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For Pastors Only – Part 2

Pathway to Victory / Dr. Robert Jeffress
The Truth Network Radio
June 8, 2026 3:00 am

For Pastors Only – Part 2

Pathway to Victory / Dr. Robert Jeffress

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June 8, 2026 3:00 am

The preservation of a nation depends on the effectiveness of local churches in fulfilling their mission, which in turn depends on pastors fulfilling their calling as preachers, prophets, and evangelists. Pastors must stand up for the truth of God's word and not be intimidated by the culture or the threat of losing tax-exempt status.

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Hey, podcast listeners. Thanks for streaming today's podcast from Pathway to Victory. You know, Pathway to Victory is a non-profit ministry featuring the Bible teaching of Dr. Robert Jeffress. And right now, your generous gift will have twice the impact thanks to the In God We Trust $1.5 million matching challenge, active now through July 5th.

To give a special matching challenge gift, go to ptv.org/slash donate or follow the link in our show notes.

Now, here's today's podcast from Pathway to Victory. Hi, this is Robert Jeffers, and I'm glad to study God's Word with you every day on this Bible teaching program. On today's edition, a Pathway to Victory. No local church has ever lost its tax-exempt status for anything the pastor has done in the pulpit.

Now, I don't encourage, I would not advise any pastor to officially endorse a political candidate from the pulpit. But what I'm saying to pastors is don't be intimidated from sharing what you believe is the truth of God's word from your pulpit. Welcome to Pathway to Victory with author and pastor Dr. Robert Jeffress. You know, every day it seems like our country wanders farther away from the Christian principles upon which it was founded.

but the Bible warns that any nation that rejects God will eventually fall. Today on Pathway to Victory. Dr. Robert Jeffers teaches how the local church can be salt and light in order to preserve our nation for the proclamation of the gospel. But first, let's take a moment to hear some important ministry updates.

Thanks, David, and welcome again to Pathway to Victory. Today, I'm thrilled to tell you about the In God We Trust matching challenge that's active right now. Several friends of Pathway to Victory have created a matching challenge of $1.5 million so that every dollar you give today will be doubled in size and impact. We will channel your gift into broadcasting the truth through Pathway to Victory. When you give your gift to the Matching Challenge, you're ensuring that the Christian voice remains a powerful force for good in shaping the future of our nation.

And when you give your generous gift to the matching challenge, I'm going to send you an encouraging book that will engage your entire family. It's our 250th commemorative edition of America is a Christian Nation. This is more than a book. It's a keepsake, a treasure for your family that celebrates America's 250th anniversary and reminds every generation that this nation was built on the Word of God. We'll say more about this fabulous book in the Matching Challenge later.

But right now, let's continue a message that was originally delivered to an influential gathering of pastors and church leaders. My goal was to bolster the confidence of these leaders to stand up boldly for the truth. culture that's often hostile to the Christian message. I titled today's Sermon for Pastors Only. Do you know what America's last hope is?

What America's greatest hope is? It is the local church. And I want to submit to you this thesis. The preservation of our nation. for the proclamation of the gospel.

Depends upon the effectiveness of local churches in fulfilling their mission. And then I want to go one step further. The effectiveness of churches in fulfilling their mission. Depends upon pastors fulfilling their calling. And I want to talk about specifically the role that the pastor has in helping the church achieve its mission so that our nation can be preserved for the proclamation of the gospel.

So, how is it that a pastor fulfills his calling? We're going to look at the three distinct callings of every pastor. First of all, we're going to talk about the pastor as preacher. The second role is the pastor as a prophet. Why are pastors so reticent to confront their culture when it departs from God's commands?

I think there are three reasons pastors are hesitant to act as prophets. One reason is a misunderstanding of the Bible. The second reason pastors many times don't. act as prophets is because of a misunderstanding of the Constitution.

