Posted on 05/08/2020 7:38:36 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Question: Should Christian leaders be restored to ministry after moral failures?
Should Christian leaders be restored to a position of Christian ministry and trust once they have betrayed that trust? I have addressed aspects of that question in previous Christian Post columns (Feb. 7 and Feb. 14, 2020).
However, this is a somewhat different question that has entered the realm of public debate in a heightened way because of the tragic situation unfolding at Cedarville University. In the interest of full disclosure, I am personally acquainted with Thomas White, Cedarvilles president, who has been placed on administrative leave by his trustees pending an investigation of his having hired an admitted sexual abuser to serve at Cedarville.
My experience with Dr. White has been that he is a man of strong Christian integrity with a high sense of calling to serve his Lord, the Gospel, and our Saviors Church, and I hope and pray that the independent investigation authorized by Cedarville trustees will find no wrong-doing other than poor judgment on Dr. Whites part. I further hope and pray that the investigation will find no breach of Dr. Whites trust in Dr. Anthony Moore, a theology professor and part-time basketball coach, who is the sexual abuser hired by Dr. White. (Dr. Moore has acknowledged surreptitiously video taping a male colleague in the shower and with having struggled with same-sex attraction while in a previous ministry.)
Even if these prayers are answered positively, however, I believe Dr. White made a terrible mistake in judgment. No matter how noble and redemptive his motives were in trying to restore a Christian brother and friend, his ultimate priority should have always been the safety and the physical and spiritual welfare of the young people entrusted to his care by their parents and the trustees. In a very real sense, Dr. White as president was the under-shepherd of these young people while they were students, and his number one priority should have been their well-being.
The Cedarville episode is illustrative and informative of an issue that is being played out on a weekly, if not daily, basis across North American Christianity in Christian schools, colleges, churches, and para-church ministries. When someone with effective, de facto pastoral oversight and responsibility (not only pastors and church staff, but also teachers in Christian schools and colleges, especially coaches and religion and Bible teachers, and para-church ministers who serve through Cru, InterVarsity, Ratio Christi, etc.) has betrayed their sacred trust, can they ever again be trusted with that kind of ministry role by Christian leaders who have the responsibility to protect Gods people from false shepherds? I believe that the answer must be a resounding, no!
Why? When people betray the sacred and holy trust bestowed upon them by Christian leaders, their potential restoration must be trumped by Christian leaders sacred duty to protect those ministered to and who have been betrayed. It should always be remembered that the best predictor of future performance is past behavior.
Can such fallen leaders be forgiven? Yes, they can if they confess their sins and ask for forgiveness (1 John 1:9). Can they be restored to full fellowship in the church as part of the body of Christ? Yes, the New Testament is clear that people who are repentant can be forgiven and restored to full fellowship in the local body of Christ. So, the vertical relationship with Jesus can be repaired, and then the horizontal relationship with fellow believers can be restored.
However, that is different from being elevated again to the scared position of trust that they have betrayed. Being called and authorized to serve Gods people as an under-shepherd and minister is a sacred privilege and a holy trust, not a right, even when God has called and equipped someone for such ministry. Their moral failures can permanently disqualify them from fulfilling their divine calling.
For such men to abuse their sacred calling to minister the love and grace of Jesus by engaging in abuse of those to whom they are called to minster and who look to them for spiritual counsel and pastoral care is blasphemous. In truth, it is soul rape.
No less a hero of the Christian faith than the Apostle Paul was well aware that his potential moral failure could disqualify him from his Apostleship and evangelistic ministry. He writes to the Corinthian church, I do not box as one beating the air. But I discipline my body and keep it under control lest after preaching to others I myself will be disqualified (1 Cor. 9:27 ESV). The language here is graphic. Paul literally pummels his body into subjection lest he be stamped disqualified or disapproved (adakimos). This word was used frequently in the first century Roman Empire to refer to the common practice of periodically weighing coins that were represented as being worth their weight in silver or gold. After a certain period of usage, they could and would lose some of the weight through being worn down by friction as they were passed from one customer to another in commercial transactions. When they were weighed in the balance and found to be no longer of sufficient value, they were stamped disapproved, taken out of circulation and placed on the shelf. Corinth was a major center of commerce in the first century, and the Corinthians would have immediately understood what Paul was saying.
Based on numerous other teachings of the apostle, Paul is clearly not fearful of losing his eternal salvation (Rom. 8:28-39; Eph. 2:8-10; 2 Tim. 1:12). However, he is very cognizant of the fact that if he did not guard himself from moral failure, he would forfeit his right to be an apostle and a minister of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
I fear that too often the legitimate and admirable desire to help restore a fallen Christian brother dulls our sensitivity to the divine, sacred honor, and consequent responsibility that is involved with taking up the pastoral, ministerial responsibility
After all, James tells us, Not many of you should become teachers, my brothers, for you know that we who teach will be judged with greater strictness (James 3:1).
And what greater responsibility and trust can be placed on a Christian in ministry than the admonition, concerning Christian leaders, they are keeping watch over your souls as those who will have to give an account of that watch care as under-shepherds (Heb. 13:17).These are very sobering words for all who attempt to respond to Gods call to be under-shepherds. At some point in the future, each under-shepherd will give an account of his watch care to the Great Shepherd Himself.
