Church Planting in the U.S.: A Discussion with Tim Brister
Posted: November 9, 2011 Filed under: Church, Gospel, Interviews, Pastoral Resources Leave a comment »I recently interviewed one of my favorite guys and a man that I’ve done some good Kingdom work with. Enjoy!
For some other great interviews and conversations, click HERE.
TODAY:
Tim Brister is the Director of the PLNTD Network and Associate Pastor at Grace Baptist Church in Cape Coral, Florida. He also blogs at the popular Provocations & Pantings.
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What are the biggest cultural challenges that you see hindering the Gospel in your country?
TB: My one word answer would be idolatry. But to be more specific, I would say that our culture provides many functional saviors or god-replacements that have brought about increased slavery and dysfunctional living, ironically being lived out as a self-salvation project. Seeking to be free, people have become enslaved. Thinking they are living independent of God, they don’t realize they are only under the present judgment and facing the coming wrath of God. Unlike many addictions, idolatry springs from good things that have become ultimate things. Our culture has defined themselves by the good things God has blessed us, and the in our depravity we have turned God’s blessings into a curse. Only when the kingdom of God comes in the power of the Holy Spirit can captives be set free and functional saviors seen for the sham they really are.
What would you say is the biggest reason for a need for church planting in your country?
TB: Every generation is a responsible steward of the mission God has given us. That mission is to make disciples who gather as new churches (local expressions of the kingdom). We need church planting first and foremost in our country because the church is the only “institution” God has promised to build and bless. Our country is not promised God’s blessings. The same is true for parachurch organizations, educational systems, or government programs. The church is not only uppermost in God’s plan. It is God’s plan for His people. Therefore, we should devote our lives to joining God on His mission to make His name great through the proclamation of the gospel, advancement of His kingdom, and planting of new churches.
Cultural context aside, what general advice would you give to a man who is considering planting a church?
TB: Generally speaking, I would begin by saying know God well. That may sound simplistic, but often times church planters spend more time considering the context rather than communion with God. We need me who know God and commune with Him, men who are fluent with the gospel and find their lives shaped and saturated with it. The calling of a church planter is certainly important, but what is preeminent in my mind is whether that prospective planter has a cursory knowledge and experience with God or whether he is, in the words of John Piper, “God-besotted.” Given all the challenges and difficulties church planters face, those who know God best are best equipped to handle the various seasons they will encounter.
What encouragement would you give a planter who may be thinking of “throwing in the towel” because perhaps things are not going how they had hoped?
TB: Realistically speaking, I believe every church planter will be able to attest that things that did not go exactly as they envisioned. Everything looks great on paper or in a proposal, but when everything unfolds, there are surprises and disappointments that will be inevitable. In some situations, it may very well be time to “throw in the towel” in the sense that God may have other plans than what you intended. On the other hand, I believe that we are living in a time where endurance and perseverance are well-worn virtues of yesteryear but a rare find today. My encouragement would be not to think too self-referentially or make decisions when you are depressed or frustrated. Seek counsel from those who will speak plainly in your life and help you keep a kingdom-first perspective on all your labors.
Lastly, I encourage the church planter to reflect on the last days of Jesus’ life on earth. His mission appeared to be a waste of time and effort. His disciples all turned back and denied Jesus. He had no visible “fruit” and even on the cross His Father turned His back on Him. At any point, Jesus could have thrown in the towel. He didn’t when he sweat drops of blood at Gethsemane, was whipped to the bone, or when nails pierced his hands and feet. At the end of the day, this vision of our Savior who “for the joy set before Him” endured the cross (Heb. 12:1-2) should inspire us in the race marked out for us. Because of the resurrection, Paul exhorts us that we should be “steadfast, immovable, and always abounding in the work of the Lord” and encourages us that “no labor is in vain in the Lord” (1 Cor. 15:58). Abound in the work. None of it is wasted because Jesus is risen and will raise us also. Believe that the Lord of the harvest will bring an increase. And find your identity not in the work or the harvest but in the one who rejoices over you as His adopted son.
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For some other great interviews and conversations, click HERE.