Some pastors and many laymen believe that the separation of church and state prohibits pastors from addressing controversial issues like abortion and same-sex marriages because such issues are, quote, politics rather than spiritual issues. The phrase separation of church and state appears nowhere in the Constitution, much less in the Bible. Groups today, like the Americans United for the Separation of Church and State, they regularly try to intimidate pastors and churches from influencing legislation or elections by threatening their tax-exempt status. Probably saw in the news because my good friend Barry Lynn, head of Americans United for Separation of Church and State, announced. He's writing a letter about Pastor Jeffers to the Internal Revenue Service.

You know what? Anybody can write a letter. A 10-year-old can write a letter to the Internal Revenue Service. It doesn't mean one thing at all. You cannot afford to allow people like Barry Lynn and others intimidate you and muzzle you from sharing the truth of God's word.

It is important that you stand up for your rights as an American. We're going to take a little history lesson here. I think you'll find this interesting. A question comes up, pastors.

Well, what are we allowed to do when it comes to influencing elections or legislation? Historically, churches in our country for the first 180 years of its existence spoke passionately for and against candidates for public office. Did you know that? I mean, it's regular and routine in churches. I mean, Christians opposed the election of Thomas Jefferson as president because he was a deist.

They opposed William Howard Taft for embracing Unitarianism. I mean, they regularly did that. They also were at the forefront of influencing legislation. It was the churches who led the movement for abolition of slavery. for desegregation.

And by the way, I want to stop here and say something. There is absolutely no place in the church for racial prejudice. None whatsoever. And Dobb. I am so glad about the number of African Americans and Latinos and people of every ethnicity imaginable that are coming to First Baptist Church.

And they are welcome here. We're glad to have them here. And if there is anybody, if there is. Anybody who is uncomfortable with that, better get your heart right with God or find another place of worship. Because the fact is, that's what the church is supposed to be.

And everybody is welcome in our church. The church has always been at the forefront. It's always been at the forefront of leading for desegregation and civil rights.

However, in 1934, the government enacted a law that prohibited tax-exempt nonprofit institutions like ours from using a substantial portion of their income to lobby for legislation. Doesn't mean we can't lobby for legislation on those issues that have a biblical basis. It just means we can't use an overwhelming amount of our money to do so, which of course we don't. But in 1954, this is where it gets interesting, Congress approved an amendment introduced by then Senator Lyndon Johnson to the IRS governing churches and other 501 tax-exempt organizations like ours that prohibited those organizations to influence elections by supporting specific candidates. And then in 1987, that amendment was expanded to also prohibit speaking out against specific candidates.

Although pastors can influence legislation, they cannot as a group. In a church, officially support one candidate over another in an election. This restriction is being challenged, and many people predict that it will one day be abolished because it's such an apparent violation of First Amendment rights.

Now, while a handful of churches through the years have been fined for violating this no substantial part of money being used for legislation or other issues, what you need to know is no church has ever lost its tax-exempt status in the 57 years since Lyndon Johnson headed that amendment. Do you realize that? Not one church in history has ever lost its tax-exempt status. And my friend Barry Lynn won't tell pastors that. He tries to intimidate pastors.

Oh, you're going to lose your tax-exempt status. Not one church has ever lost their tax-exempt status. There is one church, the Pierce Creek Church in Binghamton, New York, that lost its tax-exempt letter ruling, which is something different because during the 1992 election, they ran a full-page ad in USA Today claiming that Bill Clinton was the Antichrist. And Not a wise move, okay? The IRS notified them that they couldn't do that anymore, but if they didn't do anything like that again, they would be just fine.

But here's the bottom line for pastors: no local church has ever been fined, no local church has ever lost its tax-exempt status for anything the pastor has done in the pulpit.

Now, I don't. Encourage, I would not advise any pastor to officially endorse a political candidate from the pulpit. But what I'm saying to pastors is don't be intimidated from sharing what you believe is the truth of God's word from your pulpit. It is a fear many times of a misunderstanding of the Constitution that causes pastors to silence themselves. A third reason pastors don't act as prophets many times is a fear of controversy.

Now, pastors make for easy targets of criticism, even from church members. You know, it's easy for laymen to say, well, Pastor, we're behind you, keep standing for the truth. We're right there with you. Unless church attendance starts to fall and receipts start to diminish a little bit, and then suddenly it's off with his head, you know. It's very easy for that to happen in churches, and most pastors recognize that.

