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On Pastors Who Use Churches as Studios


Transcript

Pastor John, what would you say to a pastor who uses his church on Sundays as a studio? Essentially, he preaches past his people into a video camera, into a microphone, with the main goal of producing online content. In other words, his church is just a mechanism, just a studio for him to address an online audience through them.

Well, I would try to encourage him first that it's not wrong to have a wider ministry, but it is wrong to pretend that you have a flock that you shepherd when you don't have a flock that you shepherd. You have a studio, or you have a stepping stone, or you have an excuse.

And if that's true, you shouldn't presume to say you have a flock because God has some really, really serious things to say about that kind of shepherd in Ezekiel 34. He says, "Son of man, prophesy against the shepherds of Israel. Prophesy and say to them, even to the shepherds, 'Thus says the Lord, 'Ah, you shepherds of Israel who have been feeding yourselves, should not shepherds feed the sheep?

You eat the fat, you clothe yourselves with wool, you slaughter the fat ones, and you do not feed the sheep. The weak you have not strengthened, the sick you have not healed, the injured you have not bound up, the strayed you have not brought back, the lost you have not sought, and with force and harshness you have ruled over them.'" Those have always been unbelievably serious words to me as a pastor.

And I think Peter picks it up in 1 Peter when he says, "So I exhort you as a fellow elder, shepherd the flock of God that is in your charge, exercise oversight, don't rule with compulsion, do it willingly, set a good example for your people." So it seems to me there is a profound inauthenticity about preaching past your people in front of you, past your flock.

And that inauthenticity, I think, may get a crowd in the short run, but will not be blessed by God in the wider church in the long run. Instead, I think the mindset should be—this is what I'd say to anybody who's being tempted this way— serve your people with your best energy, serve your people with full affection, serve your people with focused attention, feed your flock with the food they need.

Don't give them generic messages for a generic audience. Let the extent of the ripple effect of serving your people be the impulse of others, not yourself. In other words, if God means for you to have a wider impact because of what you're saying to your sheep, let others draw that out.

You just be so faithful. Love your people. Serve your people. Feed your people. Beware of the addicting dangers of being widely known. Don't pursue that. Pursue truth. Pursue edification and worship. Pursue your flock and let the ripples take care of themselves. If other people want to draw that out, maybe one illustrates, you know, Spurgeon, his sermons were published in goodness, I don't know how many dozens of newspapers around the world.

Well, my best reading of Spurgeon is he didn't even know about some of those, and it wasn't his business to try to make that happen. He wasn't getting up on Sunday saying, "Okay, I got to preach in a way that more newspapers will pick this up." That's just not the way he thought.

He fed his flock in front of him, and because that was so authentic and so helpful to that flock, others picked it up. Thank you, Pastor John, and thank you for listening to this podcast. Please email your questions to us at AskPastorJohn@DesiringGod.org. At DesiringGod.org, you'll find thousands of other free resources from John Piper.

I'm your host, Tony Reinke. Thanks for listening. you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you