Part I. Authority and Power
Authority and power are interrelated and serve as the pivotal benchmark for ministerial ethics. The proper use of these wields enormous influence on congregations and motivates others to proper discipleship and productivity. However, the potential for abuse is vast and close to ministry leadership and should never be taken for granted or looked upon without reverence.
Authority is the ability to lead a group of people or specific individuals with the intent to serve their needs or desires positively. The key to that sentence is serve. The proper authority serves those he/she has authoritative power over. “Authority is earned and not assumed.”[1] In addition, power is the ability to assert authoritative promulgation with effective and positive outcomes. One earns authority in Church settings and uses his/her power to assert the congregation, exact doctrinal change, and help heal those he/she is leading with the constant discipleship of Christ as the model. Jesus with the agent of change from the axis of servitude. “He (Jesus) appeared on the stage of history in the role of a servant, the man for others, who asked nothing for himself—no home, no money, no leisure, no privacy. He had everything to give and he gave it freely.”[2]
Authority is exercised with integrity when God is the focal point of all authoritative directives. Within ministry settings, authority takes on a different role than secular authority. God-centered worship is the focal point of authority; therefore, those members wielding that authority need to take God into consideration when exercising it. Members of the Church with authority always should set Christ-like discipleship as the base for his/her power. It is out of service that we lead, to serve our God in obedience, serve each other with love, and serve ourselves out of humility. When God, neighbors, and self is out of order, our power diminishes and ultimately our authority is called into question. Leadership is exalted to serve those he/she is leading, service is the source of authoritative power. Proper service calls for persuasion and technique not useful in secular settings. “Effective ministers do not order; they persuade.”[3] Christ showed others the truth, he did not demand it of them.
As in any setting, leaders will always attempt to abuse power. Either authoritatively through directives or persuasively from the pulpit. This slowly starts to evolve into a totalitarian style of ministerial leadership that pervades and plagues a large portion of Christian ministries throughout the world. “Dictatorship may be the most efficient form of government, but it leaves out the consent of the governed.”[4] As mentioned earlier, “In both political life and voluntary organizations, leadership depends on the consent of the governed.”[5] Once the congregation or “flock” begins to realize this abuse of power, all hell breaks loose. This has been happening year after year in the American style of ministry. Televangelists have been exposed as money-hungry charlatans; while Catholic and Protestant leaders, alike, have been found guilty of abusing power with sexual malfeasance. Knowing ourselves and our propensity to sin is an integral part of protecting ourselves from the abuses of power. John Calvin wrote, “Nearly all the wisdom we possess, that is to say, true and sound wisdom, consists of two parts: the knowledge of God and of ourselves.”[6] The knowledge of God is compassion, love, and grace. The knowledge of ourselves is greed, lust, and self-centeredness.
Part II – Code of Ethics for Healthy Relationships
As a member of non-profit leadership and co-existing member of a faith-based community, I pledge to uphold and adhere to ministerial ethics and biblical doctrine that separates, evaluates, and propitiates healthy relationships within the constructs and frameworks of these organizations.
- I will always put the needs of the group above the needs of myself.
- I will always treat each individual with the same amount of respect.
- I will never engage in personal relationships outside of the constructs of the group.
- I will never accompany any member of the group to a bar or restaurant with the sole purpose of drinking.
- I will not engage in a personal relationship with extenuating members of any group member’s family without express permission.
- I will not lie or bear false witness to any member of the group or organization.
- I will not engage in personal relationships outside of the organization or community with any member of the opposite sex.
- I will make an effort to perform one charitable act of service each week for one different member of the group.
- I will openly show mercy to any member of the group that confesses, repents, and asks for forgiveness.
- I will not act on, or contribute to, gossip or rumor within the organization or group.
- I will offer advice only when asked.
- I will not condone the degradation of any member of the group.
- I will not support the rebuke or dismissal of any member of the organization without proper evidence or tribunal where the person is allowed to defend his/her accusations.
- I will encourage and propagate healthy eating within the group and organization at all times.
- I will encourage and propagate exercise within the group, either as a whole or individually.
- I will partake in or steward a weekly Bible study wherein all members of the group or organization may have the chance to hear the word of God.
- I will do my best to speak to each member of the group without any type of profanity.
- I will respect differentiating opinions within the group as long as they do not include egregious sinful actions or blatant heretical doctrine.
- I will bring every conflict within the group to God first before I make a serious decision that could affect the organization of members within it.
- I will follow the will of God over the will of the group, or its membership.
It would be a miracle if the elites in society, the politicians, and our new media had such a dedication to truth and a reverence for the power they wield.
Bibliography
Bonhoeffer, Dietrich, and Eberhard Bethge. Ethics. New York, NY, Etc.: Simon & Schuster, 2002.
Calvin, John. The Institutes of Christian Religion. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1962.
Trull, J. E., and J. E. Carter. Ministerial Ethics: Moral Formation for Church Leaders. 2nd ed. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2004.
Footnotes:
[1] J. E. Trull and J. E. Carter, Ministerial Ethics: Moral Formation for Church Leaders, 2nd ed. (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2004), 91.
[2] Ibid, 92.
[3] Ibid, 91.
[4] Ibid.
[5] Ibid.
[6] John Calvin, The Institutes of Christian Religion (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1962), 35.

