Next - Discovering, Developing, and Deploying Future Leaders
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Contents
Preface 4
1: Biblical Foundation 8
2: Discovering Future Leaders 14
3: Developing Future Leaders 23
4: Depolying Leaders 35
Conclusion 46
Bibliography 47
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PREFACE
Over the next eight years I continued to serve on two church staffs.
My responsibilities grew and in turn I learned many great lessons about
ministry. I grew as a leader, a teacher and a pastor. It was an experience
4
of trial-by-fire–I had to mature or I would never survive in ministry.
The problem was that during these years I was untethered from any
type of intentional plan for discipleship as a minister and leader. As a
result my growth was always stunted. I knew there were clear defects
in my character, my teaching and my counsel to those in need. I
wanted to grow, but I was largely figuring out what to do in isolation.
Unfortunately, as the years went on I became more and more confident
in my abilities and too proud to admit that I needed help.
5
preclude meaningful investment in these young and developing leaders.
There is simply too much to do – sermons to write, counseling to be
done, and a staff to lead. As long as the young leader does not make a
big mistake then all is well. And, after all, the leader is being developed
for ministry through their classroom training at seminary, right?
Wrong.
The reality is that leaders are often not being developed well. They
are learning valuable information in the classroom, but their growth
is limited without a context for applying this information in the local
church. They do not simply need hermeneutical principles, but they
need to apply these principles to sermons they preach before their
congregation and get strategic feedback from their pastors. They
do not simply need to learn what the Bible has to say about divorce
and remarriage but they need to apply this teaching to a counseling
situation with a marriage in crisis. They do not simply need to learn
apologetical truths for effective evangelism, but they need to apply
these truths to equip others to life all of life on mission as well.
This can only happen if churches take the mantle of responsibility for
discovering, developing and deploying future leaders in the church and
for the church. Evangelical literature is replete with books that provide
leadership principles for existing leaders. What these books often lack,
however, is a thorough discussion on the process of finding new leaders,
training them to maturity, and sending them to strategic mission in
the church. The task of developing new leaders will not come easy, as
the age and relative maturity of such individuals and the complexity of
leadership in the church is often a toxic combination.
The task of this short book is to analyze the Pastoral Epistles (1, 2
Timothy and Titus) for evidence as to how Paul went about the task of
developing new leaders, specifically in the lives of Timothy and Titus.
The Pauline example will then be used to provide implications for the
way in which new leaders can be trained and sent by churches today.
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1
BIBLICAL FOUNDATIONS
The modern church looks out over a similarly vast harvest field, and
it may squander this stewardship without fervent prayers for God to
raise up leaders and active engagement in the process of leadership
development. Chuck Lawless notes that the lack of evangelistic
fruitfulness of the modern church can be traced to a number of causes,
but “at the core of most concerns is a singular pressing issue: a failure
in leadership.”2 This failure of leadership can be traced to the fact that
many current leaders do not have an intentional plan for training future
leaders. As a result the church is increasingly dependent on fewer and
fewer leaders, without a clear process by which new leaders are sent
into strategic ministry.
This lack of leadership is not only true in North America: around the
1
All Scripture taken from the English Standard Version, unless otherwise noted.
2
Charles Lawless, “Paul and Leadership Development” in Paul’s Missionary Methods: In His Time and Ours (eds.
Robert L. Plummer and John Mark Terry; Downers Grove: Intervarsity, 2012), 216.
7
world missionaries are noting a “critical shortage of Biblically trained
leaders.”3 James Engel and William Dryness write that “leadership
development is today’s greatest priority.”4 Addressing this priority
will require great care and intentionality since the duties of leaders
in the church “are so exacting and complex as to demand for their
accomplishment men possessed of the highest qualities of mind and
spirit, who also have received a technical training for their special
work.”5 The void of leaders and the complexity of the task necessitates
that the church must act. Benjamin Merkle, writing about the need for
leadership development, argues that it is “perhaps the most neglected
[task] and therefore one that must be emphasized in the local church.”6
Pastors should labor to do the hard work of equipping others to do the
work of the ministry in order to cause the body to grow (Ephesians
4:11). Amidst the host of other matters that consume a pastor’s
attention, it is easy to lose sight of the vital work that is involved in
discipling future pastors. Merkle laments the reality that many pastors
undertake vital kingdom work year after year “but, when all is said
and done, they have effectively trained and equipped nobody to take
their place. It is a sign of an unhealthy church if there is no one in the
congregation who can step in the gap and fill the pulpit whenever the
pastor is gone.”7
This task must drive the church to God’s authoritative word for
timeless principles for leadership development rather than simply
consulting a host of pragmatic tools designed towards this end.