Any true shepherd of a local congregation is concerned about the spiritual, the organizational, and yes, the financial health of his congregation. And although the universal church will never cease to exist, the fact is many local congregations have shut their doors because of diminishing attendance. No pastor wants to be the catalyst for killing his church.

Now I'm sympathetic with that. I'm sympathetic with pastors who are concerned with taking controversial stands that could send their congregants out the door and discourage new members from coming in the door. You may find this hard to believe. But during the first 15 years of my pastoral ministry, I rarely, if ever, spoke about controversial issues. Never spoke about abortion, never spoke about homosexuality, never encouraged my people to vote, much less gave them any criteria for how to select a candidate.

Instead, I figured my job was just to preach the Bible and leave all that other stuff to other people. After all, why bother to try to save a sinking ship? I spent the first 15 years of my ministry.

Some of you who were with me in Wichita Falls knows that many of my years there, I never said anything about those subjects. But about 13 years ago, something happened in my life that changed my thinking about that. I was preaching a year-long series through the book of Genesis in my last church, and I had come to Genesis chapter 19, the story of Sodom and Gomorrah. And I'd already finished the sermon. It was about a Wednesday, and I was making the application points about the story of Sodom and Gomorrah.

And one of the application points was. As a culture, we cannot afford to condone. What God has condemned. And so that was the point I was going to share the next Sunday morning. We cannot condone what God has condemned.

A member of our church who worked in the local library that Wednesday came in to see me. She said, Pastor, here are two books that are in the children's section of our public library. Daddy's Roommate, which is about a little boy whose father divorces his wife and moves in with another man. And it's a picture book for children promoting homosexuality. And it shows this little boy's father and his homosexual lover in bed together.

And then the other book, Heather Has Two Mommies. I bet you can figure out the plot line of that one. But anyway, she handed me these books and said, Now, Pastor, what are you going to do about this? And I said, well, you know, I really hadn't thought about it.

So I sat there with those library books and I thought, what am I going to do about this? I mean, I've got enough headaches as a pastor of a church. I don't need to get involved in this. But how can I, as a pastor, stand up with a straight face and tell my congregation we cannot condone what God has condemned and why do nothing about it?

So I said, well, I'll try the diplomatic route.

So I called up the local librarian on the phone. And I said, you know, somebody brought to my attention these books, and I'm sure you're unaware that they're in the children's section of the library. And, you know, these are books that are promoting a practice, a lifestyle that, first of all, is against the law in the state of Texas, which it was at that time. It is responsible for the greatest epidemic of all times, AIDS, and it violates the teaching of three major world religions: Christianity, Judaism, and Islam. And I said, because of that, I just don't think these books belong there.

Public tax dollars shouldn't be used to purchase these books. Would you remove these books? And she said, basically, not on your life. And so after I've tried the diplomatic approach. The next Sunday, I was standing up preaching my message, went through this.

And I had those library books with me in the pulpit. And I felt impressed by God to say this. I held up the library books and I said, These are in my possession. and I'm not giving them back. And um I'm telling you.

That was the shot heard round the world. I mean, the next week, the editor in the local paper said I needed to be put in jail for disobeying the law. And he said, remember, Martin Luther King wrote some of his best work while he was in jail. And Pastor Jeffers needs to go to jail. And so all of this.

And so, you know, I paid the $54 to buy the library books. But that was it started a controversy in our community that lasted for two years. Every major outlet talked about it. PBS actually came to our city and filmed a documentary about this firestorm that had divided the small West Texas town. I mean, it was the biggest, there was a federal law suit, it was the biggest brouhah you can imagine.

For two years in the local paper, almost every day, scathing letters about what Pastor Jeffers has done and the First Baptist Church of Wichita Falls and all of this and all of this and all of this. I wish I could tell you that during those two years, our church exploded in growth. It didn't happen. A few people left. But mainly, a lot of new people just weren't real anxious to come to our church.

I mean, when you're reading about a church that's homophobic and hates people, and a pastor that's this, this, this, and this, and this, it really doesn't encourage people coming to church.

