Quote:
Originally Posted by tv1a
I'm not offended by your statement. My style doesn't work well with religious people. It is easier for me to teach Biblical principles to hungry new people than to teach christians entrenched in a religious system. Ironically, most of my time is training and teaching new people. My mentoring style is successful.
|
Well good...but you still did not answer my question of whether you are a pastor or not. And it would be helpful, since you accuse me of taking your words out of context, to define what you believe. This is an Apostolic board and apostolic definitions range from the boards admin's definition all the way to the Catholic definition. (Catholics define themselves as apostolics in case folks do not know. )
Since you like to go by scientific rules, How do you measure your success? By what standard or rule?
Is your success visible? How does the reader know that you aren’t just blowing wind when you say your methods are successful?
For the record, I am not entrenched in any religious system.
Quote:
Originally Posted by tv1a
A better term is influencing people to live a particular lifestyle.
|
Well now, why didn’t you just say so in the beginning?
Quote:
Originally Posted by tv1a
Jesus had the same problem. He pointed that out a few times. Evangelism takes on different forms. I'm not sure how you would define evangelism. Evangelism could be as simple as sharing your testimony with someone. Evangelism could be an organized outreach to the community. Some people evangelize on the street corner thumping a Bible.
Outreach is important. It is the pastor's responsibility to teach the importance of evangelism. Outreach is what keeps the church from growing stale.
|
I agree. However, any more comment on this would require a better understanding as to how you classify yourself... a pastor? an evangelist? An anointed saint?
Quote:
Originally Posted by tv1a
My experiences in legalism is most seasoned chrsitians are happy to sit on the pew, give a few bucks in the offering, maybe show up on church workday or help with a fundraiser and that's about it. The sad part is the people who want to help can't because they don't make the grade.
|
Heh. Who gives the 'grades"? Most ‘seasoned’ christians sit on the pew have been taught by their leadership to do that. I have seen over and over new born babes in Christ wanting to do something for Him, but the leadership in the church takes it upon themselves to thwart them saying that they don’t ‘make the grade’.
Who makes those decisions? Who quenches their spirit? People like YOU do by your words....don't make the grade and trash.
Quote:
Originally Posted by tv1a
I understand you are looking at this through a oneness apostolic pentecostal prism. You are correct. OP's have a poor track record overall in personal evangelism. I know of churches outside the OP movement who realize the need to grow molecularly. OP's usually split because of disagreements. Some of the successful ministries I've been involved with or observed have established multiple churches in various locations. Once those churches are established, they run independent of the mother church. Non OP's aren't afraid of growing, splitting, creating new life. I don't know how to correct it in the OP movement. I gave up trying. If I can be encouraging, you don't need the masses to turn the world upside down. Jesus started with twelve.
|
But...today’s world is not turned upside down. If it were, there would be more Christ-like influence in society than there is now. Instead, what they see and what they read in the papers is about spiritual abuse, child molestation, adultery, lavish lifestyles etc. And it's not just in the OP movement. It's all over Christendom.
Quote:
Originally Posted by tv1a
Today's system is just as messed up from the pew as it is from the pulpit. Many saints abdicate their responsibilities. For example, who do the saints call when someone is sick? The pastor. Who are they supposed to call? James said call the elders. How many board members do you know will go pray for the sick? Why do many elders avoid that responsibility? The Bible guarantees when the elder prays for the sick, the person will recover AND their sins will be forgiven. If you can trust an elder/board member to pray for the sick and get results, you got a board member who is in tuned to the heartbeat of God. Those are the kind of board members I love to work with.
|
It is messed up from the pew...I agree. Why? From an OP observation, it is because the leadership teaches them to call the pastor instead of the elders. Right? The pastor of any given church I’ve observed appoints the board members. Do some deliberately sabotage themselves by appointing ‘yes’ men to the board? A church is no better than it’s leadership. A home is no better than it’s leadership. You have a Holy Ghost filled husband and father, who loves the Lord, does his best to live by the Word and you have a happy home. Ditto with the wife. It takes everybody involved in the ‘cell’ (for lack of a better word) for the body to grow around it.
Quote:
Originally Posted by tv1a
In one post, you take an issue with spending time to train people to do the work of the ministry, then you take issue that pastors don't want to delegate.
|
No, you do not seem to understand what issue I am taking with you despite how many times I have posted it here.
