Pastoring Is Always Personal: Is This Good News or Bad News?

But, you knew this was coming, the personal nature of pastoral ministry can also lead to great heartache. If you simply share the Gospel with people from a safe emotional distance, if you merely dispense truth without opening your life to people, if you lead like a dispassionate CEO, then you will be fairly safe. Your people won't be able to hurt you. But if you care for them like a nursing mother cares for her children, if, like Paul and his team, you share not just the Gospel but also your own soul with your congregation, then you are vulnerable. You can and, I'm sorry to say, you will be hurt.

Sometimes the hurt happens from a distance. A family you poured your life into decides to leave your church without evening telling you. You hear through the grapevine that one of your leaders said mean things about you—and so forth and so on.

Sometimes the hurt happens at close range. I will never forget the time a member of my church came to see me, bringing along an elder "for her protection." But she hardly needed protecting in our conversation. For what seemed like an eternity, she chronicled my failings as a pastor, some of which were true, many of which were not. She finished her speech by saying bluntly, "The bottom line is that you are simply not a loving person. You are not a loving person." The dagger of her words pierced my heart.

On another occasion, the pain came when a beloved brother in Christ, one with whom I had shared countless hours fellowship and ministry, chose to leave the church over something that seemed to me relatively unimportant. Nothing I could do would change his mind. He was set on leaving, as if our years of friendship, mutual prayer, and shared ministry counted for nothing. For months afterward, my heart ached every time I thought of him. Today, I don't feel much pain, but I do have a lingering sadness over the way our lives parted.

So, the good news is that the personal nature of pastoring will lead to some of the richest and most meaningful moments in your life. The bad news is that it will lead to some of the saddest and most painful moments in your life.

Surely it would easier, safer, and perhaps even more successful to do pastoral ministry in a less personal way. But such an approach stumbles over the example and teaching of Paul & Co. in 1 Thessalonians. Moreover, an impersonal pastorate hardly reflects the way God does pastoral ministry: in Bethlehem, in Capernaum, in the Garden of Gethsemane, on Golgotha, and on the shores of the Sea of Galilee.

12/15/2011 5:00:00 AM
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  • Mark Roberts
    About Mark Roberts
    Mark D. Roberts is Senior Director and Scholar-in-Residence for Laity Lodge, a retreat and renewal ministry in Texas. He blogs at Patheos and writes daily devotionals at www.thehighcalling.org, and he can also be followed through Twitter and Facebook.