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Who has been the most influential preacher in your life?
According to abpnews.com, Protestant pastors ranked Billy Graham the most inflential living preacher in a survey by LifeWay Reasearch [see the 02/05/10 edition of The Pastor's Weekly Briefing].
I have been blessed to have at least a few!
First and foremost, our faithful Pastor, Ron Bozarth of Christ Fellowship Church, San Juan Capistrano, CA
Jon Couson
Greg Laurie
The most influential preacher in my life has been Chuck Swindoll. I can see where Billy Graham would be at the top of the list for most influential preachers because of his evangelistic impact, but I suspect that individualy speaking, most pastors would not say that Rev. Graham was the most influential in their life. I say this with all due respect because even though Chuck Swindol has been the most influential preacher in my life, Billy Graham has been the most influetnial role model for my life as far as seeking to model humility as well as grace while facing false accusations.
I love seeing some of the names that are being tossed into the ring. I don't think you can argue with any of them. The list of men God has used in my life has continued to grow from the point He tried to call me. It includes a friend who was the right person to speak at the right time in my life — Ron Walters. And there were two highly influential men that guided my personal and ministry attitude, people I had never seen in person at the time. My mother sent me an audiocassette while I was in seminary of Howard Hendricks and Richard Halverson speaking at a Sunday School conference in Los Angeles. I wore those tapes out listening to these two speak over and over again. Warren Wiersbe was also at that conference, and also inspired me. But the man who did more than anyone else in shaping who I became as a minister was my local pastor, someone that the country and the world never heard of — James Brougher. That's why I have so much respect for every local pastor. They have no idea how many people they are influencing in mighty ways.
I served my seminary internship in a small rural parish. I was mentored by two pastors. One served one of the largest churches in our denomination, having grown it from 35 members to over 1500. The other served a small rural two point parish, his two congregations sitting just to the east and just to the west of the small country church where I ministered for a year. He was more prone to preserve the envelope than to push it. He suffered from a couple of vocal members who thought he had been there long enough. They often attempted to garner my support for their insurrection.
At the time, I was swayed by the complaints of the disgruntled members of the neighboring parish, though I had enough wherewithal to refrain from supporting them out of loyalty to my fellow pastor. In fact, I thought my neighboring pastor rather lazy and behind the times. At the same time, I was in awe of the other pastor's methodologies and straightforward in your face manner. When I brought a situation I was facing to them, their reactions were totally different. The one was very sympathetic, saying "It's too bad some people treat pastors that way." The other was pro-active, saying "I faced that situation in a previous congregation and here is what I did to solve it."
Now, many years later, while I still admire the large church pastor, I have come to see that much of his success was due to traits I have failed to emulate. He has advanced leadership skills built on an innate ability to accumulate and spend political capital. I'm more of an analyst usually connecting the dots after the moment of opportunity has passed. So, I don't waste my time trying to emulate him anymore. I'm not like him and never will be.
On the other hand, the country pastor is still faithfully serving his two point parish. He has grown immeasurably in my estimation. He has found a niche where his unique skillset and personality have allowed him to build relationships. His perseverence in the face of opposition has not come from defeating his enemies, but loving them. His even handed stability has done much to build the kingdom of God in his neck of the woods. While he doesn't have the kind of leadership skills that will gather a large following or rally people to a new vision, he has faithfully preached the Word, counselled his people and served as shepherd to his flock for nearly 25 years. While he will never pastor a large big city church, start a national ministry or broadcast his messages into five states like my other mentor, I find myself emulating him more and more as the years go by.