
Iām in my forty-third year of credentialed ministry and you might say Iāve been around the block. No, I havenāt seen it all but Iāve sure seen a lot. Iāve been a pastor of two congregations and interim pastor of a third while at the same time serving as an appointed Bishop giving oversight to a region. Iāve spent a lot of time analyzing various kinds of situations and who knows, some may have thought that I could have used a little analyzing myself.
While I certainly havenāt worked with every kind of circumstance a minister may face, Iāve sure dealt with a lot of them. Specifically reviewing the early years of my time in ministry, Iām drawn to this conclusion about myself and itās probably not so different from your experience also and that is this:
āI was much more prepared and equipped for preaching than I was the ministry.ā
Yes, you read that correctly and no, preaching and ministry are not always one in the same.
āI was much more prepared and equipped for preaching than I was the ministry.ā
You may be able to āpreach the paint off the wallā or you may be a Camp Meeting walking around on two legs every time you get up, but for several reasons, you are possibly failing to find pleasure in day to day ministry. Youāre missing the joy, not because you dislike the people you serve or the community you serve them in but because you may be ill-prepared to walk through the mine fields that surround you each and every day.
You learned homiletics, hermeneutics, a lot of Greek and a little Latin, but nobody taught a class in āhot-headedā board member control. Maybe you graduated with a BA in Biblical Interpretation but you donāt have a clue of how to interpret a budget.
Challenges
Let me lay out all the disclaimers. We are scripturally obligated to apply ourselves to biblical study-wherever and however we obtain it, itās a must (2 Timothy 2:15). Thatās a given. However, equipping yourself only for preaching wonāt guarantee you long-term success.
...equipping yourself only for preaching wonāt guarantee you long-term success.
There are recent challenges to the old statistics that used to indicate that as many as 1,700 pastors per month leave the ministry. Who really knows? The truth is, if it was only one and that one was you, then it was one too many.
Some pastors live only for Sunday. Preaching is the fulfilling and even āfunā part of the job. They engage in everything else they do the rest of the week because thatās what allows them to get to do what many preachers really enjoyāpreaching.
Overcoming The Statistics
So the question becomes, āHow does one avoid becoming a statistic?ā
We all know the obvious and expected answers that include a consistent prayer and devotional life. Certainly, those are paramount, but here are some other helpful practices you might want to take note of in order to have a better shot at longevity.
- Keep Falling in Love with your Spouse-You canāt risk ruining your marriage to a competing affair with the church.
- Find a Mentor and Coach. Sometimes theyāre one in the same and sometimes theyāre not. You havenāt learned it all. Someone, somewhere knows more about succeeding and even surviving in ministry than you do, it doesnāt matter how big your church is.
- Find a Confidant-It may or may not be a mentor. You need someone you can talk to that wonāt be ātalking youā to someone else when youāre finished. Thatās why theyāre called āConfidants.ā You can confide in them. Donāt be reckless, however. Choose carefully and responsibly.
- Learn to Successfully Manage Expectations-Yours and the expectations of others as well.
Managing Expectations
This is a tough one. Most of the time, you just canāt live up to yourself and the self-imposed image of success and achievement you have conjured up. Neither can you live up to what others expect you to be and do most of the time. Too often we expect too much out of our limited abilities and live in a constant state of ālet down.ā Comparing your gifts and talents to others will most assuredly complicate matters as well.
Unfortunately, Pentecostal preachers seem to be especially prone to over-analyzing their pulpit performance week after week.
Years ago when I first started speaking in Camp Meetings and conventions, a noted minister said to me one night, āTim, always remember youāre only as good as your last Camp Meeting sermon.ā That was back when the same speaker preached night after night in the same Camp Meeting.
He meant well and I understood the point he was making. However, his statement worked on me for several years. For a good while, I found myself striving to dig for āCamp Meeting Goldā rather than resting more in knowing that I had heard from God about my sermons and how to deliver them. Regardless of the delivery, crowd response or acceptance, hearing from God and pleasing Him was enough. It more than enough both then and now.
Managing expectations is a subject that few have written about and fewer know how to practice. But the day you learn the art of managing expectations is the day you will start enjoying ministry as much, if not more than preaching itself.
...the day you learn the art of managing expectations is the day you will start enjoying ministry as much, if not more than preaching itself.
Lessons Learned
I know this, at the start, while my preaching seemed to mature at a fair pace, it took me a while to learn ministry. The first church I tried to lead in Texas didnāt nearly get the pastor my second church got years later in Virginia. By then I had learned a few things about ministry.
Among the best lessons that got me ready for ministry:
- My family was my most Important congregation.
- My own personal discipleship happens every day.
- The Church is Godās not mine.
- The best thing I can do for the Church is to take care of my own Life-Spirit, Body, Emotions, Family, etc.
- People can disagree with me and still Love me.
- People will behave in ways that I must not take personally.
- Real success canāt be judged only by my pulpit performance.
- I should never apologize for resting and taking time away.
- Everyone doesnāt like me or my preaching and thatās ok.
- I must never stop learning.
- I should never be afraid to ask for help.
- I should laugh often and be tender enough to cry when it helps.
- I am not defined by peopleās praise or criticism.
- I must not mistake perfectionism for excellence. Theyāre not the same. Perfectionism can lead to an early grave while excellence honors the Lord.
- I must never allow the thought of failure to paralyze me.
Conclusion
And so it goes. If preaching was all that any of us did, I guess it would be a much simpler life, though not a very fulfilling one. I honestly canāt tell you of a sermon Iāve preached that was solely responsible for growing any church Iāve ever served. Being faithful in all things with consistency and balanced living is what people should always remember and what you must strive for.
Letās Talk About It.
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