3. Qualifications for
the Work.
Forasmuch then
as your office is both of so great excellency and of so great difficulty,
you see with what great care and study you ought to apply
yourselves,
as well that you
may show yourselves dutiful and thankful to that Lord,
who
has placed you in so high a dignity;
and also to
beware that you personally neither offend,
nor be the cause
of others offending.
"About
eating food offered to idols, then, we know that “an idol is nothing in the
world,” and that “there is no God but one.” For even if there are so-called gods, whether
in heaven or on earth—as there are many “gods” and many “lords”—
yet for us there is one
God, the Father.
All things are from Him,
and we exist for Him.
And there is one Lord, Jesus Christ.
All things are through Him,
and we exist through Him.
All things are from Him,
and we exist for Him.
And there is one Lord, Jesus Christ.
All things are through Him,
and we exist through Him.
However, not everyone has this knowledge. In fact,
some have been so used to idolatry up until now that when they eat food offered
to an idol, their conscience, being weak, is defiled. Food will not make us acceptable to God. We are not
inferior if we don’t eat, and we are not better if we do eat. But be careful
that this right of yours in no way becomes a stumbling block to the weak. For if someone sees you, the one who has this
knowledge, dining in an idol’s temple, won’t his weak conscience be encouraged
to eat food offered to idols? Then the weak person,
the brother for whom Christ died, is ruined by your knowledge. Now when you sin like
this against the brothers and wound their weak conscience, you are sinning
against Christ. Therefore, if food causes my brother to fall, I will
never again eat meat, so that I won’t cause my brother to fall." 1 Corinthians 8.4-13
"Then they prayed, “You, Lord, know the
hearts of all; show which of these two You have chosen" Acts
1.24
Once again we are
reminded that the office of priest is a high calling. Indeed it is a 'great excellency' — the kind
of phrase usually reserved for royalty, heads of government such as Presidents,
and international judges. As God's
minister we should carry ourselves like, and in our life be as exacting as, those in
the world who earn the title 'excellency.'
This will be difficult, and The Ordinal has no shame in speaking that plain
and simple truth. Ministry is greatly
difficult and there is no way around that.
If you are not finding ministry difficult then it is likely because you
are either not doing it properly or you fail to grasp what it is you are called
to not only do but what you are called to be.
That we must apply
ourselves with all care and study goes without saying but what this means
practically will be covered later. In
any case The Ordinal clearly expects the way we study and apply ourselves to
our ministry will be such that any onlooker would recognise immediately in us a person who is both most dutiful and professional in their work and yet also
eminently thankful for all the blessings and challenges God graces them with. This thankfulness flows from a simple
fundamental truth which both haunts and buoys those in ministry — this calling
was not their choice, it was God's calling and His choosing. Whilst it may be true that the church on
earth acknowledges and endorses a minister in their calling the church does not
give it or maintain it - nor can it remove it.
As the first question in the Public Examination makes clear, a person is
called above all else by God Himself and thus his spiritual authority flows
from that simple truth. The reason that
none of the Reformers up till Laud, and even many afterwards, did not have an
issue with inviting non-episcopally ordained clergy to minister in the Church
of England without 're-ordination' is simply because it was God who gave
authority and churches, whether episcopal or not, merely publicly recognise and
legally licence it. God has placed us in
this ministry, let us not forget or sully it.
The final clause is
the need for ministers to beware against offending any. This clearly cannot mean offending by
preaching the gospel which is inherently offensive to human nature. Instead it refers to life and manners, how we
act, speak, and relate others, what we do and what we don't do. Again this is a careful balancing act, but
the example given by Paul regarding not offending 'weaker brothers' who could
be enticed to sin by acting against their conscience is of utmost
importance. Paul goes so far as to say
that if we needlessly endanger, offend, or cause the stumbling of a fellow
Christian we are guilty of sin against Jesus Christ Himself. This should have ramifications on how
ministers relate to alcohol, gambling, television, language, and even
dress. Many Christians wander through
life oblivious to the effects of their words and actions. As ministers we have a duty not to be
oblivious. We have a duty to be not only reactionary to causing such a person to stumble but proactively anticipatory of
even the slim possibility of causing such stumbling. Ultimately, as God's ambassadors, we must put
the needs and holiness of others before our own freedoms and desires.
Do you grasp what an
excellency you have been given and does this daily encourage and bolster your
efforts to live up to your calling?
Do you truly
recognise the difficulty of your ministry?
