Thursday, February 05, 2009

Six Crusty Questions To Ponder

Kevin DeYoung follows up yesterdays post about "Crusty Christians" with six questions to ponder:
1. Do we actually care about evangelism? The plight of the lost should break our hearts and the opportunity to share the gospel should be a delight.

2. Do we wear smallness as a badge of honor? "Successful" ministries are not always sell-outs and small churches are sometimes just not very healthy.

3. Are our passions in the right proportion? It's fine to be passionate about our view on baptism, as long as this passion does not outshine our passion for the cross, the Trinity, and the glory of Christ.

4. Do we (or our pastors) preach with personal, passionate, pleading? The truths we believe are not for dissecting as much as for heralding with joy and humble intercession.

5. Do we know ourselves? We need to understand our gifts, our personalities, our strengths and weaknesses. We need to be ok with who we are and not try to be Driscoll, Piper, Keller, or anyone else. A sense of humor also helps. The Lord probably laughs at us on occasion so we should be able to laugh at ourselves.

6. Are we fighting the battles that matter most in our context? Don't spend gobs of time preaching on the emergent church if no one in your church has heard of it. Don't waste a lot of time defending the Pauline authorship of Ephesians if no one around you has ever thought anything different. Understand the issues of worldliness and disobedience that most affect your friends, church, and family.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

y do appreciate his thoughts, and many similar thoughts that are expressed on doing ministry in this day and time. But so many of the thoughts are geared toward the city or the suburb. Some of the ideas expressed in points like this do not apply to a very rural setting where the pastoral work is bi-vocational, and you are ministering to people who are over 50, with very few if any young people, and the land around you for 100s of acres is farmland that isn't going to change very soon. Something to consider.

James