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Let's Evaluate Your Ministry

Message 10

Pastor Chuck Swindoll • 1 Timothy

Ask any student getting ready to take a final exam how he or she feels, and you'll likely get a contradictory answer. The student will be filled with trepidation because the test will reveal his or her knowledge (or ignorance) but also with elation because it's the last test of the course. What is standard procedure in education and business—the evaluation of students and employees—isn't necessarily standard procedure in ministry. Churches too often shirk the responsibility of evaluating how their ministries are doing. They shouldn't. Because churches are populated and pastored by imperfect people, we should stop every once in a while to administer an examination against the standard of God's Word. As we close our study of 1 Timothy, let's do that—let's evaluate your ministry.

Ministering Amidst the Crazies

Pastor Chuck Swindoll • 1 Timothy 4:1–6

We live in unusual times. Surrounded by a sea of cults, false doctrines, religious extremism, political polarization, and media madness, absolute truth seems like a lonely island—sparsely populated and uncharted on the cultural map. Of course where we find ourselves today should come as no surprise . . . at least not to those who've read their Bibles closely. Jesus and His apostles warned, more than two millennia ago, that the world would tumble down this rabbit hole, especially as the end of time draws near. Today, we live and minister amidst the crazies. And if you doubt it, just look around. This isn't your father's world anymore. So what are we to do? Bunch tightly in our holy huddles, hoping to keep the world at bay? Not on your life!

The Dos and Don'ts of Ministry

Pastor Chuck Swindoll • 1 Timothy 4:6–16

Let's see a show of hands. Who in their professional lives wants to be unsuccessful? No one, right? Most professions have a set of procedures—a list of dos and don'ts—that, if followed, promote success. Ministry is no different. Beginning in 1 Timothy 4:6 and continuing through the rest of the letter, Paul turns our attention to the one who seeks to be “a good servant of Christ Jesus,” namely, the minister. Paul starts off by outlining a list of dos and don'ts for effective ministry, focusing first on the pastor's personal ministry (1 Timothy 4:7-11) and then on the pastor's public ministry (4:12-16).

Respecting and Rebuking the Saints

Pastor Chuck Swindoll

Paul made clear the purpose of his first letter to Timothy: “So that you will know how one ought to conduct himself in the household of God” (1 Timothy 3:15). We've noted that ministry would be easier if everyone in the congregation pursued godliness. But it doesn't work that way. Some do, and some don't. Those who do, deserve our respect. And those who don't, deserve a rebuke. But how should the church go about respecting and rebuking the saints? What is appropriate and what isn't? Thank God He gave us 1 Timothy to answer these questions and serve as our guide.