|

The Gift of Government
By Dr. Ray Melugin
Introduction
The gift of ruling, or government, is mentioned in Romans 12,
and I Corinthians 12. Paul urges that "he that ruleth"
should do it "with diligence." Though the Holy Spirit
guides the church, some believers have been given the gift of leadership.
The Greek word for "bishop" means "see" and
"over" giving us "overseer." God oversees His
work through using those with the gift of government, or leadership.
Definition
The Spirit-given ability to preside, govern, plan, organize,
and administer with wisdom, fairness, example, humility, service,
confidence, ease and efficiency.
I. Not Bosses, But Servants
A. Church leaders are not to seek power.
1. After James and John asked for high positions in the coming
kingdom, Jesus said, "to be great, you must be a minister...to
be chief, you must serve all." (Mark 10:42-44, above paraphrased)
Note: As Christian leadership is to be characterized
by slave-service, the words "minister." And "servant,"
mean "servant," and "slave."
2. Jesus gave us a perfect model. "For the Son
of man came to ...minister, and to give His life a ransom for many."
(Mark 10:45)
a. He humbled Himself to become a slave. (Phillipians
2:7)
b. He performed slave-service by washing the disciples' feet (John
13:15)
3. Names of major church offices denote service.
a. "Deacon" is the word for minister, or servant
b. "Pastor" means shepherd, who serves.
c. "Minister" a title, means servant.
4. Genuine Christian leadership serves, not bosses.
Note: The teaching of the universal priesthood of
believers places leader and people on the same level. ( 1 Peter
2:5,9)
II. Not Bosses, But Leaders
A. The gift of governments do exist as part of
the Spirit's gift to the church.
1. The Twelve supervised and led in the Early Church. (Acts 4:34-35;
9:27)
Note: They remained in Jerusalem to lead when others
scattered (Acts 8:1-4)
2. They advised the election of deacons. (Acts 6:2-3)
B. On Paul's journeys, a consistent policy of church
government was established.
1. On his return to Antioch, he and Barnabas "ordained
them elders in every church." (Acts 14:23, by that time, believers
had matured enough to serve.)
2. Elders were appointed at Ephesus (Acts 20:17)
3. Paul left Titus at Crete to "set things in
order...ordain elders in every city..." (Titus 1:5)
Note: Above verse proves there were many churches
established during Paul's ministry that are not named in the New
Testament.
C. Paul gave Timothy a list of qualifications for
church leaders. (I Timothy 3:1-15)
Note: Paul said the elder who ruled well should receive double
honor because he does two things: leads and as well teaches. (I
Timothy 5:17)
D. A church operating without leadership will hamper
the work of the Holy Spirit, Who gives the gift of ruling.
Note: When a church officially has no pastor, it officially
has no leader, or unofficially has one or two.
E. Though members are equal, the Holy Spirit does
place some over others in the church.
1. As a father "rules" over his family, he is to care
for the church. (I Timothy 3:5) (means to stand over, place over,
set over, superintend, preside.)
2. The word "government" in I Corinthians
12:28 is related to the word "master" meaning, "helmsman"
or steersman."
Note: as a ship needs a pilot or helmsman, a church
needs a captain with the gift of piloting.
3. Another word for "government" refers
to a "governor," which means "to go before, rule,
command, have authority over."
a. as Joseph was "ruler" over all Egypt (Acts 7:10)
b. as certain were "chief" among the apostles. (Acts 15:22)
c. the word is used for church leadership three times in Hebrews
13, verses 7, 17 and 24.
III. The Operation of Leadership
A. Qualifications for Leadership.
1. Most of the demands relate to a fruitful character. (I Timothy
3:1; Titus 1:5-9)
2. He is to be an example to the flock. (I Peter 5:3)
B. Paul equates leadership with labor.
"Know them which labor among you and are over you in the
Lord. (1 Thessalonians 5:12)
C. The gift of government runs counter to hierarchical
structure.
1. Comes from Christ-like example and humble service, (no pomp,
fanfare, etc. excludes being overbearing, stubborn, heady, wanting
their own way)
2. The gifts must be accompanied by spiritual grace,
or it will breed anarchy.
D. Areas of exercising the gift in church life.
1. Presiding at meetings (someone other than the pastor may
know parliamentary procedures better than the pastor)
2. Handling church discipline (I Thessalonians 5:14)
3. Participating on boards such as missions, Sunday School, Christian
School, music, visitation, outreach, and other related ministries
to each local church.
IV. The Gift of Government involves setting goals
for the future.
A. Motivating people
Note: Most organization have two groups: one to do business
as usual, the other to try new ways; one preserving, the other prophetic;
one conservative, the other creative; one traditional, the other
inventive.
B. Executing plans
Note: Contests, campaigns, outreach programs that have started
in our generation such as Teen Challenge, Campus Crusade, films,
retreats, and other innovative ministries.
C. Reviewing the results
Note: This must always be for ministry to the people, not to
manipulate them. If a certain program works, enhance it. If it doesn't,
put it back on the shelf and try something else.
Conclusion
The New Testament church of today needs leaders capable of steering
the ship safely through rocks and shoals of the future. People with
this gift have ability to make plans and launch projects to meet
future needs.
|