Appreciate Your Pastor By Interceding For Your Pastor

Time has seemingly scrapped by since quarantine swept over all of us back in March. But even with the days slowly marching by, we have finally landed in October. This month we celebrate the Reformation and our kids get to run around our neighborhoods (hopefully) to chase after the spoils of Trick or Treating. October is also the month that many churches have set aside to encourage and uplift their pastoral staff through Pastor Appreciation month.

If there is a year pastors need to be encouraged and uplifted – it is 2020. COVID has flipped ministry on its head for most of the year. Ministries found themselves having to pivot overnight from customary in-person worship service to becoming online service streaming experts. Pastoral care needs spiked as church members struggled with the loss of income, COVID diagnoses, and the fear of what was going to happen in the months to come. Pastoral schedules that were already maxed out, were now bursting at the seams. There were more needs than hours of the day to deal with them.

Then came the stress of how to move forward. Should we re-open or stay virtual? Should we ask people to wear masks or not? Should we offer children’s and youth ministry opportunities? Every leadership move scrutinized. Every decision was sure to have a cost on some level.

The weight of all of it has many pastors utterly overwhelmed and on the brink of burnout or even leaving the ministry altogether. We may not see it on Sundays, but many pastors are hurting and are in desperate need of emotional and spiritual support.

So what do we do? Let’s encourage them. Write them a hand-written note. Take them out for a meal. Give them a gift card to their favorite restaurant or coffee shop. Tell them what they have meant to you and your family as their pastor.

Beyond just emotional support, I’d challenge you to stand behind your pastor spiritually in prayer. I understand that it can be a little daunting to pray for the leader of your church beyond the prayer that he would be a good leader and preacher, but the Apostle Paul gives us a great framework to pray for our pastors and elders as he lays out the requirements for both in Titus 1.

4 WAYS TO PRAY FOR YOUR PASTOR RIGHT NOW

Here are 4 ways that we can pray for our pastors right now:

1) Pray for your pastor’s family.

“if anyone is above reproach, the husband of one wife, and his children are believers and not open to the charge of debauchery or insubordination.” ~ Titus 1:6

The people who most intimately feel the burden pastors carry are the people that share a home with him. With schedules stretched to the max, many pastors regularly miss family meals because of the needs of the church. When they do make it home, many ministers have little emotional collateral to spend with their wife and kids because they have been wrung out through the course of the day.

Pray for supernatural energy and strength for your church’s leadership. May they have enough energy to love and shepherd their own family after having to spend the past 10 hours of the day loving and shepherding the other families in his church. Pray that he could find the time and opportunity to sow gospel truths into the hearts of his family in the same way that he gleans gospel truths for his weekly sermons. Pray that even as he is utterly exhausted that he loves his wife and precious kids with as much fervor as he loves the hurting congregants in his local body.

2) Pray for your pastor’s walk with Jesus.

“if anyone is above reproach…For an overseer, as God’s steward, must be above reproach.” ~ Titus 1:6

If the Holy Spirit pens this phrase twice in two verses – it has to be important. The leaders of our churches must be above reproach. They need to blameless and unassailable. They need to be distinctly set apart. Scottish pastor Robert Murray M’Cheyne once said, “The greatest need of my people is my personal holiness.” M’Cheyne’s words clearly echo the words of Paul here

Pray that your pastor stands against the temptations of Satan. It may seem ridiculous to pray in that way, but if the Devil tempted Jesus you better believe that he’ll go after the men who proclaim the gospel of Jesus. Pray God will put godly men in your pastor’s life who he can be honest with and who will hold him accountable. Pray that he would have the strength to say “No” to the enticements of the enemy.

3) Pray for your pastor’s love of others.

“…He must not be arrogant or quick-tempered or a drunkard or violent or greedy for gain, but hospitable, a lover of good, self-controlled, upright, holy, and disciplined.” ~ Titus 1:7b-8

People can be really hard to love sometimes. Days can stretch far beyond the physical and emotional limits of many pastors. The wrong person can cross a pastor at the worst time possible and words and actions can produce hurt and regret in the lives of the church or community members. It takes a lifetime to be loving, but it only takes a split second to be unloving.

Pray that your pastor can soak in the fact that he is loved by his Creator and Savior. Pray that he will love others just like the Father who has redeemed him and called him. Pray that the watching world will see Jesus in your pastor because he loves like the Lord he proclaims.

4) Pray for your pastor’s love of the Word.

“He must hold firm to the trustworthy word as taught, so that he may be able to give instruction in sound doctrine and also to rebuke those who contradict it.” ~ Titus 1:9

When schedules and psyches are stressed, often the first thing to get cut is personal time in Scripture. Yet this is the spiritual food for every believer, much less for elders and overseers. God’s Word is the pastor’s supply and sermon foundation. Time in the Bible is immensely valuable.

Pray that your pastor would say no to “good” things in order for him to soak in the very Word of God. Pray that he would preach Scripture boldly without bowing to the cultural thought of the day. Pray that He would love the promises of God above the praise of men.

Post by DRITCH9

I am a speaker and author from Raleigh, NC. I was born without arms but I do not allow that to define me - I use my disability to empower and give hope to others.

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