The purpose of
a pastor, whether he or she works with adults, children, or youth, is to equip
church members to do the work of the Kingdom of God (Ephesians 4:12).
Specifically, the purpose of gathering together at church each week is to
prepare believers to go out and be the Church in their daily lives outside of
the church building. The work of the Kingdom of God can happen on the weekends
in a church building … but it is supposed to grow, spread, and build outside of
the church walls during the week. If a church congregation focuses on building
itself and not the Kingdom, it is simply either a social club or an insular
self-help group. Demographic research shows that what most people look for in a
church is recreation. Accordingly, many churches (believe it or not) attempt to
accommodate, often to the point where recreation and entertainment becomes an
end unto itself. This is the worst case scenario. Only slightly better is the
pastor and church that focuses on the spiritual (i.e. the moral) life of
members but provide no direction for that personal growth. Remember: in this
age, the primary purpose of being moral, of being Christ-like, is to do the
work of the Kingdom of God. It may be a cliché, but too often liberal
Christians want to pursue Kingdom goals without the morality, while
conservative Christians want to pursue morality with limited Kingdom goals. You
cannot separate morality from Kingdom purposes. The Kingdom without morality is
self-defeating. Morality without the Kingdom is purposeless. You need both. Pastors
and churches are there to prepare you to do both.
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