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Home/Featured/Gurnall on Celebrity Pastors

Gurnall on Celebrity Pastors

We need to guard our spirits against the temptation to create new celebrities.

Written by Jeremy Walker | Saturday, October 26, 2013

We go beyond that properly Berean spirit that receives the word with all readiness and searches the Scriptures to find out whether the things being taught are so (Acts 17.11). Our chosen big cheese has only to press the ‘publish’ button or produce another book and – on the assumption that his (or, indeed, her) unmatched insight and wisdom is once more on display – we immediately begin uncritically to consume the latest offering. 

 

Whether we are prepared to admit it or not, most of us have ‘celebrity pastors,’ or at least men to whom we offer a measure of unqualified and uncritical appreciation or even adulation. We go beyond that properly Berean spirit that receives the word with all readiness and searches the Scriptures to find out whether the things being taught are so (Acts 17.11). Our chosen big cheese has only to press the ‘publish’ button or produce another book and – on the assumption that his (or, indeed, her) unmatched insight and wisdom is once more on display – we immediately begin uncritically to consume the latest offering. In this way, we give a pass to that one upon whom we have bestowed this honour. There is no party or tribe that is immune to this spirit; the elevated individual may be alive or dead; the problem is not restricted to the internet age. Indeed, some of those who shout loudest against celebrity pastors are in danger of fostering the same attitude in their own circles: “Of course we don’t follow Celebrity Pastor Jones; we show a proper, measured and appropriate appreciation of Gifted Pastor Smith.” Trouble is, it looks, sounds and feels almost if not entirely identical.At the same time, a reasonable antagonism to the mindless adulation given to a man can become a personal animus against the man himself, as if – because others do not show a measured spirit in regard to him – he himself is suspect. Perhaps our problem is that our celebrity is, we feel, not quite sufficiently celebrated by others.

William Gurnall, writing in The Christian in Complete Armour of the need to have our waist girded with the belt of truth, makes this appropriate comment:

Enslave not thy judgment to any person or party. There is a spiritual suretiship which hath undone many in their judgments and principles. Be not bound to, or for the judgment of any. Weigh truth, and tell gold thou mayest, after thy father; but thou must live by thy own faith, not another’s. Labour to see truth with thine own eyes. That building stands weak which is held up by a shore, or some neighbour house it leans on, rather than on a foundation of its own. When these go, that will fall to the ground also. Let not authority from man, but evidence from the word, conclude thy judgment; that is but a shore, this is a foundation. Quote the Scripture rather than men for thy judgment. Not, so saith a learned man; but thus saith the holy Scripture.

 

Read More.

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