Writings
- Merciful
Pastor Randy Nabors understands poverty. He grew up in the projects of Newark, New Jersey, before he and his wife Joan were called to a life of ministering to people in need. Merciful was written to help those involved in mercy ministry to understand the need for those who are locked into generational poverty to be brought out of it through a discipling relationship that changes a poverty value system into an aspirational one. The book is divided into six sections so it is a combination of autobiography, theology, and methodology in helping to bring people out of poverty.
In Merciful, Nabors offers a practical set of guidelines and recommendations to help the poor. He bases his proven methods not on charity or pity, but on biblical mercy.
Charity only provides for the immediate needs of the poor—a noble goal, but not one that helps over the long term. Mercy guides people as they learn to help themselves, allowing them to develop meaningful, rewarding lives free of the shackles of poverty.
Merciful begins with Nabors’s own experience with poverty and how it shaped his ministry and views. He examines the problem of poverty from both a theological and philosophical standpoint, focusing on practical, long-term strategies to help the poor. Along the way Nabors tackles the many issues surrounding poverty, discussing what helps rather than what merely enables, and the limitations of government and nonprofit assistance.
A committed, caring congregation of Christian believers can end the cycle of impoverishment and permanently improve the lives of the disenfranchised. Randy Nabors can show you how.
- Insufficent
Insufficient challenges pastors to look at their work in its varied complexity while recognizing the need and demand to increase competency in skills.
Pastors must admit their “insufficiency.” Nabors does not shy away from calling pastors to realize there is more than meets the eye in pursuing ministry. A right pursuit of orthodoxy has sometimes blinded pastors to what has been left out, namely the articulation of orthopraxis. Pastors need Christian good works, especially justice and mercy. This orthopraxis is an essential part of any true, orthodox theology.This work is daunting and difficult. Insufficient calls pastors to a dependence on the grace and power of the Holy Spirit, who alone is able to make competent pastors of the Gospel. Nabors provides insights, advice, and pragmatic wisdom from more than forty years of ministry experience.