Ministers of Reconciliation
Posted: November 3, 2011 Filed under: Daily Life, Gospel, Testimony Leave a comment »In a world of subjective truths, complete equality, tolerance, and acceptance, Christianity has become nothing more than “another” religion in the eyes of many. Western culture in particular is grievously enamored with the idea of self-reliance, self-dependence, and self-worth. Christianity is extremely counter-cultural because it teaches the actuality of human depravity, the necessity for a Savior, an other-worldly focus, and an eternal view of our temporal lives. For the world at-large, this is something that is considered intolerant and outdated, a tradition steeped in tradition, and a stumbling block to progress in the world. For Christians, however, this is true reality. This is life for the human race
Perhaps a substantial reason for the negative view of Christianity is the attitude and actions of Christians themselves. As a world religion, the stigma of dependence on something outside ourselves is already a built-in excuse for the world to reject us. In addition, Christians mistake their salvation as a license to be self-righteous and judgmental, wondering why the world is not intelligent enough to “figure it out.” As the Pharisee in Luke 18, we often look at the world around us exclaiming, “Thank you God that I’m not like these tax collectors!” As the story goes, the Pharisee has much to learn from the tax collector whose only justification is in the mercy of God, not in his righteous (or unrighteous) works. I have encountered many non-Christians and de-churched Christians who use Christian hypocrisy as the chief reason for their unbelief. Often times this is a copout, in my estimation, but just as often it is as real to them as Jesus is to us. For Jesus to be a catalyst for change in the world, Christians must first wear His name with humility, dignity, and fervor.
As Jesus so clearly states in Luke 19, even if we do not worship Him, creation itself will cry out His name. He doesn’t need us to change the world but, nonetheless, He uses us as agents of reconciliation (2 Cor. 15:14-21). It is our duty and obligation to speak truth into the world (Matt. 28:18-20), and there is no “out clause” for the Christian. We are to be salt and light in a tasteless and dark world (Matt. 5:13-16), loving Him and others because He first loved us (1 John 4:19). There is a story going on all around us, a story God has been writing since before the foundation of the world. Again, He doesn’t need us, but He wants us and uses us. Acts 17 tells us that God has appointed to every person the time and boundaries in which they live so that they will find Him. So, for the Christian, this means that not only are you in the time and place that you are to find God, but those around you are in a similar position. You cannot save His elect, but it is your burden as a Christian to treat everyone as though they are. As the great Charles Spurgeon once said (and I paraphrase), “I believe that God will save His elect, and I also believe that if I do not preach the Gospel He will lay the blood of the lost at my doorstep.”
A non-Christian reading this essay may have no clue what I am talking about. Heck, a Christian reading this may be confused, but the Bible is the only authority Christians have to stand on and we must plant our roots firmly in it. In the end, we do not know the answers to every question about how and why God saves anyone, but His Word is very clear that the proclamation of His Gospel is a key component to transforming the world (Romans 10). The world cannot be ultimately changed for the better by new legislature, war, personal enlightment, or secret philosophies; it can only be changed by the sin-stomping, life-altering, culture-scandaling, life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. He is the way, the truth, and the life and no one comes to the Father but through Him and by Him (John 6:44; 14:6).
This is our hope, and this is hope for our world. May we as Christians reflect Christ in a way that is not self-righteous and proud, but rather humble and sacrificial. Perhaps one of the most telling verses in the entire New Testament comes in Acts 2. After hearing the preaching of the Word, the early Christians went about their daily lives following the apostles’ teaching, sacrificing for one another, and spending genuine time in community. The result? They were loved by those around them and “the Lord added to their number daily those who were being saved” (2:47). People were being saved just by watching these Christians live their lives! This is the Gospel at work in the world, changing lives through lives that love God and love others. The word being preached is extremely important, as seen earlier in Acts 2, but there is so much more to it. Jesus will be a catalyst for change in the world when Christians obey Him the way these early Christians did.
