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Bivocational pastors receive boost at luncheon
Tobin Perry, Baptist Press
June 18, 2013
5 MIN READ TIME

Bivocational pastors receive boost at luncheon

Bivocational pastors receive boost at luncheon
Tobin Perry, Baptist Press
June 18, 2013

HOUSTON – To call Jonathan Lemaster’s life busy would be an understatement. He pastors two churches and is helping to start a third. And, until recently, he worked as a debt collector in Duluth, Minn., where he pastors.

“It’s hard to learn that balance of doing ministry and spending time with your family,” Lemaster said. “I have a wife and four daughters. It’s really been hard at times to balance everything.”

Speakers at the Bivocational and Small Church Leadership luncheon at this year’s Southern Baptist Convention in Houston encouraged Lemaster and others by reminding them of the key part they play in penetrating lostness in North America. The luncheon was sponsored by the North American Mission Board (NAMB) and Wayland Baptist University and hosted by the Bivocational and Small Church Leadership Network.

“A big part of the conversation we’re trying to lead is that bivocational ministry is the new normal,” said Aaron Coe, NAMB’s vice president of mobilization and equipping. “We really believe that to reach North America, we can’t do it through full-time clergy. It has to come through a multiplicity of pastors in all kinds of contexts.”

Michael Summers, director of church services at Wayland, said the majority of Southern Baptist churches are small.

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Photo by John Swain

Keynote speaker Jimmy Scroggins, pastor of First Baptist Church in West Palm Beach, Fla., told pastors at the Bivocational and Small Church Leadership luncheon they “have been laboring for a long time without any thanks.” The North American Mission Board recognizes their sacrifice, he said.

“If we do not help them, then we’re missing the whole point of missions,” Summers said. “The future of Send North America is going to be based on an apostolic approach and using lay people and bivocational pastors right where they are.”

Jimmy Scroggins, pastor of First Baptist Church in West Palm Beach, Fla., and the luncheon’s keynote speaker, shared about his church’s decision to focus on bivocational pastors as its church planting strategy. He said the church realized that to reach the 7 million people in their three local South Florida counties for Christ, they’d need to start at least 1,000 new churches.

“The only way remotely possible to even plant 100 churches in any reasonable amount of time – 10 years, five years or even 20 years – is that we are going to have to raise up and engage some bivocational pastors who are intentionally bivocational,” Scroggins told the audience.

With that realization, First Baptist West Palm Beach began to mobilize leaders in their church – who already had jobs in the community – to start new churches in South Florida. The church has been actively training these leaders before sending them out to start new churches.

Scroggins shared about the church of Antioch from the Book of Acts, contrasting the “pros” who planted the Jerusalem church with the average “Joes” who planted the Antioch church. He said the church in Antioch, led by bivocational leaders, then became the missional model of the early church.

Scroggins finished by encouraging bivocational and small church pastors attending the lunch.

“Some of you have been laboring for a long time without any thanks,” Scroggins said. “You know the tears, you know the agony and the balance and the feeling that you’re not doing enough in church, you’re not doing enough at work and you’re not doing enough at home. You may, in time, feel like you are a failure in every arena trying to do this.

“But I want to encourage you that the North American Mission Board is preparing to come alongside of you in a fresh way. The churches of the Southern Baptist Convention are preparing to come alongside of you in a fresh way. We’re raising the alarm among pastors of other churches. We want to help you,” Scroggins said.

Ray Gilder, who serves as the national coordinator of the Bivocational and Small Church Leadership Network, said the network helps provide training and develop relationships between bivocational and small church pastors. Gilder recently published a book, entitled “Uniquely Bivocational,” to help bivocational pastors understand and embrace their calling.

“Bivocational and small church pastors are serving God right where they are,” said Gilder, who also leads bivocational ministries at the Tennessee Baptist Convention. “If you are where God put you, there is no move up.”

(EDITOR’S NOTE – Tobin Perry writes for the North American Mission Board. For more information about the network, visit bivosmallchurch.net. To find out more about church planting in a bivocational setting, visit namb.net/mobilize-me. See SBC 2013 for more about the annual meeting.)