Male church leadership is under attack from several directions, particularly because of glaring examples of men whose leadership has been abusive. In churches that take a complementarian view of church leadership, how do we prevent these abuses? We need to think of male leadership in church as father-like, writes Jim Sayers.
John Benton from Aylesbury explored this theme in one of the key sessions at an overnight event for Grace Baptist pastors at High Leigh in March. Leadership should not be about control, he said, but about stimulating, loving, and extending the family. In a generation where young men are regularly failed by the education system, where automation is taking many of their jobs, do pastors understand them? Issues of race, misogyny and gang culture exacerbate the challenge. At the same time, churches need to be places where strong, gifted, and intelligent women are encouraged to flourish. Male leadership that ignores women is both harming them and stunting the growth of the entire church.
Gathering together more than 80 pastors, elders and theological students, the conference covered many themes. Simon Robinson challenged us to think about reaching men, building on his years spent replanting Shepherd Drive Baptist Church in Ipswich. Stéphane Simonnin from Brentford gave a fascinating historical perspective on Calvin’s Company of Pastors. Calvin said: ‘Send us wood and we will send back arrows.’
When their teaching is healthy, but their behaviour isn't
What does it mean to 'contend for the faith once for all delivered to the saints' (Jude 3)?Here is …