A New Shepherd | Psalm 23 Sermon

Sermon text: Psalm 23

Sermon outline

Main idea: Jesus shepherds us through death to new life.

  • The Lord is my shepherd.
  • When the Lord is our shepherd, we have everything.
  • When the Lord is our shepherd, we don’t fear anything.
  • When the Lord is our shepherd, we have him forever.

A New Cornerstone | Psalm 118 Sermon

Sermon text: Psalm 118

Sermon outline

  • God loves to the uttermost (vv. 1-4, 29).
  • God saves to the uttermost (vv. 5-18).
  • The rejected stone becomes the cornerstone (vv. 19-24).

A New David | Psalm 16 Sermon

Sermon text: Psalm 16

Sermon outline

  • The division of Psalm 16
    • We first get a picture of a devoted life (vv. 1-6)
    • We then get examples of God’s blessings (vv. 7-11)
  • A devoted life…
    • …depends on God (vv. 1-2).
    • …delights in the saints (v. 3).
    • …hates idolatry (v. 4).
    • …accepts the lot God gives (vv. 5-6).
  • God blesses….
    • …with his guidance (vv. 7-8).
    • …with his faithfulness (vv. 9-10).
    • …with his exaltation (v. 11).
  • We can devote our lives to God and receive God’s blessings because Jesus was devoted to God and received God’s blessings.
  • Jesus bids you to come and die.

Counterintuitive Advice for Pastors

From the start of the summer, I have participated in a weekly online cohort for pastors. It has focused on areas of ministry faithfulness and fruitfulness that I don’t always think about or emphasize in my own ministry. If you’re interested in this cohort, you can find it here. My time in the cohort has led me to embrace some counterintuitive advice for pastors, some from the cohort and some from elsewhere, that really works.

In my experience, pastors often fall into one of two categories: workaholics or slackers. This article is for the former. Workaholic pastors can easily be misled—by themselves or by well-meaning church members—into believing their overwork is a sign of virtue. But if you’re in that camp, know this: you’re not just hurting yourself; you’re also doing harm to your church.

Do Less

God gave the church pastors “to equip the saints for the work of ministry” (Ephesians 4:12).

(If you want to learn more about this, you can watch a sermon that I preached on this passage: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=91qdGfcVzoI.)

Your church members need to learn to do the work of ministry. As the pastor, it is your responsibility to train them. If you can equip the saints for the ministry, their combined impact for God’s kingdom will be greater than yours ever could be on its own. You just have to delegate, train, empower, and encourage them. For pastors, figure out what only you can do in the church and then delegate everything else that is on your plate. The church members need to do the ministry; you can’t horde it all. If someone can do the work even 80% as good as you think you can after a year of training and encouragement, they are talented enough to do it.

Be Gone More

You don’t want your church to be built on you. You can’t handle the weight of it. As they say, out of sight, out of mind. If you’re gone, the church has room to breathe and minister without you. This is healthy for you and the church. Go to your denomination’s annual meetings. Take a week for a pastor’s retreat. Do that mission trip overseas. Preach a revival at a sister church or a camp. Take all your vacation days and enjoy them with your family. People will call you lazy. People will say you only work one day a week. We know they’re wrong. You are doing your job when you’re gone because your job is to equip the saints for the work of the ministry. They are being equipped not only in your absence but by your absence.

Take Your Days Off

You are finite. You are mortal. You are limited. Take your days off. Aim for two every week. Weddings and funerals happen. They’ll take plenty of your days off. Get two on the weeks you can, and one on the weeks you can’t. If you plan for one, you’ll end up with zero. Your family will appreciate it. You will appreciate it. Your church will appreciate it because you’ll have something to talk about other than church. While I’m at it, make an appointment to get a full night’s sleep every night. Accept your limitations. Everything will go better when you do.

Preach Less

I hate this one. I love preaching. I rarely feel better than when I’m in the pulpit.

However, I can’t stay fresh in the pulpit if I never take breaks. When I preach around eight weeks or more in a row, I start feeling in the pulpit like Bilbo Baggins in The Fellowship of the Ring. He said, “I feel thin, sort of stretched, like butter scraped over too much bread.” That’s how I start to get in the pulpit without a break.

I need to hear someone else preach a few Sundays a year, and I need to see them in my pulpit. My church needs Sundays to be exposed to solid, guest preachers and for us to develop new ones. Just this month, I had a church member preach his first sermon on a Sunday morning. He did excellent! So, I don’t feel bad about taking those Sundays off even if I get the occasional church member who gives me a hard time about it.

Conclusion

When you’re in a rut or your church’s attendance has plateaued, how many people would tell you to do less, be gone more, take your days off, and preach less? Sadly, not enough. Normally, you get this kind of advice when you’re close to burning out, but I hope that you see this advice doesn’t just benefit you, it benefits your church. Your church needs you to do less, so they can take on the work God has called them to do. They need you to be gone more because your presence casts a large shadow, and your absence requires them to step-up. You need to take your days off because you won’t give your church your best when you give them everything. You need to preach less because they need to hear someone else, and they need you to preach out of a full heart not an empty one.