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Pastor Elections & Deacons

salzer mtn

Well-Known Member
Should all churches that go by Baptist hold pastor elections and have deacons ? What would be the pro's of pastor elections ? or if any, what would be the con's of pastor elections ? Should this privilege be denied to the church ? Would you attend a church that didn't have pastor elections or deacons ? Can a church call themselves a established church without these benefits ?
 

Revmitchell

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I have never seen nor do I know of a church that has pastor elections. It is a silly thing to turn the choosing of a pastor into a political event.
 

salzer mtn

Well-Known Member
I have never seen nor do I know of a church that has pastor elections. It is a silly thing to turn the choosing of a pastor into a political event.
Rev, maybe you should get out of Mexico more often. If the government is with the body, how could the church not hold pastor elections ?
 

Revmitchell

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Rev, maybe you should get out of Mexico more often. If the government is with the body, how could the church not hold pastor elections ?

I'm not in Mexico and I stay informed on what goes on in churches in general. Also you set up a false dichotomy. There are more ways that one way to choose a pastor under congregational governance. If pastoral elections are going on anywhere they are an anomaly not the norm.
 
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PreachTony

Active Member
I'm not in Mexico and I stay informed on what goes on in churches in general. Also you set up a false dichotomy. There are more ways that one way to choose a pastor under congregational governance. If pastoral elections are going on anywhere they are an anomaly not the norm.

(I posted this earlier and for some reason the post didn't take...so here we go again...)Every baptist church in my neck of the woods holds a pastor election. This is typically done in Conference, while discussing the business of the church and then electing officers in the church for that upcoming year. We're smaller churches that don't have a "staff" running the front office, mainly because we don't have a front office.

Each position is elected to a term of one year. Other churches in the area elect pastors for 2 years. One church elects a pastor and he is "in office" until the Lord tells him it is time to move on.
 

Pastor_Bob

Well-Known Member
If by "pastor elections" you mean that two or more men have their name on a ballot and the church votes which man they want as pastor - I'm totally against that.

If you mean that the church body comes together to vote on a single pastoral candidate by a "yes" or "no" vote - I'm in favor of that.
 

PreachTony

Active Member
If by "pastor elections" you mean that two or more men have their name on a ballot and the church votes which man they want as pastor - I'm totally against that.

If you mean that the church body comes together to vote on a single pastoral candidate by a "yes" or "no" vote - I'm in favor of that.

Should've added that clarification to my post. Thanks, Pastor_Bob.

The churches I was talking about only vote on one candidate. There is no secret ballot with multiple names, and it's not like the person campaigned for the job.
 

salzer mtn

Well-Known Member
Tony is right, smaller churches in the south whether it be Baptist, CoG, Methodist, FWB all have pastor elections. I have set under both, pastor elect churches and non- pastor elect and from what I have observed the non-pastor elect is more of a pastor rules in everything. Aside from that, pastors that know they will be there for the rest of their life or have announced they will be there, tend to grow lax in their studies, their messages become stale, clicks are formed.
 

preachinjesus

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Should all churches that go by Baptist hold pastor elections and have deacons ? What would be the pro's of pastor elections ? or if any, what would be the con's of pastor elections ? Should this privilege be denied to the church ? Would you attend a church that didn't have pastor elections or deacons ? Can a church call themselves a established church without these benefits ?

Well, this isn't the NT model so I would say it appears to be an unwise method.

If a man isn't staying sharp and doing his due diligence in preparing sermons and teaching from the heart, then it doesn't matter what system he is in. He is failing as a pastor.

I've not seen this kind of system work well.
 

PreachTony

Active Member
Tony is right, smaller churches in the south whether it be Baptist, CoG, Methodist, FWB all have pastor elections. I have set under both, pastor elect churches and non- pastor elect and from what I have observed the non-pastor elect is more of a pastor rules in everything. Aside from that, pastors that know they will be there for the rest of their life or have announced they will be there, tend to grow lax in their studies, their messages become stale, clicks are formed.

I've seen it many times, salzer. I've seen men basically entrench themselves as pastor and basically turn it into their church instead of a church following Christ.

Well, this isn't the NT model so I would say it appears to be an unwise method.

If a man isn't staying sharp and doing his due diligence in preparing sermons and teaching from the heart, then it doesn't matter what system he is in. He is failing as a pastor.

I've not seen this kind of system work well.

The south has some weird tendencies, preachinjesus. When it comes to autonomy of the church in picking their own pastors, you'd probably have to pry that right from their cold, dead fingers.
 
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