Sermon for January 19, 2003
Text: 2 Timothy 1:1-7
Theme: God calls leaders through people
The entire Bible is a record of God providing leaders for his
people-leaders in the home, leaders in the
church, leaders in the community. Because God is a gracious and
a caring God He knows that His
people flounder if they do not have good leadership. God continues
to provide leaders for His church
today in order that His plan of salvation can be carried out.
It is the will of God that all people
everywhere will know His love and the undeserved forgiveness of
sins that comes through the blood of
Jesus Christ. It is part of God's plan that this message is carried
by people-human flesh and blood
people-who themselves know the weight of sin in their lives and
also know the joy of having Jesus as
the One who died for them and who gives them the sure hope of
life forever after death
Throughout the Scriptures we see how God has used different
methods to raise up leaders. He called
Moses with a burning bush. He used a large fish to recruit Jonah
as a missionary. He appeared to Saul
(Paul) in a blinding light. At times He used dreams and visions.
It is an interesting record in the
Scriptures about the various ways God used to call individual
people to serve as leaders for His people.
In all these different ways, God also used other people. After
the blinding light on the road to Damascus
it was necessary for Paul to meet with people for a time in order
to learn about the Christian faith. God
still uses this method to raise up people today. In our text for
today, the Apostle Paul says he is an
apostle of Christ Jesus by God's will. Paul also says he serves
with a clear conscience as his ancestors
did. The ancestors of Paul were an influence in his life. He refers
to Timothy as his son in the faith.
Somehow God used Paul as an instrument to help Timothy to grow
in his faith in Jesus Christ for the
forgiveness of his sins. There are also references to Timothy's
grandmother and his mother Eunice. So,
in the life of Timothy there were a number of people involved
who helped him not only to develop in his
faith, but also then to be called into the ministry of the church.
There are references in the text to the
laying on of hands. At some time in the life of Timothy the larger
church recognized that God had called
him to serve as a leader, and set him aside, or consecrated him
to serve as a leader in the church.
[At this point in the sermon you can mention the people who
influenced you in becoming a pastor or
deacon in the church.]
(In my own life certainly the greatest influence for me was my
father who was a pastor and my
grandfather who was a pastor, as well as my uncle and older brother.
Seeing these people in the
ministry, travelling around with my father as a young boy when
he visited people and gave them private
communion, certainly was a great influence in my life. But besides
the family, there were other people
who would make comments to me and say that I should consider becoming
a pastor.)
Today it is important that in every congregation, members look
around and identify people who are
potential leaders for the church, either pastors or deacons.
Every Christian is called by God to faith. This call comes
through the working of the Holy Spirit in the
preaching and teaching of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. This call
for all Christians to be servants comes
through their baptism and is reaffirmed constantly in the body
and blood of Jesus in Holy Communion.
Every child of God is called by God to serve Him and share the
good news of Jesus Christ. Every one
who has been called into the faith also has to ask the question,
"Does God want me to serve as a leader
in the church?" Every Christian needs to ask themselves that
question and we need to ask each other
this question. Does God want you to serve as a leader in the church-either
as a pastor or a deacon?
Not every one is able to answer 'yes' because not everyone is
called to be a leader, but the question
should be asked of everyone.
What are the qualifications a person should look for in himself
or herself, or in other people? It would
be a mistake to look for special abilities and intelligence. In
fact, it almost seems as though one of the
qualifications necessary to be a leader in the church is to be
convinced you are not qualified and your
own abilities do not give you the right to become a leader in
the church. What is really essential for
anyone to be a leader in the church is that they recognize their
own sinfulness, their own unworthiness
and their total dependence upon the blood of Jesus Christ for
the forgiveness of their sins. This is
necessary because the real mission of the ministry of the church
is to proclaim this beautiful sweet
Gospel of Jesus Christ. Moses certainly wasn't qualified to be
a leader. In fact, he said he couldn't
speak. Saul (Paul) hated and killed Christians. Certainly he was
not qualified. Jonah ran away. Isaiah
was a man of unclean lips. In our text for today Paul says it
is the Spirit who gives us power, love and
self-control. If there is anything we need to look for in a person
to be a leader, it is that the spirit of God
has given him or her the strength and the power to serve, and
a tenderness of love and care for other
people, as well as some self-control. In leadership it is very
important to have the help of the Holy Spirit
to be able to control ourselves in time of panic or depression
or passion.
How do I know if God has called me to be a leader in the church?
I am not sure if there is any time
when one who serves as a pastor or deacon in the church can be
absolutely, positively sure God wants
them to be a leader in the church. In fact, it seems as though
all of our ministry is filled with some doubt
and apprehension and we need to be convinced time and again by
God that it is His will that we serve
in leadership positions in the church. Certainly one way of finding
it out is to test it. If the Spirit of God
has laid upon your heart the call to become a leader in the church,
then you should talk about it with
other people and test it out to see if they affirm it or not.