Other than Jesus himself, the apostle Paul serves as the exemplar of
leadership development recorded in the Scriptures. As a towering figure
in the Scriptures, his life provides the natural context for an analysis
of the process of developing future leaders. While the entire Pauline
3
Paul McKaughan, Dellana O’Brien and William O’Brien, Choosing a Future for U.S. Missions (Monrovia: MARC, 1998),
65.
4
James F. Engel and William A. Dryness. Changing the Mind of Missions: Where have we Gone Wrong? (Downers
Grove, IL: Intervarsity, 2000), 105.
5
Charles R. Erdman, The Work of the Pastor (Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 1924), 4.
6
Benjamin Merkle, 40 Questions About Elders and Deacons (Grand Rapids: Kregel, 2008), 94.
7
Merkle, 40 Questions, 93-94.
8
corpus provides evidence of his work of developing leaders, the Pastoral
Epistles (PE) demonstrate a heightened focus on this task. They speak
not only to the process of mentoring Christians in general, but more
specifically to the task of mentoring future leaders for the church.
Before considering the evidence found in the PE, one must first assess
the life of the recipients and the occasion for the writing of these letters.
TIMOTHY
The PE were written to two of Paul’s primary traveling companions:
Timothy and Titus. Timothy was the son of a believing, Jewish mother
and a Greek father. He came to faith at some point early in Paul’s
missionary travels, perhaps during his first missionary journey to
Lystra, Iconium and Derbe (Acts 14:6-23). When Paul returned to
the city on his second missionary journey, Timothy had developed a
reputation among the church for his character and faithfulness, which
motivated Paul to make the clear choice and take Timothy along on his
future missionary ventures (Acts 16:1-3).
8
Eckhard Schnabel, Early Christian Mission Vol. 2, (Downers Grove: IVP, 2004), 1119.
9
to serve the church there and addressed the problems that were evident
among God’s people (1 Corinthians 4:17). This process served as vital
preparation for the work that would lie ahead in Ephesus as “Paul had
once again sent Timothy into a difficult situation, to a church where
sin was rampant and Paul’s authority was under question, a situation
similar to that which would develop in Ephesus.”9 Years later, Paul
would send Timothy to the church at Ephesus, where was serving when
he received the letters known as 1 and 2 Timothy.
TITUS
Titus was also a traveling companion and missionary partner of the
apostle Paul. While his name is not stated in the book of Acts, he is
mentioned in numerous places in Paul’s letters (2 Corinthians 2:13;
9
William D. Mounce, Pastoral Epistles, Word Biblical Commentary, vol. 46 (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 2000), 1.
10
Ibid., lii.
11
Ibid., lxi.
10
7:6, 13, 14; 8:6, 16, 23; 12:18; Galatians 2:1, 3; 2 Timothy 4:10; Titus
1:4). He was evidently a Gentile convert who worked alongside Paul
and Barnabus, beginning in Antioch in 45-47 A.D. He traveled with
Paul to Jerusalem in 47 A.D. in an effort to provide famine relief for the
church (Galatians 2:3) and continued to be active in missionary labors
throughout Illyconium. Together with Timothy, he played a significant
role in the development of the church in Corinth (2 Corinthians 1:1; 2
Corinthians 1:19), and some even believe that Titus may have carried
the second letter to the church (2 Corinthians 2:12-13; 7:6). It is in
Corinth that Timothy and Titus likely met and served together.
PASTORAL EPISTLES
Paul wrote three short letters, historically known together as
the pastoral epistles, to his young protégés, Timothy and Titus. 1
Timothy and Titus were likely written after Paul’s release from Roman
imprisonment while he visited other churches in the area of Asia Minor.
1 Timothy was meant to be read by Timothy and the church since it was
an “ad hoc document addressing specific issues.”13 Through this letter,
Paul publically transferred authority to Timothy in his leadership of the
church and his conflict with those bringing harm to the church.14
12
Lea and Griffin, 1, 2 Timothy, Titus, 276.
13
Mounce, Pastoral Epistles, lviii.
14
Ibid., lix.
15
Ibid., 386.
