basic social unit and the man is the established
family authority, we should expect that men would become the elders of the
larger church family. Consider Paul’s instructions in 1 Timothy 2:12: "But
I do not allow a woman to teach or exercise authority over a man." In the
same way that every individual family is governed by certain standards of
conduct, so the local church family is governed by certain principles of
conduct and social arrangement. The letter of 1 Timothy specifically addresses
the issue of proper order and behavior of men, women, and elders in the local
church family. To his representative in Ephesus, Paul writes, "I am
writing these things to you, hoping to come to you before long; but in case I
am delayed, I write so that you may know how one ought to conduct himself in
the household of God, which is the church of the living God, the pillar and
support of the truth" (1 Tim. 3:14, 15; italics added).
A major aspect of the church’s
social arrangement concerns the behavior of women in the congregation. In the
church in Ephesus, as a result of false teaching that may have challenged the
validity of traditional gender roles, Christian women were acting contrary to
acceptable Christian behavior. In order to counter improper female conduct in
the church, Paul restates Christian principles of women’s conduct: "Let a
woman quietly receive instruction with entire submissiveness. But I do not
allow a woman to teach or exercise authority over a man, but to remain quiet.
For it was Adam who was first created, and then Eve. And it was not Adam who
was deceived, but the woman being quite deceived, fell into transgression"
(1 Tim. 2:11-14).
First Timothy 2:11-14 should settle
the question of women elders. Paul prohibits women from doing two things: (1)
teaching the men of the church; and (2) exercising authority over the men.
Note that immediately following his
instruction in 1 Timothy 2:11-15, that prohibits women from teaching and
leading men, Paul describes the qualifications for those who oversee the local
church (1 Tim. 3:1-7). Significantly, the qualifications assume a male subject.
Thus the overseer is to be "the husband of one wife" and "one
who manages his own household well" (1 Tim. 3:2b,4a). Paul
gives no suggestion of women elders in this passage.
Qualified Leadership
In a letter to a young presbyter
named Nepotian, dated A. D. 394, Jerome (A.D. 345-419) rebukes the churches of
his day for their hypocrisy in showing more concern for the appearance of their
church buildings than the careful selection of their church leaders: "Many
build churches nowadays; their walls and pillars of glowing marble, their
ceilings glittering with gold, their altars studded with jewels. Yet to the
choice of Christ’s ministers no heed is paid."
Multitudes of churches today repeat
similar error. Many of them seem oblivious to the biblical requirements
for their spiritual leaders as well as to the need for each congregation to
properly examine all candidates for leadership qualities in light of biblical
standards (1 Tim. 3:10). The most common mistake made by churches that are
eager to implement biblical eldership is to appoint biblically unqualified men.
Because there is always a need for more shepherds, it is tempting to allow
unqualified, unprepared men to assume leadership in the church. This is,
however, a time-proven formula for failure. A biblical eldership requires
biblically qualified elders.
The overriding concern of the New
Testament in relation to church leadership is to ensure that the right kind of
men will serve as elders and deacons. The offices of God’s church are not
honorary positions bestowed on individuals who have attended church faithfully
or who are senior in years. Nor are these offices to be viewed as church-board
positions to be filled with good friends, rich donors, or charismatic
personalities. Nor are they positions that only graduate seminary students can
fill. The church offices--both eldership and deaconship--are open to all men
who meet the apostolic, biblical requirements. The New Testament unequivocally
emphasizes this. Consider these points:
- To the troubled church in Ephesus, Paul insists that a
properly constituted, biblical Christian church (1 Tim. 3:14,15) must have
qualified, approved elders:
It is a trustworthy statement: if any man aspires to the
office of overseer, it is a fine work he desires to do. An overseer, then,
must be above reproach, the husband of one wife, temperate, prudent,
respectable, hospitable, able to teach, not addicted to wine or pugnacious, but
gentle, uncontentious, free from the love of money. He must be one who
manages his own household well, keeping his children under control with all
dignity (but if a man does not know how to manage his own household, how will
he take care of the church of God?); and not a new convert, lest he become
conceited and fall into the condemnation incurred by the devil. And he must
have a good reputation with those outside the church, so that he may not
fall into reproach and the snare of the devil (1 Tim. 3:1-7; italics added).
- Paul, as we’ve seen, also insists that prospective
elders and deacons be publicly examined in light of the stated list of
qualifications. He writes, "And let these [deacons] also [like the
elders] first be tested [examined]; then let them serve as deacons if they
are beyond reproach" (1 Tim 3:10; cf. 5:24, 25).
- When directing Titus in how to organize churches on the
island of Crete, Paul reminds him to appoint only morally and spiritually
qualified men to be elders. By stating elder qualifications in a letter,
Paul establishes a public list that will guide the local church in its
choice of elders and empower it to hold its elders accountable:
For this reason I left you in Crete, that you might set in
order what remains, and appoint elders in every city as I directed you,
namely, if any man be above reproach, the husband of one wife, having
children who believe, not accused of dissipation or rebellion. For the overseer
must be above reproach as God’s steward, not self-willed, not
quick-tempered, not addicted to wine, not pugnacious, not fond of sordid gain,
but hospitable, loving what is good, sensible, just, devout, self-controlled,
holding fast the faithful word which is in accordance with the teaching, that
he may be able both to exhort in sound doctrine and to refute those who
contradict (Titus 1:5-9; italics added).
- When writing to churches scattered throughout
northwestern Asia Minor, Peter speaks of the kind of men who should be
elders. He exhorts the elders to shepherd the flock "not under
compulsion, but voluntarily, according to the will of God; and not for
sordid gain, but with eagerness; nor yet as lording it over those allotted
to your charge, but proving to be examples to the flock" (1 Peter
5:2, 3).
It is highly noteworthy that the New
Testament provides more instruction concerning the qualifications for eldership
than on any other aspect of eldership. Such qualifications are not required of
all teachers or evangelists. One person may be gifted as an evangelist and be
used of God in that capacity, yet be unqualified to be an elder. An individual
may be an evangelist immediately after conversion, but Scripture says that a
new convert cannot be an elder (1 Tim. 3:6).
When we speak of the elders’
qualifications, most people think that these qualifications are different than
those of the clergy. The New Testament, however, has no separate standards for
professional clergy and lay elders. The reason is simple. There aren’t three
separate offices--pastor, elders, and deacons--in the New Testament-style local
church. There are only two offices--elders and deacons. From the New Testament
perspective, any man in the congregation who desires to shepherd the Lord’s
people and meets God’s requirements for the office can be a pastor elder.