The second test would be to take the training
offered by the Church. The final test comes when we are actually
in the ministry and can determine
whether God uses us to communicate the Gospel to other people.
In our text for today, Paul says he is thankful to God for
having called Timothy to be a leader in the
church. It is important in all our congregations that we publicly
express our thanks and praise to God
whenever He provides us with a pastor or deacon to serve in the
church. This attitude of thankfulness
for the office of the public ministry encourages more people to
want to consider whether God is calling
them into service in the church. Of all the things we can do with
our life, there is really nothing that has
more honour or is more of a privilege than spending our whole
life proclaiming to other people the
powerful message of the Gospel of Jesus Christ-changing people's
lives by proclaiming to them the
name of Jesus in a caring way.
It is the very nature of faith itself that it comes from outside
of us as a gift from God. It never comes up
from within us. This faith is brought to others through people
speaking to them the message of salvation
in Jesus Christ. To have the privilege of being an instrument
of God in bringing the most powerful thing
into the lives of other people is certainly an honour and a privilege.
It is something that should be
considered by everyone who has been called by God into the Christian
faith. The whole purpose for
God in raising up leaders is so that the good news can be proclaimed.
We do not teach people ten
ways of how they can be saved. It is not a message 'if you believe
in Jesus you will be saved.' It is the
message 'You have been saved, believe it!' When Christ on the
cross said, "It is finished," He meant
that it is finished. The total price has been paid for the forgiveness
of our sins. So now we proclaim to
people something that has been completed and done. Your sins have
been forgiven. Believe it because
it is true.
There are people on this earth who do not know their sins have
been forgiven. There are people who
know and do not believe their sins have been forgiven. For both
of them, they need to hear again and
again the message of the love of God that is unconditional and
unending, that comes through His Son,
our Lord and Saviour.
Everyone called by God through the Spirit to this faith is
now sent to speak this to others. However, it is
necessary that there be those called to be leaders in the public
ministry in order to proclaim this on
behalf of the whole church and in order to equip all the members
to be missionaries proclaiming the
Good News of Jesus Christ. It is essential for the life and the
mission of the church that there be those
who are called and placed into the public ministry. It is not
an optional matter for the church to have
pastors and deacons. It is essential to the mission and ministry
of the church that there be those called
and placed into this position through the laying on of hands.
We live at a time in our church when there
is a real shortage of leaders in the public ministry. There is
no doubt that our church is suffering because
of this lack of leadership. At this time, as at any time, it is
essential for those of us in the
church-mothers, fathers, grandparents, those of us already in
the office-to look at those we know in the
church and encourage them to consider the call from the Holy Spirit
to serve as leaders in the kingdom
of God.
Prayer is an essential part of the process. Our Lord Jesus
says the harvest is great, pray that there be
more labourers. It is essential in our personal life, and in our
public life, that we constantly include
prayers to the throne of God, that Jesus who sits at the right
hand of the Father would continue to carry
out His ministry of sending pastors and teachers and evangelists
for the equipping of the saints to carry
out the mission of the church.
Pray for yourself. Pray that God would make it clear to you
whether or not you should consider the call
into the public ministry. If God has provided you with a faithful
pastor, be sure to thank God and to
thank him. If God has called you into this ministry, also thank
God, because it is by His grace and His
mercy that any of us are allowed to serve in this wonderful privilege
of being partners with God in
proclaiming the gospel of Jesus Christ. If you have been called
by God, you cannot wait until everything
is in place, or before you have all the abilities, before you
accept the call. It is important that when the
call comes, you accept it and say, "Yes Lord, here I am,
send me, send me." God never asks us to do
something without also providing us with the means to do it. God
never called anyone into the ministry
of the church without also providing them with the strength, the
power, the love and the self-control that
is necessary for them to carry out their leadership roles. God
very seldom provides this ahead of time,
but He provides these gifts and He keeps His promises as we serve
Him and as we accept the call.
May the Holy Spirit move all of you to consider a call from
God to serve as a leader in the church. May
the Holy Spirit also move you to look around, if you have not
been called by God, that you would
identify someone in the congregation who should consider a call
from God to serve in the church. God
will answer our prayers as He has since the Lord Jesus lived and
walked on this earth, He will always
raise up leaders because He will not leave His people helpless,
floundering around without leadership.
God will do this, not because we deserve it, but because He truly
wants to carry out His plan of
salvation. He will continue to do it the way He has always done
it, and that is through people in His
church-all this so that more people can know His love, the forgiveness
of sins and the sure hope of life
forever in Jesus Christ. Amen