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Thomas F. Fischer, M.Div., M.S.A., Editor
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The Antagonist's Greatest Weapon:
Pastoral Over-Function
Thomas F. Fischer, M.Div., M.S.A.
Number 56
- The unhealthy expectation the everything depends on the pastor. After all it's "his" church! So let him do it!
- Being required to be present at every single meeting sponsored by the church;
- Being the only one in the church who can pray out loud in groups;
- Investing too much time, talent and treasures to the church;
- Financially underwriting the church by personally paying its bills, subsidizing supplies, needs, and operational expenses;
- Taking it upon yourself for fixing mechanical failures or others things around the church;
- Doing items of regular maintenance on a regular basis (e.g. cleaning, mowing lawn, shoveling snow, cleaning the kitchen, maintaining the altar, et al);
- Being the watchdog who makes sure no one else makes mistakes;
- Being the head triangulator, i.e. the one designated to confront people for things other people are bothered by (but are too afraid to do it themselves);
- Being the one on whom all the tasks and responsibilities for outreach, stewardship, education, and every aspect of the church is exclusively placed;
- Having to make decisions which don't need to be made by "The Pastor" such as those items dealing with structure, maintenance, and aesthetic preferences.
- Being the one everyone looks to make decisions for them;
- Being the only one who is charge with recruitment and ensuring that every program is functioning perfectly;
And oh, so many, many more examples!
Why Pastoral Over-Functioning Is Reinforced
1) Positive organizational momentum;
2) Financial soundness;
3) Positive perception of staff relationships;
4) Organizational goals and expectations met;
5) Continued pastoral-over-function and the expectation that staff personnel and function will remain relatively stable and predictable;
6) No major financial surprises, unexpected setbacks, or changes in the physical property (e.g. maintenance items, building expansion, major church repairs, purchase or sale of parsonage, etc);
7) Maintaining sameness in the mission and vision for the church;
8) Honoring tradition and the status quo;
9) Congregational needs and expectations are met; and
10) The elected and un-elected leaders and patriarchs are present, active, and approving of the ministry and they voice such approval regularly and spontaneously.
They've Got You Now!
Take On The Antagonists--Within Boundaries!
- Make a diligent study of key resources of the Scriptural basis of the Office of the Ministry and it's relationship to lay ministry. Lutherans and other Christians will benefit from C.F.W. Walther's Church and Ministry (Concordia Publishing House), a standard for Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod pastors.
- Consult with your Circuit, Regional, District, and Synodical leaders and theologians regarding the appropriate exercise of ministry boundaries in the parish.
- Read Townsend and Cloud's landmark book entitled Boundaries: When to Say 'Yes', When to Say 'No' (Zondervan, 1992). It's simply one of the most remarkable discussions of appropriate boundaries from a Christian perspective. Read it--it may give you a life experience second only to the Christian conversion!
- If you're an Adult Child of an Alcoholic or Dysfunctional Family (ACOA/ACDF), be sure to get specific ACOA/ACDF counseling by an ACOA/ACDF counseling specialist to avoid codependent extremes (too permeable or impermeable) of healthy boundaries (cf. Ministry Health article 27)..
- When your boundaries are appropriately and Scripturally defined, take Jesus' advice from his greatest sermon: "Let your 'Yes' be 'Yes' and your 'No', 'No." Then stick to appropriate ministry styles and convictions pastorally, evangelically, genuinely and patiently.
Perhaps the absolute most important thing a pastor can do is to do as St. Paul did so often in the churches (e.g. Ephesus, Galatia, et al) and in his training of pastors and elders in the church (e.g. Pastoral Epistles): uphold the Office of the Ministry in a healthy, scriptural manner.
- Be prepared for resistance. Satan hates ministry boundaries and so do his antagonists. St. Paul paid a great personal price to uphold this doctrine during his painful--but fruitful--ministry (II Corinthians 11, Romans 5, Philippians 4, et al). Jesus died for it. You may not have to be crucified, but you may be called to take up the cross..
- Don't line up for martyrdom or self-pity. Just be appropriately prepared. Start building supportive coping relationships immediately (cf. Ministry Health Article #14 "Five Types Of Coping Relationships").
- Trust Jesus' promise to Build His Church. He has, He does, and He shall build His church. It's guaranteed. It's His will. It's His promise. Trust Him to do it in your ministry!
- Don't be what one of my ministry brethren calls an "S.O.B." ("Super Orthodox Brother"). Such doctrinal extremism, promoted by pastors under the banner of "orthodoxy," may really be evidence of ACOA/ACDF or other unresolved personal issues. Build trust not enmity!