Now, later on, God blessed our church tremendously with explosive growth, but it didn't happen during that time.

Somebody asked me Reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, he brought up that incident up in Wichita Falls. He said, Pastor, if you had it to do over again, would you do it again? I said, absolutely. Absolutely. It wasn't popular to do, but I am never going to disobey what I feel the Holy Spirit leading me to do.

And regardless of the cost, I had to take a stand at that point.

Now, I'm going to say to you, pastors, you may not be. feeling called to borrow books from your local library, okay? That's okay. That doesn't have to be your calling because it was my calling. But preaching biblically based messages on controversial topics, encouraging your members to vote, challenging laws that violate God's laws are just some of the ways that you can fulfill your role as a prophet.

Now, at the risk of offending some, let me be very blunt. Pastor, you will never be criticized by the world for building a homeless shelter. You will never be criticized by this culture for asking your members to give sacrificially to build water wells in Africa. In fact, the culture will applaud you as a pastor for doing those things because they think that's what a pastor is supposed to do, encouraging nice people. to do nice things.

That is their idea of a pastor. Nobody's going to criticize you for that. But if you dare stand up and point your finger at the culture and say, This is wrong, thus saith the Lord, you better be ready to suffer. You may be suffering not the loss of your life as the Old Testament prophets did. But be prepared to suffer the loss of your reputation.

Your career. Your livelihood. That's why Paul said in 2 Timothy 4, verses 2 and 5: Be prepared to endure hard. Hardship. Timothy was told that if he fulfilled his role as a prophet, it was going to get hard at times.

But that's the pastor's role, not only as a preacher, but as a prophet. 2 Timothy 4 explains a third role of the pastor, and that is as an evangelist. Do the work of an evangelist, Paul reminded Timothy in 2 Timothy 4:5. And when Paul said, I want you to be an evangelist, Timothy. He didn't have in mind, I want you to travel the countryside with five suits and five sermons, okay?

That's not his idea of an evangelist. He meant do the work as a pastor of an evangelist proclaiming the good news of the gospel. You see, the great commission, Matthew 28, is for us to go into all the world and make disciples, fully devoted followers of Jesus Christ.

Now Before you can be a disciple, though, you have to be a convert. You have to be introduced to faith in Christ. And while it's possible to be a convert without ever being a disciple, it is impossible for somebody to be a disciple without, first of all, being a convert and saved. And so one of the primary things that a pastor is to do is, beyond his own ministry, he is to be involved in evangelism. How can a pastor, beyond his own personal witness, be and do the work of an evangelist?

Let me suggest several ways. First of all, through his preaching, through his preaching. Make sure in every message, no matter what you're talking about, there is some explanation of the gospel. You know, Charles Haddon Spurgeon said, it doesn't matter what passage he was in, he always made a beeline to the cross. And we're to do that as well.

Also, I would encourage those of you who are pastors, when you're preaching, always challenge unbelievers in the audience to make a decision to trust in Christ. Second way we act as evangelists is through equipping. You know, the pastor is to be an evangelist, but he's not the only evangelist in the church. My mentor and professor for so many years, Howard Hendricks, used to quote Bud Wilkinson's definition of football. He said, In football, you have 22 men on the field desperately in need of rest, being cheered on by 50,000 spectators in the stands, desperately in need of exercise.

Then Prophet would add, you know, that may be. And make for exciting football, but that is a lousy way to run a church. God never meant for just a few people to be out on the field doing all the work. We're to all be involved in ministry and especially evangelism. Remember the words of Ephesians 4:11 and 12?

And Christ gave some as apostles, he gave some as prophets, some as evangelists, some as pastors and teachers for the equipping of the saints for the work of service, to the building up of the body of Christ. A third way we do that, a third way we act as an evangelist is through organizing. You know, you read through the book of Acts. The chronicles, the ministry of Paul, and you quickly come to the conclusion that Paul was a man with a plan. I mean, he had a plan for reaching his world for Christ.