I was first introduced to church at the age of 14. Following my parents’ divorce, I was subconsciously chasing after self-worth and the approval of others. I found that at church. There were people there who loved me, who invested in me, and who genuinely wanted to show Christ to me. All of these factors taught me things about God, but I was always provided with a list of rules to follow in order to convince God to love me. It wasn’t until the age of 21 before Christ took full hold of my heart. When hearts are transformed, actions will follow. At first, I was more like the bratty kid who does chores begrudgingly rather than a respectful and loving son, obeying out of love, respect, and appreciation for my Father. It is paramount that Christians be ministers of reconciliation, watching Jesus grab hearts not through our Pharisaical attempts at righteousness, but through our works of love aimed both at Him and at His image-bearers. Christ does not need us, but He uses us. May we be faithful stewards of this responsibility.
Matt Chandler on the Explicit Gospel
Posted: October 26, 2011 Filed under: Gospel, Pastoral Resources Leave a comment »“If you don’t make the Gospel explicit, if you don’t keep coming back to the imputed righteousness of Jesus Christ for us, if you don’t keep coming back to the wrath absorbing cross for us, If you don’t keep coming back to the resurrection — listen, you need all three of those — if you don’t keep coming back to those things and you assume that’s some sort of kindergarten-level, entry-understanding Christianity; you are going to build out Moralistic Deism — do this, don’t do this — instead of preaching, “find your righteousness in Christ alone and approach the throne of grace with confidence.” But you’ve got to come back to it — over and over and over again.”
- Matt Chandler
Behavior modification does no good for anyone. We can conform people to a pattern of living – typically begrudgingly – but it won’t reach their hearts. The point of the Gospel is to transform hearts, not behavior. If the heart is changed, obedience to God is the natural outcome.
Preaching Notes from Popular Pastors
Posted: October 8, 2011 Filed under: Pastoral Resources Leave a comment »This is a really cool idea by Josh Harris. He has scanned and posted sermons from some of the greatest preachers of our time, such as: Mark Driscoll, Tim Keller, C.J. Mahaney, Mark Dever. Matt Chandler, and David Platt.
Check them out: Part 1 | Part 2
Dumb Church Sign
Posted: October 4, 2011 Filed under: Miscellaneous Leave a comment »This is a great reason why non-believers justifiably hate the church. Not a great way to help people hear the message of Christ.
John Owen, Sin, and Temptation
Posted: September 26, 2011 Filed under: Gospel Leave a comment »“Let no man pretend to fear sin that does not fear temptation also! These two are too closely united to be separated.”
- John Owen
It seems as though our culture has mastered the art of stepping as closely to the edge of the cliff as possible without falling into the canyon. Inevitably, culture can and will creep into our churches, causing Christians to adopt the same ideals about temptation and sin.
Though Jesus was tempted as we are, yet without sin (Heb. 4:15), it is not wise nor beneficial for us to engage in temptation ourselves. As Owen so perfectly states, sin is too closely tied to temptation to be toyed with. It is equally a great danger to be ignorant of temptation, believing that that we are too holy or righteous to stumble. The truth is that, even for the Christian, Satan is able to capitalize on our weaknesses and knows the human race well enough to tap into the darkest parts of our existence.
Paul, gives us great hope in this battle:
No temptation has overtaken you that is not common to man. God is faithful, and He will not let you be tempted beyond your ability, but with the temptation He will also provide the way of escape, that you may be able to endure it.
- 1 Corinthians 10:13
Temptation is common to mankind, and there are none special to your situation. Sin is a nasty beast, devouring away at every person from birth. This reminds us quickly to remember that we are just as in need of grace as those whom we love to belittle and judge (Jesus had something to say about that).
Thankfully, Paul doesn’t leave us there but reminds us of the Gospel. Whatever it is that you struggle with (and we all have a multitude of somethings), God makes a way of escape. That escape may look different for everyone, but the point is that we as Christians, with new natures, have the unique ability to step away before we are entangled in sin.
Please, do not isolate yourself from the world. We have far too many people who hide from culture and have no real impact for the Kingdom, but use good judgment as a child of God to deal with temptation as seriously as necessary.
Be in the world, not of it.
