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Ordination / InstallationBaptistFill-in Template~15 minClaude Opus 4.6

Set Apart by the Church: Baptist Ordination and the Local Body

1 Timothy 4:12-162 Timothy 2:15

Ordination by the local church — the congregation recognizes and sets apart a person called by God and gifted by the Spirit for the ministry of Word and prayer

Baptist (Distinctive)

Soul liberty, believer's baptism, and local church autonomy

This template has fill-in placeholders

Look for [BRACKETED TEXT] throughout the sermon. Replace these with your specific details to personalize the message.

[MINISTER_NAME] e.g., Pastor Sarah, Reverend Marcus, Brother David[ROLE] e.g., Senior Pastor, Associate Minister, Deacon, Elder[CONGREGATION] e.g., Grace Community Church, First Baptist
Tradition vocabulary:local churchpriesthood of all believersordination councilset apartequip the saintscongregational authoritycallingrecognition

The Local Church Ordains: Baptist Polity and Pastoral Authority

In Baptist life, the local church ordains. Not a bishop. Not a denomination. Not an association (though associations may participate as guests). The congregation — the gathered community of regenerate believers — recognizes, affirms, and sets apart the person God has called. This is not congregational chaos. It is congregational accountability. The people who will sit under this ministry have the primary voice in recognizing it. They know the candidate. They have watched the candidate's life. They have heard the candidate preach and teach. And they say, together: we affirm this calling. We set this person apart for this work. The laying on of hands at a Baptist ordination is the congregation's act. The ordained council (typically including visiting ministers and deacons from area churches) participates — but the church is the ordaining body. [MINISTER_NAME] is being set apart by [CONGREGATION] for the ministry to which God has called them. This is the church acting with the authority Christ gave to the gathered community of believers.
Acts 6:1-6Acts 13:1-3Matthew 18:18-20

The Council and the Congregation

At a Baptist ordination council, the candidate is examined by a group of ordained ministers and deacons — sometimes for hours — covering theology, call, character, church history, and practical ministry. After the council, the congregation votes. The council advises. The congregation acts. This balance reflects Baptist polity: experts consult, but the gathered community decides. No single individual or external body overrides the local church's discernment.

Source: Baptist ordination practice / Local church autonomy

Priesthood of All Believers and the Set-Apart Minister

Baptists hold two convictions in tension that many traditions resolve by sacrificing one. First: every believer is a priest — every Christian has direct access to God, no human mediator required, every member of the church a minister in the general sense. Second: some members are specifically called and set apart for the ministry of the Word and prayer — a distinct role that is not merely "gifted volunteer." Ordination in the Baptist tradition does not create an ontological change in the minister. [MINISTER_NAME] will not become a different kind of person today. They will not acquire sacramental power or priestly authority that other members lack. What they will have is the church's recognition that their calling is real, their gifts are evident, and they are set apart for a specific function. The tension is worth holding. The minister is not above the congregation — they are among the congregation, serving them. But the minister has a specific calling and responsibility that is not shared by everyone. The title "Reverend" in Baptist life is less a claim to clerical superiority than it is a marker of a specific calling recognized by the community.
1 Peter 2:9Acts 6:4Ephesians 4:11-12

Do the Work of an Evangelist: Ministry That Produces Ministry

Paul's charge to Timothy includes: "do the work of an evangelist." Not "be the church's professional Christian so everyone else can be secular." The minister in the Baptist tradition is not the hired spiritual director who does ministry on behalf of the congregation so they don't have to. The minister is the trainer, the equipper, the example. Paul writes in Ephesians: "So Christ himself gave the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, the pastors and teachers, to equip his people for works of service." The purpose of the ordained minister is to equip the whole congregation for ministry — not to do ministry for them. A ministry that produces dependent consumers is not healthy. A ministry that produces active, engaged, spiritually mature disciples who themselves minister to others — that is the goal. [MINISTER_NAME], measure your success not by how many people come to hear you preach but by how many people are doing ministry themselves. The best thing a Baptist minister can do is make themselves unnecessary — not by leaving, but by multiplying.
2 Timothy 4:5Ephesians 4:11-132 Timothy 2:2

Applications

  • 1[CONGREGATION], you voted to ordain [MINISTER_NAME]. Now support that vote with prayer, generosity, and commitment.
  • 2[MINISTER_NAME], serve with humility. The priesthood of all believers means you are among the people, not above them. Lead by example.
  • 3Commit to equipping, not just preaching. The measure of Baptist ministry is not what the minister does but what the congregation becomes.
  • 4Stay accountable. The local church that ordained you is the local church you answer to. Honor that relationship.

Prayer Suggestions

  • Lord, [CONGREGATION] has spoken together: we affirm this calling. We recognize what You have done. We set apart [MINISTER_NAME] for this work.
  • Guard this minister's character. The calling is from You; the character must be sustained by You. Do not let success corrupt what faithfulness built.
  • Make [MINISTER_NAME] an equipper — one who multiplies rather than creates dependence. Let the congregation grow into their own ministry through [MINISTER_NAME]'s ministry.
  • And to the congregation: you share this calling. You are a kingdom of priests. Do not outsource your ministry to your pastor. Amen.

Preaching Toolkit

Movie Analogy

Remember the Titans (2000)

Coach Boone does not just coach — he produces coaches, leaders, men who can carry the legacy forward. His success is measured not by his individual performance but by what his players become after the season ends. Baptist ordination theology says the same about ministry: [MINISTER_NAME]'s success will be measured not by their personal platform but by what [CONGREGATION] becomes over the long haul of their shared ministry.

3 Voices

Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition

Classic

The local church ordains. Not a bishop, not a denomination — the congregation recognizes what God has done and sets the person apart for the work. That authority is real and significant.

Pastoral

The priesthood of all believers does not make the ordained ministry unnecessary. It makes it more important — the ordained minister equips the royal priesthood for their work.

Edgy

If [MINISTER_NAME]'s goal is to become indispensable — to be the person without whom nothing happens — they have misunderstood Baptist ministry. The goal is to equip the saints to do ministry themselves.

More Titles

Set Apart by the Church: Baptist Ordination TheologyThe Local Church Ordains: Baptist Polity ExplainedPriesthood of All Believers and the Ordained MinisterDo the Work of an Evangelist: Multiplying MinistryRecognized by the Community: A Baptist Ordination Message
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Frequently Asked Questions

Who ordains in the Baptist tradition?

In the Baptist tradition, the local church ordains — the congregation of regenerate believers recognizes and sets apart the person God has called. An ordination council (visiting ministers and deacons) may examine the candidate and advise, but the local congregation is the ordaining body. No external authority (bishop, denomination) can override the local church's discernment.

Does Baptist ordination create an ontological change in the minister?

No. Baptist ordination does not create an ontological change — the minister does not become a different kind of person or acquire sacramental power. Ordination is the church's recognition of a real calling and its setting apart of the person for a specific function. The priesthood of all believers means every Christian is a priest; ordination recognizes a specific calling within that broader priesthood.

This Sermon in Other Traditions

See how 16 other Christian traditions approach the ordination / installation sermon.