Thursday, November 8, 2012

Understanding the Local Church (Pastoral Training Discussion Continued)


In order to best understand discipleship in the specific context of the local church, there should be a proper theological understanding of the local church in general.  The Bible gives both explicit and implicit instructions for understanding discipleship in the local church. The church has historically dealt conceptually with discipleship concepts, and more recent scholarship related to discipleship has emerged from theologians and practitioners. Using this as a solid foundation, I submit that the best locale for Christian discipleship and, by implication, pastoral leadership is in the context of the local church.
Perhaps the primary passages related to local church discipleship come from the Pauline epistles. In Ephesians 4:11-16, we are told that God gave to the church some to be pastors. In Paul’s letters to Timothy, we can find clear qualifications for leadership in the local church. Additionally, there are nineteen qualifications that can arguably only be proven within the context of a local church environment. If local church leaders are the models for mature discipleship, these passages can help inform a construct of biblically based ecclesiology.
Some of the more proficient American writers of the late twentieth century, like Mark Dever and John R.W. Stott, have made some insightful statements about these explicit biblical bases for discipleship in the local church. Dever points to the epistles and the book of Acts where “Paul and Barnabas were sent out by the local church. Paul tells Timothy, the pastor of Ephesus, to entrust gospel truths to other faithful men who will teach others (2 Tim. 2:2).”[1] Stott admits that “the chief function of the pastor is teaching, for the chief duty of the shepherd is to feed or pasture his sheep.”[2] These functionary aspects of pastoring place training within the locus of local church discipleship.
There are, moreover, some biblical texts that implicitly teach the priority of ecclesiology in discipleship and pastoral training. For example, Dever cites the pastoral relationship in Hebrews 13 “where the members are told to consider the lives of the leaders (in verse 7) before they are told to obey those leaders (in verse 17).”[3] The one another passages, like John 13, also give a basis for discipleship within the context of a community of faith. Dever points to the letter to the Galatians in the discourse about the fruits of the Spirit as providing the “relational context in the reality of the church which is absolutely perfect for identifying who is gifted to be a minister, for challenging such individuals, and for raising them up.”[4]
Even some contemporary Canadian house church and European cell church practitioners like Alan Hirsch, Rad Zdero, and Howard Astin have begun to make their contribution in the debate about Christ’s model of leadership training as a local church model for discipleship. Expressing an opposition to formal seminary models, Hirsch makes this distinction:
This is simply not the way that Jesus taught us how to develop disciples. And it is not that Jesus lacked an appropriate model of the Academy – the Greeks had developed it hundreds of years before Christ, and it was well entrenched in the Greco-Roman world. The Hebrew worldview was a life-oriented one and was not primarily concerned with concepts and ideas in themselves [emphasis in original]. On the other hand, it appears to me that the Academy is almost solely organized around the transfer of concepts and ideas.[5]

Astin believes this is a reflection of Kingdom principles in Scripture and suggests that “Jesus’ primary purpose [emphasis in original] for his Church…is to make disciples.”[6] Zdero points to the synagogue mentality that must have been prevalent during the first century to suggest that Christ’s own model of training was congruent with those same training techniques and therefore must have been copied by both Peter and Paul.[7] Not only does Astin go so far as to say that “Jesus trained his leaders by apprenticeship,” but that “indeed, as we scan the pages of the New Testament, there is no other model of leadership training.”[8] At least for these writers, New Testament discipleship was instituted by Christ and continued as local churches were planted.
Bill Hull supports a line of apostolic authority within the local church context that can be traced from Jerusalem and Antioch when he says,
Instead of following the biblical example and having the best-qualified leaders chose [sic] other leaders, some of today’s evangelical churches do it backward. They charge a nominating committee with placing names on the ballot for selection of leaders. Though I do not wish to trash congregationalism, when the group that selects the potential leaders are not properly qualified, trouble easily ensues. Typically the church chooses names from the floor of the annual business meeting; the only qualification becomes a single person’s opinion. Without discussion, names are voted on.[9]

In contrast to the aforementioned model, Zdero points out the following:  
Evidence suggests that in the first-century Jewish synagogue system – which provided
the cultural and religious background for the emergence of the early Christian house churches – a team of elders was responsible for each local synagogue. Similarly, the biblical record lends itself to a plurality of elders managing a given Christian community, rather than any one individual. Thus, ideally, each house church would likely have had a small group of elders.[10]