How do you react to such difficulty?
What does it mean
for you that God personally chose you for ministry in His church? How does this truth change you?
Looking at what Paul
says about sinning against Christ by leading others to stumble, what in our
society today might ministers be doing which Paul would question?
Where might you be
causing offence or unnecessary stumbling?
a) Prayer for the Holy Spirit.
However, you cannot have a mind and will to do this by
yourselves;
for that will and ability is given by God
alone.
Therefore you ought, and have need, to pray earnestly for His
Holy Spirit.
"When he was in
distress, he sought the favour of Yahweh
his God and earnestly humbled
himself before the God of his ancestors." 2 Chronicles 33.12
"Elijah was a man with a nature like
ours; yet he prayed earnestly that
it would not rain, and for three years and six months it did not rain on the
land." James 5.17
"Search
for the Lord and for His strength; seek His face always." 1 Chronicles
16.11
"Wisdom
and strength belong
to God; counsel and understanding are His." Job 12.13
"He
will also strengthen you to the end, so that you will be blameless in the
day of our Lord Jesus Christ." 1 Corinthians 1.18
"For we don’t want you to be unaware,
brothers, of our affliction that took place in Asia: we were completely overwhelmed—beyond our strength—so that we even
despaired of life." 2 Corinthians 1.8
"I pray that He may grant you,
according to the riches of His glory, to be strengthened with power in
the inner man through His Spirit," Ephesians 3.16
"I
am able to do all things through Him who
strengthens me."
Philippians 4.13
"May you be strengthened with all power,
according to His glorious might, for all endurance and patience, with joy"
Colossians 1.11
"I labour for this, striving with His strength that works powerfully in me."
Colossians 1.29
"But the Lord is
faithful; He will strengthen and guard you from the evil one." 2
Thessalonians 3.3
"If anyone speaks, it should be as
one who speaks God’s words; if anyone
serves, it should be from the strength God
provides, so that God may be glorified through Jesus Christ in everything.
To Him belong the glory and the power forever and ever. Amen." 1
Peter 4.11
"So when they arrest
you and hand you over, don’t worry
beforehand what you will say. On the contrary, whatever is given to you in that
hour—say it. For it isn’t you speaking, but the Holy Spirit."
Mark 13.11
"But the Counsellor, the Holy Spirit—the Father will
send Him in My name—will teach you all
things and remind you of everything I have told you." John
14.26
"For our gospel did not
come to you in word only, but also in
power, in the Holy Spirit, and with much
assurance. You know what kind of men we were among you for your benefit,"
1 Thessalonians 1.5
"Guard,
through the Holy Spirit who lives in us, that good thing entrusted to
you." 2 Timothy 1.14
"I pray that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the
glorious Father, would give you a spirit
of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of Him." Ephesians
1.17
"Devote
yourselves to prayer; stay alert in it with thanksgiving."
Colossians 4.2
"At the same time, pray also
for us that God may open a door to us for the message, to speak the mystery of
the Messiah, for which I am in prison," Colossians 4.3
All that has so far been laid out and all that will follow is
quite bluntly an impossible standard. No
human excepting Jesus could ever even come close to it. That is not to say we should not strive to do
and be all we can for the glory of our Lord, but we must also be humble. We must never, ever, let pride infect our mind
or seep its rancid sewerage into our veins.
The reality is that without God at work within us not only would be fall
miserably short of achieving any of our calling but we would not even have the
basic and fundamental desire or will to do so in the first place. A holy discontent with ones holiness and
ministry is a sure sign of the Lord at work.
We must model in our lives and teaching a humility which
makes plain that our strength is weak and we can only go on through God's
strength; that our minds are feeble and stupid such that we can only teach
through God's gift of wisdom; that our hearts are so weak and fearful, so
slothful and selfish that the only way we can lead God's people is by His Holy
Spirit giving us a new heart and a new mind.
Not only must we model this we must
actually live it! We need to be on
our knees each day praying before all things for God to be at work within
us. We must be constantly casting down
our weaknesses and failures and calling on God to redeem them through His blood
and power.
The amazing thing is, our God is so loving and generous that
when we come to Him with a broken and contrite heart, with humility and empty
hands, He gives us more than we could ever imagine or hope for.
How does the fact that you can never do enough or be good
enough, let alone fulfil the life laid out in this exhortation, make you
feel? How should you respond?
How do you kill pride and selfish self-serving attitudes?
How practically can you model an utter dependence on God?
