SHEPHERDS
AND
SHEEP-DOGS
Every
shepherd
needs a
sheep-dog.
Knowing
this,
God
sends
them.
Some
shepherds
cannot
tell the
difference
between
a
sheepdog
and a
wolf and
chase
the dogs
away.
The loss
to the
shepherd
and the
flock is
tragic.
Other
shepherds
think
they are
sufficient
by
themselves
and do
not need
assistants.
This
attitude
is
equally
disastrous.
Every
shepherd
needs a
dog.
Moses
needed
helpers
and God
sent
them.
One of
his
greatest
was
“Caleb”–whose
name in
Hebrew
significantly
means
“sheepdog”.
In 1978
I
returned
to South
Florida
to begin
a new
work in
an old
congregation.
I was
freshly
anointed
with the
Holy
Spirit
and
alive
with
eagerness.
For two
years
the
church
grew
phenomenally.
In a
short
time the
congregation
doubled,
then
doubled
again,
finances
flourished,
people
were
happy,
and the
Holy
Spirit
began
moving
in
power.
Word
quickly
spread
that a
church
in
Delray
Beach,
Florida,
had come
alive.
Homes
were
rescued,
addicts
delivered,
and
lives
changed.
New
believers
were
sometimes
taken to
the
ocean
after
the
service
and
baptized
in the
dark. A
young
couple,
Wendel
and Jan
Hollingsworth
joined
our
staff
and
ushered
us into
genuine
worship
and
praise.
In that
state,
we
attracted
sheepdogs
and
wolves.
Suddenly,
the
glory
ended
and
all-hell
broke
lose. In
a short
time the
congregation
found
itself
in the
center
of an
ugly,
public
dispute.
One of
our
supposed-sheepdogs
proved
to be a
wolf.
The
local
newspaper
carried
his side
of the
story.
To avoid
that
conflict
we
voluntarily
gave up
the
church
property,
moved to
the
local
High
School–and
fell
apart.
In a
short
time we
went
from a
mountain
of Glory
to a
pile or
rubble.
What had
been a
thriving,
anointed
congregation
became a
scattered,
disorganized
mob.
Wolves
carried
off part
of the
lambs
and
sheepdogs
disappeared.
Worst of
all, the
community
was
robbed
of its
only
Spirit-filled
church.
The pain
for me
was
intense–unbearable.
I felt
abandoned,
alone,
wanted
to quit
preaching
and
hide.
God said
No. In
that
environment
we
struggled
on.
During
that
depressing
time I
returned
to my
seat in
the
school
cafeteria
one
Sunday
morning,
sat down
next to
a
visitor–a
gentleman
I had
never
met–and
immediately
heard
the Holy
Spirit
say,
“The
young
man
beside
you is
one I
have
sent to
be your
helper.”
I turned
and
looked.
He was
in deep
worship
and I
did not
interrupt.
After
the
service
I
introduced
myself
and
learned
his name
was Herb
Young.
In time,
Herb
became
my
assistant
and
proved
to be a
treasure
of
wisdom
and
endless
motivation.
He
quickly
took the
lead as
minister
of
music,
served
in every
capacity
from
church
janitor
to
counselor,
errand-boy
to
personal
friend.
If a
task
needed
to be
done
Herb was
there to
do it.
Looking
back at
the
years of
Herb’s
ministry
to the
church,
I
seriously
doubt we
would
have
survived
had not
God sent
him when
He did.
Herb was
blessed
with
invincible
determination.
He could
sense
the
presence
of a
wolf and
was
devoted
both to
me and
the
flock.
Never
once did
I doubt
his
support
for my
role as
pastor
or the
sincerity
of his
actions.
Nor did
I put
him on a
dog-leash.
We soon
moved
into our
wonderful
facility
in
Boynton
Beach
and Herb
disappeared
as
silently
as he
came.
His work
was
done. An
important
truth I
learned
from him
was
this:
The
sheepdog
is
devoted
to the
shepherd.
