Travel to any major city and you will find binoculars attached to major buildings overlooking the skyline. For a fee you can see the beauty of the landscape and take in the breathtaking scenery. But you just about always have to adjust the focus in order to see anything clearly. The book of Isaiah shows us how to turn our lives so that it comes into focus with God’s plan. He paid the price so that we can see it, but we have control over how in focus it is.  Join us as we discover the wonder of this prophetic book and how you can get your life back into focus.
Why Spiritual Leaders Are Essential
Proverbs 29:18 says, “Where there is no revelation, the people cast off restraint; but blessed is he who keeps the law†(NIV). The general meaning of this verse is that without someone explaining God’s Word, holding it with great regard, and directing the people to look to it for answers, then the people will perish. They perish because they turn away from God and His law and begin to do what they feel is right in their own eyes. The Hebrew verb yipaara` means ‘are dissipated;’ also ‘revolt,’ ‘become unbridled,’ and so perish. This unbridled, and consequently ruinous state, is opposed in the parallel clause, “happy;” as “the law” stands in contrast to “no vision.” The following principle can be drawn from this passage of Scripture: If a ministry within the church does not have a leader, then the ministry will plateau and decline. Weekly objectives will not be met, and the overall quality will diminish. As people involved in the ministry begin to do things as they think best due to a lack of direction; there will be disunity, confusion, and decline.
Therefore, before a strategy can be developed for any ministry, there must be someone to champion the ministry within the church. This leader must cast a vision of a desirable future and see that the Sunday-to-Sunday objectives are accomplished, along with hundreds of others items that need to be addressed on a weekly basis. Clark says:
Effective leadership is essential for progress. Someone must be responsible for planning, organizing, directing, and making decisions. Some groups operate in a leaderless structure with group members sharing responsibility equally. However, unless individuals are skillfully trained and experienced, they need leaders to motivate them towards goals to be accomplished. The leader acts as a guide to show the way and to coordinate activities.
A lack of this characteristic of seeking to improve by casting vision and goal setting is analogous to the carpenter who uses a piece of wood as a way to measure another piece of wood to cut. When the carpenter has cut the wood, he then casts the original measured wood aside and substitutes it with the new cut piece of wood. This process continues for some time, until he realizes that when he measures the pieces each is a different size. If he had used one piece as a standard, instead of using each new piece with a slightly different cut size, he would have been able to accomplish his task. But the carpenter has to go back and start over. In ministry if everyone is ministering the way they feel is best, or referencing the analogy above, “a different size,†then nothing really fits together; but if they are all the same size, it is much easier to build the ministry and Christ’s kingdom. A leader needs to make sure that standards are kept and bars are raised in order to improve the ministry. Otherwise people tend to do what they think is best; there is a lack of uniformity and purpose; and decline becomes inevitable.
For the purposes of our discussion, Blackaby’s definition of leadership will be used. This definition of leadership is, “spiritual leadership is moving people on to God’s agenda.†He explains that spiritual leadership has not occurred if a person has not left their personal desires and plans and if they have not been influenced to move towards God’s plan. A leader in any ministry seeks God’s plan for the ministry and then leads the rest toward this God-ordained purpose and plan. In Luke 9:33 Jesus brought Peter with Him to a mountain in which God chose to transfigure Jesus so that He had a glorious appearance. Peter, not understanding what was going on, says, “Master, it is good for us to be here. Let us put up three shelters—one for you, one for Moses and one for Elijah†(He did not know what he was saying) (NIV).
In any ministry people will want to do things that are counterproductive to God’s agenda, and do things that just do not make sense. It is the leader’s role to have clear instructions from the Lord and to explain these instructions to others. Otherwise, everyone is trying to build shelters and miss their mandate to transform the lives of others. A leader keeps his team on task and does not allow them to become involved in activities that distract them from their task of directing others towards God.
Why Spiritual Leaders Are Essential
Proverbs 29:18 says, “Where there is no revelation, the people cast off restraint; but blessed is he who keeps the law†(NIV). The general meaning of this verse is that without someone explaining God’s Word, holding it with great regard, and directing the people to look to it for answers, then the people will perish. They perish because they turn away from God and His law and begin to do what they feel is right in their own eyes.  The Hebrew verb yipaara` means ‘are dissipated;’ also ‘revolt,’ ‘become unbridled,’ and so perish. This unbridled, and consequently ruinous state, is opposed in the parallel clause, “happy;” as “the law” stands in contrast to “no vision.”[1] The following principle can be drawn from this passage of Scripture: If a ministry within the church does not have a leader, then the ministry will plateau and decline. Weekly objectives will not be met, and the overall quality will diminish. As people involved in the ministry begin to do things as they think best due to a lack of direction; there will be disunity, confusion, and decline.
