In the golden age of the Internet in which we live, the goal
of any content or message is to achieve a “viral” status. You tell 2 friends and they both tell 2
friends, and before you know it entire email address books are geometrically
expanding and promoting a given link and millions of people are said to have
experienced the targeted content. While
this model seems to have the most meaning to advertisers with short messages
and singular tag lines, or musicians sharing a single song, the model for a
church has a few missing goals. It is
not only exposure the online church needs, it is not only the repetition, not
even the propagation of the message to promote its viral nature … it is
adoption of the content internally. The
“experience” of being set free from self cannot be relayed only in words,
songs, or short video clips. It must be
personally experienced in order that YOUR witness is true, not simply the
re-telling of what you heard someone else’s story to be. Living the salvation experience provides a
real-time view into what it means to love others like Christ loves others. And that love comes out of you in all kinds
of forms; from what you say, to what you do, to quiet deeds of charity that
no-one will ever give you credit for - for credit is not what you seek.
Living the salvation experience, where through submission of
your desires to Christ to be remade you become someone else; remakes “church”
into a group of people who share this common Christian experience. “Church” becomes viral at that point not only
online, but in real life. Messages are
spread not only through our words and posts, but by people inquiring how we
seem so happy and at peace all the time despite what life brings our way in the
War with evil. This model also however
has one missing role that tradition has enforced in us that we “need”. That is the role of Pastor, or church leader. Tradition has made us lazy. We expect our “pastors” to play the
leadership role in the faith. We expect
them to “spread the word”. We even
expect them to be “holier” than us common folk.
In short, we have adopted the WRONG model of church. And in our quest to organize a body of
believers, we have allowed hierarchy to replace personal participation so that
now only a few are held accountable for the success or failure of the forward
momentum of the gospel.
But Peter held no such illusions. Peter may have been one of the first after
Jesus to promote the basis of a church organization that could and would go
“viral”. Peter understood the first goal
of any viral church is to spread out the leadership responsibilities NOT to
consolidate them into only a few individuals.
In his first letter to the church, he begins outlining exactly how a
viral church should work in chapter five, beginning in verse one … “The elders
which are among you I exhort, who am also an elder, and a witness of the
sufferings of Christ, and also a partaker of the glory that shall be revealed:” First take note that Peter does not begin his
exhortation of encouragement by addressing the “pastors” of the church, nor
does he refer to them as “priests”, “bishops”, or “reverends”. His counsel is intended for those who are
“elders” in the church. Further he
identifies himself as a fellow elder. In
this context he is leveling the playing field.
The encouragement he is about to offer is spread across the church for
those who are more senior in the faith.
The common Christian experience that forms a true church is
living salvation. Those who have been
living in this condition longer are by definition elders in the faith. The designation of elder is not constrained
only to those of advanced physical years (though typically they have had the
most opportunity to be living in salvation the longest), it is simply about
those who better understand what it means to be saved FROM YOURSELF. Those who have had long held addictions to
sin in any form, and have found themselves made free from that addiction, get
it. They understand what it means to be
remade by Christ. No longer wanting and
craving the thing that once destroyed them, gives that Christian an insight
into salvation that someone who has not had the same personal experience can
ever truly understand. Those who are in
that journey, but not as far along are likely not elders. Those who are in that journey, but much
farther along, likely are elders.
Peter was around long enough to be a personal witness of
Christ, but he immediately outlines that those who are fellow partakers of His
grace and glory are also now revealed to be co-leaders in the faith. Think how tradition has robbed the cause of
God. In a group of 100 church members,
tradition dictates that the pastor is the sole leader of the faith and
movement. But in the model Peter
ascribes, there would be a body of elders who are equally responsible for the
growth of the church, both inside and outside its walls. These elders would ALL have a role to play in
the viral church, not just a supporting role to the singular pastor, but to be
a body of pastors who not only speak the gospel, but live under its life
altering power. The transformation of
the lives of these elders who have lived in this condition longer than the
average member is THE witness for Christ that no single individual could ever
replace.