If
needed,
Herb
would
have
protected
me with
his
life. In
a short
time the
congregation
was
thriving
again,
office-appointments
filled
our
work-week,
some
pastors
seeking
help
flew in
from out
of
state.
New
faces
appeared
on
Sundays.
When I
left the
pastoral
ministry
in 1994
the
church
was
filled
and
thrilled.
Since
then, I
have
learned
much
more
about
shepherds
and
sheepdogs
which I
think
you need
to hear.
I am
aware
that
wolves
and
sheepdogs
look
much
alike
and that
pastors
must
proceed
cautiously–but
I also
know
that it
is
spiritual-suicide
for any
pastor
to
pretend
he is
God’s
sole
gift to
the
church.
Not so.
If the
church
does not
have
sheepdogs–male
and
female–it
indicates
the
pastor’s
failure
to
recognize
and
encourage
the
development
of
spiritual
gifts in
his
flock.
Churches
across
America
are
literally
dying
because
pastors
are not
devotedly
metoring
their
Calebs.
Hear me:
Pulpit
preaching
does not
achieve
it!
Living
relationally
is the
only
acceptable
route to
pastor/sheepdog
success.
That
requires
giving
responsibility
to
underlings
and
showing
them how
to
develop
their
spiritual
gifts.
The
proof of
a church
being a
true New
Testament
organism
is that
God has
“fitly
joined
the body
together”
with
different
parts
working
in
harmony.
Paul had
Timothy,
Barnabas,
Silas,
and
others,
as
helpers
and
explained
their
function
this
way:
“According
to the
effective
working
by which
every
part
does its
share,
causes
growth
of the
body
...”
Ephesians
4:16.
A
healthy
church
is a
growing
church.
If there
is no
growth
something
is
wrong.
And it
is not
God’s
fault. I
have
been in
churches
across
America
and in
other
countries
and can
tell you
without
hesitation
that
every
successful
one has
the
“team”
concept
of
ministry.
One of
the
essential
qualities
of a
true
leader
is that
he
recognizes
his own
limitations
and
supplements
that
lack by
enlisting
others.
The best
leaders–including
the
greatest
American
Presidents–have
surrounded
themselves
with
competent
assistants
and then
delegated
authority
to them.
Pastors
who
insist
on
working
“solo”
will
ultimately
burn-out
and
finish
their
ministry
with
nothing
accomplished.
Few
things
alarm me
more
than
being in
a church
where
the only
voice I
hear,
the only
activity
I see,
the only
opinion
working,
is the
pastor’s.
A
conscientious
shepherd
does not
try to
be the
“whole
show”.
In my
early
ministry
I knew a
pastor
who
demanded
sole
care of
church
funds
though
his own
record
was one
of
financial
failure
and
bankruptcy.
How dare
he put
the
church
at risk!
I say
this
kindly
but I
will say
it
none-the-less:
I have
yet to
meet a
pastor
who was
capable
of being
everything
the
church
needed.
He is
not
equipped
to be
administrator,
treasurer,
teacher,
counselor,
legal
advocate,
kitchen
aide,
etc.,
etc.
Some
have
imagined
they
were
competent
to
function
alone—but
in every
case
their
records
proved
them
wrong.
Their
congregations
disappeared
and the
churches
died as
a direct
result
of their
bad
administration
and
egotistical
self-image.
Where
were
their
sheepdogs?
In some
cases
they had
chased
them
away.
Without
sheepdogs
the
flock is
destined
to
failure.
If I
sound
intolerant
it is
because
I grieve
for
churches
that are
being
endangered
by
arrogant–egotistical
–pastors.
And it
is
happening
across
the
nation.
We
pastors,
elders,
church
leaders,
will be
held
accountable
for the
failures
we have
thrust
upon the
sheep.
To me,
the
scariest
verse in
the
Bible is
when
Jesus
passes
sentence
on
preachers
at the
Judgment
who have
“cast
out
demons
in His
name and
in His
name
done
many
wonderful
works”.
Even so,
to them
he says:
“Depart
from Me
you
workers
of
iniquity,
I never
knew
you!”
Matthew
7:23.
