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Amateurize Your Church One of our church's core values is to "amateurize ministry." HisChurchatWork.org - When I was a youngster, there was an ongoing argument about the "professionalization" of the Olympics. Americans carped that we sent amateurs to compete against professional athletes from Eastern Europe, whose full-time work was their athletic pursuit.
That complaint has largely died down, of course, now that Americans send highly paid professionals to Olympic events. In popular usage, amateur often means "second rate," while professional means "excellent." Both, though, are superficial understandings of the words. "Amateur" comes from a Latin word that means doing something "for love." An amateur athlete is not necessarily second rate, but pursues excellence for the love of the pursuit, not for monetary payback. A professional, on the other hand, receives a paycheck. That may imply the professional does the task better, but its no guarantee. The best person at a task may be an amateur who is motivated by love. As the saying goes, "Professionals built the Titanic; amateurs built the ark." Putting off Weve established the amateur model of ministry not so much by programs, but by a comprehensive understanding of who we are as the people of God. The first specific emphasis is a "putting off." We de-emphasize titles and avoid using words that suggest divisions in the church. For instance, we have dropped the words clergy and laity from our vocabulary. Saying, "lay people" is really saying "people people." As an adjective, the world lay mainly suggests a second-class ministry. Clergy words had to gotitles like Reverend and Doctor simply arent needed. We have no parking places reserved for pastors or staff; rather, the pastors park in the spaces farthest away. Officers are encouraged to do the same. We removed the "throne" chairs from the platform. And on church retreats, pastors pay the same fees as everyone else. Putting on The spadework for every sermon is not done by a pastor alone, but by a small group in which non-staff participants outnumber the staff. The one who will be preaching speaks the least and takes the notes. This happens four to six weeks before the worship service, allowing time to flesh out fresh ideas. Among the key questions are: Our Sunday morning worship has true amateur input; its not left up to professionals. The results are more honest preaching and more responsive worship. When people see their paid leadersthe professionalsacting like amateurs, they start acting that way too. When the authorities said in Acts 17:6, "These people have been turning the world upside down..." they were referring to Jason and some unnamed believersno doubt, amateurs. Written by Harry Heintz, permission 2001. Content distributed by WorkplaceMinistry.org > used for non-profit teaching purposes only.
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