Matt Chandler (pastor)

Matt Chandler
Born (1974-06-20) June 20, 1974
Seattle, Washington
Occupation President of the Acts 29 Network, Pastor, Author
Years active 1992-present
Notable work The Explicit Gospel, Creature of the Word
Spouse(s) Lauren
Children 3

Theological work

Era Late 20th and Early 21st centuries
Tradition or movement Evangelical, Calvinist, Southern Baptist
Notable ideas Complementarianism, Reformed Soteriology

Matt Chandler (born June 20, 1974) is the lead pastor of teaching at The Village Church, a Southern Baptist[1] church in Flower Mound, Texas and the President of the Acts 29 Network.[2] As of October 2012, Chandler was in the top five of the leading podcasts on iTunes. Chandler's first book, co-authored with Jared Wilson, The Explicit Gospel, was released in 2012. In it he explains what the gospel is and how it has been misunderstood.

Biography

Chandler was born in Seattle, Washington. His father was in the military, causing him to move multiple times. They lived in Olympia, Washington; Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan; Alameda, California and Galveston, Texas.[2] In Texas, the 6' 5" Chandler was a member of the high school football team. He oftens refers to the fact that Jeff Faircloth, a football teammate, was quick to share the good news of Jesus with him in a way that intrigued Chandler. Over the course of two years, Chandler attended church gatherings, opposed the beliefs, raised questions and doubts against Christianity and eventually submitted his life to the Lordship of Christ.[3]

Following high school, Chandler acquired his first job, as a janitor at Pine Drive Christian School in Dickinson, Texas. Chandler first spoke in front of a crowd when he was asked to share his testimony at a high school chapel. He was then offered a job as a youth minister at a small Baptist church in La Marque, Texas at the age of 18.[4] Chandler moved to Abilene, Texas where he attended Hardin-Simmons University. While there, Chandler began leading the weekly Grace Bible Study at the Paramount Theater,which grew from a couple of hundred attendees to a couple of thousand. Chandler earned a Bible degree from Hardin-Simmons University. In 1996, Chandler was hired by Beltway Park Baptist Church under pastor David McQueen.[5] In 1999, Chandler started a non-profit called Waiting Room Ministries with close friend Shane Barnard..[6] Chandler twice started seminary classes but dropped out both times because he felt that he had acquired the tools he was learning from seminary back in bible school.[7] He married his wife, Lauren, on July 31, 1999, and they have three children: Audrey, Reid and Norah.[8]

A woman on the board of his non-profit organization asked Chandler to put in a résumé at Highland Village First Baptist Church. Chandler claims he did not expect to get the job due to conflicts in beliefs.[9] Despite this, he was offered the job, and in 2002 he accepted the position. The church at that point had an attendance of 160 people. Now known as The Village Church, it has since grown to over 14,000 attendees.[4] Chandler says his character was partially shaped by John Piper.[9]

On Thanksgiving morning in 2009, Chandler had a seizure at his home[10] and was later diagnosed with anaplastic oligodendroglioma, a malignant brain tumor.[11] Chandler commented in June 2010 that he believed that God healed his cancer.[12] He received treatment at Baylor University Medical Center and was given a clean bill of health in September 2010.

In March 2012, Chandler was named president of Acts 29 Network, succeeding Mark Driscoll, who had helped found the network of church planters. Acts 29 Network is a partnership of church plants that has grown to over 400 churches in the United States and around the world.[13]

Theological views

Distinction between Israel and the Church

Chandler makes a distinction between Israel and the church, as two different bodies that God created at different points in history. Chandler sees the church as being created by God through Christ's preaching: "God created the Church through the proclaimed gospel of the revealed Word, Jesus Christ." [14]

Christian hedonism

Chandler believes in Christian hedonism, a phrase coined by John Piper, teaches that "God is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in Him" and that God's highest pursuit ("his glory") and man's deepest and most durable joy come together in one pursuit—namely, the pursuit of satisfaction in God.[5]

Gender roles

Chandler holds to a complementarian view of gender roles. This view states that man and woman are equal in essence, value and dignity, but were created and called by God for distinct roles within the home and church. Husbands are charged to lead, protect and provide for their wives and families and wives to affirm and submit to their husbands' leadership. Men are also to bear the primary responsibility of leading the local church; therefore, the office of pastor/elder is restricted to men. Chandler believes that men were designed to be "cultivators, growers, nurturers, and builders".[5][15][16]

Calvinistic Soteriology

Chandler’s soteriology is Calvinistic.[17] This view states that a person’s “response to the gospel is rooted and grounded in the free and unconditional election of God for His own pleasure and glory.” [18]

Spiritual gifts

Regarding spiritual gifts, Chandler is a continuationist.[5][19] He believes that supernatural gifts such as prophecy, miracles, healings and speaking in tongues have not ceased and should be exercised within the church under the authoritative parameters that Scripture provides.

