Lay People: Servants Not Spectators
April 23rd, 2007
(By John MacArthur)
I have often spoken out against all the pragmatic and “seeker-sensitive” approaches to contemporary worship because they tend to diminish the proper place of preaching and replace it with quasi-spiritual forms of sheer entertainment (music, comedy, drama, and whatnot). Any trend that threatens the centrality of God’s Word in our corporate worship is a dangerous trend.
But one of the most disturbing side effects of the seeker-sensitive fad is something I haven’t said as much about: When one of the main aims of a ministry philosophy is to keep people entertained, church members inevitably become mere spectators. The architects of the modern megachurches admit that they have deliberately redesigned the worship service in order to make as few demands as possible on the person in the pew. After all, they don’t want the “unchurched” to be intimidated by appeals for personal involvement in ministry. That’s the very opposite of “seeker sensitivity.”
Such thinking is spiritually deadly. Christianity is not a spectator sport. Practically the worst thing any churchgoer can do is be a hearer but not a doer (James 1:22-25). Christ himself pronounced doom on religious people who want to be mere bystanders (Matthew 7:26-27).
Something is seriously wrong in a church where the staff does all the “ministry” and people are made to feel comfortable as mere observers. One of the pastor’s main duties is to equip the saints to do the work of the ministry (Eph. 4:12). Every believer is called to be a minister of some sort, with each of us using the unique gifts given us by God for the edification of the whole church (Rom. 12:6-8).
That’s why Scripture portrays the church as a body—an organism with many organs (1 Corinthians 12:14), where each member has a unique role (vv. 15-25), and all contribute something important to the life of the body. “And if one member suffers, all the members suffer with it” (v. 26).
I can’t read that verse without thinking of Dizzy Dean. He was a Hall-of-Fame baseball pitcher, whose career peaked in the 1930s. His 1934 season has never been excelled by any pitcher in history. Dean won thirty games that year, a feat that hasn’t been repeated since (though Dizzy himself came close, winning 28 games the following year). But in the 1937 All-Star game, he took a hard line drive off his toe, and the toe was broken. It should not have been a career-ending injury, but Dean was rushed back into the lineup before the fracture was completely healed, and he pitched several games favoring the sore toe. That led to an unnatural delivery that seriously injured his pitching arm. The arm never fully recovered. Dizzy Dean’s major-league career was essentially over in four years.
Something similar happens in any church where there are non-functioning members. The active members of the body become overextended, and the effectiveness of the whole body suffers greatly. Even the most insignificant member, like a toe, is designed to play a vital role.
That truth has been one of the main foundations of my approach to ministry for many years. When I first became pastor of Grace Community Church in 1969, I taught a series on Ephesians, and we spent a great deal of time studying the principle of Ephesians 4:11—that the pastor’s duty is to equip the saints, and it is their duty to shoulder the work of the ministry.
Our people quickly embraced that simple idea, and it transformed our church in a remarkable way. For one thing, we began to see dramatic growth. Within a matter of months, attendance on Sundays had ballooned to almost 1,000. About that same time, a well-known evangelical magazine asked a reporter to write an article about the growth of our church. He visited our services for several weeks, carefully observed how the ministry functioned, interviewed scores of people, and then wrote an article titled “The Church with 900 Ministers.”
That title perfectly summarized what has made Grace Church unique for all these years. Nowadays we have several thousand ministers, but the principle is still the same. Everyone is expected and encouraged to be involved in active ministry. Almost no one in our church would ever view ministry as the exclusive domain of professional clergy. If you want to be comfortable as a mere spectator, Grace Church is not the church for you.
I am not making a case for egalitarianism. Much less would I argue against the need for full-time vocational pastors who devote their whole lives to prayer, the study of the Word of God, and the training and equipping of the saints (cf. Acts 6:4; 1 Timothy 4:14-15; 5:17). The church needs leaders, and God has specifically called men to leadership and set them in places of authority in the church (cf. Hebrews 13:7, 17).