Peter continues his counsel in verse 2 … “Feed the flock of
God which is among you, taking the oversight thereof, not by constraint, but
willingly; not for filthy lucre, but of a ready mind; [verse 3] Neither as
being lords over God's heritage, but being ensamples to the flock.” Keep in mind Peter is NOT addressing a set of
pastors, priests, or bishops … he may well be addressing you. He begins by pointing out the first blessing
of anyone who is living the salvation experience, the honor of “feeding” the
flock of God. He encourages those who
understand salvation from a personal experience to take oversight of the body,
NOT through force of constraint, but by choice and of a willing heart.
This gift of feeding the flock is designated to the elders
of the church, to those who personally understand living in salvation, not just
the figurehead. The “leadership” these
elders provide is encouragement, counsel, and direction to those less advanced
in the journey of transformation, of how to take the next step in the surrender
process to Jesus Christ. That is how the
collective “we” feed the collective flock of God. It is not about preaching formal sermons that
take 6 days to prepare, and get delivered in 90 mins in a formal church setting
once a week. It is by daily interacting
with the part of the flock we come in regular contact with and providing
insight and sharing common experience of how to surrender even more to Jesus
Christ. It is by seeking out those who
may have strayed from our company because we care about them, and realize that
sometimes the War against evil inflicts casualties and pain. Watching out for our sheep means going the
extra mile to find the ones that stray and reminding them of just how much they
are loved, not how guilty they may be for straying in the first place. The Shepherd brings the lost sheep home on
His shoulders, He does not spend the next 60 minutes giving them a lecture on
how stupid they were to stray from His company in the first place.
The next tradition buster Peter has the audacity to be blunt
about is … the role of Church leader, or feeder of the flock that was intended
for elders not pastors, is an UNPAID position.
We, not the formal pastor-ship of a given church of believers, are to
feed the flock as Peter says … “NOT for filthy lucre”. Instead we do these acts of love because our
minds are made ready by the transforming power of the love of Christ. We too pick up the lost straying sheep, and
tenderly lay them across our shoulders without ever voicing a word of
condemnation, and gently invite them back into the fold of Christ, bringing
them personally into His presence and love once again. We, like Christ, meet whatever physical,
mental, or emotional needs they have - that through Christ we have the ability
to meet. And we do ALL of this without a
single thought of how much money it is worth to the church, or to the lost soul
we minister to.
In the viral church Peter advocates, there are no offering
calls intended to fund the work of the singular minister. Instead resources are collected and
distributed as the members have need.
That too is a radical departure from tradition in our churches. Using collective wealth to benefit the
members as they have need, with everyone contributing including the self-funded
elders, is unheard of. Musicians who
gladly give their talents back to God for free in His services, or better, in
His cause whatever the venue is a far cry from the paid positions that
infiltrate the ranks of our wealthier churches today. Peter continued his skills as a fisherman
long after his additional role as Apostle and elder was taken on. He did use donated funds to enable mission
work and to establish churches in areas that did not formerly have them. But he did none of this in order to “make a
living”. Nor did he aspire to the great
wealth that could be had off the collective backs of believers who continue to
donate to the cause of Christ. He did
not live with hand carts carried by slaves to ease his passage to new areas of
the world. In our vernacular, he did not
go buy a Rolls Royce to get to church because he had the money, and wanted to
make a statement about the blessings of God to His flock.
Instead Peter supported himself when he could, and used
donated funds when the cause of Christ required him to. What is more, he advocates the same model to
the elders across the faith. Peter
continues his counsel of what it means to lead emphasizing that the elders are
NOT to think of themselves as “Lords” over Gods people. A Lord had every right in the day of Peter to
expect compensation from his assets. His
servants worked to earn their Lord means to ever grow his kingdom. Peter is quick to point out this is not the
model for the viral church. Instead the
elders of which he counts himself, are to provide leadership by being examples
to the flock. Again Peter emphasizes
that the distinction of elder is reserved for those who are LIVING the
salvation experience. The living example
of what it means to be made free from sin, is the hallmark of an elder. It is the very reason why an elder knows his
own unworthiness, realizes how much he needs Christ in order to reach others,
and is so grateful even to be used in the cause of Christ for the redemption of
others.
