Seeking Wise Counsel

First Kings 12 tells the interesting story of young king Rehoboam and his inexperience as a newly appointed king. Rehoboam is quickly confronted with a dilemma and the need for wise counsel. As seems to be the case with many, Rehoboam had no shortage of people who wanted to give him advice (Who doesn’t like playing the game, “If I were the king”?). There were two groups vying for the king’s attention- those elderly men who had counseled Rehoboam’s father and Rehoboam’s younger friends whom he had grown up with. After listening to both sets of counsel, Rehoboam aided with the harsher, immature counsel of his friends, disregarding the ‘old school’ thinking of his father’s counselors.

Proverbs 13:10 wisely states, “By insolence comes nothing but strife, but with those who take advice is wisdom.” Strife followed Rehoboam’s actions because although he followed his friends’ counsel, it was only because it so closely matched his own desires. Rehoboam refused to take the advice that he didn’t like, no matter how wise it may have been.

Friends, over and over again in Scriptures we are admonished to seek heavenly wisdom and counsel from God and his word. Personally, I all too often fail to seek counsel, or worse, like Rehoboam, I seek it from those most like me who will tell me what I want to hear.

Mediation on Scriptures along with conversations with the elders of the faith (both living and dead) will yield a rich bounty. Why reinvent the wheel or travel down a sorrowful path when we can avoid doing so by seeking out the truth? Brothers, let us not repeat the foolishness of Rehoboam!

Watching the Sprouts Grow

Yesterday I posted about the encouragement that I have felt when I read or hear about others who struggle in the good work of church planting. I don’t feel so alone when things aren’t going as I have planned them. I’m so thankful that I have other encouragements in church planting than the fact that others struggle. Yesterday more grace to continue was given to me by what I observed going on at church.

I strongly believe that formal discipleship is a major missing element in the church today, and I think I can back that claim up. And because of that, I have made extra effort to train the men and women of our church as is humanly possible. I believe that a biblically well-educated membership is a necessity to passing on the faith to others, so that I won’t be the only one making disciples forever. I need to be an equipper of saints who will go forward with the work of the ministry.

This year I have made an effort to spend 2-3 hours one on one with a brother in our church, and we have grown close because of this discipleship and friendship. But over the last few weeks, my disciple has been meeting with a disciple of his own. I watched them yesterday amid the VBS craziness sitting quietly at a table in the fellowship hall, sharing the Word over coffee and donuts. An investment of time and love is beginning to pay off spiritual dividends! Gospel multiplication at its best. Grace manifest to a little ministry like ours. God is so good. May His Kingdom flourish like this one-hundred fold.

A Church Planter’s Encouragement

Church planting can be tough work. Scratch that, it can be soul-breaking work. I’ve seen enough casualties to know that I don’t want to become one. Three books are encouraging me right now–Timothy Keller’s Church Planting Manual for Redeemer Presbyterian in New York, “Church Planting is For Wimps” by Mike McKinley, a church planter from Mark Dever’s church (Capital Hill Baptist) and “The Trellis and the Vine” by Collin Marshall and Tony Payne. The first two are explicitly church planting books while the last fits into the genre perfectly for its helpful biblical insights.

There are so many good, satisfying and gut-checking things that I could say about these books, but what I want to mention here is the need for church planters to find refreshment for their souls. In Keller’s and McKinley’s books, I found hardship and some failure and set-backs, and that, funny enough, is so encouraging to me. Let me explain.

When I see and hear the success stories of ministry, I try to keep everything in perspective acknowledging that God is sovereign, and I am His to do with as He pleases, wherever He chooses and with whatever degree of success He sees fit. I honestly believe that biblical success is measured in faithfulness. Yet I also passionately want to see my little area of God’s vineyard flourish and abound with much fruit. And I think that this desire is right, if it keeps the perspective that all glory is for God alone. What was so encouraging in the set-backs I read about was the ring of truth I heard in them. Keller and McKinley were honest and they told of their struggles and hardships, even their own worries and doubts. Being a church planting pastor can be lonely at times. It’s men like Keller and McKinley and my pastor who remind me that plugging along, plodding faithfully with my hands to the plow and my eyes heavenward is what I must keep doing. Soli Deo Gloria!