Call No Man Father, Part 1

In my work-in-progress on living with divine affirmation, I want to address how the “good-enough-for-God” life impacts our desire to have others follow us and how we treat and look at those we follow. Nate Larkin helped shape my thoughts on this matter, but we won’t get to his quotes until next week.

“Make known his deeds among the peoples; make them remember that his name is exalted.”

Isaiah 12:4

If there’s one thing the church doesn’t do well, it’s humility. At various times in church history, Christian worship defined “pomp and circumstance.” Church based worship of Christ involved awe-inspiring cathedrals, ostentatious costumes, and elaborate rituals with utensils that cost more than many people’s houses. I’m not suggesting cathedrals were wrong, just that no one would call such places “humble abodes.”

The humility the good enough for God life calls us to is more about individual posture and position. Walking into a four-century-old cathedral can humble me and remind me of God’s power and presence. Getting a new title or promotion? Not so much. It makes me feel good about…myself.

I was invited to attend an ordination meeting at a large church, and one of the prospective pastors presented a paper on church government. The young man kept saying, “the Bible’s view of leadership is this,” or “the Bible presents government like that,” until I raised my hand and asked, “Where in the Bible do you see a senior pastor?”

Read this blog on Substack HERE.

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Published on October 29, 2025 07:09
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