Is Ministry Harder
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Is
Ministry Harder today than it was 40 years ago?
by Keith Drury
There seem to a lot of
churches anxious to dump their pastor this year. And an almost-equal number of
pastors confess to being 'half-burned out' and are looking for a way of escape.
Perhaps I'm hearing about the worst cases, but it sure looks like pastoring is
tougher than it was 40 years ago. My pastor-father pretty much always expected a
'unanimous vote.' To him, a few 'no votes' meant it was time to move on. Not so
today. Pastors simply expect some opposition as part of the 'cost of doing
business.' What has changed? Why are church members more willing to criticize,
oppose, or vote against a pastor today?
Thirty years ago my pastor-father's
primary job was to pray, call on people, study, and preach. The pastor was
considered 'godly,' and even respectfully called 'preacher' or 'Reverend.' My
dad pastored the largest church is his area, but he didn't even have an office
in the church—he had a 'study' at home, and that's what he did there - study.
When people in town discovered that he was a minister they responded in an
almost hushed respect, and often with a discount. Not so today in the post-Swaggart/Bakker
era. Many ministers hide their identity now that the general respect for the
profession has sunk closer top the media, congressmen, and lawyers.
But we haven't just lost this spiritual aura in the world, it's slipped away in
the church too. I sometimes wonder if it is because of the change in what we
actually do now. Today's busy pastor has more in common with a YMCA director or
business manager than the preacher of the 1950's. Many of today's church offices
hum like an insurance agency, complete with a photocopy machine, computer,
office hours, and a paid secretary. The work of a pastor has changed from
praying, calling, study, reading, and sermon preparation to leadership and
managerial activities related to a sprawling church activities calendar. Laity
increasingly see us ministers as employed 'program managers' or 'church
administrators' more than 'prophets of God.' Does this make them more
comfortable criticizing our productivity, or 'firing a non-producer?' Have we
brought some of this on ourselves?
We ministers now swim with all the other management sharks, and sometimes pay
the same price for it. Many laymen on the board are better experts than the
pastor at these things, and we sometimes look bad, in spite of our decade's
reading of management books. Seldom does a pastor get the boot for being a poor
preacher or weak in fasting, but more often it is because he is a 'weak leader,'
or 'poor administrator.' Many pastors are totally out of his or her own area of
expertise. Certainly we can't turn back the clock. But has this massive change
in the nature of our work, gotten us into areas where we have little or no
seminary training, and eventually made us less effective at doing what we were
not trained to do? Hmmmmmmmmm...
People's expectations have changed too.
Members today expect excellence, quality, - even perfection. A pastor should be
likable, funny, a good organizer, great office manager, excellent people skills,
have good looking well-behaved kids, stay slim, dress well, be a 'good
communicator,' and be willing to work for considerably less than some of the
board members. Anything less, and some members get dissatisfied. The trouble is,
we ministers aren't perfect. (Neither is Robert Schuller if you saw him all
week.) People expect more today. And when they don't get it, they are willing to
oppose the pastor, maybe even try to 'run 'em off.' A pastor needs to be better
today—just to survive. If you aren't really good, you might not 'make the cut'
with some people. Its hard to be perfect when you're not.
Many pastors get ousted because they,
'made too many changes too fast.' We are right now going through a period of
massive change in worship styles. The wise old-timers always said, 'You can
change a lot of things, but when you mess with the worship style you're asking
for trouble.' Well, we've been messing with the morning worship service a lot
during these last ten years. And lots of people don't like it. Some of them are
willing to get even. They like the fact that you've changed what they've done in
worship for a thousand years (actually they've only been 15 years, they just
*think* their style was permanent.) Today's consumer-member knows what flavor
ice cream he or she wants, and if you can't serve that flavor, down the street
they'll go... or, more likely, down the street *you'll* go. We are seeing a lot
of this unrest because we have introduced too much change too fast.
Sure, we've always had carnal church
members. And, I know some people think the level of godliness is at an all-time
high in the church. I don't. So, I suspect that the general level of spiritual
shallowness and worldliness in the church has produced a good crop of the quack
grass of carnality. And its not all lay-carnality either.
I know, Jerry Falwell's
'moral majority' evaporated long ago. But the Moral Majority mothered a dozen
other movements committed to change society. For more than a decade evangelicals
have trained our people in the fine art of how to get your own way. We've taught
our people to use war terminology, power tactics, and organized protests to
attack the enemy. We've trained members how to organize, sign petitions, boycott
products, write congressmen, protest, organize and wield power to get what they
want. Could it be that they've learned the lesson too well? Is it possible that
we didn't recognize that we were teaching them a *method* of getting what they
want? And now this dog has turned and bit us in the rear end? I fear that many
churches have gotten better at effecting change through petitions, protest
letters, and power blocks than by engagement, discussion, compromise and prayer?
Are we now more at home with boycotts than the Bible? Organizing a 'no' vote,
than organizing a VBS?
I hope not. But from what I hear through my EMail, there is a tremendous amount
of turmoil in local churches. Not everywhere, mind you. But it will take a
considerable amount of evidence to persuade me that pastoring is not harder
today than it was 40 years ago.
But, then again, If today's ministry is harder, God certainly wouldn't leave us
high and dry would He? Won't He supply increasing grace to do it? He giveth more
grace when the burden s grow greater...
Is ministry more difficult than 40 years ago? Is it easier? How?
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By Keith Drury, You are free to transmit, duplicate or distribute this article for non-profit use without permission. You may view Keith Drury's website at Tuesday Columns. |
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Thursday May 04, 2006
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