Was
Jesus
talking
about
pastors?!
Yes. He
had to
be.
These
were
“wolves
in
sheepdog
clothing”.
At the
same
time I
write
this, I
understand
the
pastor’s
fear of
trusting
others.
During
my
ministry
there
were
times
when I
suffered
severely
at the
hands of
unloving
Church
Boards.
Under no
circumstance
do I
recommend
that
kind of
behavior.
Not only
so, God
will
judge
it. But
one
extreme
does not
justify
another.
We
create
greater
problems
when we
circumvent
the New
Testament
pattern.
And what
is that
pattern?
A
plurality
of
Elders
in
God-fearing
submission
to each
other
while
each
concurrently
supports
the
Pastor.
There
are
times
when a
pastor
is safe
only
when the
Elders
protect
him from
criticism
and
unjust
accusation.
Let me
illustrate:
In 60
years of
ministry
I never
signed a
church
check.
Nor did
I want
to. Even
Jesus
had a
treasurer.
So did
I.
Though I
now
function
as a
private
ministry
I still
have a
well-qualified
treasurer
who
carefully
oversees
the
spending.
Our
records
are
judiciously
kept. My
Board
members
are my
spiritual
family–and
I am
grateful
to God
for
them.
Not only
so, but
I meet
with
them
regularly
to
receive
their
advice
and
recommendation.
I would
not dare
function
any
other
way.
Significantly,
these
same
Calebs
have
been
with me
since
1994
when my
traveling
began.
We have
never
had a
controversy.
God
intends
that all
sheepdog-teams
function
this
way. It
can be
done.
When my
pastoral
ministry
ended in
1994 and
my
evangelical
work
began,
God
quickly
brought
David
Rhea
into my
life.
David is
a true
Caleb.
For
years he
accompanied
me on
trips
from
London
to
Alaska,
Canada
to South
America,
and
points
across
the U.S.
Today I
am
traveling
less,
David is
in
Tennessee,
but Rick
Cross
and
Larry
Castelli
are my
local
sheepdogs.
Rick is
a
Kingdom-Caleb,
committed
to God
and to
the
assistance
of my
ministry.
Larry is
a
Sergeant
in the
West
Palm
Beach
Florida
Police
Department.
Until
recently
he was
the
department’s
SWAT
Director,
Narcotics
Department
Head,
and
Under-Cover
Agent.
We met
at my
“Sons In
Ministry”
event in
May,
2008
when
another
P.D.
worker
brought
him to
the
meeting.
At that
time
Larry
had
never
been in
a
gathering
where
the Holy
Spirit
moved in
“power
and
demonstration”.
I
Corinthians
2:1-5.
When I
called
him
forward
for
prayer
the
power of
God
suddenly
dropped
him
helplessly
to the
floor.
That
astonished
him.
This
former
Marine/body
builder
discovered
his
martial
arts
training
was no
match
for the
authority
of
Heaven.
That
night
Larry
was
filled
with the
Holy
Spirit
and his
life
radically
changed.
Neither
of us
knew it
at the
time but
God also
assigned
him to
be my
sheepdog
and
friend.
Be aware
of this.
When
such
people
fall to
the
floor
under
the
power of
God
unable
to move
they are
learning
the Holy
Spirit’s
most
fundamental
message:
Submit–Surrender–Don’t
fight
back.
This
kind of
falling
happened
to Saul
of
Tarsus
on the
Damascus
Road,
Acts
9:4, and
still
occurs
today.
I have
been so
incredibly
blessed
by
spiritually-empowered
men and
women
such as
these
that I
am
puzzled
why
other
pastors
do not
recognize
their
Calebs
and
encourage
them.
Every
shepherd
needs a
sheepdog.
A
shepherd
without
a Caleb
is
spiritually
crippled.
Any
flock of
sheep,
large or
small,
healthy
or
infirm,
will
attract
a wolf.
If the
shepherd
has
chased
off his
sheepdogs
he will
be no
match
for the
attack.
The wolf
comes to
“kill,
steal,
and
destroy”.