- Don't be a sexist! The Scripture has placed well-defined boundaries of the service of both men and women in the church. Don't deny either gender the full and appropriate blessing of God for service in His church as Scripture has defined it..
- Don't expect instant miracles! Other than conversion itself, the biggest changes in the church and peoples' lives don't come about instantly. Start slowly, sensitively, but deliberately. The process of education, information, examination and re-formation of boundaries can take years in any parish.
- Remember, it doesn't all depend on you. Let's God's Word do what God determines for it and humbly get out the way! Isaiah 52, et al.). Faithfully minister God's Word in this critical area as far as God determines to destroy, to plant, or to build" (Jeremiah 1:6ff).
- Introduce a variety of fresh approaches (short and long term) to study appropriate scriptural boundaries for pastoral and lay ministry in the context of renewal.
- Lead adults through Cloud and Townsend's video series based on his book, Boundaries . As parishioners discover and apply appropriate boundaries in their personal lives, they are more likely to translate and apply the concept of healthy boundaries into the congregation's ministry, too.
- Don't force the "Office of Ministry" stuff down the congregation's throat, "lord" if over them, or hold it out on your sleeve. If you're going to do that with any doctrine, do with the Doctrine of Justification by Grace. Instead, recognize that parishioners will likely be most receptive to instruction on healthy ministry boundaries and the related doctrinal issues when they see it presented by a healthy-boundaried servant-based pastor.
- Start creating an environment for diversity in ministry and the celebration of gifts in the congregation. Find some important areas of neglected ministry and gather leaders together to organize task forces to effectively deal with them. When they've effectively completed their task, celebrate them! (And don't be a perfectionist. They'll never do it exactly like you wanted! Could be a boundary problem ).
- Don't expect the "old timers" to get on board. They're likely entrenched in their boundary patterns--whether they're healthy or unhealthy. Keep affirming and ministering to them in the best and most appropriate way possible.
- Recruit new members with the understanding of appropriate boundaries. Translated into practice, this means to share with them the vision that if they join the church, they should join the church with the expectation to make a positive difference in the church. They should also expect to experience the spiritual growth to which God calls them. Train them right right from the beginning! (Hmmm, isn't that what the "experts" are saying that "Baby Boomers" and "Generation X'ers" want? The real secret is that every healthy and growing Christian wants to make a difference. Give them an opportunity in your church!)
- Celebrate those people who have made a positive difference in the congregation's ministry. Celebrate them publicly, celebrate them privately, celebrate them repeatedly in every genuine way you can. As people see how others are making a difference worth celebrating, they'll respond too! You just can't celebrate them enough! The real joy comes when they start encouraging and celebrating each other!
- Expect and deal with the almost inevitable jealousy which may arise from those threatened by the celebration of others. Yes, celebrate those laggardly dinosaur organizations and individuals in any genuine way you can even though they may have outlived their purpose, vision, etc. and have no desire to change. You'll probably (but not always) get sweeter results with honey than with hot pepper. No, you probably can't change them, but you may influence one or two of them and energize a homophilous communication network in your favor or at least not to your destruction. The rest of the work of persuasion you'll just have to give to God. He's had a lot more experience with the stubborn, stiff-necked and proud than you'll ever have!
- Don't "find every need and fill it." You can't. Neither can your church. If you do try, you and your leaders are only exposing your lack of boundaries. Focus your congregation's ministry on specific areas that you can and will fill...then do so prayerfully and passionately seeking the Lord's blessing.
- Use denominational staff and others to lead seminars, retreats, training sessions, etc. to help your leaders develop vision statements, philosophy of ministry, objective, goals, etc. These should all be designed and directed toward a healthier understanding and implementation of appropriate ministry goals in the church. Be sure to seek congregational ownership and involvement in the process. Then publicize it widely. These steps certainly won't stop any potential resulting conflict. But these steps may give the type of critical widespread support needed to manage the process over time through "thick and thin."
- Respect the principles of change throughout this process. They will help you to follow Jesus' advice, "Be as wise as serpents and innocent as doves." See the Ministry Health article #42, "Five Principles of Change" for helpful insights and suggestions.
- Don't do it alone! Work with and through your most trusted leaders initially. Help them through the transformation first. As they help, they will be challenged to an enhanced understanding and implementation of healthy boundaries in their respective areas of ministry. Isn't that a healthy modeling strategy!
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This page was revised on: Tuesday, October 05, 2004 11:02:20 PM |