When I Became a Man (Spoken Word)
Posted: September 3, 2011 Filed under: Spoken Word | Tags: Christ, Christianity, faith, Jesus, Spoken Word Leave a comment »His Treasure
Posted: August 31, 2011 Filed under: Daily Life, Gospel Leave a comment »Christian, let God’s distinguishing love to you be a motive to you to fear Him greatly. He has put His fear in your heart, and may not have given that blessing to your neighbor, perhaps not to your husband, your wife, your child, or your parent. Oh, what an obligation should this thought lay upon your heart to greatly fear the Lord! Remember also that this fear of the Lord is His treasure, a choice jewel, given only to favorites, and to those who are greatly beloved.
- John Bunyan
Preaching Today: A Discussion with Jared Wilson and Tony Merida
Posted: August 17, 2011 Filed under: Gospel, Interviews, Pastoral Resources 6 Comments »I have asked two brothers of mine to answer a few questions in hopes of providing a resource and encouragement to men entrusted with preaching the Word of God in our culture.
The Panel:
Jared Wilson is the lead pastor of Middletown Springs Community Church in Middletown Springs, Vermont and the author of Your Jesus is Too Safe and Gospel Wakefulness (releasing October 2011). He also blogs at the popular Gospel-Driven Church and has written Bible study material for LifeWay.
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Tony Merida is the founding pastor of Imago Dei Church in Raleigh, North Carolina and Associate Professor of Preaching at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary. He is also the author of Faithful Preaching and Orphanology.
BRANDON: In light of the many aspects of church life (i.e. Bible studies, small groups, age-specific classes/ministries, evangelism, worship through music, etc.), is preaching to the group-at-large from the stage/pulpit the most important? Why or why not?
JARED: I don’t know if I would classify it as “most” important, but I’d certainly classify it as indispensable, necessary, and vitally important. The Bible prescribes and we need the Scriptures proclamationally delivered — with authority, with exposition, with prophetic strength. This can be done one-on-one or in smaller group settings, of course, but we see both under the old covenant and the new covenant the people of God gathered to hear the word of God. Think of Moses’ addressing of the people after hearing from God all the way through to Ezra preaching to those gathered in Nehemiah to Jesus’ sermons and the addresses of the apostles in the church’s court-gatherings. The pattern is not either/or in terms of how the word of God is delivered to believers but both/and, and we have plenty of Scriptural examples of proclamational preaching from one person to a large group, enough to see it as biblically normative and therefore contemporarily necessary.
We have always needed the word of God delivered to us this way, but I think culturally speaking today we need in a peculiar way a pastoral voice under the mantle of God’s authority delivering “thus saith the Lord” to us. We are very much drenched in a “did God really say?” society, and some of the ways churches today downplay preaching or turn it into conversational sharing or what-have-you lose the gospel-shape of preaching, which is proclamational and one-directional.
Mark Driscoll has some helpful to things to say on this subject in relation to proclamational pulpit preaching as the “air war” and the day-to-day matters of personal discipleship, fellowship, counseling, and the all-encompassing participation in the mission of God as the “ground war.”
TONY: I agree with Jared. We should work to do both “the air war” and “ground war” well. It seems that some (extreme) groups pay little attention to one of these two.
For some, preaching has no place in church life. They think the church should just have dialogue, or groups, or meet in a bar and talk theology. I want to see more emphasis on public proclamation, practicing 1 Tim. 4:13. Public proclamation is patterned for us in Scripture, and public proclamation has the “life-changing-on-the-spot” potential because God saves people through the preaching of the gospel.
On the other hand, there is a group that has such a high view of preaching that they give very little thought to how to do the ground war: how to disciple, train elders, plant churches, reach unreached people groups, care for orphans and widows, etc. Ideally, the church is led from the pulpit with faithful exposition and application of biblical texts, and then ministries are developed and deployed to live out these truths. To do both, public proclamation and practical ministry well, serious attention must be given to both.
BRANDON: Over the course of your ministry, what has been your most consistent focus in regards to how you prepare and ultimately preach a sermon?