The scriptural qualifications can be
divided into three broad categories relating to moral and spiritual character,
abilities, and Spirit-given motivation.
Moral and Spiritual
Character: Most
of the biblical qualifications relate to each candidate’s moral and spiritual
qualities. The first, overarching qualification is that of being "above
reproach." The meaning of "above reproach" is defined by the
character qualities that follow the term. In both of Paul’s lists of elder
qualifications, the first, specific, character virtue itemized is "the
husband of one wife." This means that each elder must be above reproach in
his marital and sexual life.
The other character qualities stress
the elder’s integrity, self-control, and spiritual maturity. Since elders
govern the church body, each one must be self-controlled in the use of money,
alcohol, and the exercise of his pastoral authority. Since each elder is to be
a model of Christian living, he must be spiritually devout, righteous, a lover
of good, hospitable, and morally above reproach before the non-Christian
community. In pastoral work, relationship skills are preeminent. Thus a
shepherd elder must be gentle, stable, sound-minded, and uncontentious. An
angry, hotheaded man hurts people. So, an elder must not have a dictatorial
spirit or be quick-tempered, pugnacious, or self-willed. Finally, an elder must
not be a new Christian. He must be a spiritually mature, humble, time-proven
disciple of Jesus Christ.
Abilities:Within the lists of elder qualifications, three requirements
address the elder’s abilities to perform the task. He must be able to manage
his family household well, provide a model of Christian living for others to
follow, and be able to teach and defend the faith.
Able to manage his family
household well: An
elder must be able to manage his family household well. The Scripture states,
"He must be one who manages his own household well, keeping his children
under control with all dignity (but if a man does not know how to manage his
own household, how will he take care of the church of God?)" (1 Tim. 3:4,
5). The Puritans referred to the family household as the "little
church." This perspective is in keeping with the scriptural reasoning that
if a man cannot shepherd his family, he can’t shepherd the extended family of
the church. Managing the local church is more like managing a family than
managing a business or state. A man may be a successful businessman, a capable
public official, a brilliant office manager, or a top military leader but be a
terrible church elder or father. Thus a man’s ability to oversee his family
household well is a prerequisite for overseeing God’s household.
Able to provide a model
for others to follow:
An elder must be an example of
Christian living that others will want to follow. Peter reminds the Asian
elders "to be examples to the flock" (1 Peter 5:3b). If a man
is not a godly model for others to follow, he cannot be an elder even if he is
a good teacher and manager. The greatest way to inspire and influence people
for God is through personal example. Character and deeds, not official position
or title, is what really influences people for eternity. Today men and women
crave authentic examples of true Christianity in action. Who can better provide
the week-by-week, long-term examples of family life, business life, and church
life than a local-church elder? That is why it is so important that an elder,
as a living imitator of Christ, shepherd God’s flock in God’s way.
Able to teach and defend
the faith: An elder must be able to teach and
defend the faith. It doesn’t matter how successful a man is in his business,
how eloquently he speaks, or how intelligent he is. If he isn’t firmly
committed to historic, apostolic doctrine and able to instruct people in
biblical doctrine, he does not qualify to be a biblical elder (1 Tim. 3:2;
Titus 1:9).
The New Testament requires that a
pastor elder "[hold] fast the faithful word which is in accordance with
the teaching" (Titus 1:9a). This means that an elder must firmly
adhere to orthodox, historic, biblical teaching. "Elders must not,"
one commentator says, "be chosen from among those who have been toying
with new doctrines." Since the local church is "the pillar and
support of the truth" (1 Tim. 3: 15b), its leaders must be
rock-solid pillars of biblical doctrine or the house will crumble. Since the
local church is also a small flock traveling over treacherous terrain that is
infested with "savage wolves," only those shepherds who know the way
and see the wolves can lead the flock safely to its destination. An elder,
then, must be characterized by doctrinal integrity.
It is essential for an elder to be
firmly committed to apostolic, biblical doctrine so "that he may be able
both to exhort in sound doctrine and to refute those who contradict" (Titus
1:9b). This requires that a prospective elder must have applied himself
for some years to the reading and study of Scripture, that he can reason
intelligently and logically discuss biblical issues, that he has formulated
doctrinal beliefs, and that he has the verbal ability and willingness to teach
other people. There should be no confusion, then, about what a New Testament
elder is called to do. He is to teach and exhort the congregation in sound
doctrine and to defend the truth from false teachers. This is the big
difference between board elders and pastor elders. New Testament elders are
both guardians and teachers of sound, biblical doctrine.
Spirit-given Motivation
for the Task: An
obvious but not insignificant qualification is the elder’s personal desire to
love and care for God’s people. Paul and the first Christians applaud such
willingness and created this popular Christian saying: "If any man aspires
to the office of overseer, it is a fine work he desires to do" (1 Tim.
3:1). Peter, too, insists that an elder must shepherd the flock willingly and
voluntarily (1 Peter 5:2). He knew from years of personal experience that
someone who views spiritual care as an unwanted obligation cannot fulfill the
shepherding task. An elder who serves grudgingly or under constraint is
incapable of genuinely caring for people. He will be an unhappy, impatient,
guilty, fearful, and ineffective shepherd. Shepherding God’s people through
this sin-weary world is far too difficult a task--fraught with too many
problems, dangers, and demands--to be entrusted to someone who lacks the will
and desire to do the work effectively.
A true desire to lead the family of
God is always a Spirit-generated desire. Paul reminds the Ephesian elders that
the Holy Spirit--not the church or the apostles--placed them as overseers in
the church to shepherd the flock of God (Acts 20:28). The Spirit called them to
shepherd the church and moved them to care for the flock. The Spirit planted
the pastoral desire in their hearts. He gave them the compulsion and strength
to do the work and also the wisdom and appropriate gifts to care for the flock.
The elders were His wise choice to complete the task. In the church of God, it
is not man’s will that matters; it is God’s will and arrangement that matter.
So, the only men who qualify for eldership are those whom the Holy Spirit gives
the motivation and gifts for the task.
