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STS Articles are written by small-town pastors and leaders for those serving Christ in the small-places of New England and beyond.
We have a Father who loves his children. He’s not a distracted parent. His children’s small deeds of trust in his good instructions don’t go unnoticed. It would be impossible for the Father in Heaven to miss anything!
Hebrews 10:1-18 is that plot-twist culmination: the whole enterprise of the Old Covenant worship system was about Jesus all along.
God’s illustration of truth is different than ours in that we can only draw on realities he’s created, but he creates to illustrate. Jesus was the Bread of Life before God ever made bread to point to him. Our union with Christ was in the mind of God before he ever created vines and branches. In the same way, there were heavenly realities in the mind of God before he ever established the Mosaic Law and the Levitical priesthood, prescribed its rituals, or gave instructions for the tabernacle that was the portable sanctuary where God would dwell with His people.
That burden—the greatness of the needs in front of us mixed with the greatness of the weakness inside of us—can destroy our souls if we let it. That is because we are not Jesus. And that is okay. In fact, it is better that way.
The Jews argue that Jesus comes from the wrong tribe and the wrong name. They thought of Jesus as another guy, whose name was insignificant, and whose followers had caused a ruckus. Hebrews shows us that Jesus isn’t just anybody. He is our extraordinary priest.
Jesus is dear to those who know and cling to him by faith. As you shepherd the little flocks among you, please remember to “Hold On For Dear Life!”
The path to spiritual maturity involves an intimate relationship to Jesus as Priest.
There remains a rest for the people of God. The God who rested from his creative works promises the Christian a future rest. Hold fast and draw near to Jesus. Only for those who do will it be said, they made it home.
Pastor in a small place or a small church, do not despise the small moments. God cares greatly about the small unseen moments of discipleship. We should too.
Christ is faithful to the house that he himself is building, one redeemed sinner at a time.
When you’re tempted to give up, instead look up to the exalted Christ and see him on his throne (Hebrews 1). And then look beside you, to the Christ who calls you brother.
Jesus is the wow factor in our small-town churches. If we continue to press into our extraordinary Christ, we will find that we can also press on for him.
If a good friend is a hard thing for a man to find, then a good friend in the church is an even harder thing for a pastor to find.
Perhaps rural towns and villages can be thought of as seed beds within which to nurture, grow and prepare people to serve, nourish and enrich the urban environments they may end up living within.
Rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep. One way we can do this is to prioritize attending the funerals of church members.
What can a hurt pastor do? How can you stand tall and say “In God I trust…What can a mere mortal do to me?” Get your job assignment from the Book of Job.
We’d like to share and celebrate some of the guiding principles that have, from the beginning, defined and directed us. We hope these principles will continue to remain central to the culture and mission of Small Town Summits.
Small places have unique strengths and opportunities. Lean into the big strengths in small places to see people saved, lives changed, the gospel spread, and God glorified.
For bivocational pastors finding a healthy balance in life where your physical, emotional, and family health is not sidelined is exceptionally difficult and critically needed for a lifelong marathon of faithful ministry.
We need not fear a disease that can kill the body but not the soul. God’s treatment goal for your disease and mine is curative, not palliative.
As we face an uncertain future, let’s fix our hope upon the surety of our God and look for ways to partner with one another in the work that he’s bringing about. And may the Lord of the harvest send more workers for his harvest.
Voices are the primary instrument in the church’s worship. This frees small-town pastors and worship leaders from the burden of musical complexity or even proficiency. The voices of the people simply need to be unleashed.
While the city offers unique discipleship opportunities, small places have unique discipleship opportunities of their own. Here are three discipleship opportunities unique to ministry in small, slow, out-of-the-way places.
A Loving Life helped me to process the book of Ruth in bite-size chapters that explain a small portion of the text, with robust application and illustration for today. Here are three reasons that the biblical lessons from A Loving Life are especially relevant to small-town pastors.
I pray that the Lord places a big ambition in our hearts to carry out our work in small places in such a way that we are conformed to the image of our Savior.
Our churches should not be working to advance our kingdom and our glory but God’s kingdom and his glory. To do that, we need to work together. We need a “kingdom mindset.”
Fellow small-town pastor, a sabbatical will be good for you and your church.
We can never underestimate the importance and necessity of every believer encouraging unbelievers in Christ
Proclamation and teaching that promotes the gospel of reconciliation and unity calls for our best study, exegesis, self-examination, accountability, prayer, and energy.
The work of supporting those serving Christ in the small places is urgent, but we can’t do it alone. Would you consider partnering with STS financially as we seek to reach and resource small-town pastors, lay people, and churches throughout New England?
We can never underestimate the importance and necessity of every believer encouraging one another in Christ
There is only one Savior and we are not him. But we can join in both the eager pursuit and the eager waiting with trust in his sovereign power.
Books can help young men aspiring to pastoral ministry. But their value pales compared to what can be learned from experienced pastors in local churches. A well thought out pastoral internship stands on these four legs.
Four reasons why one-to-one Bible reading is uniquely suited for ministry in small places.
It’s doable. God gives us the strength and wisdom and energy we need to do the work he’s called us to do. Where better to raise up pastors for New England, than in New England churches?
Know your blueprint. Be ready for the inspection. Honor the occupants. It will take some time–even a lifetime. If you’re being careful how you build, that’s okay.