John
10:10.
The
sheepdog
comes to
help
protect
the
flock
from
that
terrible
invader.
Believe
me, in
my
decades
of
preaching
I have
encountered
both. In
1993 God
specifically
told
Karen
McMichael
to
assist
my
ministry,
she
became
secretary
and has
remained
at her
Caleb-post
ever
since.
Her
husband,
Craig (a
giant
among
Caleb-sheepdogs)
is the
one who
brought
Larry
Castelli
to my
meeting.
Sheepdogs
such as
Craig
search
for
wandering
sheep
and
bring
them
back to
the
fold.
This may
surprise
you but
one of
the
greatest
prophecies
of
Christ
in the
Old
Testament
identifies
Him with
the role
of the
sheepdog.
He is
the
ultimate
protector
from the
wolf. To
Scripturally
illustrate
this
fact I
need to
compare
quotations
of
Isaiah
11:1-3,
from
both the
old and
New King
James
Bibles.
You will
observe
that
these
two
versions
use very
different
language
in
translating
the same
word.
Here is
a
partial
quote
from the
original
King
James:
"And
there
shall
come
forth a
rod out
of the
stem of
Jesse,
and a
Branch
shall
grow out
of his
roots:
And the
Spirit
of the
Lord
shall
rest
upon him
... and
shall
make him
of quick
understanding
in the
fear of
the
Lord,
And he
shall
not
judge
after
the
sight of
his
eyes,
neither
reprove
after
the
hearing
of his
ears."
Isaiah
11:1-3.
Where
the old
King
James
says,
"Shall
make him
of quick
understanding
in the
fear of
the
Lord,"
the New
King
James
says,
"His
delight
is in
the fear
of the
Lord."
"Quick
understanding"
and
"delight"
seem
contradictory
translations.
Which
version
is
correct?
The
answer:
Both are
correct.
The same
Hebrew
word, "ruach",
is the
source
for
each,
and both
are
valid
renderings.
Not only
so, but
their
combined
messages
bring a
valuable
revelation
about
Jesus’
identity
as a
sheepdog.
What I
say may
seem
technical
but it
is
vital.
Please
stay
with me.
First of
all, if
you have
an
acquaintance
with the
Hebrew
language,
you
recognized
that
ruach is
the same
word
translated
as
"spirit”,
“wind”,
or
“breath".
Genesis
1:1. In
the New
King
James,
ruach
refers
to the
inhaled
breath;
specifically,
as "the
delight
of
breathing
the
fragrance
of
roses".
The
original
King
James,
instead
of
referring
to the
delight
of
breathing
refers
to the
result.
This is
significant
and
provides
a
profound
revelation
about
the
sheepdog’s
discerning
the
presence
of a
wolf.
The New
Testament
calls
this
"discerning
of
spirits".
For
example:
In
ancient
Israel,
sheep
herding
was a
vital
part of
life.
During
the day,
it was
easy for
the
shepherd
or
sheep-
dog to
see a
wolf and
protect
the
flock.
Nighttime
was a
different
story;
when
darkness
fell,
the
shepherd
was
powerless.
Not so
with the
dog.
Even in
the
dark,
when he
could
not
"judge
after
the
sight of
his eyes
or
reprove
after
the
hearing
of his
ears",
the dog
could
smell a
wolf. A
dog’s
sense of
smell is
100
times
greater
than a
human’s.
At a
burned-out
arson
site a
dog can
smell
1/500,000th
of a
drum of
flammable
fuel. It
was this
usage of
"ruach"
which
Isaiah
said
would
typify
the
future
Messiah.
When
Messiah
came, He
would
not
depend
on sight
or
hearing
for
making
judgment;
instead,
another
sense,
one
which
could
penetrate
the
dark,
would be
His
basis of
judgment.
When the
Scripture
says,
"The
Spirit
of the
Lord
shall
... make
him of
quick
understanding,"
that is,
"quick
to
smell",
it
literally
means
the
Messiah
will be
able to
"smell a
wolf in
the
dark".