Do you truly believe that God will give you 'the will and the way' in your ministry?
b) Study of the
Scriptures.
And seeing that you cannot by any other means accomplish
the
doing of so weighty a work, pertaining to the salvation of man,
but
with doctrine and exhortation
taken out of the holy
Scriptures,
and
with a life agreeable to the same;
consider
how studious you ought to be in reading and learning the Scriptures,
and in
framing the manners both of yourselves,
and of
them that specially pertain to you,
according
to the rule of the same Scriptures:
and for this self-same cause,
how you ought to forsake and set
aside (as much as you may) all worldly
cares and
studies.
"But
as for you, continue in what you have learned and firmly believed. You know
those who taught you, and you know that from childhood you have known the sacred
Scriptures, which are able to give you wisdom for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus. All Scripture is inspired by God and is profitable for teaching, for
rebuking, for correcting, for training in righteousness, so that the man of God may be complete,
equipped for every good work." 2 Timothy 3.14-17
"Do your best to present yourself to God as
one approved, a worker who has no need to be ashamed, rightly handling the word
of truth." 2 Timothy 2.15
"Every word of God is pure;
He is a shield to those who take refuge in Him.
Don’t add to His words,
or He will rebuke you, and you will be proved a liar" Proverb 30.5-6
He is a shield to those who take refuge in Him.
Don’t add to His words,
or He will rebuke you, and you will be proved a liar" Proverb 30.5-6
"so My word that comes from My mouth
will not return to Me empty,
but it will accomplish what I please
and will prosper in what I send it to do.” Isaiah 55.11
will not return to Me empty,
but it will accomplish what I please
and will prosper in what I send it to do.” Isaiah 55.11
"I have stored up your word in my heart,
that I might not sin against you." Psalm 119.11
"This Book of the Law shall not
depart from your mouth, but you shall meditate on it day and night, so that you
may be careful to do according to all that is written in it. For then you will
make your way prosperous, and then you will have good success."
Joshua 1.8
"Do not be conformed to this world, but be
transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what
is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect."
Romans 12.2
"How can a young man keep his way
pure? By guarding it according to your word." Psalm 119.9
"For the word of God is living and
active, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing to the division of soul and
of spirit, of joints and of marrow, and discerning the thoughts and intentions
of the heart." Hebrews 4.12
"My people are destroyed for lack of
knowledge; because you have rejected knowledge, I reject you from being a
priest to me. And since you have forgotten the law of your God, I also will
forget your children." Hosea 4.6
"But his delight is in the law of the Lord, and on
his law he meditates day and night." Psalm 1.2
"This saying is
trustworthy: “If anyone aspires to be an overseer, he desires a noble
work.” An overseer, therefore, must be above reproach, the husband of one wife,
self-controlled, sensible, respectable, hospitable, an able teacher, not addicted to wine, not a bully but
gentle, not quarrelsome, not greedy— one who manages his own household competently, having his
children under control with all dignity. (If anyone does not know how to manage his
own household, how will he take care of God’s church?) He must not be a new convert, or he might
become conceited and fall into the condemnation of the Devil. Furthermore, he must have a good reputation
among outsiders, so that he does not fall into disgrace and the Devil’s trap." 1
Timothy 3.1-7
When God gives us the will and ability to
fulfil our calling the ways in which it is fulfilled are the next things to be
considered. How should a minister spend
their time in order to serve their Lord to the best of their ability? What methods should a minister use to train
themselves in righteousness and virtue that they may be examples to their
flocks? Above all things, the resounding
answer of our reformers is simple: hear, read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest
the Holy Scriptures. A minister of God is to be a person of the Bible.
When Saint Paul was in prison it was not food or clothes that were most
important to him, the first place was given to his 'scrolls' - that is his
Bible.
What the Church of England teaches about
Scripture will be examined further when looking at the Public Examination but
that it is the foundation and wellspring of all a minister should be is clear
from the extensive treatment in this exhortation.
The means of accomplishing the salvation of
many and the life of ministry is primarily through doctrine and preaching. In the view of the Reformers right doctrine
leads to right living. Good preaching
leads to changed lives and transformed morals.
Every minister should be a theologian, every minister should care and be
passionate about doctrine. Every
minister should hold preaching as their highest calling. Importantly though, all this doctrine and
teaching and preaching must come from one place above anywhere else — the
Bible. Anything which is not from the
Bible or cannot be supported by it is not to be taught as necessary to
salvation. Likewise when looking on how
a minister should order their lives the exhortation points us in the direction
of Scripture to find the answer. In a
world which constantly devalues Scripture and relativises it, as only a
post-modern mindset could, ministers should be ever appealing to Scripture for all
things both great and small.
