Reforming the Home, Restoring the Prophetic Voice of the Church
Dr. Carlton C. McLeod, Senior Pastor, Calvary Revival Church Chesapeake

1) Reclaim the Gospel (The Message of the Kingdom) - It’s not about fulfillment; it’s about forgiveness!

2) Reestablish Holiness (The Lifestyle of the Kingdom) - God values righteousness. The underlying issue of the day is immorality (1 Thes 4:1-8). Let’s not ignore half the message!

3) Ready the Church through Stewardship (To Resource the Kingdom) - There is a fiscal famine coming. Will the kingdom be ready for future harvest?

4) Reform the Family (The Foundation of the Kingdom) - Since we are losing 70-88% of our children by the end of their freshman year in college, we must reestablish the biblical role of the father and encourage parents to disciple and train their own children in the Word.

(Prayerfully edited to add....)

5) Restore Trust in Leadership (The Integrity of the Kingdom) - Now more than ever, pastors need to see themselves as holy, humble shepherds first rather than CEOs.  Integrity must become even more important than "vision" which many times is simply "ambition."


This has been around awhile, but it is sooooo true.  Hilarious too!

 

 


Battle Stations….(Enough with absorbing attacks; it's time to hit back!)

In the movie Hunt for Red October, there is a gripping scene that paints a picture of where CRCC is right now.  Russian Captain Marko Ramius and his submarine crew are submerged and navigating deep and dangerous underwater canyons.  It is a demonstration of both skill and experience.  They had just begun their righteous mission of delivering one of the world’s most dangerous weapons (the submarine itself, designed to start a war with the United States) to America in the hopes of averting World War III.  They slipped away silently, but after being sabotaged by a member of the crew, they had been found out. In the scene, the dialog went something like this:

Sonar officer: “Captain, we’ve just be over-flown by a low altitude, multi-engine turboprop!” (A sub-hunting aircraft)
Captain: “Put it on audio.”
Sonar officer: “Water entry of small objects!!!”
Executive officer: “Sonobuoys.” (Devices that send out audio signals to detect underwater objects.)
Executive officer: “Should we bottom the boat Captain?!?!” (Essentially, put the ship on the ocean floor and hope they are not heard.)
Captain: “Too late for that now…Battlestations.”

And as the scene plays out, their discovery almost cost them their lives.  The aircraft launched a torpedo that nearly destroys the ship. Now, what does all this have to do with CRCC you might be asking? :)

CRCC….

Battlestations.

We’ve been discovered. Our righteous mission to preach the unfettered, unadorned, and uncut Gospel unashamedly in order to Reach, Teach, and Release Hurting People through the Power of Jesus Christ is not going unmet! Although I’m not an alarmist, nor am I into conjecture and hyperbole, I’m certain of this: Satan and the forces of hell are launching torpedoes!

Remember friends…Satan hates Christ. Satan hates His Gospel. And Satan hates anyone who will not bow to the pressure of cultural relativism and “Christian” conformism.  We’ve been cruising along “under the ocean” grinning and preaching and having a good old time.  But the “Word” is out!

Why am I saying this?  Because of the evidence.  Too many marriages are struggling for no reason.  Too many saints are dealing with overwhelming money pressure. Too many blessed children and teens don’t know the Gospel and/or are struggling with rebellion and despair. Too many believers stay in a constant state of disconnection. There is too much inconsistency in our intentional efforts to read and study and grow in the Lord at home.  There is too little discipleship and too much assimilation of cultural entertainment in most lives.  And there is too much compromise in our homes!

Yes, I know it doesn’t seem that way.  We show up on Sunday and everything seems so good.  We worship, preach, hug and greet. People in Care Group smile and laugh and wave. Everything seems so nice.  And don’t get me wrong; we aren’t faking it.  We have an awesome ministry and our God has been faithful!  But the Lord has revealed that we are under a vicious assault: our children, our relationship covenants, our bodies, and our leaders. It is a direct result of daring to preach the Gospel of Christ Jesus without compromise.  It is a direct result of refusing to turn the Gospel into motivational speeches.  It is a direct result of moving closer and closer to a New Testament Church where we not only worship, but we also do His Will; where we not only dance and shout, we also implement discipline and submit; where we not only grow but we give; where we not only enjoy His love, but we also seek and disciple the lost!