When we love others like Christ loves others, our entire
purpose for living is to lure the non-repentant sinner to the Lord of love
through acts of unselfish charity and personal investment no matter what their
response. This is the mission of
spreading the gospel, and it was never intended to be consolidated in the hands
of single pastor, or single church leader, under the auspices of needing
organization. This role of elder was to
be defined by how good one’s understanding of personal transformation to love
like He loves was known and adopted.
Elder(s), plural, were to provide the leadership and living example to
the flock of God, not as a paid position, but as stewards of his flock applying
resources as needs were revealed, and contributing to this cause themselves as
they were able. This is the model that
would create a viral church, both then and now.
Peter concludes his exhortation to the elder leadership of
the viral church in verse 4 writing … “And when the chief Shepherd shall
appear, ye shall receive a crown of glory that fadeth not away.” Peter first reminds these intended leaders
that they are under-shepherds and living examples in the cause of Christ. The ONLY true leader of the church of Christ
is Jesus Christ, the chief Shepherd.
When He shall appear, those who have pointed others back to the source
of Love, will receive a crown of glory that will not fade away. First, notice that it is not the sparkle of
jewels illuminated by the eternal light of God, that are reflections of our
accomplishments in the kingdom of heaven.
Stones are not the prize. What
will stand without fading in His kingdom are the souls who might not have been
there, but for our choice to reflect His love to them at just the right time in
their lives, no matter the conditions of our own life at the time. Choosing to reflect love to others, not just
when it is convenient to us, or expedient to us, but based on the needs of others
results in the glory that does not fade.
Putting the needs of others ahead of our own, is the exact path Christ
walked when He was here, even when it was not convenient.
The ministry of the leading elders in the church is not
about the reproof of sin, or the watch guarding of standards, it is about the
experimental love of Christ. It is about
living under the freedom from sin, that unburdens the soul and brings a level
of happiness those who remain chained in sin want to aspire to. Without living in freedom from the pain of
self-inflicted sin we have nothing the world would long to acquire. We have then only words, not deeds. We have only stories, not experience. You do not need to condemn the pain sin
causes at all, if you can DEMONSTRATE what it means to live free from it. Punishment, judgment, and consequences are
not what is needed to call our attention to in the cause of Christ – what is so
desperately needed is the WAY OUT. Point
the flock and the erring soul to the love of Christ, demonstrating how He can
make them free from sin, just as He is doing for you. Demonstrate to the flock of Christ that the
freedom He has already brought you has taken away your self-inflicted pain and
is making your life better every day, and you will find willing ears, and
hearts that desire to find what you have found.
This is the way in which the cause of Christ is advanced, and the gospel
spread in the power in which it was intended.
The role of leading the viral church was not ever supposed
to be constrained to the few, but instead experienced by the many. Tradition robs the leadership of Jesus Christ
to replace it with limited humans in limited roles in paid positions of formal
authority, and thus reduced what was supposed to be a viral church into a focused
failure. But it is not too late to
return to basics. It is not too late to
see the gospel advanced by the living example of those who understand
transformation to love others like He loves others. When we begin to reflect the love of Christ
to those in need, we become the gospel message in living form. Until we reflect that love to others, we are
sounding brass, and tinkling cymbals, full of fury and noise and meaning
nothing to His cause. It is not the
stories of others that is needed to reach the person in your path, it is YOUR
story he needs to hear and to see. In
this you become the elder who shares in the spread of the gospel.
But the counsel of how to achieve a viral church Peter
intended was not constricted only to those of more experience He had ideas for
those less experienced as well …
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