Therefore, before a strategy can be developed for any ministry, there must be someone to champion the ministry within the church. This leader must cast a vision of a desirable future and see that the Sunday-to-Sunday objectives are accomplished, along with hundreds of others items that need to be addressed on a weekly basis. Clark says:
Effective leadership is essential for progress. Someone must be responsible for planning, organizing, directing, and making decisions. Some groups operate in a leaderless structure with group members sharing responsibility equally. However, unless individuals are skillfully trained and experienced, they need leaders to motivate them towards goals to be accomplished. The leader acts as a guide to show the way and to coordinate activities.[2]
A lack of this characteristic of seeking to improve by casting vision and goal setting is analogous to the carpenter who uses a piece of wood as a way to measure another piece of wood to cut. When the carpenter has cut the wood, he then casts the original measured wood aside and substitutes it with the new cut piece of wood. This process continues for some time, until he realizes that when he measures the pieces each is a different size. If he had used one piece as a standard, instead of using each new piece with a slightly different cut size, he would have been able to accomplish his task. But the carpenter has to go back and start over. In ministry if everyone is ministering the way they feel is best, or referencing the analogy above, “a different size,†then nothing really fits together; but if they are all the same size, it is much easier to build the ministry and Christ’s kingdom.[3] A leader needs to make sure that standards are kept and bars are raised in order to improve the ministry. Otherwise people tend to do what they think is best; there is a lack of uniformity and purpose; and decline becomes inevitable.
For the purposes of our discussion, Blackaby’s definition of leadership will be used. This definition of leadership is, “spiritual leadership is moving people on to God’s agenda.â€[4] He explains that spiritual leadership has not occurred if a person has not left their personal desires and plans and if they have not been influenced to move towards God’s plan. A leader in any ministry seeks God’s plan for the ministry and then leads the rest toward this God-ordained purpose and plan. In Luke 9:33 Jesus brought Peter with Him to a mountain in which God chose to transfigure Jesus so that He had a glorious appearance. Peter, not understanding what was going on, says, “Master, it is good for us to be here. Let us put up three shelters—one for you, one for Moses and one for Elijah†(He did not know what he was saying) (NIV). In any ministry people will want to do things that are counterproductive to God’s agenda, and do things that just do not make sense. It is the leader’s role to have clear instructions from the Lord and to explain these instructions to others. Otherwise, everyone is trying to build shelters and miss their mandate to transform the lives of others. A leader keeps his team on task and does not allow them to become involved in activities that distract them from their task of directing others towards God.
[1] John Joseph Owens, Analytical Key to the Old Testament, vol. 3, Ezra-Song of Solomon (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1991), 602.
[2] Robert Clark, Joanne Brubaker, and Roy Zuck, Childhood Education in the Church (Chicago: Moody, 1986) 228.
[3] Eph 2:20–22
[4] Blackaby and Blackaby, Spiritual Leadership, 21.
"One Small Step for Man, One Giant Leap for Mankind"
My role in this life doesn’t seem to be one of landing on the moon, inventing the newest technology, or winning a major battle. Instead, it seems that my destiny lies in my influencing those young men who will. And that’s ok.
Tonight the Wolf den of Pack 277 had an awesome time. We are working on our “science” belt loop so we discussed the “scientific method.” All the boys were able to walk through the process, and we experimented with balsa wood air planes (the kind that you wind a rubber band on the bottom). It is so much fun to see their smiles as they discover simple scientific concepts as though they were the first people ever to think of such things. They are so full of energy and anticipation about life — it was fun just to be there with them. Each boy adds so much to our evenings. I am so proud of each and every one of them.
Isaiah 7:10-16; 9:1-21 “A Sign From God”
Travel to any major city and you will find binoculars attached to major buildings overlooking the skyline. For a fee you can see the beauty of the landscape and take in the breathtaking scenery. But you just about always have to adjust the focus in order to see anything clearly. The book of Isaiah shows us how to turn our lives so that it comes into focus with God’s plan. He paid the price so that we can see it, but we have control over how in focus it is.  Join us as we discover the wonder of this prophetic book and how you can get your life back into focus.
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