I started to comment on Brother Maynard’s blogpost pointing to Sally Morgenthaler’s article in Leadership Journal. Both are very good. But I realized that my comment was a post of its own and I shouldn’t be hogging the good Brother’s space.
You’ll need to read Sally Morgenthaler’s article, or give it a good skim, before this makes sense. But I’ve been thinking about this whole idea of professional pastorate for some time now. I’m not sure that having professional pastors is necessarily wrong, but I am sure that how churches treat those pastors in some cases is. I am certain that for too long we have used a few key Scripture references to force pastors, and folks who are in paid ministry positions, and their families to live up to impossible levels of sin free behavior. (I also think we do this to Presidents and politicians, but that’s another story.)
I have good friends for whom Sally’s story would resonate. With a key difference being that their marriage has managed to stay whole. I have other friends who have left ministry positions simply because the pressure to perform outweighed their calling. We have, in many perverse manners, managed to take the simple heart of a shepherd and twist it, mangle it, stretch it, and turn it until the position is no longer recognizable. Those who are in ministry, more than any other, need friends in their local faith community with whom they can be vulnerable without fear of retribution. Without fear of losing face, or God, or love, or community. Without fear … period. But we humans have removed that safety net from them.
What’s that verse in John 15? We’ll be known by our love? Or something like that.