TONY: My main focus is that that I want to take the listeners for a swim in the text. I want us to immerse ourselves in Scripture, and my desire is particularly to exalt Jesus as the hero of the Bible – and by extension as the hero of every sermon. I want people to walk away every week and say, “What a great Savior” not “What a great sermon.”
To do this, I use a five step method for preparation that is articulated in Faithful Preaching: (1) study the text, (2) unify the redemptive theme, (3) construct an outline that supports the theme, (4) add the functional elements within each point (explanation, application, illustration), and (5) add an introduction and response.
In terms of mechanics, I want to make sure every sermon is a coherent whole, built around one dominant (redemptive) idea, and then drive that idea through the body of the sermon, pointing people to Jesus.
JARED: I find this very helpful. I think you’re right on the money. In particular, I think what is often missing in a lot of preaching and missing in a lot of instruction or shepherding of preaching is the ability to “feel” Scripture. So I like your words on immersion and swimming.
Preaching ought to be exultational, an act of worship on the preacher’s part. Many preachers have already discovered that their congregations don’t get excited about what their preacher tells them to get excited about but instead about what their preacher is evidently and obviously himself excited about. Our people will start to see how God’s proclamational initiative in saving us through Jesus Christ provokes doxological astonishment.
BRANDON: Tony, you are in a unique position in that you teach on preaching in the academic arena. Are there significant benefits to studying preaching academically, or is more of a “born with it or not” gift?
TONY: I begin the first day of Bible Exposition class (the basic preaching class) with a brief talk on “The Making of a Preacher.” I tell them that there seem to be about seven things that shape guys into effective preachers. Most of them involve the work of God and human responsibility, but there are a few important things to learn in an “academic setting.”
- Love for Scripture. I think the Word should drive us to the pulpit, instead of the pulpit driving us to the Word. Good preaching is overflow … an overflow of love for God’s Gospel. Hopefully, in class I can stir up a love for Scripture by the way I handle the Word and speak of the Word, but ultimately, this is a personal dynamic between the student and God.
- Gifts. Obviously, “I can’t put in what God has left out!” Not everyone is gifted to preach. That’s okay; we need guys who are gifted in other areas as well in more priestly and kingly positions.
- Experience. I can’t give students this either, with the exception of a few reps in preaching class. Guys need to be preaching a lot to be effective. Driscoll says in Vintage Church that a guy needs 200-300 sermons before he’s a decent preacher.
- Mentor. I can’t do this either, with the exception of the nine or ten guys that I try to mentor in our elder training program. For some students, these mentors may be from a distance, and for some, they may be a “dead mentor” (ala John Piper and Jonathan Edwards). Preferably, in my opinion, you have all three: life on life mentor, a mentor from a distance, and a dead mentor.
- Models. I really can’t do this in class either, with the exception of showing some sermon videos in class. But I do try to help guide students toward pastoral-theologians that they can learn from, like Jared Wilson.
- Character. This goes with #1, but is a bit different. Here, I’m talking about having a life that reflects a love for Scripture. People need to see the pastor exemplifying his teaching. I can help cultivate love and holiness by emphasizing spiritual disciplines in class, but once again, students must accept responsibility for pursuing God and exemplifying Christ.
- Instruction. Here’s where I try to be of most help to aspiring preachers in class. There are things that students need to learn like: how to exegete a passage of Scripture, how to incorporate biblical theology into expository preaching, how to apply the text in a Gospel-centered manner instead of a moralistic manner, how to preach Christ from the Old Testament, how to prepare a sermon manuscript, prepare a series, look for sermon helps, and on and on. While a seminary is not the only place one could learn these things, it is one place.
With this list, it’s evident that one can’t simply take my preaching class and believe that they’ll become a great preacher. Nope. I can’t promise that at all. I work hard at #7, and help with some of the others, but it’s certainly not all about the classroom. Beyond these matters, I also begin with the caveat that a lot in preaching is “mysterious” and that I can’t explain all the spiritual dynamics involved in preaching. But this list is my humble stab at trying to articulate some of the key things that seem to be present in the lives of effective preachers.
