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Leadership BooksChanging Lives Through Preaching and Worship

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Can Worship Leaders Worship?





Pastors, as player-coaches, must both give instructions and follow them at the same time.
—Ben Patterson

Some of the things the apostle Paul said scare me. For instance: "I do not run like a man running aimlessly; I do not fight like a man beating the air. No, I beat my body and make it my slave so that after I have preached to others, I myself will not be disqualified for the prize" (1 Cor. 9:26-27 niv, emphasis added).

That makes the hair on the back of my neck stand up—spiritually speaking, that is.

It is an occupational hazard of the ministry, is it not, to have spent our time and energy trying to get others to love, obey, and worship Jesus Christ, only to discover in the end that we ourselves have not. We have been so occupied with coaching other runners that we ourselves have never actually run the race!

Pastors have an extraordinarily difficult job, one filled with great spiritual peril. We are player-coaches. We must both tell others how to be Christians and be Christians ourselves. We must both preach what we practice and practice what we preach. The difficulty is the tension between the two. The great pastoral peril is to succumb to the temptation of being just a coach.

Nowhere is this problem more apparent to me than in the Sunday worship service. I can get so preoccupied with trying to get the congregation to worship that I don't worship.

It doesn't take much to get me to forget why I am there in the first place. Sitting as I do, up front on the platform, I can see most of what is happening in the sanctuary. I can see if the ushers are botching their job. I will notice if the junior highers sitting in the back are nudging each other and giggling. I will be more aware than I want to be if a young woman is imprudently ...



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