I pray that all who are called to the sacred and holy calling of under-shepherds in Jesus name will continuously keep in kind to pummel their bodies into subjection, lest they forfeit the wonderful and sacred privilege of being one of Gods under-shepherds of Gods flock. _________________________________________________________
Dr. Richard Land, BA (magna cum laude), Princeton; D.Phil. Oxford; and Th.M., New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, was president of the Southern Baptists Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission (1988-2013) and has served since 2013 as president of Southern Evangelical Seminary in Charlotte, NC. Dr. Land has been teaching, writing, and speaking on moral and ethical issues for the last half century in addition to pastoring several churches.
No.
I am not sure they should have hired the teacher but it seems like he is equating a school teacher with a minister. They are not the same.
Long article. Short answer. No.
As an across the board proposition? No. Possibly, in some cases? Sure. Depends on the transgression(s) and a host of other factors.
+1
As a general rule, if you’ve fallen in a way that is notorious, you should take your place in the pews. You should not return to a public position in the church or a church organization.
If you are in a public position, and you know you are skating toward the edge, you should step aside quietly and work out your issues out of the public eye.
People in the ministry face pressures and temptations that most of us don’t face, and won’t understand, and they have the additional problem that their mistakes are therefore more public. It goes with the territory. If you mess up publicly in a way that you can recover without bringing disrepute, fine. Some have been able to incorporate what happened into their ministry. But beyond a certain point, you should not try to hold on to your position, but go get a job like anyone else.
Well this is about Chritian leaders hiring people.
I just know in any business people can certainly mask and fool any employer. It is no different in Churches who hire people.
Even so there are certain ‘sins’ which cannot be overlooked if known. Anyone assulting or hurting children needs to find another vocation and should never be given leadership authority. Certain sins have a profound ‘result’ on the public overall.
There is always a ‘cost’ when we sin but some costs are and should be greater than others because the impact is so horrendous.
I agree with his article.
When a Christian leader falls due to moral sin (theirs a word we don’t hear much anymore) he can certainly be restored to fellowship, but he has squandered and forfeited his right to lead.
I’m in that position as a senior volunteer leader of a national youth ministry. I believe the qualifications of an elder in Scripture in I Timothy and Titus apply to people like me as well. That knowledge and conviction prevents me from wanting to do something stupid.
One common failure of Christian clergy that has been around since at least the 1920s, is one of moral polarity. That is, they divide the world in half between good and evil.
The failure in this is that good needs constant attention for individuals to remain good, but if someone sins at all, an irresistible force on the side of evil will grab them and drag them across the dividing line. That is, they are damned with no hope of reform or redemption.
The result of this can go in a few directions, all bad. One is that they want to tempt themselves by leering and gawking at grotesque things they consider evil, but no touching.
Perhaps the worst of these directions is their assumption that since because of their sin they are damned, that there is no need for them to hold back, that they are free to wallow in the pig sty of evil.
For this reason, it is best that once they have been caught and punished, that they must face an arduous road to redemption to just again become one of the faithful. From there, any path for them to again become clergy must start over from scratch.
A bank President, is found to be taking money from widows accounts, putting them into a private account. He practices FRAUD, pilfering money, and lying on documents. ARE YOU GOING TO PUT HIM BACK IN AS PRESIDENT OF THE BANK AFTER YOU PROVE THE EVIDENCE IS TRUE AND HE HAS BROKEN YOUR TRUST?
A better question: when will churches be permitted to meet again?
Isn’t up to the flock to follow the preacher? Just because someone wants to stand up and minister...they need a following in order to do that.
So, that makes this a moot point. No one “allows” anyone else to minister—fallen or not. And, we’ve all sinned. You can forgive, but it doesn’t mean letting that person back into your life in an influential role?
What happened to common sense?
Isn’t up to the flock to follow the preacher? Just because someone wants to stand up and minister...they need a following in order to do that.
So, that makes this a moot point. No one “allows” anyone else to minister—fallen or not. And, we’ve all sinned. You can forgive, but it doesn’t mean letting that person back into your life in an influential role?
What happened to common sense?
The Christian college leader didn’t commit a sin. He probably made a poor decision hiring the guy if he knew his background but thought the teacher had repented. However, that judgment is mine, and sounds like yours, and not necessarily supported by the Bible.
In my opinion the author is applying Biblical standards for a minister to a school teacher.
I will say (and try desperately to remind myself about ALL that the Bible says about the need for humility) the flock should most likely be looking for someone who practices what he preaches.
Doesn’t the flock take on the same witness/testimony as the shepherd? What you tolerate says a lot about who you are.
NO.
Our Pastor turned out to be a pedophile and is still in jail where he belongs.
Depends on what the moral failing was committed. We ALL fail morally at some times, some things are way bigger than other things.
As an example; looking at porn verses committing adultery, the case Biblical can be made morally they are the same.
Is it ?
Not in that kind of position again.
We all have areas of weakness and to put someone in a position again where he already demonstrated a weakness, is asking for trouble.
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