11
the same benefit of Paul’s extended teaching ministry as did the church
in Ephesus. The needs, however, were quite similar. Most believe the
letters were written by Paul at virtually the same time.16
The second letter to Timothy was written due to the fact that Paul
knows he is “already being poured out” (2 Timothy 4:6-7). He writes
from prison and uses this letter as an opportunity to encourage and
exhort young Timothy to faithfulness “in the face of his spiritual
father’s imminent death” (2 Timothy 1:8, 17; 2:9).17 Lawless notes that,
“The apostle was ready to die, and he would not miss his opportunity to
teach his mentee about living and dying.”18 Together these three letters
provide rare insight into the way in which Paul lead developing leaders
in their care of God’s church.
16
Ibid., lxii.
17
Ibid., lxiii.
18
Lawless, Development, 230.
12
2
What does the church do then? All too often the answer is “not
much”. The church has often been passive in the discovery process and
they will continue to be passive in fanning into flame the calling and
giftedness of this young leader. The pastor may meet with him and help
him make a decision about which Bible college or seminary he should
attend and then send him off with the blessing of the church – often to
never see or hear from him again.
What if the church were far more active in the process? The church
provides fertile soil for the discovery of future leaders, as evidenced by
both Timothy and Titus. These leaders were forged in the context of the
local church community, and from this body, were recognized as those
who may lead the church in the future. Similarly, the church is the best
context for discovering future leaders today. As Phil Newton argues, it
is due time that churches take back the primary mantel of discovering
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future leaders and investing in them throughout their maturation
process.19
ACTIVE DISCOVERY
For this to happen, current leaders who, like Paul, are in a position
of authority, must assume the responsibility for both recognizing and
exhorting young leaders to the vital work of church leadership. The
discovery of new leaders is not the passive byproduct of time and
chance, but should be on the forefront of the agenda of all current
pastors. Colin Marshall and Tony Payne write that “We shouldn’t sit
back and wait for people to ‘feel called’ to gospel work, any more than
we should sit back and wait for people to become disciples of Christ in
the first place. We should be active in seeking, challenging and testing
suitable people to be set apart for gospel work.”20 They continue:
19
Phillip Newton, Local Church Leadership Development: Its effects and Importance on Church
Planting and Revitalization, (PhD Dissertation, May 2013, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary),
xvii.
20
Marshall and Payne, Trellis, 134.
21
Ibid., 141-42.
14
the future of the church in North America and must not be neglected
due to the host of other demands that vie for a pastor’s attention.22 But,
if pastors are not seeking out leaders, then who will?
This is often true of those whom God saves. They are hungry for the
truth of the gospel, passionate to share their faith with others, and
willing to give their lives away to the mission of God. Sadly it is often
the case that the longer a person is a Christian the fewer relationships
they have with those far from God and the less willing they are to make
radical sacrifices for the mission of God. This means that pastors should
seize the opportunity to challenge new believers to consider how God is
calling them to steward their lives for the sake of his mission – which
may include leadership in the church.23 Like Timothy, new converts
22
Owen Strachan, “Pastoral Discipleship,” 9Marks, n.p. [cited 8 September 2012]. Online:
http://www.9marks.org/journal/pastoral-discipleship
23
J.D Payne, Discovering Church Planting: An Introduction to the Whats, Whys, and Hows of
15
are often those that demonstrate an insatiable hunger for the Word, an
aptitude for leadership, and are still relationally connected to many of
those who are far from Christ.
New disciples are ripe for this type of appeal. We are given a unique
opportunity to challenge them to consider leadership from the early
days of their faith journey. Paul certainly reminded Timothy to not
appoint new converts to leadership (1 Timothy 3:6) this need not mean
that we should not challenge young believers to consider leadership
at some point in the future. It also does not mean that we should have
an expectation that new believers have to be a Christian for a decade,
have taken 30 Bible study classes, have a master’s degree or have no
recognized character defects before they are appointed to leadership.
Young leaders can be deployed into strategic ministry far quicker
through an intentional development process such as the one outlined
below.
16
indicate that he placed a high value of discernable character in the life
of a leader who should be “above reproach” in all things (1 Timothy
3:1-7; Titus 1:5-7).
These marks provided a metric for discerning the fruit of the gospel
that one can expect to continue in the life of the leader. A person who is
growing in understanding and applying the gospel to his/her life should
be marked by “the fruit of repentance” (Matthew 3:8). Rather than
perfection, we should observe a clear brokenness over sin, a trust in the
gospel and a battle for holiness.