That is
the
clearest,
most
poignant
illustration
of the
Holy
Spirit's
gift of
discerning
of
spirits
that you
will
find
anywhere
in
Scripture.
It also
means
that
those
who
operate
in this
blessed
sheepdog-endowment
do not
find
themselves
defenseless
simply
because
night
has
fallen.
Not so.
My
concern
is this:
I meet
pastors
and
church
members
who are
virtually
powerless
in the
area of
discernment.
They
excel in
their
love for
God but
in
detecting
Satan's
devices,
they
remain
spiritually
naive.
Costly
mistakes
are
made.
The
sheepdog
is
urgently
needed.
Theoretically,
what
these
Christians
observe
in
daylight
hours,
they
recognize
well.
When
darkness
falls,
they are
helpless
as
anyone
else,
easily
victimized
by
"those
who lie
in wait
to
deceive".
Ephesians
4:14.
When the
thief
comes to
"kill,
steal,
and
destroy,"
they are
quickly
exploited.
John
10:10.
The high
divorce
rate
among
Christians
is
primary
proof of
what I
say.
Deception
tears
good
couples
apart.
Families,
individuals,
even
churches,
frequently
have
long
histories
of wrong
decision-making.
This
cannot
be the
will of
God. He
is not
honored
when the
world
makes
fools of
His
children.
God has
provided
adequate
protection
against
this
hazard
through
the Holy
Spirit's
gift of
"discerning
of
spirits".
I
Corinthians
12:10.
But this
gift
does not
operate
automatically;
it has
to be
sought,
nourished,
and
lovingly
developed.
A casual
attitude
toward
it will
produce
superficial
results;
an
earnest
seeking
of it
will
bring
remarkable
discretion
and
judgment.
The
choice
is ours.
In the
New
Testament
day, the
word
"discern"
was a
Greek
medical
term
which
meant
"to cut
and look
below
the
surface".
With
this
spiritual
gift in
operation,
one does
not
merely
rely on
things
as they
appear
but may
know
them as
they
really
are.
Yes, it
is
possible,
for
believers
to
operate
in the
revelations
of the
Holy
Spirit.
In this
capacity,
we can
regard
ourselves
as
sheepdogs.
Besides
exposing
things
that are
evil and
dangerous,
the
Caleb-gift
of
discerning
spirits
also
discloses
the good
and
beautiful.
Soon
after my
return
to
Florida
I felt
isolated
and in
need of
friends.
My
baptism-in-the
Spirit
caused
the loss
of my
denomination
and
acquaintances.
One
morning
I went
to a
pastors'
meeting
in West
Palm
Beach
and then
to a
large
cafeteria
for
lunch.
As I sat
alone,
watching
people
enter
the
dinning
room
from the
serving
line, a
young
man
appeared
whom I
had
never
seen
before.
In that
instant,
the Holy
Spirit
spoke,
"He is
your
brother.
I want
you to
meet
him."
The same
moment,
I was
able to
discern
a godly
presence
upon
him.
When I
finished
my meal,
I went
to his
table
and
said,
"The
Lord
tells me
you and
I are
'brothers'."
He
gripped
my hand,
"Praise
God!,"
He said,
"Sit
down. I
am glad
to meet
you!"
Instantly,
we
experienced
a
fellowship
as deep
as if we
had been
friends
for
years.
But,
more was
to
happen.
While we
talked,
the Holy
Spirit
told me
to show
him the
business
card in
my
pocket.
There
was only
one.
Handing
it to
him I
asked,
"Do you
know
this
man?" He
took it
and
said,
"Yes!,
this is
my
prayer-partner
and
brother
in the
Lord!
Where
did you
get his
card?"
Briefly,
I
explained
about
meeting
this
pastor
at the
meeting
a few
hours
before.
The
significance
of that
event in
the
cafeteria
was not
about
the man
at the
table,
the
card, or
the
person
who gave
it.
Rather,
the Holy
Spirit
was
showing
me how
His
gifts
could
bring
new
friends
into my
life,
bless,
protect,
and
direct
me even
in the
smallest
ways. He
was
demonstrating
that I
need
never be
afraid,
feel
alone,
or think
I was
helpless.