Given ministers must teach biblical doctrine
and live Biblical lives it is no wonder we are told ministers should
'studiously' read and learn the Scriptures.
Ministers are to be perpetual and eternal students sitting beneath God's
word and absorbing its wisdom, truth, and power through careful exegesis,
prayerful seeking, and humble submission.
This is a challenging task for any Christian, especially the last part,
but it is vital to a healthy and wholesome ministry. There is simply no way around the fact that
the Anglican view of ministry involves much time spent in the study delving
into the wondrous and glories depths of the mysteries of God revealed through
the pages of the Bible.
This study should lead to practical and
externally recognisable changes in life and manners. Our lives, saturated in Scripture, should not
make sense to the world around us. Our
lives should be models of Biblical holiness and truth to those seeking it. But for ministers the buck doesn't stop at
our own door — we must likewise fashion the lives of our families and even
those committed to our charge. Paul
tells us that marriage is an image to the world of the love of Christ for the
Church. If you can't run a household
decently, Paul tells Timothy, you shouldn't be running a church. In the Bible every man is the pastor of his
family, only the best family pastors should take on the role of pastoring the
wider body of Christ.
Perhaps the most challenging aspect of the
exhortation is that the study of Scripture should so consume our lives that we
lay aside and count as worthless the cares of the world and the studies it would
call us to pursue. Thankfully the
exhortation graciously recognises that we can only do this as far as we are
able (or God allows?) and thus we are not to decry having a hobby or despise
all secular pleasure. But. nonetheless,
such things must most definitely be second place in our lives. At best we should use them to recharge our
batteries and inform our ministry as much as may be needed and no more.
You may be wondering what this practically
means. Well, thankfully, the Reformation
canons of the Church were more than clear in explaining such things:
"No
ecclesiastical person shall at any time, other than for their honest
necessities, resort to any taverns or alehouses, neither shall they board or
lodge in any such places. Furthermore,
they shall not give themselves to any base or servile labour, or to drinking or
riot, spending their time idly by day or by night, playing at dice, cards, or
tables, or any other unlawful games: but at all times convenient they shall
hear or read somewhat of the Holy Scriptures, or shall occupy themselves with
some other honest study or exercise, always doing the things which appertain to
honesty, and endeavouring to profit the church of God; having always in mind
that they ought to excel all others in purity of life, and should be examples
to the people to live well and christianily, under pain of ecclesiastical
censures, to be inflicted with severity according to the qualities of their offences." The Canons of 1603 75.
"The
sober, grave and exemplary conversation of all those that are employed in the
administration of holy things being of great avail for the furtherance of
piety, it hath been the religious care of the Church of England strictly to enjoin
on all and every one of her clergy, a pious, regular and inoffensive demeanour,
and to prohibit all loose and scandalous carriage by severe censures to be
inflicted upon such delinquents as appears by the 74th and 75th canons of 1603
provided to this purpose.
For
the more effectual success of which pious and necessary care this present synod
straitly charges all clergymen in this church that setting before their eyes
the glory of God, the holiness of their calling and the edification of the people
committed to them, they carefully avoid all excess and disorder, and that by
their Christian and religious conversation they shine forth as lights unto
others in all godliness and honesty." Canons of 1640 10.1-2
Whilst these canons are no longer in force
and have been relaxed beyond all recognition, they are the kind of things this
exhortation is talking about - and all ministers should be greatly challenged by
such canon laws.
How important do I
think right and biblical doctrine is?
How do I ensure my teaching is thoroughly biblical?
Is my life recognisable as one lived by and to biblical standards? How often do I evaluate my life by the bible
and do I have any systems in place to ensure I do?
How much time do I
spend studying Scripture? Is this enough or
not?
How high is studying
Scripture on my list of ministry priorities daily, weekly, monthly, annually?
When I don't like
what Scripture says am I willing to humbly submit to it?
How am I actively fashioning
the life of my family by biblical teaching and standards?
What cares and
studies of the world do I occupy my time with?
Is this more than I should, where
is the healthy balance?
Are there any
'worldy things' I do or take part in which fall short of the exemplary life
I am called to lead (which should have an eye to making sure no-one should
stumble by my example)
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