Here’s what I mean. Take Amy. She has recently come to faith in
Christ and is known to passionately share the gospel with the mom’s
who live in her neighborhood. But the reality is that she is a gossip.
Before she met Christ she was a busybody who thrived on knowing all
of the juicy rumors about her peers and being the first one to share
that information with others. Since her conversion this process has
continued. She genuinely loves her neighbors now and wants them to
come to faith in Christ. But she is over-zealous and her passion bubbles
over in sinful actions at times, including posting things on social media
17
about the sinful behaviors of her friends. Is Amy disqualified from
leadership in the church?
If so, then we should expect that the longer she walks with Jesus the
more her character would be refined. She may not be exemplary in her
character now, but given an intentional development plan she could be
before she is appointed as a leader.
18
in the church is so vital. Leaders are not leaders if no one is willing to
follow them. Sheep recognize shepherds. They see them lead and want
to follow.
They also begin to find meaningful ways to use their gifts to serve
the body. They see a need in the ministry of the church and do what
they can to fill the gap. This will begin in small, almost unrecognizable
ways. They won’t be teaching or leading a small group, but they will be
showing up early to greet guests on Sunday mornings, providing a ride
to small group for someone new to the church, volunteering to serve at
various big events that the church offers and things of this sort. When
they hear of people struggling with sin or suffering, they will seek to
find ways to serve them and meet tangible needs. At first, they may not
know what to do to help, but they will do what they can. They may make
mistakes or say the wrong things, but this is to be expected for young
leaders. Intentional training to direct raw passion towards increasingly
fruitful ministry and mission.
This means that future leaders will often have a desire for more.
19
Seeking out leaders does not mean leaders should not self-identify. Paul
notes that men should aspire to the office of elder (1 Timothy 3:1). This
is not necessarily a prideful posturing, but rather the outworking of a
God-given passion in the heart of a young leader. They aspire to lead
and serve.
For this reason, future leaders will often make their desires to lead
known. They will call you with questions, send emails seeking counsel,
or make suggestions on the way in which ministry could be improved.
They may even come on too strong at times or volunteer to serve in
ways that exceed their maturity at that time. This need not deter you
from inviting them into a more formal development process. Their
passion can be often be channeled into meaningful ministry with the
proper mentorship and training. At this point what you are looking for
are humble servants who are faithful (albeit not perfect) at the work
God has put before them. Your job is to partner with them to see them
developed into men and women who can lead among God’s people.
New Believers…
Godly Character…
Proven Faithfulness…
Passionate Desire…
20
thought I should lead and this word of encouragement and exhortation
provided the affirmation that I needed to take the next step.
21
3
I played offensive left guard. What? You don’t know what that position
is? Right. That’s because no one knows what that position is or does.
They block. That’s all. The know the snap count, take a couple of steps
in any direction, and attempt to prevent a 300-lb. lineman or blitzing
linebacker from killing their quarterback. They never touch the ball.
Never.
And I got my wish that on that faithful day in practice. Because the
team had been so poor in tackling the coaches decided to teach us a
lesson. We would line up in two lines facing one another fifteen yards
22
apart. In the middle was a cone. The first person in one line, regardless
of that person’s position, got to carry the ball and run towards the cone.
The first person in the opposing line was supposed to tackle them. This
would be our assignment for the next two hours.
If we are not careful we can take passionate future leaders and throw
them into the game without any process of development. At first they
may thrive and grow. But over time the weight of leadership in the
church will expose their weaknesses. They will get hit and many not get
back up.
The answer is to develop leaders into those who can carry the ball day
in and day out without being crushed under the weight of leadership
among the people of God. The apostle Paul exemplified the process of
leadership development throughout his work with Timothy and Titus
and though his example we can discern a clear path for leadership
development in our day as well.
23
a long-term relationship with a current leader. This relationship will
prove as the primary context whereby the leader’s life is transformed.
The nature of this relationship should follow the Pauline paradigm by
inviting future leaders to “follow me as I follow Christ (1 Corinthians
11:1).
24
Duane Elmer and Lois McKinney, eds. With an Eye on the Future: Development and Mission in the 21st Century -
Essays in Honor of Ted Ward (Monrovia: Marc, 1996), 210.
25
Derek J. Prime and Alistair Begg, On Being a Pastor: Understanding Our Calling and Work (Chicago: Moody, 2004),
204.