A biblical eldership, then, is a
biblically qualified team of shepherd leaders. A plurality of unqualified
elders provides no significant benefit to the local church. I agree fully with
the counsel of Jon Zens, who writes, "Better have no elders than the wrong
ones." The local church must in all earnestness insist on biblically
qualified elders, even if such men take years to develop.
Servant Leadership
Just as Christianity influenced the
Roman Empire, the Greco-Roman world also affected the course of Christianity.
Citing pagan influences on early Christianity, Kenneth Scott
Latourette--renowned church historian and professor of Christian
missions--states that the Roman concepts of power and rule corrupted the
organization and life of the early churches. He observes that "the Church
was being interpenetrated by ideals which were quite contrary to the Gospel,
especially the conception and use of power which were in stark contrast to the
kind exhibited in the life and teaching of Jesus and in the cross and the
resurrection." This, Latourette goes on to say, proved to be "the
menace which was most nearly disastrous" to Christianity.
I believe it is more accurate to say
that the conceptual and structural changes that occurred within the church
during the early centuries of Christianity proved to be disastrous.
Christianity, the humblest of all faiths, degenerated into the most power-hungry
and hierarchical religion on earth. After Emperor Constantine elevated
Christianity to legal religious status in A.D. 312, the once-persecuted
Christians fiercely persecuted all their opposition. An unscriptural clerical
and priestly caste arose that was consumed by the quest for power, position,
and authority. Even Roman emperors had a guiding hand in the development of
Christian churches. The pristine character of the New Testament church
community was lost.
When we read the Gospels, however,
we see that the principles of brotherly community, love, humility, and
servanthood are at the very heart of Christ’s teaching. Unfortunately, like
many of the early Christians, we have been slow to understand these great virtues
and especially slow to apply them to church structure and leadership style.
New Testament, Christlike elders are
to be servant leaders, not rulers or dictators. God doesn’t want His people to
be used by petty, self-serving tyrants. Elders are to choose a life of service
on behalf of others. Like the servant Christ, they are to sacrifice their time
and energy for the good of others. Only elders who are loving, humble servants
can genuinely manifest the incomparable life of Jesus Christ to their congregations
and a watching world.
A group of elders, however, can
become a self-serving, autocratic leadership body. Thus Peter, using the same
terminology as Jesus, warns the Asian elders against abusive, lordly
leadership: ". . . nor yet as lording it over those allotted to your
charge, but proving to be examples to the flock" (1 Peter 5:3). Peter also
charges the elders, as well as everyone else in the congregation, to clothe
themselves in humility just as Jesus clothed Himself in humility: "All of
you, clothe yourselves with humility toward one another, for God is opposed to
the proud, but gives grace to the humble" (1 Peter 5:5b). With
similar concern, Paul reminds the Ephesian elders of his example of humility.
In Acts 20:19, he describes his manner of "serving the Lord with all
humility" and implies that they, too, must serve the Lord in the same
manner. Because of pride’s lurking temptation, a new Christian should not be an
elder: "And not a new convert, lest he become conceited and fall into the
condemnation incurred by the devil" (1 Tim. 3:6).
In addition to shepherding others
with a servant spirit, the elders must humbly and lovingly relate to one
another. They must be able to patiently build consensus, compromise, persuade,
listen, handle disagreement, forgive, receive rebuke and correction, confess
sin, and appreciate the wisdom and perspective of others--even those with whom
they disagree. They must be able to submit to one another, speak kindly and
gently to one another, be patient with their fellow colleagues, defer to one
another, and speak their minds openly in truth and love. Stronger and more
gifted elders must not use their giftedness, as talented people sometimes do,
to force their own way by threatening to leave the church and take their followers
with them. Such selfishness creates ugly, carnal power struggles that endanger
the unity and peace of the entire congregation.
The humble-servant character of the
eldership doesn’t imply, however, an absence of authority. The New Testament
terms that describe the elders’ position and work--"God’s stewards,"
"overseers," "shepherd," "leading"--imply
authority as well as responsibility. Peter could not have warned the Asian
elders against "lording it over those allotted to your charge" (1
Peter 5:3) if they had no authority. As shepherds of the church, elders have
been given the authority to lead and protect the local church (Acts 20:28-31).
The key issue is the attitude in which elders exercise that authority.
Following the biblical model, elders
must not wield the authority given to them in a heavy-handed way. They must not
use manipulative tactics, play power games, or be arrogant and aloof. They must
never think that they are unanswerable to their fellow brethren or to God.
Elders must not be authoritarian, which is incompatible with humble
servanthood. When we consider Paul’s example and that of our Lord’s, we must
agree that biblical elders do not dictate; they direct. True elders do not
command the consciences of their brethren but appeal to their brethren to
faithfully follow God’s Word. Out of love, true elders suffer and bear the
brunt of difficult people and problems so that the lambs are not bruised. The
elders bear the misunderstandings and sins of other people so that the assembly
may live in peace. They lose sleep so that others may rest. They make great
personal sacrifices of time and energy for the welfare of others. They see
themselves as men under authority. They depend on God for wisdom and help, not
on their own power and cleverness. They face the false teachers’ fierce
attacks. They guard the community’s liberty and freedom in Christ so that the
saints are encouraged to develop their gifts, to mature, and to serve one
another.
In summary, using Paul’s great love
chapter, we can say that a servant elder "is patient . . . kind . . . not
jealous; . . . [a servant elder] does not brag . . . [a servant elder] is not
arrogant, does not act unbecomingly . . . does not seek [his] . . . own . . .
[a servant elder]is not provoked, does not take into account a wrong suffered,
does not rejoice in unrighteousness, but rejoices with the truth; [a servant
elder] bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all
things" (1 Cor. 13:4-7).
BIBLICAL EVIDENCE FOR PASTORAL LEADERSHIP BY THE PLURALITY OF ELDERS
Christians who profess the Bible to
be God’s infallible, all-sufficient Word agree that they must establish their
church practices and doctrines on the teachings of the Bible. Many contemporary
scholars say, however, that the New Testament is ambiguous or silent regarding
the topic of church government and conclude that no one can insist upon a
biblical model of church government (by elders or anyone else) for all churches
because the Bible doesn’t. George Eldon Ladd, author of A Theology of the
New Testament and former professor at Fuller Theological Seminary,
expresses this view most concisely: "It appears likely that there was no
normative pattern of church government in the apostolic age, and that the
organizational structure of the church is no essential element in the theology
of the church." Although this is a widely held view among scholars today,
it must be challenged because it simply does not fit biblical evidence.