As with
Philip
and the
Ethiopian,
Acts
8:26-39,
He could
cause
believers
to meet
in the
middle
of the
desert
or in
crowded
cafeterias.
Please
hear
this
point:
Had that
man been
a "wolf"
whom I
was
planning
to trust
in some
vital
way, the
Holy
Spirit
could
also
have
shown me
that. In
California
one
time,
while
praying
for a
man
whose
office
was on
Wall
Street
in New
York
City,
the Holy
Spirit
accurately
gave me
the
names of
two men
in his
New York
office
who were
dangerous
to his
business.
I had
never
heard of
either
of them.
My
friend
confirmed
that
both men
were
there
and he
had
already
distrusted
them.
I am not
saying
that
we–or
any
other
sheepdog–will
function
perfectly;
I
certainly
do not.
At best,
we are
imperfect
vessels.
What I
am
saying
is that
we can
function
much
better
than we
are
presently
doing.
Nor do
we seek
gifts of
our own
choosing.
We seek
the
Giver
who
distributes
“to each
one
individually
as He
wills.”
1
Corinthians
12:11.
Let me
ask you
a
personal
question:
Have
there
been
times in
your
life
when you
made
imprudent,
costly
mistakes,
because
you
depended
on your
eyes and
ears and
not your
heart?
The
answer,
of
course,
is yes.
We are
all
guilty.
Were
there
other
times
when you
had a
deep,
deep
"sense
of
warning"
which
you
ignored?
Again,
all of
us must
admit
that we
have
done so.
Had you
known
that God
had a
provision
to
protect
you from
many of
those
blunders,
would
you have
accepted
it?
Before
you
answer,
let me
explain
that
"discerning
of
spirits",
is only
part of
the Holy
Spirit's
package.
Acts
1:4-8. I
Corinthians
12-14.
There
are
other
endowments
which
come
with it.
All are
wonderful,
good,
precious,
blessings
from
Heaven.
Even so,
some
well-intended,
but
wrongly
motivated
Christians
scorn
them.
Not
every
church
or
denomination
believes
in the
"package":
The
baptism
in the
Holy
Spirit.
Many
churches
have
been
victimized
by
deception,
stripped
of
power,
left in
a
spiritually-inert
state
but
still
adamantly
insist
nothing
is
wrong.
Year
after
year,
they
continue
their
downward
slide.
Seemingly,
they can
see
everything
except
the
presence
of this
crippling
attitude
in
themselves.
Without
a
sheepdog
to
sniff-out
and
expose
the
wolf,
the
church
suffers.
In
rejecting
sheepdogs
and
spiritual
gifts,
we
Christians
merely
deprive
ourselves.
God says
these
Caleb-gifts
are
real.
More
importantly,
the Holy
Spirit
wants us
to have
them.
They are
part of
Jesus'
provision
for the
Church.
In our
denial,
we leave
ourselves
wide
open for
more
destruction
by the
wolf.
Acts
20:29.
If you
want
God’s
provision
of
spiritual
gifts,
they are
yours
for the
asking–provided
you will
love
them,
treasure
them,
nourish,
and
encourage
them.
That
requires
submission
to the
total
New
Testament
message.
It
requires
time in
prayer,
fasting,
communion
with the
Holy
Spirit.
Pride,
ego,
self-seeking,
carnal
ambition,
must go.
If you
are a
pastor,
I pray
God will
bless
your
ministry
with
wonderful
sheepdogs.
If you
are not
a
pastor,
my
prayer
is that
God will
make you
into the
best
sheepdog
any
pastor
ever
had.
Either
way, you
are a
winner.
Satan is
a loser.
The
Kingdom
is
advanced
through
Calebs.
Long
after
Moses
was dead
and
gone,
Caleb
carried
on the
work of
the one
who
mentored
him.
Thank
God for
spiritual-sheepdogs
and
pastors
whose
Kingdom-work
outlives
them!
Amen!