In other words, we are entering another phase of our growth in the Lord.  The first phase (over the last two years) was the reestablishment of a Christ foundation.  Now we are dealing with the results of that: greater levels of joy by many, but also attacks by the Enemy of Christ and the emergence of areas of darkness in our lives that the Word and the Spirit have exposed that we might be holy.  And since we have decided to fight for our children, the attacks have intensified....

So again, let me be clear: Battlestations! (This is not a drill….)

“For though we live in the world, we do not wage war as the world does. 4 The weapons we fight with are not the weapons of the world. On the contrary, they have divine power to demolish strongholds. 5 We demolish arguments and every pretension that sets itself up against the knowledge of God, and we take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ.” (2 Cor 10:3-5)

Just as Captain Ramius gave instructions to his crew to save the ship in the aforementioned scene (and in the scene some argued with him as he was trying to save their lives…been there!!!!), I’ll offer some counsel to help our “ship” get to the destination God has prepared for us:

1. Consult the War Manual. Determine in your spirit to read, search out, and obey God’s Word at all costs. The path to victory isn’t found on Facebook.  It is found in the Word of God! Popular psychology is not the answer; what God says is the answer!

2. Man your station. When battlestations is sounded onboard a Navy ship, NOBODY is in their rack, working out, or eating.  EVERYONE is preparing for war. CRCC, now is the time to plug in. Be at church every single Sunday if you can.  Don’t miss Care Group.  Don't neglect family worship and catechism.  Everybody pick a ministry and put your hand to the plow. Every parent take up battle positions at home. Engage the enemy!

3. Obey at all costs.  When Christ our Commanding Officer issues orders, obey. To win this fight, we must realize that our obedience must never be bound to our feelings.  Feelings have a way of betraying us.  One of the greatest lies the Enemy has embedded within the culture is that all feelings are valid.  Human feelings are only valid when they line up with eternal truth.  They are invalid when they flow from flesh and are contrary to God’s Word.

4. Increase maneuvering speed.  When any battle begins, so does the speed of the combatants.  There is no time to lose.  A war posture and a battle mindset must be in place now!  At the rate our covenants and children are being attacked, we must fight now.  The fight against sin must be engaged with swiftness and determination.  Just like the nation of Israel at times in the Old Testament, the overabundance of our blessings has made us slothful and slow.  We must pick up the pace.

5. Deploy countermeasures.  Prayer, fasting, and praise are common countermeasures.  Others are love, forgiveness, giving monetarily (because of its affect on the heart) and consistent service.  But to me, the one that sums up all the others is love-based obedience. Peter called this obedience in our battle against the Enemy “standing firm in the faith” (1 Peter 5:9).  That is what we must do.  It is the shield of faith that that extinguishes the flaming “torpedoes” of the evil one (Eph 6:16).

6. Counterattack. Stand on the Word!  Draw your sword (Eph 6:17)!  Snapshot on 1 & 2!  (Submarine-speak for “fire!!!” LOL).  You see my friends, we lose sometimes because we don’t speak or believe or obey the Word.  When temptations or tough decisions arise, the Word is not our first consideration.  All too often we are ruled by our desires and we resist God’s accountability.  But in order to fight back, take authority by saying what God said in His word and doing it!  Teach your children to do the same!

7. Assist the wounded.  Sadly, there will be casualties.  When I first began teaching that “Jesus is Enough” I knew it would be tough.  But admittedly, I didn’t realize the depth to which our faith and joy was linked to circumstances instead of Christ, and I didn’t realize how the right message would bring us into conflict with so much evil.  Now that we are fighting for our children, it's even worse!  So look around.  See who is hurting. Then go to their rescue.  Realize that in battle, healing the hurting is almost always painful because there is little time for anesthetics and hospital room niceties.  But the struggle for the hearts of our children, the future of our marriages and singles, the souls of lost people, and our Kingdom Potential to me is a life or death struggle.  So if we must endure pain to save lives, so be it.

At the end of the movie, Ramius and a primary character named Jack Ryan are floating along on the Red October in safety, having reached the destination. They are chatting and reflecting in a very peaceful and tranquil scene, looking at a calm and serene river, breeze blowing and danger past. The battle is over and times of circumstantial joy and serenity await. Friends, Christ promised us the same (Rev 21-22)! But until then, we are in the thick of the fight for the Truth of Jesus Christ. So let’s come about smartly, engines all ahead full, weapons warm and ready, and take the fight to the enemy.

That is all.....