There is something particularly exhausting about political discipleship. It’s high-stakes. It takes courage. But if the Holy Spirit is in it, he can turn that risk into reward.
The small-town nature of Bethlehem demonstrates the nature of Jesus’s salvation, the nature of Jesus’s rule, and the nature of the King and his Kingdom.
Our entire earthly existence could be understood as a training ground for learning to trust in God. By choosing to trust and obey, we find the secret to joy in the midst of suffering.
If my community—and yours—is going to be impacted by the gospel, we need to review what it is, what it means, and how we share it and teach others to share this good news.
New England will only be reached with the gospel if we have a clear understanding of what the gospel is—and is not.
When these four qualities are part of any church there is great hope for Spirit-led momentum.
Dear twenty-first century friends of the gospel in New England, trust God for the revitalization of their churches by his Word and his Spirit, for his glory.
As a young pastor, I fought the very idea of bi-vocational ministry because I wanted to devote my entire energy and time to the church. I now understand it differently.
Not only does God not want me to despise the day of small things, but he does not despise it either.
Loneliness and ministry in small places go hand-in-hand for many pastors, but the gospel unites pastors and churches.
The question is not will we suffer but rather, will we suffer well? The mark of a Christian is not whether we suffer, but how.
The goal of The Small Town Summits Podcast is to resource and encourage those serving in small places by taking the rich theology and lived experience we get to enjoy at our summits and making it more accessible to listeners, wherever they live and minister.
I believe that God will mature and deepen the present interest in small-place ministry into something of lasting significance as those who serve in tiny, little-known communities look down, back, around, outward, and local.
Faithful Endurance is a book full of gold nuggets that will help us to help pastors endure in 2021 and beyond.
We are called, by the power of the Spirit, to minister the way our Lord ministered while on earth. There are a lot of things this means, but one thing is for certain. We are called and commanded throughout the Scriptures to patiently shepherd those in our care.
The Small Town Summits Leadership Team answered the question, “Why are you thankful to be a small-town pastor?” We pray that the Lord will encourage you as thankfulness engenders more thankfulness, and as you think of your own unique reasons that you are thankful to serve Christ in your small town.
My father was blessed with a foretaste of his coming reward and heavenly celebration. Not every pastor gets his “George Bailey Moment” in this life, but by God’s grace each of us will in eternity.
Undershepherd, are you availing yourself of the shepherd’s grace as you engage the hard work of small-town pastoring?
Pastors are evaluated by their parishioners all the time! How can a small-town church conduct a positive pastoral evaluation?
One of the greatest gifts you can give your pastor is to faithfully pray for him.
This poem has resonance and relevance for what all of us do every day of the year.
With the world thrown off its axis, here are a few bits of wisdom that may help you remain sane and hopeful as we prepare for what is to come.
I want to encourage you with God’s word, that when the numbers don’t add up, we can trust in God’s economy of provision.
But what if God chooses to bring growth to his church during COVID-19?
If Jesus loved the church so much that he “married” us, how can I not also love Jesus’ people the same?
As we gather together for weekly discipleship, our aim is to point continuously to the person and the work of Christ, looking back to the grace of God and looking forward to the glory that is to be revealed to us in Christ’s second coming.
As a small-town pastor, here are specific resolutions that I have as I think about ministry in 2020.
Small places afford us opportunities to focus on the particular people, customs, and challenges of a community. As such we can be ready to speak gospel hope to the context in which God has called us, with pastoral hearts.
I’m convinced that every church, led by biblically-qualified, Jesus-enamored elders, can become effective in mission. Size is no barrier to the power of the gospel. At the end of the day, we just need to do our job!
Stephen Witmer has written an excellent, helpful work of well-researched analysis coupled with theologically insightful reflection that yields Gospel-driven advocacy for the values and virtues of pastoral ministry in smaller congregations in smaller communities.
This is a book for every pastor in every place. It will spark all sorts of good thinking about pastoral ministry and the work of the local church. It will also undoubtedly serve to lead many to think a good deal more as well about genuinely “small places.” It is time that such a word came again to God’s people.
Your heavenly Father sees you. He is sovereign over the depth and the breadth of your ministry. He is working all things according to his good pleasure, and he loves you and the small town he’s called you to serve.
We are invited to come to Jesus with all our weaknesses and stand amazed as his powerful word calls life out of death in our small churches and forgotten towns.
My prayer for pastors ministering in the small places is that we would see theology not as a dry and dusty discipline but a deep dive into the manifold glories of our God. May we embrace the weighty yet joyful privilege to serve the small places as public theologians and do all we can to prepare ourselves for this task.
A great poet and humble pastor writes a guide for rural pastors. That’s a book I want to read and re-read. It’s a book worthy of being reclaimed by small-town and rural pastors (and many others) in our own day.
The only way that I can see your church this way is if you brighten my eyes with your glory so that new light is shed on everything around me.
The answer to our inadequacies as pastors and our tendency to make ministry about ourselves is to repent of our pride and to look to Jesus.
Dear small-town pastor, you really can change and reshape the world
STS Articles is a place for current and future small-place pastors and lay leaders to find thoughtful, theologically-rich equipping and encouragement. If you’d like to hear about new articles as they’re posted, subscribe to the Small Town Summits newsletter.