Categories
Pastor's Life

Pep talk to pastors

Pep talk to pastors:
(a) struggling with the difficult of decision-making amidst the uncertainty of the pandemic,
(b) seeing high profile Christians act nothing like Jesus,
(c) with members snippy and outraged about our world,
(d) missing wholesome social interaction:
1. Be faithful. Have integrity. Teach the Bible. Pray. Care for people. The social science is clear that church involvement does indeed form people morally. And community participation helps health outcomes. What you do matters. Keep going.
2. Pay attention to the needs of the people who live nearby. With regard to poverty: partner with local organizations and government. Be a master of directing the needy to the resources that can help them. Then fill the gaps. And advocate for better resources for them.
With regard to a deficit of knowledge: people need content on the history of race in the US, why Christian faith is intellectually plausible, analysis of other social issues, relationship help, addiction info, and most of all, from the Bible, how to live as a follower of Jesus.
3. *Do* discuss ideas together as a board and as a church staff. Brainstorm ideas and try to anticipate whether the ideas will work. Listen, reflect.
BUT, there are few perfect initiatives. It is healthy to discuss, try something, and appreciate the limited success the idea had.
4. Fame, money, and size are not what determine whether an idea or person or organization was effective. Individuals and little groups do much good. They are light in a dark world. Joy is also often there. The world is not as it seems! Blessed are the little people (Matthew 5-7)!
Categories
Pastor's Life Sociology

Pastors generally happy with families, finances, preaching. Less with health, administration, world.

A nice little report here on how pastors are feeling about their lives and work. 

 

Andy Rowell ‏@AndyRowell  Nov 12Minneapolis, MN

Pastors generally happy with families, finances, preaching. Less with health, administration, world. http://www.christianitytoday.com/le/2015/fall/how-are-you-pastor-really.html … @davidkinnaman

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Categories
Evangelism Pastor's Life

These Christians interface with the world more than pastors: Writers, artists, activists

I have been thinking about how as a pastor my job was to help bring people on the margins of the church community closer to the center. It is the job of lay people who interact on a daily basis or through their vocations with outsiders to be an interesting example of a Christian to outsiders. Perhaps pastors should not beat themselves up about not interacting more with non-Christians. This is easy for most of their congregants! Are these not different roles to a large extent? That is not to say pastors should have no non-Christian friends but is not their job to help occasional attenders to get connected? 

 

  1. That certain ingrown evangelical pattern of speaking, thinking, writing . . . Is there any hope of communicating outside the church?

     
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    @editordanreid Pastors feel bad about distance from outsiders. http://www.christianitytoday.com/le/2015/fall/how-are-you-pastor-really.html … The role of lay people? Francis Collins/Spufford.

     
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    @editordanreid Tim Keller has had some success in reaching outside–quoted by David Brooks. Philip Yancey says artists, activists effective.

     
     
     
    3:28 PM – 12 Nov 2015 · Details
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    @AndyRowell Yes, there are successful ones. I was just reading something & thinking how it wouldn't reach my "nones" friends.

     
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