Making Big Hard Leadership Decisions:
Reflections on Acts 15
It
seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us
to
impose on you no further burden than these essentials…
(Ac 15:28)
Last night, after phone conversation with friend
dealing with a big church leadership question, I thought of the Jerusalem Council. They had to make a big decision. The debate concerned whether or not us Gentiles need to be circumcised and
follow dietary laws—to become good Jews in order to receive the Gospel. After “much
debate,” the assembly decided neither circumcision nor dietary laws matter. Us
pagans can be saved as is.
Their claim to pronounce such a big decision seems
modest: “It seemed good…”. No mountain,
or vision, just “It seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us…” Maybe that’s the best model for making church
decisions. We don’t claim ultimate authority. It just “seemed good…” We leave
ultimate judgments to God. Meanwhile, we do what seems good.
There were big names present: Peter,
Barnabas, Paul and James the brother, or half-brother, or something, of our
Lord who served as lead pastor of the Jerusalem church. With such big
personalities, one might expect something like “Peter decided that you don’t need
to be circumcised.” But, not so. There’s a “we”, and an “us”; and a certain
humility: “It seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us.”
Between now and the last trumpet sound, decisions have
to be made. We honor the biblical pattern when we says something like “It
seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us.”
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