Confessions of a Missional Pastor (Wannabe?) - Looking Back on Some Frustrations With Time

Being a Missional pastor ain't easy. There are inevitable compromises. No matter how hard you try, you end up spending less time on the things you really are passionate about (i.e. mission) and more time on things you value less (i.e. organization). You wonder some days if you really are pastoring missionally or whether indeed you've succumbed to surviving the church machine? On this 4th day of Christmas, before the Western Calendar New Year begins, here's a look back on the last ten years of missional pastoring, wishing for more time on some things, and less on others.

Over the past several years of church planting I wish I had done the following:

1. Spend less time writing sermons, more time listening and speaking truth relationally lovingly into people's lives. My goal, when I am preaching, is to never spend more than twelve hours a week writing sermons. Preaching the Word is important. It takes skill and practice. Yet the sermon is for speaking truth over people's lives, not for entertainment. Sometimes the "entertainment" piece takes too much extra work. The sermon proclaims the true reality as it is under the Lordship of Christ and calls people into Him. It is my opinion the reason why sermon prep takes so much time is that often pastors place too much self-importance into it. How many hours a week do you spend on sermon prep?

2. Spend less time reading-writing on leadership and more time walking with/mentoring young leaders, speaking into their lives, having them with you when you minister, in the hospital, in the coffee house… in the homes, in the neighborhoods. I am finding less and less time to do this but am aiming to make for more. How much time do you spend mentoring leadership? It is absolutely essential to missional community.

3. Spend less time planning the worship gathering - more time in silence before God on a quiet hill overlooking the missionfield of NW Suburbs (this place is Walter Payton Hill - Arlington Hts.) Sunday morning gathering is liturgy. It has its moving parts. It is people coming together organically to be centered in God thru Jesus Christ thereby being re-centered for Mission Dei. My theory is, that even if everyone who was participating in the service somehow came up sick 5 minutes before service, everything should be able to go smoothly. This makes possible more time for mission. How much time/energy does your church spend on the worship gathering?

4. Spend more time with the children, less time programming "entertainment with pizza." This last comment is about youth/children's programs as commonly conceived. We actually don't center children's formation on entertainment. We center it around relationships. The former is a proven failed and flawed strategy for discipling our youth into a walk with Jesus. I have found when I spend time with children they teach me more (in one way) than I end up teaching them.

5. Spend less time in meetings, more time in the neighborhood. This is a constant struggle for me. To me, the organization of the church should be located in the congregation, carried on in the gifts. We need gather only for a few meetings a year for accountability financially. I recognize several folk disagree with me. How do you go abouit managing necessary meetings?

6. Spend less time in meetings figuring out details to make things work better, and more time in meetings where we ask "what is God doing?" where is He working? How can we encourage, edify, build up, flourish this ministry? Our Wednesday night meeting (every other week) with leaders vacillates on this. We have to intentionally steer away from handling details in this meeting.

7. Spend less time trying to please Christians, more time trying to minister to the hurting, lost and poor outside of Christ. This one is hard. But all in all, I think I could have done better on this one over the years. Please tell me I am not the only one who has struggled with this?

8 Spend less time answering bizarre twisted questions about outlier doctrines, and more time sharing the vision of what church, community, mission and transformational life can be together as we join together to participate in this great life God has given us. Nonetheless doctrine is essential. How do you discern where to draw the line?

9 Spend less time worrying about numbers and less time filling out forms (OK. To be honest, we don't really do much of this anymore). Spend more time with people, just hanging out in life together.

10. Spend less time frantically trying to catch up with all the words I have to write and deliver any given week as a pastor, writer and professor, and spend more time praying, taking long walks, thinking praying, letting the Spirit speak in silence, the situation at hand, the Scripture I just read and studied. Nothing feeds my creativity and strengthens my Spirit like prayer … on a long walk. What spiritual formation practices keep you from drying up inside with God?

COMMENTS:

Blogger Darryl said...

This is profound, David. You describe some of the tensions I'm living with. Thanks for this. I plan to re-read it and and reflect on it - there's lots here to wrestle with.

10:40 AM

 
Anonymous traveller said...

Especially, with regard to numbers 1 through 6 can one actually ever succeed at making that transition so long as their is an institution/organization approach to the ekklesia? This seems to be the underlying question that only a few followers of Jesus are asking and searching to understand.

8:28 PM

 
Anonymous davefaulkner said...

Thank you, very challenging. I've just linked to this on my blog.

10:59 AM

 
Blogger joe said...

not that it helps you. but it helps me to know i am not the only one with these tensions.

11:17 AM

 
Blogger Makeesha said...

joe - I'm with you - all I can say really David is that I relate and to let your readers know that as a missional leader, I think you're spot on with all of this and it's all so true ime.

11:34 AM

 
Blogger Adam Copeland said...

I'm with you, but it's so hard to bring the resolutions to fruition. Strangely, I would love to have your struggles as it would mean our congregation would have moved so far.

Until then, I suppose, I can work on having your good ideas seem less foreign to my particular flock.

-A Wee Blether

12:32 PM

 
Blogger Scott said...

less time blogging, more time living...

6:00 PM

 
Anonymous Ben Sternke said...

Really helpful, David. Thanks. Especially #3 - as we begin to form what liturgy looks like for our community, one of the guiding values we're striving for is sustainability - it's so easy to put all the eggs in the worship service basket and then end up spending all your time planning it because you've set the performance bar so high. At the same time I want a simplicity in the liturgy, I also want beauty, which sometimes does take some time and effort. So I'd love to hear further thoughts on this. Looking forward to Saturday's "commons".

6:56 AM

 
Blogger Pastor Rod said...

David,

Amen. This philosophy requires us pastors to get off the ego-driven merry-go-round and focus on what really matters.

I would recommend the following book to any pastors who are trying to or who want to make this transition: The Art of Pastoring: Comtemplative Reflections, by William C. Martin.

Rod Pickett

11:59 AM

 
Anonymous Mike said...

David,

Great post. To me it all boils down to three things. Firstly GOD's glory, second being with GOD, last being with people.

7:30 PM

 
Blogger Ms. Mize said...

Thank you for the post! I enjoyed number 8 particularly. I have been thinking about it lately. Why does the church let small differences in beliefs divide us? When we get to heaven, I think we are going to see how minute these differences were and realize how much we could have accomplished together. I will have to ponder where I draw the line more.

8:37 AM

 
Blogger preacherman said...

David,
Excellent post brother.
More time living the life of Jesus. Let's unplug and be missional great idea....ummm....it might be a head habit to break but I can get out, get in the hood, get real with the people, show them the grace of Chris throught the power of the Holy Spirit, and be the missional person that God has called me to be. Again excellent post brother, fantastic!!!!!!!! One of my callings is to encourage the brothers who are blogging and starting emerging churches, doing ministry, and other things that God desires. But God bless your work in the name of Holy Spirit!

2:29 PM

 
Anonymous DeknMike said...

Excellent post. Especially 7 & 8.

And 4. When we program happy times with kids, do we shortchange their spiritual growth. Do we set in motion the seeds of a disappearing generation when they graduate High School?

I do have to disagree with #5. True, having a meeting just to have a meeting to give the appearance of activity. But regular 10-minute meetings to check up on one another are crucial. We tell each other what we can't get done right now so someone else can backfill, so the schedule doesn't get in the way of the shared ministry.

8:31 PM

 

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