26
Robert Coleman’s classic work The Master Plan of Evangelism is a useful catalyst for relational disciple-making.
Robert Coleman, The Master Plan of Evangelism (Old Tappan, NJ: Revell, 1963), 21.
24
or time.27
27
Os Guinness, Fit Bodies Fat Minds: Why Evangelicals Don’t Think and What to Do about it: (Grand Rapids: Baker
Books, 1994), 47.
28
Ibid., 196.
25
…though formerly I was a blasphemer, persecutor, and
insolent opponent. But I received mercy because I had acted
ignorantly in unbelief, and the grace of our Lord overflowed
for me with the faith and love that are in Christ Jesus. The
saying is trustworthy and deserving of full acceptance, that
Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, of whom I
am the foremost (1 Timothy 1:13-15).
29
Mounce, Pastoral Epistles, 579.
30
Craig Van Gelder, Dwight J. Zscheile, and Alan Roxburgh, The Missional Church in Perspective: Mapping Trends and
Shaping the Conversation (Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 2011), 155-57.
31
Edmund Clowney, The Message of 1 Peter: The Way of the Cross (Downers Grove, IL: IVP, 1988), 201.
26
others to follow us as we follow Christ. Pray as I pray. Love as I love.
Serve as I serve. At its most basic level, this is the work of leadership
development. It is the process of inviting a younger disciple into your
life for an extended period of time and allow them to model your life
and teaching.
27
the mission of God was a “trustworthy word” which they were to declare
and demonstrate throughout their work (Titus 1:9).32
32
Guthrie notes that the notion of a “trustworthy word” presupposes some objective and authoritative standard of doctrine
that these leaders were meant to maintain. Donald Guthrie, Pastoral Epistles: An Introduction and Commentary (Grand
Rapids: Eerdmans, 1957), 186.
28
FOCUS ON CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT
This plan should focus on developing the character of the leader and
not simply on their external behaviors. Richard Baxter, in his classic
The Reformed Pastor, laments the reality that many of those entrusted
with pastoral leadership do not know God or demonstrate the fruit of
godly living.33 Discipleship for leadership must be an inside-out process
whereby the future leader is challenged to have a soft heart to the things
of God and not simply to acquire the skills of a professional pastor.34
Adept leadership developers will also call out heart issues in those
they are mentoring. Rather than waiting for the developing leader to
disclose sin patterns, you can be proactive in this process. It would be
a gift of grace to a future leader to have a mature pastor or ministry
leader say things like, “Did you know that you should really prideful
when you say things like…?” “It seems like you talk yourself out of
taking risks. Could it be that you have an unhealthy fear of man?”
“Brother, you are running yourself ragged working on that upcoming
sermon. If you do that week after week you are going to crush your
family.” These diagnostic questions protect a leader from the shrapnel
that may come to their lives and their families if they are not addressed
earlier.
33
Richard Baxter, The Reformed Pastor (Edinburgh: Banner of Truth Trust, 1656), 56.
34
See John Piper, Brothers, We Are Not Professionals: A Plea to Pastors for Radical Ministry, Updated and Expanded
Edition (Nashville: B&H, 2013).
29
leadership development. There is also a vital cognitive component that
one would hope a leader is exposed to over the course of a formation
process. Intellectual training alone is insufficient but it must not be
neglected or outsourced. It is not enough to hope that a seminary will
provide the type of theological training that a leader needs. Rather,
church leaders should map out an intentional path that they would
hope a leader moves through during their formation process. This
plan helps a leader avoid simply pulling books of the shelf or sending
helpful articles via email. These readings may be helpful but they
cannot replace an intentional plan that allows us to ensure that we
have covered critical aspects of leadership formation. It also provides
the leader with a helpful tool for replicating the process in the life of
another leader at some point in the future.
I developed such a plan over the first two years of pastoral ministry
in Greenville, South Carolina. A young, youth pastor came to me
frustrated about his lack of growth and development. He got a job at
a local Starbucks and asked me to take the next two years to invest
in his life and train him for future pastoral ministry. This forced me
to map out a plan. In many ways I was building an airplane in the air
– doodling ideas on a dinner napkin as I went along. The end result
was Aspire: Developing and Deploying Disciples in the Church and
For the Church.35 In it I map out six topical sections (roughly three
months per section) covering the gospel, spiritual transformation,
mission, proclamation, leadership and pastoral ministry. Each section
is written as a workbook, designed to provide a weekly journal for
developing leaders to reflect on the Scriptures and apply them to their
maturation. This plan allows a pastor or leader to have a strategic
model for leadership formation and provides the developing leader with
a replicable model that he/she can use in the future.