In its major features, local church
leadership (or government) by the plurality of elders is plainly and amply set
forth by the New Testament writers. J. Alec Motyer, former principal of Trinity
College in Bristol, England, captures the true spirit of the New Testament when
he writes, " . . . it is not as much as hinted in the New Testament that
the church would ever need--or indeed should ever want or tolerate--any other
local leadership than that of the eldership group."
Not only does the New Testament
record the existence of elders in numerous churches, it also gives instruction
about elders and to elders. In fact, the New Testament offers more instruction
regarding elders than it does regarding such important church subjects such as
the Lord’s Supper, the Lord’s Day, baptism, and spiritual gifts. When you
consider the New Testament’s characteristic avoidance of detailed regulation
and church procedures (when it is compared to the Old Testament), the attention
given to elders is amazing. "This is why," writes Jon Zens, editor of
the journal Searching Together, "we need to seriously consider the
doctrine of eldership; it jumps out at us from the pages of the New Testament,
yet it has fallen into disrepute and is not being practiced as a whole in local
churches."
A Consistent, New
Testament Pattern
To hear some scholars speak, you
would think that the Bible doesn’t say one word about church elders or church
government. But that is not true. The New Testament records evidence of
pastoral oversight by a council of elders in nearly all the first churches.
These local churches were spread over a wide geographical and culturally
diverse area--from Jerusalem to Rome.
Examples of Eldership: Consider,
as recorded in the New Testament, the consistent pattern of plural leadership
by elders that existed among the first Christian churches.
·Elders
are found in the churches of Judea and the surrounding area (Acts 11:30; James
5:14, 15).
·Elders governed the church in Jerusalem (Acts 15, 21).
·Among the Pauline churches, leadership by the plurality of
elders was established in the churches in Derbe, Lystra, Iconium, and Antioch
(Acts 14:20-23); in the church in Ephesus (Acts 20:17; 1 Tim. 3:1-7; 5:17-25);
in the church in Philippi (Phil. 1:1); and in the churches on the island of
Crete (Titus 1:5).
- According to the well-traveled letter of 1 Peter,
elders existed in churches throughout northwestern Asia Minor: Pontus,
Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia (1 Peter 1:1; 5:1).
- There are strong indications that elders existed in
churches in Thessalonica (1 Thess. 5:12) and Rome (Heb. 13:17).
Instruction About Elders: Not only does the New Testament
provide examples of elder-led churches, it includes explicit instructions to
churches about how to care for, protect, discipline, select, restore, and call
the elders. The apostles intended these instructions to be obeyed, and they
should be regarded as normative teaching for all Christian churches at all
times.
- James instructs those who are sick to call for the
elders of the church (James 5:14).
- Paul instructs the Ephesian church to financially
support elders who labor "at preaching and teaching" (1 Tim.
5:17, 18).
- Paul instructs the local church about protecting elders
from false accusation, disciplining elders who sin, and restoring fallen
elders (1 Tim. 5:19-22).
- Paul instructs the church regarding the proper
qualifications for eldership (1 Tim. 3:1-7; Titus 1:5-9).
- To the church in Ephesus, Paul states that anyone who
desires to be an elder desires a "fine work" (1 Tim. 3:1).
- Paul instructs the church to examine the qualifications
of prospective elders (1 Tim. 3:10; 5:24, 25).
- Peter instructs the young men of the church to submit
to church elders (1 Peter 5:5).
- Paul teaches that elders are the household stewards,
leaders, instructors, and teachers of the local church (Titus 1:7, 9; 1
Thess. 5:12;).
Instruction and Exhortation
to Elders: Besides
giving instruction to churches about elders, Paul, Peter, and James give these
instructions directly to elders:
- James tells elders to pray for the sick and anoint them
with oil in the name of the Lord (James 5:14).
- Peter directly charges elders to willingly pastor and
oversee the local congregation (1 Peter 5:1, 2).
- Peter warns elders not to be too domineering (1 Peter
5:3).
- Peter promises elders that when the Lord Jesus returns
they will receive "the unfading crown of glory" (1 Peter 5:4).
- Peter exhorts elders to be clothed in humility (1 Peter
5:5).
- Paul reminds the Ephesians elders that the Holy Spirit
placed them in the church to be overseers and pastor the church of God
(Acts 20:28).
- Paul exhorts elders to guard the church from false
teachers (Acts 20:28) and to be alert to the constant threat of false
doctrine (Acts 20:31).
- Paul reminds elders to work hard, help the needy, and
be generous like the Lord Jesus Christ (Acts 20:35).
Promotes the True Nature
of the New Testament-Style Local Church
The local church’s structure of
government makes a profound statement about the nature of the local church and
its philosophy of ministry. The local church is not an undefined mass of
people; it is a particular group of people that has a unique character, mission,
and purpose. I am convinced that the elder structure of government best
harmonizes with and promotes the true nature of the local church as revealed in
the New Testament. We will consider four ways in which the elder structure of
government complements the nature and theology of the local church.
The Church Is a
Close-knit Family of Brothers and Sisters: Of
the different New Testament terms used to describe the nature of the
church--the body, the bride, the temple, the flock--the one most frequently
used is the family, particularly the fraternal aspect of the family--brothers
and sisters. Robert Banks, a prominent leader in the worldwide, home-church
movement, makes this observation in his book, Paul’s Idea of Community:
Although in recent years Paul’s metaphors for community have
been subjected to quite intense study, especially his description of it as a
"body," his application to it of "household" or
"family" terminology has all too often been overlooked or only mentioned
in passing.
Banks further
comments on the frequency and significance of these familial expressions:
So
numerous are these, and so frequently do they appear, that the comparison of
the Christian community with a "family" must be regarded as the most
significant metaphorical usage of all.... More than any of the other images
utilized by Paul, it reveals the essence of his thinking about community.
The local Christian church, then, is
to be a close-knit family of brothers and sisters. Brotherliness also provided
a key guiding principle for the management of relationships between Christians
(Rom. 14:15,21; 1 Cor. 6:8; 8:11-13; 2 Thess. 3:14,15; Philem. 15,16; James
4:11). Jesus insisted that His followers were true brothers and sisters and
that none among them should act like the rabbis of His day who elevated
themselves above their fellow countrymen:
"But they do all their deeds to be noticed by men; for
they broaden their phylacteries, and lengthen the tassels of their garments.
