The Teaching Elder: Reformed Ordination and the Ministry of Word and Sacrament
1 Timothy 4:12-16 • 2 Timothy 2:15
Ordination to the ministry of Word and Sacrament — presbyterial ordination, the teaching elder, educational standards, and the accountability of the presbytery
Reformed / Presbyterian
The sovereignty of God and doctrines of grace
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The Presbytery Ordains: Authority Without Hierarchy
The Presbytery Examination
Before a minister is ordained in the Reformed tradition, they face a thorough examination by the presbytery: their call, their theology, their understanding of the Westminster Confession or equivalent standards, their character, their sermon. This is not hazing. It is stewardship: the church takes responsibility for who is released to preach the Word and administer the sacraments in its name. The examination is the church's act of care for the people who will sit under this ministry for years.
Source: Reformed polity / Presbyterian ordination examination
Word and Sacrament: The Minister's Double Responsibility
Subscription to the Standards: The Minister's Doctrinal Commitment
Applications
- 1[CONGREGATION], hold your [ROLE] accountable to the doctrinal standards. Not as a gotcha — as a gift. Accountability is what prevents drift.
- 2[MINISTER_NAME], invest in your theological education. The Reformed tradition demands intellectual rigor. The congregation deserves a minister who does the hard work of study.
- 3Take the presbytery relationship seriously. The accountability of the ordered community is a gift — not a burden.
- 4Commit to the long pastorate. Reformed ministry is not about building a personal platform. It is about being faithful to one community over the long haul.
Prayer Suggestions
- God of the covenant, You have called [MINISTER_NAME] to the ministry of Word and Sacrament. Equip them for both.
- Grant wisdom to the presbytery as it holds and supports its ministers. Let accountability be a gift, not a burden.
- Make [CONGREGATION] a congregation that receives the preached Word with eagerness and lives it with faithfulness.
- Soli Deo Gloria — let the ministry of [MINISTER_NAME] bring glory to You alone, not to [MINISTER_NAME]. Keep them humble. Amen.
Preaching Toolkit
The Paper Chase (1973)
The law professor's relentless Socratic examination prepares students for the rigor of legal practice — and reveals who is ready and who is not. The presbytery examination serves the same function: not to humiliate but to verify that the minister can handle the Word rightly, reason theologically, and bear the weight of pastoral responsibility. Those who pass have been tested. The congregation benefits from that testing.
3 Voices
Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition
The ministry of Word and Sacrament — preaching and the sacraments belong together. The Reformed minister does both, accountable to the presbytery and to the doctrinal standards.
The teaching elder is a servant of the Word — which means a servant of the congregation. The learning is in service of the feeding. Study hard so the congregation eats well.
Reformed churches examine ministers on doctrine, Scripture, and character before ordaining them. If your church ordains people without this level of scrutiny, you might want to ask why.
More Titles
Frequently Asked Questions
What does "ministry of Word and Sacrament" mean in Reformed theology?
In Reformed theology, the ordained minister is primarily responsible for preaching the Word (teaching elder) and administering the sacraments (baptism and the Lord's Supper). These two functions are inseparable — the same Gospel proclaimed from the pulpit is signed and sealed in the sacraments. The minister is not primarily a counselor or administrator but a teacher-preacher and sacramental administrator.
Who ordains in the Reformed/Presbyterian tradition?
In the Reformed/Presbyterian tradition, the presbytery ordains — the ordered body of elders and ministers in a region, not a single bishop. This reflects the conviction that authority in the church is shared and distributed, not hierarchical. The presbytery examines the candidate's calling, doctrine, character, and readiness before ordaining.
This Sermon in Other Traditions
See how 16 other Christian traditions approach the ordination / installation sermon.