Archive for April, 2014
Guest Post: Let the Men be the Men by Jeana Floyd
Today, RonnieFloyd.com welcomes guest writer, Jeana Floyd. Jeana is the wife of Dr. Ronnie Floyd, mother, grandmother, author, and 24-year breast cancer survivor.
I grew up in a pastor’s home. I said I would never marry a pastor, but that is the only life I have ever known. Growing up in a pastor’s home undoubtedly molded much of my thinking as I became “the pastor’s wife.” Much of what I learned in a minister’s home has been resourceful and invaluable. I learned from my father to love the Church and God’s Word. My mother was a wonderful example of a quiet and gentle spirit and served with a true servant’s heart.
One of the greatest lessons and realizations I learned early on as a pastor’s wife was that I was not called to be the pastor. God did not intend for us to bear the burdens of the Church. He has called our husbands to do that. He has called us to walk by their sides and be supportive of their calling.
“Let the men be the men” is a phrase I coined years ago as I challenged our minister’s wives on how to cope with church issues. This is an area where many pastor’s wives get themselves in a great deal of conflict and invite trouble into their laps. When you attempt to take on and solve church problems, you make your husband look like a weak leader. That is not the message you want to send to your congregation.
Usually, men handle conflict and challenges differently. They resolve issues with less feeling and emotion. Men have the ability to disagree completely and go out and play golf together the next day. At times, women tend to hang on to hurts and nurse them for a while before we are able to move on.
I firmly believe that if we will “let the men be the men,” God will use them to lead in powerful ways. God created men to be leaders under pressure. God created men to be less reactionary in difficult decisions. I also believe that God, because He called our husbands into His ministry, will direct them in wise decision making. A Scripture I have claimed for my pastor husband many times when he has faced difficult decisions is this one: “But His secret counsel is with the upright.” (Prov 3:32; NKJV).
At times, all our husbands will face very difficult circumstances. There are certainly times when I am thankful that I am not the one in charge – the one who has to make the tough decisions. God has gifted our husbands as men who can be courageous in the face of those difficult times.
I encourage every minister’s wife, whether your husband is the senior pastor or a support team member, to search your heart, your thoughts, and your actions. Do your actions give the impression that you would really like to be the pastor? That you always think you have a better plan? Do you feel like the man in your life – or the men on your staff team – are not making the right decisions and need your advice? Do you criticize their leadership behind their backs? Do you undermine the decisions of others? Do you cause your husband to doubt his own leadership? Do you enjoy knowing everything about everything whether it involves you or not? Do you make the effort to calm a storm or create one?
God has called your husband to be the pastor, not you. If you will concentrate that energy on loving and supporting your husband and letting “the men be the men,” it will be much more enjoyable and fulfilling to serve as a minister’s wife. Let this be your goal…and “let the men be the men.”
Jeana Floyd
Adapted excerpt from “10 Things Every Minister’s Wife Needs to Know” by Jeana Floyd
The Holiness of God
Though often forgotten today, the Bible does not forget the holiness of God. In the King James Version, holiness is referenced more than 400 times in the Old Testament and another 181 times in the New Testament. Some of these references are to God Himself, others to humans, and yet others to items separated to God (such as items in the temple). It remains that anything holy finds its root in the nature and character of God.
The ninety-ninth psalm reveals something of the holiness and majesty of God. “The LORD reigns! Let the peoples tremble. He is enthroned above the cherubim. Let the earth quake. Yahweh is great is Zion; He is exalted above all the peoples. Let them praise Your great and awe-inspiring name. He is holy.”1
Holiness: God’s standard
The holiness of God remains the standard against which our character is measured and toward which our character is aimed. We are reminded in the Old and New Testaments to be holy because God is holy.2 In the Summer 2014 unit of Bible Studies for Life, Freddy Cardoza reminds us how different cultures have a tendency to remake God in a different image not His own. Cardoza writes, “Every culture has some religious element, but each culture makes God in its own image. That god tends not to be too different from the people who worship it; there is nothing unique about their god. We desperately need a God who is beyond us; we need a God who is beyond our ability to fully explain or understand Him. That God has revealed Himself. He is holy – completely separate from His creation – yet He calls us to know Him and walk with Him.”3
To worship the one true God, the God who has revealed Himself in creation and in His Word, we must recognized God works within His creation, but is beyond it. God is not one with His creation; He is Lord and controller over it. This “separateness” is one of the facets of His holiness. Another facet, one with which we are most familiar, is the avoidance of all that is evil.
What does holiness look like for us?
While we cannot be separate from all of creation like God is, we can avoid evil. Our “being holy as He is holy” does not mean we try to leave the solar system or refuse to engage God’s created order. It does mean that we avoid evil. This is our separation.
Holiness also implies we are separate from the fallen systems of this world. We stand against exploitation, injustice, and unrighteousness because God’s character stands apart from all of these things. We cannot claim to be holy if our lives do not look different than those who do not know God. Being holy will make us look as different from those who do not know God as God does from the idols that replace him. It is for this reason, perhaps, we are commanded to “pursue peace with everyone and holiness–without it no one will see the Lord” (Hebrews 12:14, HCSB).
Yours for the Great Commission,
Ronnie W. Floyd
Senior Pastor, Cross Church
General Editor, Bible Studies for Life
1– Psalm 99:1-3, HCSB
2– Leviticus 20:7, 1 Peter 1:15, 16
3– Bible Studies for Life, Beyond Belief, Freddy Cardoza