So what does the average seminarian actually
know how to do when he enters the ministry?
Notice, I didn’t ask how much he knows.
He probably knows more than he will ever actually make use of in
ministry to real people, or even in ministry to himself. Depending on the Presbytery that examines him
he will probably be pressed to know a great many facts and details about all
kinds of things theological, historical, and hermeneutical.
The candidate for ordination will be force fed
with knowledge, and then squeezed like a lemon, so that the committee can
examine him to the point of dripping out of him everything they can, up to the
limits of his knowledge. They will take
him to the edge of his learning, and God help him if that edge is too far from
the expectations of the committee. The
gulf between expectations and his deficiencies will not be easily tolerated,
let alone any shaky, suspicious opinions, or convictions. If found wanting he will be sent back for
more study, and possibly for a few persuasion sessions.
Studying is in fact what he knows how to
do, and what the members of the Examining Committee know how to do. This is what he will do to his
disciples, and to any potential new officers; he will make them study. And when it comes to any kind of hands on
work of ministry, he will endeavor to study that as well on his way to actually avoiding it. It is hard to learn from pastors these days,
unless one has time for more study. If
one wanted to be mentored by a pastor, to catch some ministry skills he might
be modelling, well, one would have to sit quietly while he reads, or uses some
kind of software study material, or as he listens to a sermon series by a
prominent scholar; that is if the student wanted to emulate the skills of his
pastor.
If one were to ask a seminary where the
practical training comes in they might answer that they are in fact not a Bible
College or Institute that teaches “ministry.”
Or they might say that is what internships are for, where they send
recent graduates to learn from recent graduates who have no practical
experience either, except in preaching on Sunday morning. It is hard to learn ministry skills from pastors
who are still learning theirs on the job, or have settled for a new definition
of the job that has conveniently left off the skills of evangelism, home visitation,
hospital visitation, prison preaching, doing acts of mercy and good works, and
even counseling or conflict resolution.
If such pastors are planting churches and
asked to train new Elders and Deacons they repeat for them what they learned
how to do in seminary. Yes, they
challenge them to study. They give them
as much theology, doctrine, apologetics, Catechism, and Book of Church Order
material as these lay people can absorb.
They don’t necessarily teach them how to pray, or how to have a good
argument in a meeting without getting mad and quitting the church, or how to
handle a divorce case, or how to go on a mercy visit, or how to mobilize the
laity to do ministry in the community, or how to design and organize various
outreach kinds of ministry, or how to handle the pressure of marriage and child
raising while feeling obligated to keep ordination vows and serve the church.
Internships are not for a student to become
a gopher for the church staff, or to be saddled with a particular ministry
(such as nursery or Jr. High) that everyone else seems to be avoiding. It is specifically to rotate him through
essential skills; how to evangelize and share his faith actively and on purpose
with strangers, how to visit widows, the elderly, the sick, and those in
prison, how to prepare and execute a worship service, wedding, and funeral, how
to moderate and help make effective a leader’s meeting, how to problem solve
and deal with conflict on every level (other staff, Elders, Deacons, members
and attenders), and how to cast vision for ministry. He needs to do these things with and in the
company of the Senior pastor and other leaders so he can hear their reflections
and see their reactions in ministry context.
Internships are to help a potential pastor
realize if he has a work ethic or not, if he knows how to set boundaries for
himself and his family as he does ministry, and if he has the capacity and
willingness to sacrifice himself and his boundaries for the sake of the
Gospel. Internships should set up new
pastors for the reality that one will often need more people, more money, and
more time to get the simplest programs off the ground. This reality will help new pastors learn the
joy of frustration and anxiety, and be tempted to reach the heights of
resentment and despair as no one seems to give a rip about his new idea. Where will the volunteers come from, and
where will the resources come from? Oh
yes, this is where interns learn the practical realities of faith and prayer,
and that God makes things happen out of resources that aren’t yet seen.
Without practical training experiences
pastors will continue to be woefully unprepared to really train their members
for ministry, and they will continue to avoid those experiences because it
means risk, and time, which could be better spent in ….study. Without passing practical skills to the people of the church then those church members will have no way of showing the love of God to the people of the world, or of learning how to get to those people and communicate the Gospel to them.
May the Lord raise up
among us great training pastors, who take potential leaders into practical
ministry and teach them skills by doing, reflection, and re-doing!
END.
Rev. Nabors,
ReplyDeleteThank you for this. This has been on my heart a lot recently. As a young(ish) TE serving in Uganda, this has been at the heart of what I am trying to do. I need this for myself. I will be in Chattanooga soon and would love to chat with you about this.
Blessings.