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Leadership In The Early Church Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 7, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: By necessity, any group of people who hope to attain certain goals has to have leaders. Organization is an essential component in the body of Christ, just as it is in the existence of any living organism.
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By necessity, any group of people who hope to attain certain
goals has to have leaders. Organization is an essential component in
the body of Christ, just as it is in the existence of any living
organism. If there is one thing that the universe compels us to
believe about its Creator, it is that He is a superb organizer. The
harmony of our universe is no accident, for it was planned by God.
When God entered history in the person of His Son to build His new
creation, He again revealed His desire for harmony by training 12
men to lead and guide His church. Jesus put His whole active
ministry into the training of leadership, for it was of prime
importance to Him.
As we follow the progress of the church we see that it grew in
its organization to meet the needs as they arose. In Acts 6 we read
that a need arose for someone to assure that Greek widows received
their fair share of charity. So the first official officers of the church
were appointed, and they were the deacons. Later deaconesses
needed to be added because in oriental lands men did not have
access to minister to women in many situations.
Whenever Paul established a new church he appointed elders,
as we read in Acts 14:23. Paul later in his letters explains the duties
of the elders, and also the presbyters and bishops. We learn that
basically they were rulers and teachers, for they guided the church
in its business and they taught the people the Word of God. The
strength or weakness of the church depended upon the leadership
and upon the cooperation of the people with the leadership.
The Jews in their synagogues, and the Greeks in their religious
clubs had a democratic form of government, and so it was natural
that this form of government would be adopted by the church. We
might see in this the providential guidance of God, and also see that
this form of government is God’s preference. Paul, however, makes
it clear that no form of organization, or method of leadership will be
successful unless there is cooperation between the leaders and the
led. That is what brings us to our text. Paul is pointing out the
duties of each to the other, and only as each fulfills it's obligation can
the whole church be what God intends it to be. Paul had just
comforted them with the doctrine of the second coming. Now he
challenges them with the duties that face them until He comes. We
will look first at the duties of the leaders, and then the duties of the
led.
I. THE DUTIES OF THE LEADERS. v. 12
The duties of the leaders is actually secondary here, for the
thrust of Paul’s exhortation is to the followers, and he beseeches
them to know their leaders and to esteem them. By his description
of the leaders, however, he tells us of their duties. He is not writing
of ordained clergy here, for the labors he writes about are obviously
those of layman. They have only recently been converted from
paganism, and even if there had been Christian schools to go to for
training, there was not enough time to have them trained and
serving this church. Paul had likely appointed elders to organize
the church. All of the early churches had to be led by layman. The
early church depended completely upon dedicated layman for its
leadership.
These leaders, Paul says, are those who labor among you.
Their primary duty is building up the faith of those in the church,
for the church must become strong and mature before it can reach
the world. These leaders were to labor, and the word for labor is
kopiao, which means to toil, to be wearied, and to be worn out. It is
the same word Jesus used in Matt. 11:28, “Come unto me, all ye that
labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” Paul used this
word of himself several times as he wrote in I Cor. 15:10, “I labored
more abundantly than they all.” In Col. 1:29 he writes, “Whereunto
I also labor, striving according to His working which worketh in me
mightily.” In his conclusion to Romans in 16:12 he wrote, “Salute
Tryphena and Tryphosa, who labor in the Lord. Salute the beloved
Persis, which labored much in the Lord.”
These and other verses indicate that good hard work is the duty
of a leader. Paul indicates that every leader is to take his task
seriously, and to work at it until it becomes toil, and until he is tired.
It is assumed that any leader will do his best out of gratitude for the
grace of God that made him able to be a servant in the first place.