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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Reminding pastors what is succcess is,
By
This review is from: Liberating Ministry from the Success Syndrome (Paperback)
Many pastors and church leaders find themselves evaluating their ministries by corporate standards. As a result, if the church or ministry does not meet particular benchmarks they feel the ministry is unsuccessful.Kent Hughes has been a pastor for over four decades and he writes Liberating Ministry from the Success Syndrome for the pastor who is feeling this pressure. The book was originally published by Tyndale House in 1987 and has now been updated and republished last month by Crossway. Hughes recounts a scene from early on his ministry where he was working on a church plant. From all accounts this was going to be a successful ministry. Hughes was blessed with a clear demonstration of pastoral gifts, a solid core group, a promising social demographic, and financial backing. However, after a short period, Hughes was on the edge of despondency and ready to leave the ministry. He goes on to articulate the depths of despair that colored these early days of ministry: "My long-established world of bright prospects and success melted around me. I was in the darkest, deepest depression of my life. My memory of this time is of a gray, horizonless sea. A faint light falls from a threatening sky and I am treading water alone, sinking. Soon, I will be below the surface. Melodramatic, to be sure! But that is how I felt. I wanted out." For someone like myself who is in the process of church planting, this book is encouraging and sobering, while being very practical. Hughes goes on to describe the way in which the Lord brought him low only to bring him back up through prayer and dependence upon the God of the Scriptures. It was through this process of praying and reading that Hughes began to learn what ministry was all about. Thankfully he is now sharing his story of God's grace in his own life. The majority of the book is made up of defining what biblical success is. The successive chapters are, Success is...faithfulness, serving, loving, believing, prayer, holiness, attitude. Hughes is deeply transparent throughout the book. His wife Barbara occasionally and helpfully pops in to add her perspective during the times of trial and growth. Her presence in the book would be helpful for pastors' wives for sure. This would be a great book to pick up for a pastor who is feeling `beat up' in ministry. It would also be a great gift for a seminary student or young man who is pursuing ministry. Either way it is a helpful and biblical reminder of what matters and what does not. And Hughes has done it for over forty years.
7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Proper Perspective for Evaluating Ministry,
By Dr. Sandy Shoemaker (Orangevale, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Liberating Ministry from the Success Syndrome (Paperback)
It is so easy to miss what God would consider fruitful and faithful ministry by falling prey to the worldly ways success is measured. Every pastor and Christian worker should read this book. Dr. Sandy Shoemaker
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Refresh Your Ministry Pastors...,
By S.B. "Snuggle" (Alachua, Fl) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Liberating Ministry from the Success Syndrome (Paperback)
I have enjoyed many of Hugh's books, but this one is surly the best I have read by him. It comes at just the right time too. Having experienced the pressures of being in an Evangelical Church to increase size, grow, grow, grow, it is refreshing and reassuring to have a much more biblical approach to "measuring your ministry." A+++. A MUST READ for any pastor who struggles with these pressures.
4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Liberating Read,
By
This review is from: Liberating Ministry from the Success Syndrome (Paperback)
This book is concise, and largely biographical. It is geared toward protestant ministers, but I think it will resonate with a wider audience since the Bible calls us to such a counter-cultural view of success. Your concept of success will be enriched, confirmed and maybe even changed. This is a timeless read, and well worth rereading. You may even want to keep a loaner, as I have!
5.0 out of 5 stars
Real success found!,
By
This review is from: Liberating Ministry from the Success Syndrome (Paperback)
Success is something everyone hungers after. And rightly so. The Christian should crave to hear his Master say, 'Well done, good and faithful servant.'However, measuring success is tricky because the method by which you measure success differs from one area of life to another. And what ends up happening is that a measure of success in one realm is wrongly used to measure success in another. In this helpful book the Hughes (a husband and wife team effort) attempt to counter the measurement of pastoral success through numbers - usually numbers of people. In a very honest account of their own experience, the Hughes tell the story of feeling like failures early on in the ministry due to a declining church plant. This despair led them to explore the Biblical model of success which then proved helpful for themselves and also produced this book to try and help others. In eight easy to read chapters the Hughes teach us that the Bible understands Biblical success as faithfulness, serving, loving, believing, prayer, holiness and attitude. These chapters are then followed by chapters designed to encourage the pastor, the pastor's wife and congregations to be successful. I found this book enormously helpful. Far too often Christians are wrongly interested in counting heads to measure success. This usually results in discouragement for themselves and others because they end up calling work unsuccessful that God would call successful. I would suggest all pastors read this book. I would also suggest all Christians read at least the chapters defining success (so that they can be successful too!) and the chapter on how to encourage their pastor - it will be a great blessing to him.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Getting back to basics,
By
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This review is from: Liberating Ministry from the Success Syndrome (Paperback)
Absolutely loved this book! Brought me back to why I got into ministry 38 yrs. ago...to mend and help broken people. Often times we get caught up in what the "Christian world" calls success and we forget what God calls success. I was able to regroup and focus once again on what the truly important 'successes' are.
5.0 out of 5 stars
I Love it!,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Liberating Ministry from the Success Syndrome (Paperback)
Small church pastors look at how other ministers preside over large, growing congregations, and then they sometimes wonder what they are doing wrong and why they cannot be more "successful." R. Kent Hughes says that we are operating with a faulty understanding of success. He says that success means being faithful to what God wants you to do, it means praying regularly, loving God and each other, caring for your family, having the right attitude, believing God in all things, etc.Hughes shares stories from his life and how he once felt discouraged enough to consider leaving the ministry, but his wife talked him out of it. She encouraged him by talking about the lives that have been changed for the better, even though the church he started was small. This is a good book for pastors to read when they are struggling,and even when they are NOT struggling.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Get back to the basics,
By
This review is from: Liberating Ministry from the Success Syndrome (Paperback)
Though written 20 years ago, this book has never been more relevant. Kent Hughes warns of the pragmatic signs of success that have infiltrated the church, but he also gives words of comfort to the pastor.The author begins by recalling a dark time in his ministry when church attendance began to dwindle and he came very close to resigning as pastor and abandoning his call to ministry. But the Lord gave him and his wife Barbara new hope as they began to open the Scriptures and discover that true success is not measured by marketing techniques and worldly standards, but by six basic principles: faithfulness, serving, loving God, believing, prayer, and holiness. These principles define true success in ministry. The second half of the book provides a number of encouragements and practical helps in ministry. It's not that we should hope our churches (or denominations) will shrink in size, but we can rest assured that if we're faithful to God's Word and let Him take care of the results, we will find true success in His eyes. If you are in any level of pastoral ministry, this book is a must. |
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Liberating Ministry from the Success Syndrome by R. Kent Hughes (Paperback - January 7, 2008)
$14.99 $9.87
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