JARED: Tony, you’re too kind, but I think I can be extremely helpful especially in providing examples of what *not* to do. ;-)
Love the stuff on “mysterious.” We’ve all heard guys who’ve been preaching for multiple decades who sound like they’re reading a toaster manual. So I think giftedness and personal investment in the text play as big a role in preaching as technical and exegetical know-how. Of course, excellent preachers don’t start out excellent and we are all improving over time. But guys with the gift find that muscle getting stronger with use and having better reflexes.
The other side to this, however, is that the power of the gospel that works through the preacher also works in spite of the preacher. And I’m sure we’ve all experienced examples of our weak, foolish, tired sermon being no hindrance to God’s word stirring or changing or convicting or comforting our hearers. We have the privilege of getting better at preaching as we go, but we also have the freedom to know it doesn’t ultimately depend on our ability, rhetorical or otherwise.
BRANDON: With the Internet and media outlets that consume our world today, people have more access than ever before to various worldviews and areas of thought. Should apologetics be a large part of preaching in the 21st century?
JARED: I suppose it depends on what you mean by “large part.” I think apologetics is important, and some preachers/teachers are more gifted in this area than others. For my part, I don’t do a lot of apologetics in my preaching and find it more at home in personal conversations and small group settings. I make some exceptions in sermons — for instance, I preach the resurrection quite often, but when I preach on it at Easter time, I typically include some historical and logical evidences for Jesus’ bodily resurrection, not just to encourage believers in their faith but also because we are more likely to have unbelieving visitors at that time who might find the evidences challenging.
But in general I don’t deal in apologetics in my preaching because — again, speaking *personally* here — I find myself being led by that into a “let me convince you” kind of mode that I don’t find is the primary focus of preaching. I want to proclaim the truth and let the Spirit convince.
But, again, I find apologetics generally helpful and we have used materials from Josh McDowell, Ravi Zacharias, and others in our church and found them helpful. Most recently we had a group studying Tim Keller’s *The Reason for God* and they found it both helpful toward their conversations with skeptics and critics — who can be quite hostile and tenacious in our neck of the woods — and strengthening of their own faith.
TONY: I think it is very important for preachers to consider the presence of competing worldviews in the audience as they preach. As Keller says, we tend to answer the questions of the people with whom we are talking. And if we are only talking to believers, our preaching will become “ghettoized,” that is, the preacher will tend to address “insiders” only. Few outsiders will show up. But if people hear that a pastor is addressing the questions of skeptics, doubters, and atheists, then they will come – either because they themselves are interested, or because their believing friends will bring them. Keller has really challenged me on this. It doesn’t mean we can’t preach through books of the Bible, or even that we can’t focus on believers; it simply means we need to address some “outsider questions” weekly in our preaching. This requires reading very widely and also intentionally talking with non-believers. Keller says most sermons prepared by seminary students are not any good because they are aimed at other seminary students. I would agree with this, with the exception of those students who are out in the culture talking with people.
The way this works is basically to ask questions as you are working through your text, “what part of this passage would a non-believer reject?” Perhaps this would include something about the presence of warfare in the OT, the idea of wrath, or the exclusivity of the gospel. I think it is very important to address these issues as they appear in the weekly sermon text. Too many pastors (and I am guilty of this) never stop to ask, “What would [insert the skeptic at the coffee shop] not understand or believe about this passage?” Another tip I would give is to address the skeptic in the introduction of the sermon, and to let them know that you are aware of their objections and questions. Mark Dever does this really well. A final note would be to remember to argue appropriately. If you are going to challenge a worldview, you can’t just throw bombs at it. You need to get inside it, understand it, sympathize with it, and then show how it falls flat, and that the gospel is the only answer. You will not connect with the skeptic by misrepresenting their view and spouting “hater-aid.”
None of these ideas require that you totally re-vamp your preaching to do “apologetic preaching,” as much as it means that you prepare your sermon with competing worldviews in mind every week.
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For another great discussion, see: Christians and Internet Presence












Evolution and Religion
Posted: September 12, 2011 | Author: Brandon Smith | Filed under: News & Commentary | 2 Comments »The Pew Research Center did an interesting poll comparing beliefs of evolution among different religions: