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A Little Bird Told Me …

Ministry wisdom can be found anywhere, even on Twitter.

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Lest you get the impression that great ministry advice is confined to history books, here are several quotes from Twitter and Facebook that are worth your time. Each was posted by a pastor in the past few months yet represents wisdom collected over years of ministry experience.

Carlos Eliel Rebollar on Facebook:

Something I like to do sometimes is look up sermons online from random, obscure pastors I’ve never heard of, and then listening to one of their sermons. There’s something about finding an obscure pastor/preacher of a rural town or a rough part of another city preaching a faithful and powerful sermon that excites the heck outta me. There’s a sense of solidarity, lots of encouragement, and a reminder of the “seven thousand in Israel, all the knees that have not bowed to Baal” that the Lord has left for himself in the world.

If you have been faithfully tilling hard ground day in and day out in a hard part of your city or in a small town, look up and remember that the Father sees you, delights in you, and is with you as you labor. You are recognized by the King of the Universe, who else’s recognition could matter more?

#embracingobscurity #ofwhomtheworldisnotworthy

Tara Beth Leach on Twitter (@tarabeth82):

One of my more meaningful practices that is a sustaining means of grace as a pastor is my Monday gathering with a small group of community pastors. We share vulnerably our wounds, sometimes freshly bleeding ones. We share wins. We share frustrations. We share headaches.

Jeremiah Vik on Twitter (@jeremiahvik):

Pastors, it’s too easy to say a lot and miss the main point. Don’t give them more than they can chew on the rest of the week.

Richard A. Villodas Jr. on Facebook:

Whenever I train preachers, I tell them to simply say “thank you” when they are complimented. No need to say stuff like, “it was all God.”

Nope. If it was all God it would be much better than that!!

Ray Ortlund on Twitter (@rayortlund):

This question weighs with me: However faithful I might be to biblical doctrine — and doctrine REALLY matters! –still, *does anyone want to hang out with me?* Truly faithful pastors are approachable, warm, tender, relaxed, a joy to be with.

Sharon Hodde Miller on Twitter (@shoddemiller):

The church is not a product, and the world is not a saturated marketplace. And yet, as soon as we received the call to plant, we got the question: “why does this area need another church?” As if “God called us” and also “people here still don’t know Jesus” isn’t reason enough.

Posted April 1, 2020

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

Shepherding in Life’s Parentheses

I found holy purpose in the interruptions to my work.

Preach a Double-Edged Sermon

The message you prepare for your congregation is also meant for you.

Pastoring People Who Cause You Pain

Pastor and author Jared C. Wilson shares what America’s first ordained African American taught him about facing hardship in ministry.

Stumbling on the Path of the Apostles

Is there room for amazing grace in our call to uncompromising faithfulness?

Who Am I That I Should Lead?

Some people need warnings to avoid the spotlight. Others need encouragement to step up.

The Noonday Demon in Our Distracted Age

What to do when a Netflix binge brings you more joy than God’s calling.

Don’t Give Away What’s Meant for You

Can we find oxygen for exhausted souls in Song of Songs, of all books?

How to Diagnose an Ailing Soul

Pastors who rush in with the wrong treatment court spiritual disaster.

Pastors, Printers, and the Priesthood of Believers

Without the ministry of skilled printers, Reformers may never have found their voice.

View issue


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