* originally posted August 25, 2008, at sbcimpact.org
*Knowing
this is a potentially controversial topic, I want to make clear right from the
top that I am, by no means, dogmatic on this, and am totally open to gaining
any further insight from Scripture any of you may have to offer on this.
I do not
believe that ministerial ordination, as traditionally practiced in Baptist
churches, has a biblical basis. I also believe that it can end up having an
adverse effect on the advance of God’s Kingdom. I do believe, however,
in publicly setting apart individuals called by God to a particular ministry,
laying hands on them, praying for them, and commending them to that ministry. I
believe this is biblical and has a generally positive effect on the advance of
God’s Kingdom.
In traditional
Baptist practice, there is a three-fold recognition of God’s call on the life
of an individual and commendation to ministry: first, license to
preach; next, ordination; and next, installation into a specific
ministry role. I believe that what is symbolically communicated by such a
practice flies in the face of the biblical doctrine of the priesthood of all
believers. It props up the idea that “professional ministers” are, in one way
or another, a class apart. Historically, it has its roots in the Roman Catholic
concept that certain members of the Church, by virtue of their ordination (“holy
orders”), have prerogatives and abilities to carry out certain spiritual tasks
(“sacraments”) that others do not. Some historical justification for this is
also at times adduced from the Old Testament practice of ordaining priests,
insinuating that Christian ministry is essentially a continuation of the Old
Testament priesthood.
I am not
arguing against recognizing specific individuals and commending them to certain
ministry tasks or roles such as those of elder, deacon, missionary, evangelist,
teacher, etc. This is what is normally done in a ministry installation ceremony
or missionary commissioning service. I believe that biblically, in the Body of
Christ, each of us is “licensed” to preach and “ordained” to ministry, in a
general sense, at the moment of our conversion. Most ministry roles or offices,
however, are specific to local church contexts. I believe it is generally a
good thing for those in modern “para-church” ministry roles to be subject to
local church accountability as well. When someone is installed as the new
pastor at a local church, they are accountable specifically to that local
church for the exercise of that particular ministry. When someone is “ordained
to gospel ministry,” however, the idea communicated is that they are recognized
as legitimate, authentic “gospel ministers,” whether they have a specific role
or office through which they carry out their ministry or not.
Scriptural Evidence
Scriptural Evidence
The following
are the New Testament passages I have found that seem to speak one way or
another to the question of ordination and/or ministry installation. I have
included my own comments and observations on each passage…
In Matthew 10; Mark 3:13–19, 6:7–13; Luke 6:12–16, and 9:1–6, Jesus Himself personally commended the
twelve apostles to specific ministry tasks as well as appointed them to
the specific ministry role they were to carry out in the church. Judas
was later disqualified from his appointment after his betrayal of Jesus and
subsequent death. In Acts 1:15–26, we learn that Matthias was named to
take his place through the process agreed upon by the other eleven. In Acts 6:1–7, seven men (commonly regarded as the
first deacons) were chosen by the members of the Jerusalem church to oversee
the daily distribution of food. The apostles prayed for them and laid their
hands on them, apparently commending them publicly to this specific task.
In Acts 13:1–3, Barnabas and Saul were prayed for,
set apart with the laying on of hands, and sent off for the specific task
to which the Holy Spirit had called them. In Acts 14:23, Paul and Barnabas appointed elders
for the churches they had planted, praying and fasting for them, and
committing them to the Lord. In Acts 15:40, Paul was “commended by the brothers
to the grace of the Lord,” together with Silas, as he set out on his second missionary
journey. In Acts 20:28, Paul instructed the elders in the
church at Ephesus: “Keep watch over yourselves and all the flock of which the
Holy Spirit has made you overseers. Be shepherds of the church of God, which he
bought with his own blood.” In v. 32, Paul also committed these same elders “to
God and to the word of his grace.” A legitimate question can be asked at this
point if the elders were elders exclusively of the church at Ephesus or also
elders of the entire church of God throughout the world. While church history
does indicate that there was a relationship of collegiality and mutual respect
and recognition among church leaders in various locations, there is no reason
to assume an official connectionalism
between local churches or a trans-local leadership hierarchy at this time. In 1 Timothy 4:14, Paul writes to Timothy, “Do not
neglect your gift, which was given you through a prophetic message when the
body of elders laid their hands on you.” Also, in 2 Timothy 1:6, Paul writes something similar: “For
this reason I remind you to fan into flame the gift of God, which is in you
through the laying on of my hands.” It is unclear exactly what the context of
this event was. However, it would appear that Paul knew that Timothy had at one
time been commended to a specific ministry, which in 2 Timothy 4:5 he calls “the work of an evangelist.”
Likewise, the specific context of 1 Timothy 5:22—“Do not be hasty in the laying on
of hands, and do not share in the sins of others”—is unclear, though it is
possible, given the general context of the book, to link it to the appointment
of elders. Finally, Titus 1:5 indicates that Titus was given the task
by Paul of appointing elders in every town on the island of Crete.
Nothing is said explicitly, however, as to whether or not this involved a
public recognition and commendation of these men, setting them apart to this specific
ministry.
Some Final Comments
Some Final Comments
It is
evident that the action of laying on of hands was known and commonly practiced
in New Testament churches. There were also special moments in which certain
individuals were publicly recognized, prayed for, and commended to a specific
ministry. However, there is nothing to indicate that the significance of such
an action was the same as that conveyed in modern Baptist “ordination”
ceremonies. There is no indication in the New Testament that anyone was ever
publicly recognized and set apart for “at large” ministry. Whenever this
occurred, it was always with regard either to a specific ministry
responsibility linked to the direct accountability of a local church or to
being commissioned for itinerant missionary or evangelistic ministry.
At this point, although one may agree there is no specific New Testament justification for the practice of ministerial ordination, the question still remains: What harm does it cause? While I am reluctant to in any way cast stones at all those who in good faith and with very noble intentions carry out or submit to traditional Baptist ordination practices, I see the following potentially negative consequences for doing so:
At this point, although one may agree there is no specific New Testament justification for the practice of ministerial ordination, the question still remains: What harm does it cause? While I am reluctant to in any way cast stones at all those who in good faith and with very noble intentions carry out or submit to traditional Baptist ordination practices, I see the following potentially negative consequences for doing so:
- The idea is symbolically and falsely communicated that there are two separate spiritual classes within the Body of Christ: “clergy” and “laity.”
- The idea is also communicated of a professional ministry “club” or “guild,” for which the official initiation ceremony is ordination.
- Ordinary “lay people” are led to believe that there are certain tasks in the Body of Christ that should generally be reserved for “ordained clergy,” and are thus in many cases encouraged to remain passive and not put to use the spiritual gifts that God has given them.
- There is a potential conflict of interest with respect to discipline and ministry accountability between the congregation that initially ordains a minister and the congregation in which he later serves and/or becomes a member.
- Church leaders who fall into sin and are disqualified from specific ministry roles and tasks they previously occupied in a specific local church setting many times continue to maintain their “ministerial credentials” and take advantage of this circumstance to dupe those in other local churches who are unaware of their moral failure.