7 Ways Leaders Can Make the Most of a Church Meeting November 13, 2021

Preaching, preachers, advice for preachers, young preachers, ministry, sermon

Just because we assemble with God’s people does not necessarily mean that God’s Word is given or that God’s glory is priority. Leading a church meeting is a tremendous responsibility. Everyone involved in the meetings have a responsibility to the Lord (more on that here). Leaders have a responsibility both to the Lord and to those in attendance. The goal of those who lead must not simply be to moderate a service but to point everyone to the Lord. 

As an assistant to a pastor for many years it was my privilege to help lead many meetings. Recently I had the opportunity to lead a series of meetings and it reminded me of so many things. Leading a meeting can be much more challenging than preaching in one! Here are 7 simple suggestions that God is teaching me through both observation and personal experience:

  1. Plan. Do not wait until the meeting to think and pray about what will take place and what you want to emphasize. When you create a proposed order for the meeting you are seeking to remove any obstacle to the Lord’s leadership. The guidance of the Holy Spirit does not begin with the first hymn – it begins in the preparation.
  2. Start on time. We are stewards of our own time but also of the time of others. People set aside time to come to a church meeting and that time should never be wasted. When we begin on time we show the importance of every moment. I am currently reading a book on the life of G. Campbell Morgan. In it Morgan described how so many churches treated certain services as unimportant. He concluded, “Things treated as of lesser importance come to be looked upon as such, and people treat them accordingly.”
  3. Saturate every part of the meeting with purpose. We should not have a meeting just to have a meeting and we should not do anything in the meeting just to fill time. What is the goal? Have a definite emphasis in every meeting and allow every part to connect to it.
  4. Communicate. Everyone who is involved in leading in the meeting should know what is expected. Teach those who help you so that they too can be prepared.
  5. Avoid unnecessary talk. Talkers love to talk. Sometimes we can say too much in a meeting and take away from what God is trying to say. Nothing we say or do should take away from a spirit of worship and attention to spiritual things.
  6. Emphasize the Word of God. When the Lord’s people gather they should always hear from the Lord! Everything that you want to accomplish in the meeting – praise, worship, confession, intercession – will be enriched and guided by the truth of Scripture. Give people something definite from God’s Word to take with them.
  7. Pray your way through. It is vital that the leader be led by the Holy Spirit and completely yielded to His promptings. My pastor taught me that Spirit filled men will always appear a little spontaneous because the Holy Spirit does not always follow our order. “The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, and whither it goeth: so is every one that is born of the Spirit” (John 3:8). We are not seeking to harness the Holy Spirit, but we are to be harnessed by Him!

In the end, Paul’s declaration should be our desire: “Let all things be done decently and in order” (1 Corinthians 14:40). Decent according to God’s truth. Ordered by God’s Spirit.

Post Author

More from similar topics

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Recent Posts

M’Cheyne’s Bible Reading Plan Each year I adopt some plan for my daily devotional reading of Scripture. To be honest, I try to vary this a little each year to keep it fresh. Over the last year, I have been using a plan that Robert Murray M’Cheyne developed for the people that he pastored. It is helpful for several reasons: It leads you through the Old Testament once and the New Testament and Psalms twice during the year. It gives a variety of Scripture passages to read each day - historical, prophetical, and devotional. It divides the readings into readings for the morning and for the evening. It promotes a reading for private devotions and one for family devotions. It encourages the church family to read through the Bible together. M’Cheyne’s heart was to strengthen families and the church family, while deepening the personal devotion of each Christian. I can tell you from personal experience, that it has been a delight to follow. (Read M'Cheyne's full introduction to his system HERE).  We have decided to make M’Cheyne’s plan available through Enjoying the Journey this year, with the prayer that God will use it to lead all of us to a life full of the Word in the days ahead. Download the interactive PDF. 

A Full Life » Robert Murray M’Cheyne

David and Gath, David in Gath, Gath in the Bible, Artwork, Possible looks of Gath in the Bible

Friends From Gath

Mary Had A Little Lamb, Christmas, Jesus the Lamb

Mary Had A Little Lamb by Dr. Johnny Pope

“Death and life are in the power of the tongue: and they that love it shall eat the fruit thereof” (Proverbs 18:21).  Weighing less than two ounces, the tongue is one of the smallest members of the human body. Yet it has such power.

The Power of the Tongue

3 Comments

  1. Wyatt L. Graham on November 13, 2021 at 9:35 AM

    Very good, Brother Pauley, very good.

    Regarding item 1: One weakness I have regularly seen is that of not selecting the songs in advance, but seeing the song leader flip through the hymn book and write hymn numbers onto his hand for later reference. Honestly, my stomach sinks whenever I am in a service and see that transpire.

    Believing the songs and hymns have an intentional purpose…I believe we should be prayerfully intentional in their selection.

  2. Wyatt L. Graham on November 13, 2021 at 9:35 AM

    Very good, Brother Pauley. Very good.

    Regarding item 1: One weakness I have regularly seen is that of not selecting the songs in advance, but seeing the song leader flip through the hymn book and write hymn numbers onto his hand for later reference. Honestly, my stomach sinks whenever I am in a service and see that transpire.

    Believing the songs and hymns have an intentional purpose…I believe we should be prayerfully intentional in their selection.

    • scottpauley on November 16, 2021 at 9:19 AM

      I agree. Preparation is so important!

Leave a Comment