35
For such a plan see Matt Rogers, Aspire: Developing and Deploying Leaders in the Church and for the Church
(Timmonsville, SC: Seed Publishing Group, 2014.
30
Any development plan must allow future leaders to discern their
unique gifting and calling to the church. Merkle summarizes that
“Paul’s experience provides a strong argument for the need for church
planters to gain active experience and exposure to churches and
ministry opportunities as they prepare to plant churches.”36 Leaders
often emerge from seminary with cumulative years of theological
knowledge but without knowledge that has been tested and refined
in a church community and lived out in meaningful mission to the
world. This results in leaders who lack both the theological precision
to be academics or the ministry experiences to lead a congregation.37
In contrast, local church based development can make it possible for
future leaders to gain vital experience in both theological acumen and
ministry praxis. The current church leaders can help train the future
leaders to more effectively utilize their spiritual gifting for the building
up of the body of God. “Consequently, before a man is appointed as
an elder,” Merkle notes, “he will have been serving the church in some
capacity, thereby proving himself in leadership.”38
The church should provide a safe context for the leader to “try out”
ministry. We should create environments for future leaders to use
their gifts and receive feedback after the fact. They should be allowed
to teach while current pastors listen and evaluate their teaching. They
should be tasked with the administering a major church project. They
should be given the responsibility for the care of a marriage in crisis.
They should be given oversight of a small group of church members
and asked to provide ongoing spiritual care. They should be sent out on
evangelistic mission and learn how to develop friendships with those
far from God.
36
Benjamin Merkle, “Paul’s Ecclesiology,” pg. 56-73 in Paul’s Missionary Methods: In His Time and Ours (Robert L.
Plummer and John Mark Terry, eds.: Downers Grove: Intervarsity Press, 2012), 70.
37
Leith Anderson, A Church for the 21st Century (Minneapolis, MN: Bethany House Publishers, 1992), 71.
38
Merkle, 40 Questions, 200.
31
the developing leader to learn how they are gifted to serve the church.
Sadly, many leaders have never had the glorious privilege of failing in
the local church and hearing a loving mentor say, “friend, you are not
very good at that.” They have also not heard a friend say, “You may
not know it, but you are really good at that.” These experiences will
provide a context for the developing leader to cut his teeth on the work
of ministry by allowing him to apply his theology to the real life of the
church.
39
Mounce, Pastoral Epistles, 66.
40
Lea and Griffin, 1, 2 Timothy, Titus, 109.
32
4:12).
This paternal love is also true of Paul’s relationship with Titus. The
letter opens, “To Titus, my true child in a common faith” (Titus 1:4).
Paul demonstrates his love for Timothy and Titus in that he is willing to
trust his most precious treasure, the churches he has planted, to their
care. This deep affection demonstrates that the development of future
leaders is not “a barren, educational exercise” but that “it’s deeply and
inescapably relational.”43
33
to grow and mature. It also builds the trust of the church and its pastors
to move into the final act of building the next generation of leaders –
deploying them into a lifetime of fruitful ministry.
34
4
My wife and I have three kids and a fourth child on the way. At
the time of writing this chapter they are 8, 5, and 4 years old. Until
recently, our work of parenting was largely blue-collar in nature. Runny
noses, dirty diapers, and hungry bellies were order of the day. It seemed
like that’s all we did.
Paul’s work with Timothy and Titus provides helpful strategies for the
deployment of future leaders as well.
35
STRATEGIC PLACEMENT OF LEADERS IN THE CHURCH
Not only is God on mission, but Timothy and Titus also have a
personal role to play in that mission. Paul repeatedly reminds Timothy
and Titus that they “are appointed personally by Paul to achieve a
particular mission.”44 Timothy was in Ephesus at Paul’s urging “so that
you may charge certain persons not to teach any different doctrine”
(1 Timothy 1:3). Paul did not merely suggest options for Timothy, but
urged him to go to Ephesus and stay there in the midst of persecution.45
The word “urge” denotes the seriousness of the situation in Ephesus
and the vital role Timothy had to play in the mission. The same is true
of Titus, who was left by Paul in Crete to put the developing church
in order (Titus 1:5). This was not some haphazard notion by an over-
zealous leader, but the intentional plan of a leader to place a younger
leader in a strategic role.