And they love the place of honor at banquets, and the chief seats in the
synagogues, and respectful greetings in the market places, and being called by
men, Rabbi. But do not be called Rabbi; for One is your Teacher, and you
are all brothers" (Matt. 23:5-8; italics added).
In complete obedience to Christ’s teaching
on humility and brotherhood, the first Christians resisted special titles,
sacred clothing, chief seats, and lordly terminology to highlight their
community leaders. They also chose an appropriate leadership structure for
their local congregations--leadership by a council of elders. The first
Christians found within their biblical heritage a structure of government that
was compatible with their new, spiritual family and their theological beliefs.
Israel was a great family, composed of many individual families. The nation
found leadership by a plurality of elders to be a suitable form of
self-government that provided fair representation to its members. The same is
true of the local Christian church. The elder structure of government suits an
extended family organization like the local church. It allows any brother in
the community who desires it and qualifies for it to share fully in the
leadership of the community.
The Church Is a
Nonclerical Community: The local church is not only an
intimate, loving family of redeemed brothers and sisters, it is a nonclerical
family. Unlike Israel, which was divided into sacred priestly members and lay
members, the first-century, Christian church was a people’s movement. The
distinguishing mark of Christianity was not found in a clerical hierarchy but
in the fact that God’s Spirit came to dwell within ordinary, common people and
that through them the Spirit manifested Jesus’ life to the believing community
and the world.
It is an immensely profound truth
that no special priestly or clerical class that is distinct from the whole
people of God appears in the New Testament. Under the new covenant ratified by
the blood of Christ, every member of the church of Jesus Christ is a holy
saint, a royal priest, and a Spirit-gifted member of the body of Christ. Paul
teaches that a wide diversity of gifts and services exists within the body of
Christ (1 Cor. 12), but he says absolutely nothing about a mystical gap between
sacred clergy and common laity. If it exists, surely something as fundamental
to the Church as a clergy-laity division should at least be mentioned in the
New Testament. The New Testament, however, stresses the oneness of the people
of God (Eph. 2:13-19) and the dismantling of the sacred-secular concept that existed
between priest and people under the old covenant (1 Peter 2:5-10; Rev. 1:6).
Clericalism does not represent
biblical, apostolic Christianity. Indeed, the real error to be contended with
is not simply that one man provides leadership for the congregation, but that
one person in the holy brotherhood has been sacralized apart from the
brotherhood to an unscriptural status. In practice, the ordained clergyman--the
minister, the reverend--is the Protestant priest.
Biblical eldership cannot exist in
an environment of clericalism. Paul’s employment of the elder structure of
government for the local church is clear, practical evidence against
clericalism because the eldership is nonclerical in nature. The elders are
always viewed in the Bible as "elders of the people" or "elders
of the congregation," never "elders of God." The elders
represent the people as leading members from among the people.
When establishing churches, Paul
never ordains a priest or cleric to perform the church’s ministry. When he
establishes a church, he leaves behind a council of elders chosen from among
the believers to jointly oversee the local community (Acts 14:23; Titus 1:5).
Obviously that was all he believed that a local church needed. Since the local
congregation of his day was composed of saints, priests, and Spirit-empowered
servants, and since Christ was present with each congregation through the
person of the Holy Spirit, none of the traditional, religious trappings such as
sacred sites, sacred buildings, or sacred personnel (priests, clerics, or holy
men) were needed. Nor could such be tolerated. To meet the need for community
leadership and protection, Paul provides the nonclerical, elder structure of
government--a form of government that would not demean the lordship of Christ
over His people or the glorious status of a priestly, saintly body of people in
which every member ministered.
The Church Is a
Humble-Servant Community: I am convinced that one reason the apostles chose the elder
system of government was because it enhanced the loving, humble-servant
character of the Christian family. The New Testament offers a consistent
example of shared leadership as the ideal structure of leadership in a
congregation where love, humility, and servanthood are paramount. When it functions
properly, shared leadership requires a greater exercise of humble servanthood
than does unitary leadership. In order for an eldership to operate effectively,
the elders must show mutual regard for one another, submit themselves one to
another, patiently wait upon one another, genuinely consider one another’s
interests and perspectives, and defer to one another. Eldership, then, enhances
brotherly love, humility, mutuality, patience, and loving
interdependence--qualities that are to mark the servant church.
Furthermore, shared leadership is
often more trying than unitary leadership. It exposes our impatience with one
another, our stubborn pride, our bullheadedness, our selfish immaturity, our
domineering disposition, our lack of love and understanding of one another, and
our prayerlessness. It also shows how underdeveloped and immature we really are
in humility, brotherly love, and the true servant spirit. Like the saints at
Corinth, we are quick to develop our knowledge and public gifts but slow to mature
in love and humility.
I believe that churches today
desperately need a revival of love, humility, and the servant spirit. Such a
revival must begin with our leaders, and biblical eldership provides the
structure through which leaders learn to work together in mutual love and
humility. Since the eldership represents a microcosm of the entire church, it
provides a living model of loving relationships and servanthood for the entire
body. Thus, leadership by a plurality of elders ideally suits the humble-servant
church.
The Church Is Under
Christ’s Headship: Most important, biblical eldership
guards and promotes the preeminence and position of Christ over the local
church. Jesus left His disciples with the precious promise that "where two
or three have gathered together in My name, there I am in their midst"
(Matt. 18:20). Because the apostles knew that Jesus Christ, by the Holy Spirit,
was uniquely present with them as Ruler, Head, Lord, Pastor, Master, Overseer,
High Priest, and King, they chose a form of government that reflected this
distinctive, fundamental, Christian truth. This truth was not a theoretical
idea to the early Christians--it was reality. The first churches were truly
Christ centered and Christ dependent. Christ alone provided all they needed in
order to be in full fellowship with God and one another. Christ’s person and
work was so infinitely great, final, and complete that nothing--even in
appearance--could diminish the centrality of His presence among and sufficiency
for His people.
So, during the first century no
Christian would have dared to take the position or title of sole ruler,
overseer, or pastor of the church. We Christians today, however, are so
accustomed to speaking of "the pastor" that we do not stop to realize
that the New Testament does not. This fact is profoundly significant, and we
must not permit our customary practice to shield our minds from this important
truth. There is only one flock and one Pastor (John 10:16), one body and one
Head (Col. 1:18), one holy priesthood and one great High Priest (Heb. 4:14ff),
one brotherhood and one Elder Brother (Rom. 8:29), one building and one
Cornerstone (1 Peter 2:5ff.), one Mediator, and one Lord. Jesus Christ is the
"Senior Pastor," and all others are His undershepherds (1 Peter 5:4).
