Friday, March 11, 2011

a pastor

I am encouraged (once again) by Eugene Peterson's reflections on pastoral ministry. Commenting on the high rate of people leaving ministry, and of churches desiring more effective or successful "leaders" he writes:

I wonder if at the root of the defection is a cultural assumption that all leaders are people who “get things done,” and “make things happen.” That is certainly true of the primary leadership models that seep into our awareness from the culture – politicians, businessmen, advertisers, publicists, celebrities, and athletes. But while being a pastor certainly has some of these components, the pervasive element in our two-thousand year pastoral tradition is not someone who “gets things done” but rather the person placed in the community to pay attention and call attention to “what is going on right now” between men and women, with one another and with God – this kingdom of God that is primarily local, relentlessly personal, and prayerful “without ceasing.”

(The Pastor, Eugene Peterson, p. 5)

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