(Eight years ago, I posted “One hundred things I tell young pastors,” twenty at a time in five posts. I’m reposting the first twenty, but tweaking them, adding to them. Whether I’ll repost the (amended) other eighty depends on the response.)
There was no particular order to these. I jotted them down as they occurred.
1) In all the world there are only three Christians who love change; none of them are in your church. This is a reminder to introduce change carefully. I suggest you not use that word, but “experiment.” Tell the church, “We’re going to experiment with an 8 o’clock service.” It implies that if this doesn’t work out, you’ll try something else.
2) When you speak before an unfamiliar group, be careful what you say. You never know who is listening. You’ll start to tell a story about some guy in your former church and his mama is sitting right in front of you. I have scars to back this up.
3) There will never come a time when you know all the Bible and have all your questions answered. If you cannot serve Him with some gaps in your knowledge and preach without knowing everything, you’re going to have a hard time.
4) As a general rule, your church members should submit to your leadership, but you’re not the one to tell them that. Furthermore, you should not be a one-man show, but share the decision-making and direction-setting authority with others.
5) The best way to get people to submit to your leadership is for you to humble yourself and serve them the way the Lord did the disciples (John 13). People will trust someone who loves them that much.