To symbolize the reality of Christ’s
leadership and presence over the local church and its leaders, one church
places an empty chair at the table next to the chairman during all elders’
meetings. This is a visual reminder to the elders of Christ’s presence and
lordship, of their position as His undershepherds, and of their dependence on
Him through prayer and the Word.
Promotes the Protection
and Sanctification of Spiritual Leaders
We come now to two, extremely
significant reasons for and benefits of pastoral leadership by a council of
qualified elders. First, the shared leadership structure of eldership provides
necessary accountability protection from the particular sins that plague
spiritual leaders. In turn, this protects the spiritual character of the local
church and the testimony of the Lord’s name. Second, the eldership structure
provides peer relationships to help balance elders’ weaknesses and correct
their character, an essential component in the sanctification process of
spiritual leaders.
Leadership
Accountability: English historian Lord Acton said,
"Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely."
Because of our biblical beliefs in the dreadful realities of sin, the curse,
Satan, and human depravity, we should understand well why people in positions of
power are easily corrupted. In fact, the better we understand the exceeding
sinfulness and deceitfulness of sin, the stronger our commitment to
accountability will be. The collective leadership of a biblical eldership
provides a formal structure for genuine accountability.
Shared, brotherly leadership
provides needed restraint concerning such sins as pride, greed, and
"playing god." Earl D. Radmacher, chancellor of a Baptist seminary in
America, writes, "Human leaders, even Christian ones, are sinners and they
only accomplish God’s will imperfectly. Multiple leaders, therefore, will serve
as a ‘check and balance’ on each other and serve as a safeguard against the
very human tendency to play God over other people."
It was never our Lord’s will for one
individual to control the local church. The concept of the pastor as the
lonely, trained professional--the sacred person presiding over the church who
can never really become a part of the congregation--is utterly unscriptural.
Not only is this concept unscriptural, it is psychologically and spiritually
unhealthy. Radmacher goes on to contrast the deficiencies of a church
leadership that is placed primarily in the hands of one pastor to the
wholesomeness of leadership when it is shared by multiple pastors:
Laymen . . . are indifferent because they are so busy. They
have no time to bother with church matters. Church administration is left,
therefore, largely in the hands of the pastor. This is bad for him, and it is
bad also for the church. It makes it easier for the minister to build up in
himself a dictatorial disposition and to nourish in his heart the love of
autocratic power.
It is my
conviction that God has provided a hedge against these powerful temptations by
the concept of multiple elders. The check and balance that is provided by men
of equal authority is most wholesome and helps to bring about the desired
attitude expressed by Peter to the plurality of elders: ". . . shepherd
the flock of God among you, not under compulsion, but voluntarily, according to
the will of God; and not for sordid gain, but with eagerness; nor yet as
lording it over those allotted to your charge, but proving to be examples to
the flock (1 Peter 5:2,3)."
In addition to providing close
accountability, genuine partnership, and peer relationships--the very things
most imperial pastors shrink from at all costs--shared leadership provides the
local church shepherd with accountability for his work. Church leaders (like
all of us) can be lazy, forgetful, fearful, or too busy to fulfill their
responsibilities. Thus they need colleagues in ministry to whom they are
answerable for their work. Coaches know that athletes who train together push
one another to greater achievement. When someone else is running alongside him
or her, a runner will push a little harder and go a little faster. The same is
true in the Lord’s work. That is one reason why the Lord sent out His disciples
in twos.
Peer Relationships:One of the deep joys of my life has been to share the
pastoral leadership of a church with a team of dedicated pastor elders. As
partners in the work of shepherding God’s precious, blood-bought people, we
have sharpened, balanced, comforted, protected, and strengthened one another
through nearly every conceivable life situation. I do not hesitate to say that
the relationship with my fellow elders has been the most important tool God has
used, outside of my marriage relationship, for the spiritual development of my
Christian character, leadership abilities, and teaching ministry. The eldership
has played a major role in the sanctification process of my Christian life.
Shared leadership can provide a
church leader with critically needed recognition of his faults and deficiencies
and can help to offset them.. We all have blind spots, eccentricities, and
deficiencies. We all have what C. S. Lewis called "a fatal flaw." We
can see these fatal flaws so clearly in others but not in ourselves. These
fatal flaws or blind spots distort our judgment. They deceive us. They can even
destroy us. This is particularly true of multitalented, charismatic leaders.
Blind to their flaws and extreme views, some talented leaders have destroyed
themselves because they had no peers who could confront and balance them and,
in fact, wanted none.
When a single leader is atop a
pyramidal structure of organization, the important balancing of one another’s
weaknesses and strengths normally does not occur. Note the strong language
Robert Greenleaf, author of the book Servant Leadership, uses to convey
his observations:
To be a lone chief atop a pyramid is abnormal and
corrupting. None of us are perfect by ourselves, and all of us need the
help and correcting influence of close colleagues. When someone is moved atop a
pyramid, that person no longer has colleagues, only subordinates. Even the
frankest and bravest of subordinates do not talk with their boss in the same
way that they talk with colleagues who are equals, and normal communication
patterns become warped.
I believe that traditional,
single-church pastors would improve their character and ministry if they had
genuine peers to whom they were regularly accountable and with whom they worked
jointly.
An Apostolic Directive
Since Paul established the elder
structure of government among Gentile churches (Acts 14:23) and, most likely,
the Twelve established it among Jewish churches (Acts 15:6; James 5:14), the
New Testament writers assumed eldership to be a fixed, apostolic institution.
In Titus 1:5, Paul tells Titus and the churches that a church is not properly
ordered until qualified elders (plural) have been appointed. So he orders Titus
to install elders: "Appoint elders in every city as I directed you"
(Titus 1:5b). By doing this, Paul is going against customary cultural
practices because both the Jewish synagogue and Greco-Roman society commonly
practiced one-man oversight. Thus Paul’s choice of the elder structure of
government is intentional. He is not simply accommodating himself to current
social norms. His instruction to Titus establishes an apostolic directive that
should be followed by Christians today.