The issue I took before you started developing your 80/20 rule mindset on this thread, is that you use derogatory names for poor people, make off the wall statements like the disciples were a clique as if it is ok to separate people into different classes of human beings in your church. If that is inaccurate perception, then you did a poor job of trying to explain exactly what you mean.
The issue I take is that sometimes a pastor cannot or will not see past the few people he decides to surround himself with and ends up using favoritism instead of spiritual discernment when teaching a local assembly. Jesus did not spend all His time around 12 men. He taught, fed and ministered to the thousands. And nowhere in the bible will you find Jesus stooping to derogatory name calling.. to even the Pharisees and Saducees in his interaction with them. He used strong words, but never derogatory words.
So even if you hate people posting their opinions about somebody else's wrongdoings on the internet, calling them trailer park webcam prophets is unbecoming to you. If you think it is wrong to discuss current events in our churches, then you just don't do it. It is strange that people will read newspapers that report wrongdoings all over this nation and the world, but when it comes to a public place of worship, reporting wrongdoing becomes gossip?
And let me tell you, the OP pastors
in this area are the biggest gossips around. Some of them sit around at their Sunday dinner table talking about the saints in their church...repeating things told to them in confidence.
Quote:
Originally Posted by tv1a
I think I understand your misconceptions. That's because you have taken nearly everything I said out of context. That shows how weak your argument is.
|
Perhaps you ought to explain your position better if you do not want your postings to be taken out of context. It’s not about my having a weak argument. That is just a strawman statement you hide behind. This is a forum, not a round table discussion where people can look at faces and interact with just a spoken word.
Quote:
Originally Posted by tv1a
The trailer park trash webcam prophet comment was referring to people who think it's their God given right to point out the weaknesses in other people on the internet when there is no scriptural authority. I gave specific examples. You twisted it around to suggest I was talking about the saints on the pew. I let that slide for a while.
|
I do not recall reading where you explained what a trailer park trash webcam prophet is...except for maybe in your mind. Regardless, it is disrespectful to label anybody as trash, internet or otherwise. You are on here..so what if that includes you?
Regarding your belief that I twisted it to mean the saints on the pew...yes, I did think you to mean that, but it was not a deliberate twist as you accuse me of. There are a lot of things that have no scriptural authority that happens in the organized church system. I could give you a list of those things, but you wouldn't agree with me.
Quote:
Originally Posted by tv1a
Do you know the difference between discipleship and evangelism? Two different things. Evangelism is when you get a person converted to your brand of christianity. Discipleship is teaching a person to be like Christ. I don't know how much clearer I can make it.
|
Yes, I understand the difference between the two. Sadly, I do not see discipleship in OP churches. What I have been trying to say is that in most of the OP churches I have attended, the pastorate surrounds himself with a few people and then those few people think that they have become the elite in the church system and do not disciple others. But you blather on about that ignorant 80/20 rule and how it is ok and correct to go by those rules. You are the one who took this conversation there without fully explaining yourself, then get angry when someone misunderstands you.
Quote:
Originally Posted by tv1a
It appears you are deliberately twisting words and definitions. An obvious manipulation is when I said tithing is an example how the percentage stays the same, but the actual number changes. You blasted an inaccurate statement stating I was using tithing principle to collect a paycheck. A deliberate, inaccurate misrepresentation of my point. Anyone reading what I wrote would not come up to that conclusion.
|
Oh yeah? Well apparently somebody else did come to that conclusion or are you going to discount and trash them too?
Are you touchy about tithing? Do you preach and take tithes? If not, then why would you even use tithing as an example to your 80/20 rule?
Quote:
Originally Posted by tv1a
If I appear condescending, it's because I gave you the benefit of the doubt. It appears your perception of what's said is different than what is said. Your problem is in your perception.
|
And YOUR problem is that you do not explain yourself adequately.
Quote:
Originally Posted by tv1a
I never said the 80/20 rule was an outreach tool. I did say you teach the 20% who want to be effective in discipleship to teach the 80%. Part of discipleship is evangelism.
|
And you said that you don't bother with some people because they 'don't make the grade'. YOU limit the people to 20 %. A good teacher/pastor will invite whosoever that wants to participate in an effective discipleship program to learn and develop spiritual knowledge.
I would think that if only 20% shows up for that teaching, then it just happens to turn out that way. However, YOU made it read that you pick the 20% like Jesus picked the 12 disciples, then turned around and backtracked.
YOU sir... are no Jesus in that you have that much spiritual discernment to decide who makes the grade and who does not. (Your own words)