44
Derek Tidball, Ministry by the Book: New Testament Patterns for Pastoral Leadership (Downers Grove: IVP, 2008),
150.
45
Mounce, Pastoral Epistles, 15.
46
Ibid., 371
36
their Spirit-gifting for the betterment of the body of Christ. This may
mean they serve in full-time, vocational ministry, or it may mean the
leader will serve as a Bible study teacher or lay elder. Either way, the
deployment of leaders must be specific to aid in the strategic health of
the church and the retention of pastors over time.47
This good confession was based on the faithful heritage that has been
given to him by members of his own family. Paul reminds Timothy of
47
Conrad Mbewe. Foundations for the Flock: Truths about the Church for All the Saints,
(Hannibal, MS: Granted Ministries Press, 2011), 135.
37
the “faith that dwelt first in your grandmother Lois and your mother
Eunice and now, I am sure, dwells in you as well (2 Timothy 1:5).”
His spiritual heritage allowed him to be “acquainted with the sacred
writings” from childhood (2 Timothy 3:15).48 This spiritual heritage,
coupled with his appointment by Godly leaders, was a motive for
faithful ministry, even in the face of suffering. Paul reminded these
young leaders of this fact repeatedly.
38
the leader up to this time. These experiences will be the moments
that a leader will look back on years later and will remind him of the
affirmation of his church.
49
Peter Davids, The First Epistle of Peter, New International Commentary on the New Testament (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1990), 178.
50
Lea and Griffin, 1, 2 Timothy, Titus, 294.
39
entrusted with the spiritual leadership of the church, is vital for the
long-term mission of the church.51
In both 1 Timothy and Titus, Paul gives explicit instructions for the
type of leaders who should be appointed for the church. These marks
stand in stark contrast to the unrighteous character and false teaching
of the dissenters.52 Paul warns that a leader must not be a recent
convert (1 Timothy 3:6), lest he become “puffed up” by pride as a result
of the elevated office. He takes the appointment of leaders to this
office very carefully, as evidenced by his caution against prematurely
commissioning a new elder (1 Timothy 5:22).
The essential mark of a future leader was the observable fruit of the
Spirit’s work in that person’s life. Schreiner notes that “virtually all of
the attention is devoted to the character of the appointed.”53 1 Timothy
3:1-7 contains a list of 11 qualifications for the office of elder, only one
of which is a skill (teaching). Titus also contains a list outlining the
marks of a future leader. The slight differences in the traits listed likely
reflects “different but genuine historic situations.”54 This list is then
followed by a brief, though no less heart-focused, qualification list for
deacons. These qualifications were not simply meant to provide a guide
for Timothy and Titus, but also for the churches who would be left after
the delegates’ departure and, in turn, all future leaders in the church.55
Paul and Timothy were then to entrust these words to faithful men who
would be able to teach others also and thus continue the process of
leadership development (2 Timothy 2:2).
Often these decisions are the most critical ones that a new leader
will face in his early years of ministry leadership. Who will be given
leadership of the host of significant ministries in the church? Who
51
Mounce, Pastoral Epistles, 168-69; 234; Schreiner, Thomas R, 2 Peter, Jude, The New American Commentary Vol. 371,
(Nashville: B&H, 2003); David Mappes, “The ‘elder’ in the Old and New Testaments,” Bibliotheca Sacra 154 (January-
March 1997): 80-92.
52
Compare the marks of the false teachers mentioned in 1 Timothy 1:10-16 with the marks of an elder in 1 Timothy 3:1-7.
George W. Knight, III, The Pastoral Epistles: Commentary on the Greek Text (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1992).
53
Thomas R. Schreiner, Paul: Apostle of God’s Glory in Christ (Downers Grove, Ill: Intervarsity Press, 2001), 389.
54
Guthrie, Pastoral Epistles, 184.
55
Knight, Commentary, 288.
40
will he appoint as an elder, a deacon, or a committee leader. If these
choices are not made well, they can lead to years of frustration, pain,
and missionary ineffectiveness. For this reason it may be wise for the
sending church to oversee or at least advise in the appointment of the
first leaders in the church. Particularly, if the new leader is walking into
a church planting work, the sending church can even provide a context
for elder evaluation.