But the New Testament pattern is clear and inescapable: Every Christian is gifted and called to ministry. The spiritual gifts we are given are not for our own sake, but for the benefit of the whole body (1 Corinthians 12:4-7). “Having then gifts differing according to the grace that is given to us, let us use them” (Romans 12:6, emphasis added).
In my experience, it is not difficult to motivate gifted people to minister. The gift of mercy, for example, might practically be defined as the desire combined with the ability to show mercy. A person truly gifted to teach wants to teach. All the average person needs is encouragement and opportunities to employ his or her gifts. If faithful leaders properly train, equip, and guide people to the right ministry opportunities, the church will flourish.
If you are a church leader, I hope you have embraced your duty to equip people for ministry. It is, after all, one of your main duties—if not the single most important task for leaders in today’s church.
If you’re a lay person, I hope you’ll find a place where you can use your gift in the work of the ministry. Maybe you’ll be used by the Lord to start an epidemic of lay ministry in your congregation.
Great post! It would be great if you could equate gift with duty. I understand how a gift of giving or teaching would be used but how about your example of mercy. How would a person who is merciful fulfill their duties in the church using their gift of mercy?
Sarah,
Hospital visitation, nursing home visitation, bereavement ministry, home-bound visitation, shoulder to cry on, meals where needed, and more. Mercy is compassion in action and involves the healing and nurturing of the wounded in the body. It usually revolves around those in the body who are hurting or suffering in some way ie emotionally, physically, or spiritually.
Ministry is not duty but service to brothers and sisters in Christ. The motivation is love (John 13:35), the ability is Spirit given and manifests the Spirit (I Corinthians 12:4-11), and the opportunities are ordained by God (Ephesians 2:10). Ministry is not a duty to perform, but a burden and a calling that are both God given. Duty is born out of a sense of oblgation, ministry is born out of a desire to serve God by serving others and meet the needs that your gift is designed for.
Hopes this helps a little.
Morris
Morris,
it does…that was great! What about other gifts? I would like to see what you have to say about them. I’m concrete in my thinking sometimes and need a list that puts these gifts to actual actions. A person might be doing these and not realize it. Not that they actually have to realize it as long as they are doing it, but maybe someone who isn’t could see it and realize that it would be something they could do.
Sarah,
Look at I Corinthians 12, Romans 12, Ephesians 4, and I Peter 4 for the “listing” of the gifts. Read the chapters to get the context of the gifts, which will help you gain understanding of their use and purpose. A good foundation is to always keep I Corinthians 12:4-6 in the front of your mind. We see here that the gifts are from the Spirit, the ministries are from the Lord, and the effects are from God. We are but the vessels that these grace gifts are channeled through for the benefit of the body. As Paul says we are stewards of the grace given to us and as stewards we are to be found trustworthy/faithful.
If you have any more questions click on my name and email me.
Morris
An encouraging article indeed. But I thought pastor MacArthur would have taken the time to dispel the unfortunate dichotomy between laity and clergy.
In fact, a failure to dispel the dichotomy is part of our plaguing problem in the ministry. Scripture no where make this unfortunate dichotomy.
Those considered “clergy” are just serving in a different function. While the rest who are considered “laity,” serve in a different capacity with their giftedness (1Pet 4:10f).
Yes, I cringe every time I hear the term “laity”, or “lay person”. For that matter, I’m not fond of the term “clergy”. All believers are ministers, with a variety of gifts. Some of them are pastors, or pastor-teachers, or administrators. And some of them have a far less obvious gift. But there are no amateurs, no part-timers.
Great article! One quibble, however. The statement:
Dean won thirty games that year, a feat that hasn’t been repeated since
isn’t exactly true. Denny McLain wone thirty-one games for the Detroit Tigers in 1968.
Standing for truth,
-Ray