Many scholars contend, however, that
only the instructions about elders, not the elder structure, are universally
binding on churches. They say that Paul’s instructions regarding the
qualifications of an elder are binding but that the structure is not. By making
this distinction, they can eliminate the eldership structure from the church
and apply the biblical instructions to their self-appointed institutions--the
clerical structure or the singular pastorate. But this is an erroneous
distinction. How, for example, would a critically important passage such as 1
Timothy 5:17, 18 apply to the singular pastorate? This instruction makes sense
only in the context of a plurality of elders.
I conclude, therefore, that the
instructions given to elders and about elders, as well as the eldership
structure itself, are to be regarded as apostolic directives (Titus 1:5) that
are normative for churches today. Ladd is quite wrong when he claims that
"there was no normative pattern of church government in the apostolic age,
and that the organizational structure of the church is no essential element in
the theology of the church."
We would do well to heed Alfred
Kuen’s sober warning against doubting the full sufficiency of Scripture in
order to direct the practices of our churches today. Kuen, a Bible teacher at
the Emmaus Bible Institute in Switzerland, writes:
Has not the history of twenty centuries of Christianity
proved that the plan of the primitive church is the only one which is suitable
for all times and places, is most flexible in its adaptation to the most
diverse conditions, is the best able to resist and stand against persecutions,
and offers the maximum of possibilities for the full development of the
spiritual life?
Each time
that man has believed himself to be more intelligent than God, that he has
painstakingly developed a religious system "better adapted to the
psychology of man," more conformable to the spirit of our times, instead
of simply following the neotestamentary model, his attempt has been short-lived
because of failure due to some unforeseen difficulty.
All
heresies and deviations in the church spring from the abandonment of the
Scripture and of the model for the church which they present.
In short, as Alfred Kuen concludes,
"the churches established by the apostles remain the valid models for
churches of all times and places."
CONCLUSION
A filing cabinet drawer full of
objections can be raised against pastoral leadership by a plurality of elders.
For the Bible-believing Christian, however, the real issue is this: is pastoral
leadership by a plurality of elders biblical? Is it apostolic? It is my
contention that it is! Both the apostles, Paul and Peter, mandate that the
local church elders pastor the flock of God (Acts 20:28; 1 Peter 5:1, 2; cf.
Titus 1:5). We have no right, then, to take away the elders’ God-given mandate.
Yet that is precisely what most churches have done by applying the apostolic
mandate to shepherd the local church to a single, professional pastor and by
subordinating the eldership to the pastor. Where in the New Testament do we
find references to the ordained (reverend-clergyman) pastor and his advising
elders? We don’t! We find only pastor elders mentioned.
We must admit, however, that most
traditional, clergy-led churches will find pastoral leadership by a plurality
of qualified pastor elders to be difficult if not impossible to implement. So,
to try to implement biblical eldership will require two conditions. First, each
local church and its leaders must be firmly convinced that eldership is a
scriptural teaching. Second, the local church must be committed to make the difficult,
personal changes necessary in order to make eldership work for God’s glory.
These two conditions, of course, are
essential when implementing any unfamiliar or difficult biblical practice or
doctrine. If you were to ask, for example, "does marriage work?" many
people would answer that it doesn’t appear to be working. So should we discard
the institution of marriage and look for something better? No! The marriage
institution is God’s will for the human race, as revealed in the Bible. So, in
order to make marriage work we must first believe it to be a biblical teaching
and then be committed to making it work. Only then will marriage work. The same
conditions hold true for implementing a biblical eldership. We must believe it
is scriptural and be committed by God’s help to making it work effectively.
To be sure, the incorporation of
pastoral eldership into the local church is not the cure-all for every problem.
Eldership creates its own problems, and these must be understood and
continually addressed. However, when properly implemented, biblical eldership
allows the church to be what God designed it to be, fosters the spiritual
development of the leading men within the church family, and honors the
teaching of God’s precious Word.
The
following materials on church eldership can also be ordered from
Lewis & Roth Publishers (1-800-477-3239) your or local book store
Lewis & Roth Publishers (1-800-477-3239) your or local book store
Recommended Reading by PeaceMakers
Alexander Strauch's
338 Page-Revised And Expanded Edition
BIBLICAL ELDERSHIP
AN URGENT CALL
TO RESTORE BIBLICAL
CHURCH LEADERSHIP
ISBN 0-936083-11-5
Copyright by Lewis and Roth Publishers
To Order Call 1.800.477.323
338 Page-Revised And Expanded Edition
BIBLICAL ELDERSHIP
AN URGENT CALL
TO RESTORE BIBLICAL
CHURCH LEADERSHIP
ISBN 0-936083-11-5
Copyright by Lewis and Roth Publishers
To Order Call 1.800.477.323
Table of Contents:
PART ONE--BIBLICAL ELDERSHIP
Chapter 1 Pastoral Leadership
Chapter 2 Shared Leadership
Chapter 3 Male Leadership
Chapter 4 Qualified Leadership
Chapter 5 Servant Leadership
Chapter 1 Pastoral Leadership
Chapter 2 Shared Leadership
Chapter 3 Male Leadership
Chapter 4 Qualified Leadership
Chapter 5 Servant Leadership
PART TWO--DEFENSE OF BIBLICAL ELDERSHIP
Chapter 6 Bible-Based Leadership Structure
Chapter 6 Bible-Based Leadership Structure
PART THREE--THE EXPOSITION OF SCRIPTURE
Chapter 7 The Acts of the Apostles
Chapter 8 Paul's Letter to the Churches
Chapter 9 Paul's Instruction to Timothy