Now, sometimes his plans didn't pan out. I mean, sometimes his plans got vetoed by God. One time he wanted to go to Bithynia. God said, no, you're going to Macedonia instead. But the point is, he had a plan.

He just didn't sit there and wait for something good to happen. He wanted to take the gospel to everyone. And I would say, Pastor, ask yourself the question wherever you are, church, family, what is our strategy for taking the good news of Christ to the community we're in? We need a strategy, we have to have a plan. What plan do you have?

What strategy do you have for being that light in that community where God has placed you? No in speech classes. We were taught there are a number of ways to end a talk. You can do so with a penetrating question, or a relevant quote, or an interesting story, or a poem, or a song. Don't get afraid.

I'm not going to use the song. But one way to end a message. is by repeating the major thesis of that message. And that's the way I want to end today. I want you to listen carefully to these words.

The preservation of our nation. for the proclamation of the gospel. Depends upon the effectiveness of local churches in fulfilling their mission. Yeah. And the effectiveness of local churches fulfilling their mission.

depends upon pastors fulfilling their calling. As preachers as prophets. and as evangelist. At Pathway to Victory, we're praying that God would use today's message to ignite a renewed passion among pastors to preach the gospel with freedom and boldness. In that spirit, let me remind you about a tremendous opportunity to double your impact through the $1.5 million In God We Trust matching challenge.

Every dollar that you give to Pathway to Victory before the deadline on July 5th will have twice the ministry impact. Let me tell you a quick story. Benjamin Franklin, who was not an evangelical Christian, stood before the Constitutional Convention in 1787, and he said something that stopped that room cold. Franklin said, I have lived a long time, and the longer I live, the more convincing proofs I see that God governs the affairs of men. Even as believers in America face growing strife and persecution, God has not abdicated His throne.

He is still moving and still opening doors for His truth. And right now, He is inviting you to be part of something significant. The In God We Trust matching challenge is your opportunity to act on that conviction boldly, generously, and with full confidence in the God who has never once lost control of this nation. Every dollar you give today will be doubled. And to thank you for your generous gift today, I'm going to send you several wonderful resources.

The first is an inspirational keepsake for the whole family. It's a coffee table book called The 250th Commemorative Edition of America is a Christian Nation. And as a bonus, I'll also include the In God We Trust DVD and a patriotic MP3 format audio disc. This is your moment. Step forward in faith, move with urgency, and trust the only one who governs the affairs of men.

Here's David with all the details. When you give a generous gift to support the Ministry of Pathway to Victory, you're invited to request the brand new 250th commemorative edition of America is a Christian Nation. In addition to the book, you'll also receive In God We Trust, a brand new two-disc set featuring music performances by the First Baptist Dallas Choir and Orchestra and teaching from Dr. Robert Jeffress. To request these resources, call 866-999-2965, visit PTV.org, or text PTV to 78800.

And when you give $100 or more, we'll also send you the America and the Bible Message Series on DVD video and MP3 format audio disc. And remember, because of the In God We Trust matching challenge, your gift to Pathway to Victory will be matched and therefore doubled in impact.

So be sure to get in touch with us today. One more time, call 866-999-2965 or go online to ptv.org. You could also send your donation by mail right to PO Box 223-609 Dallas, Texas, 75-222. Again, that's P.O. Box 223-609, Dallas, Texas, 75222.

I'm David J. Mullins. To many Christians, persecution is something that happens in a far-off place. But in reality, persecution is already taking place in America. Join us again Tuesday for a message called When Persecution Comes on Pathway to Victory.

Pathway to Victory with Dr. Robert Jeffress comes from the pulpit of the First Baptist Church of Dallas, Texas. You made it to the end of today's podcast from Pathway to Victory, and we're so glad you're here. Pathway to Victory relies on the generosity of loyal listeners like you to make this podcast possible. And right now, your ministry gift will be matched and therefore doubled in impact thanks to the In God We Trust $1.5 million matching challenge.

Take advantage of this opportunity to double your impact before the deadline on July 5th. To give toward the matching challenge, go to ptv.org slash donate. or follow the link in our show notes. We hope you've been blessed by today's podcast from Pathway to Victory.

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