Turretin did say more, but this is a good reminder for pastors (myself included) that we are called to serve the church and humbly minister to her. The church doesn’t revolve around the pastor. The church does not exist to serve the pastor. The pastor is not the church’s lord and ruler. Jesus is. The church revolves around him and exists to serve and worship him. Pastors are merely servants that point the church to Jesus.
In the era of celebrity pastors and famous preachers who have thousands of “likes” and (sadly) even fans, it’s very important to remember that Christ’s church is greater than her pastors. Pastors serve for 10, 20, or 30 years; maybe sometimes they even serve 50 or 60 years. Then they die and someone else takes their place. The church lives on even when the pastor leaves or goes to be with the Lord. In a rightly ordered church, everything doesn’t collapse when the pastor leaves or dies. The church may grieve, but she doesn’t fold or dissolve. Instead, she prays, calls a new pastor, and together they press on in the faith. I appreciate how Francis Turretin talked about this in the third volume of his Institutes.
“…Now the church is superior to pastors, not pastors to the church; the church does not belong to the pastors, but the pastors to the church. ‘All things are yours,’ says Paul, ‘whether Paul, or Apollos, or Cephas’ (1 Cor. 3:21-22). Here he rebukes those who gloried in men as heads and for whose sake they raised dissensions and parties among the Corinthians. He shows that they acted falsely because the church is greater than and superior to all. Hence pastors are called servants and ministers of the church: ‘We are your servants for Jesus’ sake’ (2 Cor. 4:5).”
Earlier Turretin noted this:
“…The church is not for the sake of the ministry, but the ministry for the sake of the church.
Turretin did say more, but this is a good reminder for pastors (myself included) that we are called to serve the church and humbly minister to her. The church doesn’t revolve around the pastor. The church does not exist to serve the pastor. The pastor is not the church’s lord and ruler. Jesus is. The church revolves around him and exists to serve and worship him. Pastors are merely servants that point the church to Jesus. Might we even say that pastors are in a way expendable?
The above quote and entire discussion about pastors and the church are found on pages 227-8 of Turretin’s Institutes, vol 3.
Rev. Shane Lems is a minister in the Orthodox Presbyterian Church and serves as pastor of Covenant Presbyterian Church in Hammond, Wis. This article appeared on his blog and is used with permission.