Ok....so much for my thought that no one reads this blog.  No one comments, but a few do read it!  LOL.  I'm ok yall!!!!!!!! :) :)

Here is what I was trying to say yesterday....

Pastors....if they truly have a pastor's heart....care deeply for the people they lead.  Very very very deeply.  The call is first and foremost about pleasing Christ...no doubt about that.  But right after that is an overwhelming love for the saints of God, those who are lost, and those who are broken.

As a result, most pastors carry multiple wounds with new ones arriving just about every week.  And not just from one or two people that have hurt you.  From lots and lots and lots of people.  Whether those folks have died, are suffering in some area (because when they hurt, you do too), or simply left.  The best way I can describe it is getting your heart broken by multiple people/situations all the time.

Some people say "shake it off...don't let it bother you...it's just how it is."  How is a shephard who cares deeply for people supposed to "shake off" someone suffering with cancer, or someone's marriage falling apart, or someone's child who dies, or someone who had to declare bankrupcy, or someone who is on drugs, or someone who says "I'll never leave you" and not only leaves you, but lists the 2,037 things you are doing wrong when they walk out the door and/or talks about you like you're a crimminal?

Being a pastor is a ridiculous job.  Although I'm still fired up about the message Christ has given us, I do wonder at 40 if I'll survive to 50.

If anyone has some special "shake it off" anointing, please swing by and lay hands on me. :)


Here is a book I'd like to read.  Maybe I should write it.  I'd call it: Pastoral Pain: Living with the Hurt of Ministry

The chapters would be something like:

Chapter 1. The Pain of Being Misunderstood

Chapter 2. The Pain of People Leaving

Chapter 3. The Pain of Lacking Resources

Chapter 4. The Pain of Unfair Comparisons

Chapter 5. The Pain of Standing for Truth

Chapter 6. The Pain of Personal Integrity

Chapter 7. The Pain in the Pastor's Family

Chapter 8. The Pain of Spiritual Warfare

Chapter 9. The Pain of Constant Disappointment

Chapter 10. The Pain of Carrying Others' Burdens
 

 Here are Some Statistics few Christians know (or care) about:
•  Fifteen hundred pastors leave the ministry each month due to moral failure, spiritual burnout, or contention in their churches.
•  Four thousand new churches begin each year, but over seven thousand churches close.
•  Fifty percent of pastors' marriages will end in divorce.
•  Eighty percent of pastors feel unqualified and discouraged in their role as pastor.
•  Fifty percent of pastors think their work is hazardous to their well-being.
•  Fifty percent of pastors are so discouraged that they would leave the ministry if they could, but have no other way of making a living.
•  Eighty percent of seminary and Bible school graduates who enter the ministry will leave the ministry within the first five years.
•  Seventy percent of pastors constantly fight depression.
•  Fifty percent of pastors work more than 50 hours per week.
•  Eighty-five percent of pastors said their greatest problem is they are sick and tired of dealing with problem people, such as disgruntled elders, deacons, worship leaders, worship teams, board members, and associate pastors.
•  Ninety percent said the hardest thing about ministry is dealing with uncooperative people.
•  Seventy percent of pastors feel grossly underpaid.
•  Fifty-six percent of pastors' wives say they have no close friends.
•  Forty-five percent of pastors' wives say the greatest danger to them and their family is physical, emotional, mental and spiritual burnout.
•  For every 20 pastors who enter ministry, only one retires from ministry.

Other Quotes:
•  Peter Drucker, the late leadership guru, said that the four hardest jobs in America (and not necessarily in order, he added) are the president of the United States, a university president, a CEO of a hospital and ... a pastor.
•  Congregations expect pastors to wear many hats: CEO, therapist, scholar, teacher, administrator, accountant, fund-raiser, friend of children, preacher, spiritual leader, wedding/funeral presider and house blesser. (I’ll add demon-chaser, hospital chaplain, marriage-mender, child expert, real-estate agent, job-finder, and straightener of chairs.)
•  Church members expect their pastor to be on call seven days a week; few churches give their pastor two full days off, thereby losing 52 days of rest that most people relish. They work on holidays — Christmas, Easter and Thanksgiving — and never have a three-day weekend.  People expect them to have perfect marriages and kids and drive cars and live in homes that are “acceptable”.
•  The startling fact is that most pastors are lonely and feel their self-esteem has been lessened, not increased, the longer they are pastors. (I can say whole-heartedly that this is true.)



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