Chapter 10 Paul's Instruction to Titus
Chapter 11 Pauls Instruction to the Asian Elders
Chapter 12 Jame's Instruction to the Sick
Chapter 13 Hebrews: Obey Your Leaders
Chapter 7 The Acts of the Apostles
Chapter 8 Paul's Letter to the Churches
Chapter 9 Paul's Instruction to Timothy
Chapter 10 Paul's Instruction to Titus
Chapter 11 Pauls Instruction to the Asian Elders
Chapter 12 Jame's Instruction to the Sick
Chapter 13 Hebrews: Obey Your Leaders
PART FOUR--RELATED TOPICS
Chapter 14 Appointment of Elders
Chapter 15 Elders and the Congregation
Chapter 14 Appointment of Elders
Chapter 15 Elders and the Congregation
Richard Swartley's
8 1/2 x 11
Twelve Lessons
Mentor's Guide To
BIBLICAL ELDERSHIP
AN URGENT CALL
TO RESTORE BIBLICAL
CHURCH LEADERSHIP
ISBN 0-936083-12-3
Copyright by Lewis and Roth Publishers
To Order Call 1.800.477.3239
Table of Contents
LESSON 1 OLD TESTAMENT ELDERS -JOB
LESSON 2 MEN OF SOUND DOCTRINE AND WISDOM
LESSON 3 THE FIRST ELDER APPOINTMENTS
LESSON 4 PROTECTING THE FLOCK FROM FALSE TEACHERS
LESSON 5 HUMBLE SERVANTS AND THE CHIEF SHEPHERD
LESSON 6 TEAM LEADERSHIP
LESSON 7 QUALIFIED LEADERS
LESSON 8 HONORING AND DISCIPLINING ELDERS
LESSON 9 APPOINT ONLY QUALIFIED MEN
LESSON 10 SHEPHERD GOD'S FLOCK IN GOD'S WAY
LESSON 11 CARING FOR THE POOR & PRAYING FOR THE SICK
LESSON 12 SPIRITUAL WATCHMEN, SUBMISSION TO AUTHORITY & MALE LEADERSHIP
LESSON 2 MEN OF SOUND DOCTRINE AND WISDOM
LESSON 3 THE FIRST ELDER APPOINTMENTS
LESSON 4 PROTECTING THE FLOCK FROM FALSE TEACHERS
LESSON 5 HUMBLE SERVANTS AND THE CHIEF SHEPHERD
LESSON 6 TEAM LEADERSHIP
LESSON 7 QUALIFIED LEADERS
LESSON 8 HONORING AND DISCIPLINING ELDERS
LESSON 9 APPOINT ONLY QUALIFIED MEN
LESSON 10 SHEPHERD GOD'S FLOCK IN GOD'S WAY
LESSON 11 CARING FOR THE POOR & PRAYING FOR THE SICK
LESSON 12 SPIRITUAL WATCHMEN, SUBMISSION TO AUTHORITY & MALE LEADERSHIP
To order from Amazon.com-Click Below...
Alexander Strauch's Biblical Eldership: Restoring Eldership to Rightful Place in Church
Alexander Strauch's Biblical Eldership : An Urgent Call to Restore Biblical Church Leadership
Alexander Strauch's Biblical Eldership Study Guide
Alexander Strauch's Biblical Eldership-A Mentors
Alexander Strauch's The New Testament Deacon : The Church's Minister of Mercy
To Order from BarnesAndNoble.com-Click Below...
Alexander Strauch's Biblical Eldership: Restoring Eldership to Rightful Place in Church
Alexander Strauch's Biblical Eldership : An Urgent Call to Restore Biblical Church Leadership
Alexander Strauch's Biblical Eldership Study Guide
Alexander Strauch's Biblical Eldership-A Mentors
Alexander Strauch's The New Testament Deacon : The Church's Minister of Mercy
Biblical
Eldership:
An Urgent Call To Restore
Biblical Church Leadership
An Urgent Call To Restore
Biblical Church Leadership
by
Alexander Strauch
(Revised
and Expanded, 1995)
_______
Study
Guide to Biblical Eldership:
Twelve
Lessons for Mentoring Men for Eldership
by
Alexander Strauch
(This guide book is designed
primarily as a mentoring tool for training prospective new elders.)
_______
The
Mentor’s Guide to Biblical Eldership:
Twelve
Lessons for Mentoring Men for Eldership
by
Alexander Strauch and Richard Swartley
(This guide is for the mentoring
elder only, not the trainee. It is the leader’s guide for the Study Guide to
Biblical Eldership.)
__________
They
Keep Watch Over Your Souls
Tape
Series
(Contains
eight messages on church eldership.)
John MacArthur, Jr. writes:
"Mr. Strauch has made a fine
contribution to the subject of eldership. I am confident that it will be
helpful to many."
Ray Stedman gives his enthusiastic
endorsement:
"At last, a thorough biblical
study on the basis of church government and especially the function and
ministry of elders! This study cuts through the accumulation of the centuries
in the government of the church and returns to the freshness of the original
blueprint of the Lord Himself. New churches will find it a valuable guideline
to effective functioning and older churches will find it a trustworthy
corrective."
S. Lewis Johnson, former professor
at Dallas Theological Seminary, reviewing Biblical Eldership, states:
"…it would serve as an
excellent text for the study of eldership by young and older men interested in
the work of an elder. Strauch is a man of gift and experience, and I am
grateful for his work."
Bryce Jessup, President of San Jose
Christian College, states:
"Our eldership has gone through
Biblical Eldership and the guide book twice. It has been the finest
investment of our time in the twelve years that I’ve been at the church. It has
helped us see what we’re all about and has gotten us to function the way God
designed us to. Biblical Eldership is a fine work and a thorough
Biblical exposition on eldership".
Reformation & Revival Journal:
"A very useful resource for
teaching the New Testament truth regarding elders in the local church. Sound,
clear and extremely important. Recommended."
To order from Amazon.com-Click Below...
Alexander Strauch's Biblical Eldership: Restoring Eldership to Rightful Place in Church
Alexander Strauch's Biblical Eldership : An Urgent Call to Restore Biblical Church Leadership
Alexander Strauch's Biblical Eldership Study Guide
Alexander Strauch's Biblical Eldership-A Mentors
Alexander Strauch's The New Testament Deacon : The Church's Minister of Mercy
To Order from
BarnesAndNoble.com-Click Below...
Alexander Strauch's Biblical Eldership: Restoring Eldership to Rightful Place in Church
Alexander Strauch's Biblical Eldership : An Urgent Call to Restore Biblical Church Leadership
Alexander Strauch's Biblical Eldership Study Guide
Alexander Strauch's Biblical Eldership-A Mentors
Alexander Strauch's The New Testament Deacon : The Church's Minister of Mercy
Alexander Strauch's Biblical Eldership: Restoring Eldership to Rightful Place in Church
Alexander Strauch's Biblical Eldership : An Urgent Call to Restore Biblical Church Leadership
Alexander Strauch's Biblical Eldership Study Guide
Alexander Strauch's Biblical Eldership-A Mentors
Alexander Strauch's The New Testament Deacon : The Church's Minister of Mercy
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