56
Richard L. Mayhue, “Rediscovering Pastoral Ministry” 29-47, in Richard L. Mayhue and Robert L. Thomas eds. The
Master’s Perspective on Pastoral Ministry, vol. 3, (Grand Rapids: Kregel, 2002), 29-47.
41
women, recognizing the danger inherent in this ministry. This practical
counsel was surely valuable to assisting younger pastors faced with
challenging work.
57
Tim Keller, Center Church: Doing Balanced, Gospel-Centered Ministry in Your City (Grand
Rapids: Zondervan, 2012), 20.
42
6:13-14). In 1 Timothy 4:12, Timothy is told to “fight the good fight,”
and in 2 Timothy Paul invites Timothy to “share in the suffering as a
good solider of Christ Jesus” (2 Timothy 2:3). Three metaphors – an
athlete, a farmer, and a solider – are used by Paul to demonstrate the
type of steady perseverance that is needed to lead in the church.
Paul serves as a personal exemplar of the fight of faith and the trials
that surely wait Timothy as well. In contrast to the false teachers,
Timothy is to “be sober-minded, endure suffering, do the work of an
evangelist, fulfill your ministry (2 Timothy 4:1-5). This exhortation
need not imply that Timothy was weak, but simply that he, like all
subsequent leaders, would grow weary.58 Mounce comments that “even
someone who bears the title ‘man of God’ needs encouragement, to be
called to persevere.”59 Titus may have been older, more mature, and
therefore less prone to depression and the need for encouragement
than was Timothy.
Leaders who are deployed into effective gospel ministry will need the
continued reminder of the beauty of the gospel, the cause of Christ,
and the hope of salvation that extends to all people. They will need
people to remind them, as Paul does, of the beauty of their salvation,
the investment of the church, and their good confession to Christ and
his people. At the end of the day, this gospel hope both sends and
sustains future leaders. They will need to be reminded of the value of
long-term perseverance, in the face of opposition, as God does the work
58
Mounce, Pastoral Epistles, 262.
59
Ibid., 363.
60
Ibid., cxxx.
43
of building the church. This is one mantra that cannot be repeated too
often.
44
CONCLUSION
61 Mark Dever notes, “Future pastors aren’t built in a day. They’re not necessarily identified correctly at first; once you
do identity them correctly all the fruit’s not there. There are some people who you don’t think will go anywhere who do;
others who you think will, don’t. But you have to slowly but surely, patiently and encouragingly, push along. And you’ll
find that you can’t literally ‘make’ pastors; only the Lord will give growth. I’m not always right about who will and won’t
be a good pastor. Nevertheless, the Lord allows me to pour in as I can. So I push ahead and the Lord blesses.” Mark Dever,
“Raising Up Pastors is the Church’s Work,” 9Marks, n.p. [cited 7 August 2014]. Online: http://www.9marks.org/journal/
raising-pastors-churchs-work.
45
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Blanchard, Ken and Phil Hodges. Lead Like Jesus: Lessons from
the Greatest Leadership Role Model of All Time. Nashville: Thomas
Nelson, 2005.
46
from 1 Corinthians. Grand Rapids: Baker, 1993.
Dever, Mark. The Church: The Gospel Make Visible. Nashville: B&H
Publishers, 2012.
Elmer, Duane and Lois McKinney, eds. With an Eye on the Future:
Development and Mission into the 21st Century Essays in Honor of
Ted Ward. Monrovia: Marc, 1996.
47
New Testament (TDNT), ed. Gerhard Kittel and Gerhard Friedrich,
356-57. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1964.
Guder, Darrell, ed. The Missional Church: A Visions for the Sending
of the Church in North America. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1998.
48
216-34 In Paul’s Missionary Methods: In His Time and Ours. Robert
L. Plummer and John Mark Terry, eds. Downers Grove: Intervarsity,
2012.
Marshall, Colin and Tony Payne. The Trellis and the Vine: The
Ministry Mind-Shift that Changes Everything. Mathias Media, 2009.
49
______. “Paul’s Ecclesiology,” pg. 56-73 in Paul’s Missionary
Methods: In His Time and Ours. Robert L. Plummer and John Mark
Terry, eds.: Downers Grove: Intervarsity Press, 2012.
50
B&H, 2003.
Stott, John R.W. Guard the Truth: The Message of 1 Timothy &
Titus. Downers Grove, Ill.: IVP, 1996.
51