An ordination service speaks extremely powerfully to those already ordained. It reminds us of our high calling and its divine origin. It points out to us the privilege and thrill of being a minister of the gospel. It also invokes a fearful sense of responsibility and inadequacy that drives us to the grace of our Lord for our lives and ministry.
During a recent evening worship service at our church, the Rev. Scott Cook was ordained to the gospel ministry. Scott is a recent graduation of RTS (Charlotte) and had previously been an outstanding intern at our church. I had the enormous privilege of preaching from John 3:22-30, on the theme, “The Friend of the Bridegroom.” Ordination services are important, and I’d like to note just a few reasons why I love them.
- The Church. An ordination service reminds us that the church is not just a social body where we have all decided to hang out for a while. Rather, it is the household of God and the repository of the means of grace. God is always acting in the church through the means of grace, but in an ordination service we especially see God’s hands resting on the man he has called. It reminds us of God’s presence in all that we do according to his Word. An ordination service also reminds the church members that it is Christ’s church more than it is their church. Few things helps communicate to the church better than an ordination service the spiritual authority invested in the church, to which Christians are to yield proper submission by receiving God’s Word from the minister’s mouth. It is also most wholesome in these gender-confused days for the church to see faithful and loving men exercising biblical leadership for the good of the whole church. (My wife says that ordination services are her favorite: “It makes me feel like a woman to see all those faithful men in God-given authority,” she says.
Subscribe to Free “Top 10 Stories” Email
Get the top 10 stories from The Aquila Report in your inbox every Tuesday morning.

