This isn’t what everyone is talking about, and I’m a little late to the read myself, but this is an essential article for discussion amongst ministry or eldership teams. Pastors, find someone to talk it over with, please: The pattern among fallen pastors by Garrett Kell.
The author reflects on Howard Hendricks’s study of over 200 men in full-time gospel ministry who committed adultery within a two-year period. Hendricks noted four common characteristics:
Kell spells out four conclusions:
My esteemed old colleague, Reg Piper, commented:
I think that #4 should be #1, and that purity is cultivated by being loved by Jesus, which in turn results in loving Jesus.
I also want to say more emphatically that we need to be really honest with God and accountable to him.
There can be no substitute for the day-by-day coming to God in that unhurried and honest reading of Scripture and calling upon God to reveal himself to us more and more.
#1, #2, and #3 may be true, but I think the above is where the key power lies.
I guess Reg was saying accountability to others can be faked, but not with God.
Jared Wilson gives four reasons why it’s important for a pastor to say “I don’t know”.
Read it all for the full explanations, but I’d add (lower down the priority list):
Two obituaries that made me think of Psalm 116:15 (“Precious in the sight of the Lord is…”):
And on the issue of the week, month, decade…
Elisabeth Elliot, 1926-2015