The Village Church

Chandler is an elder and the lead pastor of Teaching at The Village Church, which is located in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex and consists of five campuses: Flower Mound, Dallas Northway, Southlake, Fort Worth, and Plano.[20] The Village Church considers itself to be "gospel-centered." Their mission statement reads, "At The Village Church, the means by which we will pursue the glory of God in the making of disciples is four-fold: gospel-centered worship, gospel-centered community, gospel-centered service and gospel-centered multiplication.[21] The church has an average growth rate of over one thousand people per year. Chandler believes the growth after his arrival helped him to make many changes, including switching to all male eldership.[9]

Books

Chandler's first book is titled The Explicit Gospel.[22] The book was published by Crossway Books in 2012, and was written with the help of Jared Wilson. RELEVANT Magazine explained that the purpose of the book was to clarify the gospel and its implications.[23] The book is divided into three main sections: The Gospel on the Ground, The Gospel in the Air and Implications and Applications.[24] His second book is titled Creature of the Word: The Jesus-Centered Church,[25] and was written with fellow Village pastor Josh Patterson and LifeWay Vice-President Eric Geiger. Published by B&H Publishing Group, the book is described this way: "When the gospel is rightly declared and applied to God's people, the church becomes "a creature of the Word." She understands, embraces, and lives out the reality of Christ's birth, life, death, and resurrection in more than her doctrinal statement. The gospel impacts all the church is and does."

References

  1. http://www.thevillagechurch.net/sermon/what-is-our-denominational-affiliation/
  2. 1 2 "Brain Cancer Tests a Young Pastor's Faith", MSN, Associated Press, 31 January 2010, retrieved 2012-12-15
  3. Chandler, Matt, "Staff - The Village Church", The Village Church, retrieved 2015-12-15
  4. 1 2 Chandler, Matt, "Matt Chandler - Elder", The Village Church, retrieved 2012-12-15
  5. 1 2 3 4 Wishall, Garrett (22 February 2010), "'I am going to keep my face like flint toward the Lord and do what He has called me to do' – Matt Chandler", Towers, retrieved 2012-12-15
  6. Piper, John, Autobiography, Part 1, desiringGod, retrieved 2012-12-15
  7. Chandler, Matt (12 February 2009), "Thoughts Concerning Seminary", The Village Blog (The Village Church), retrieved 2012-12-15
  8. "Matt Chandler", The Resurgence, retrieved 2012-12-15
  9. 1 2 3 Driscoll, Mark, "Interview with Matt Chandler", The Resurgence, retrieved 2012-12-15
  10. Hansen, Collin (14 December 2009), "When the Pastor Suffers", Christianity Today, retrieved 2012-12-15
  11. Hodges, Sam (26 November 2010), "Young Pastor Turns Struggle with Cancer into Year of Teachable Moments", The Dallas Morning News, retrieved 2012-12-15
  12. Olsen, Ted (4 June 2010), "Matt Chandler: 'I Really Do Believe the Lord Has Healed Me'", Christianity Today, retrieved 2012-12-15
  13. Stetzer, Ed (March 28, 2012). "Matt Chandler Named New President of Acts 29". www.christianitytoday.com. Christianity Today. Retrieved July 23, 2013.
  14. http://theaquilareport.com/ecclesiology-of-the-new-calvinism/
  15. Chandler, Matt (11 August 2007), The Role of Men - Part 1: Defining Masculinity (PDF), retrieved 2012-12-15
  16. Chandler, Matt (19 August 2007), Role of Men - Part 2: Men as Husbands (PDF), retrieved 2012-12-15
  17. 'God Saves' – Matt Chandler
  18. 'What We Believe' – Sovereign Grace Ministries
  19. Chandler, Matt (2010-05-18). Matt Chandler on being a reformed charismatic. Interview with Adrian Warnock. Retrieved 2013-07-20.
  20. History of The Village Church, retrieved 2015-02-17
  21. What We Believe, retrieved 2012-12-15
  22. Chandler, Matt; Wilson, Jared (20 March 2012), The Explicit Gospel, Wheaton: Crossway, ISBN 978-1-4335-3003-6, retrieved 2012-12-15
  23. Holland, Adam (3 May 2012), "Review: The Explicit Gospel", RELEVANT magazine, retrieved 2012-12-15
  24. Chandler, Matt; Wilson, Jared (20 March 2012), The Explicit Gospel, Wheaton: Crossway, p. 90, ISBN 978-1-4335-3003-6, retrieved 2012-12-15
  25. Chandler, Matt; Patterson, Josh; Geiger, Eric (1 October 2012), Creature of the Word: The Jesus-Centered Church, Nashville: B&H Publishing Group, ISBN 978-1-4336-7862-2, retrieved 2012-12-15

External links

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