Richard Ascough provides additional insight into this scenario with his observation that “the synagogue was governed by a group of elders in a presbyterial form of government.”[11] Regardless of polity preferences, though, these observations connect a synagogue-like plurality of leaders to a discipleship training model within New Testament local churches. This, though, gives clarity to the discussion of discipleship as a local church discipline.
In Russian evangelical churches, that plurality in leadership continues. Harris notes that modern Russian “Baptist preachers, particularly the elders, have been given a great deal of spiritual authority in the churches.”[12] The purpose of multiple leaders is to ensure ongoing discipleship through the administration of baptism as a formal requirement for leadership and spiritual maturity as an informal requirement.[13] Penner believes that “in the training efforts of Jesus and the Apostle Paul, we see how this concept takes shape within the framework of the emerging church and its mission.”[14] This was not limited to a specific “number of leading persons in the apostolic church. Rather, it was to train every person belonging to the church.”[15] If this is true, then the function of the local church is to all its members to maturity.
During the patristic period, Tertullian argued for a definitive separation of biblical theology as defined and propagated within the church and the philosophical academics in extra-ecclesial institutions.[16] In the Middle Ages, Erasmus furthered this sentiment with a clear job description for clergy to educate laity toward Christian maturity. Alister E. McGrath describes Erasmus’ understanding of clerical function as educational in that “there is no room for any superstitions which give the clergy a permanent status superior to their lay charges.”[17] McGrath notes that Erasmus never makes reference to the local church in his Enchiridion militis Christiani, but instead he focuses on the direct personal relationship between the Christian Soldier and his God. So, even among the early church fathers, there was some understanding of the task of the local church to make life-long disciples.
It was only during the twelfth century that theological training and, by implication, discipleship became associated with academic pursuits. At that time, medieval institutions through western Europe added a faculty of theology to their higher educational programs. McGrath notes,
            Initially, the study of Christianity in western Europe was focused on schools attached to
cathedrals and monasteries. Theology was generally understood to be concerned with practical matters, such as issues of prayer and spirituality, rather than as a theoretical subject. However, with the founding of the universities, the academic study of the Christian faith gradually moved out of monasteries and cathedrals into the public arena.[18]

Over the course of time, “theology came to be seen as a theoretical rather than a practical subject, despite reservations about this development.”[19] McGrath bemoans the fact that “theology has become fragmented into a collection of unrelated theoretical and practical disciplines, and lost any sense of coherence.”[20] In contrast, “the writings of individuals such as Richard Baxter and Jonathan Edwards are saturated with the belief that theology finds its true expression in pastoral care and the nurture of souls.”[21]
Adopting the same categories as Millard Erickson for describing the local church, John Hammett also places discipleship within the primary locus of local church. He argues that while the “idea of local church must be seen with some flexibility,”[22] especially in relation to size, he sees the local church as “the body of Christ, possessing full ecclesial status.”[23] For that reason, Hammett argues for the primacy of the local church in a full-orbed ecclesiology. Moreover, he states that a proper biblical theology “gives priority to the local church”[24] and demands participation in the local church by any who minister in parachurch organizations. Without participation in a local, covenanted body of believers, apparently no one can truly be discipled.
Along those same lines, Hammett appeals to a demand for regenerate church membership and church discipline when needed.[25] Although institutions like Bible colleges and seminaries may reprimand or reward their students, they cannot properly administer church discipline since they are not extensions of the local church. The local church is the place where discipline or discipleship is done.


[1] Mark Dever, “Raising Up Pastors is the Church’s Work,” n.p. [cited 25 February 2010]. Online: http://www.9marks.org/CC/article/0,,PTID314526_CHID598016_CIID2463176,00.html.

[2] John R.W. Stott, One People (London: Falcon Books, 1969), 45; in C. John Miller, Outgrowing the Ingrown Church (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1999), 142.

[3] Mark Dever, “Raising Up Pastors,” n.p.

[4] Ibid.

[5] Alan Hirsch, The Forgotten Ways: Reactivating the Missional Church (Grand Rapids: Brazos Press, 2006), 122.

[6] Howard Astin, Body and Cell: Making the Transition to Cell Church – A First-hand Account (Grand Rapids: Monarch, 2002), 68.

[7] Rad Zdero, The Global House Church Movement (Pasadena, Calif.: William Carey Library, 2004), 47.

[8] Howard Astin, Body and Cell, 73.

[9] Bill Hull, The Disciple-Making Church (Grand Rapids: Fleming H. Revell, 1990), 116.

[10] Rad Zdero, Global House Church Movement, 40–41.

[11] Richard Ascough, What are they saying about the Formation of Pauline Churches?(Mahwah, New Jersey: Paulist Press, 1998), 13.

[12] Mark Harris, “Toward an Understanding of Russian Baptist Preaching,” Paper Presented to Mission Consulting Group, (Pasadena, Calif.: Mission Consulting Group, 1996), 6.

[13] Ibid, 7–8.

[14] Peter Penner, “Contextual Theological Education among Post-Soviet Protestants: Case Study 1: The Development of a Masters Degree at St Petersburg Christian University,” Transformation 18:2 (2001), 114.

[15] Ibid, 115.

[16] Tertullian, “Prescription Against Heretics” 7 (The Prescription Against Heretics [Whitefish, Mont.: Kessinger Publishing, 2004], 12.

[17] Alister E. McGrath, Christian Theology: An Introduction (Malden, Mass.: Blackwell, 2001), 48.

[18] Ibid, 139.

[19] Ibid, 140.

[20] Ibid, 141.

[21] Ibid, 145.

[22] John S. Hammett, Biblical Foundations for Baptist Churches: A Contemporary Ecclesiology (Grand Rapids: Kregel, 2005), 29.

[23] Ibid, 37.

[24]Ibid, 70.

[25] See John S. Hammett, Biblical Foundations, 83–85.

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