Meet Our Pastor and
First Lady
So Pastors Only Work on Sundays?
"Pastor, you're lucky," they'll say. "You only
have to work on Sundays. What do you do for a living?"
I don't take it personally any more. Most
people really don't know. Just what is a pastor anyway? What does a
pastor do?
Shepherd
"Pastor" is a Latin word that means "shepherd."
The ancient Hebrews--Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob--were a sheep and goat
herding people who moved from place to place to find fresh pasture.
Consequently, the Israelites understood responsibility for sheep. They
called their leaders "shepherds of the nation."
Shepherds are a flock's first line of defense
against danger. David in the Bible once risked his life by taking on a
lion and a bear single-handed to protect his sheep--and won. When a
sheep gets lost, the shepherd will scour the hills to find it. Shepherds
care for the injured, assist at lambing, and constantly watch for
strays. Shepherds lead their flocks to fresh grasslands and water to
keep them well nourished.
David, whom God promoted from hillside flocks
to Israel's throne, applied this image to God himself.
The Lord is my Shepherd, I shall not be in
want, He makes me lie down in green pastures, He leads me beside quiet
waters, He restores my soul.... Even though I walk through the valley of
the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, For You are with me. Your rod
and your staff, they comfort me.[1]
Jesus said, "I am the Good Shepherd. The Good
Shepherd lays down his life for the sheep."[2] That's what the cross is
all about.
Local church pastors are under-shepherds of
God's smaller flocks, but you can see they have pretty big shoes to
fill. Just what do pastors do in today's world?
Worship
The most visible part of a pastor's job is
leading the church in worship on Sunday mornings. Designing worship that
lifts people towards God involves several hours each week. To give a
provocative and helpful message entails another six to ten hours of
careful preparation; if preaching looks easy it's due to long hours
spent in study. The typical pastor is called on to preach or teach at
least twice more each week, with several hours needed to prepare each
time. Unlike school teachers who can reuse lesson plans year after year,
a pastor's material has to be fresh, up-to-date, and tailored for the
particular needs of people. No repeating.
Counseling
You've seen pastors conduct weddings. While the
service may last twenty minutes, the pre-marital counseling takes a
minimum of four to six hours. Funerals often involve lots of time in
comforting and counseling the bereaved.
Pastors are no strangers to hospital rooms and
intensive care units. We spend a good deal of time with those facing
surgery or serious illnesses. Pastors are representatives of the God who
says, "I will never leave your or forsake you."
Pastors are sometimes called the "poor man's
psychiatrist." Counseling is part of our professional training, and we
get plenty of practice, though we don't charge $60 to $90 per fifty
minutes. In fact, we don't charge at all. We're called on to help wives
and husbands patch together troubled marriages, and to counsel families
whose children are in trouble. We do a good bit of career and job
counseling for people between positions and we're often used as a
sounding board when people are trying to sort through a particularly
tough decision.
Developers
Pastors are organizers, too, especially when a
new church starts from scratch. We're entrepreneurs for God, if you
will. If you've ever managed a business or been president of an
organization, you have some idea of what's involved. Groups accomplish a
lot more with a structure of tasks and responsibilities--and careful
planning. Pastors attend lots of team meetings.
But our role doesn't stop at organizational
management. Pastors seek to discover the unique and special gifts of
each member, and then endeavor to help that person recognize and develop
these gifts. We see you as God's minister; it's as if we're working
ourselves out of a job. Teaching, coaching, modeling, and on-the- job
training are all part of this. Corporations call it human resources
development.
As churches grow, they add staff--both
volunteer and paid--to meet the increasing needs of the congregation:
custodians, secretaries, youth ministers, music directors, childcare
workers. Then we're involved in the personnel functions of interviewing,
hiring, supervising, etc.
Administration
In some churches a pastor will wear a few more
hats still, until members of the congregation step up to assume their
own ministries. Writing, editing, typing, copying, labeling, bundling,
and mailing a church newsletter, for example, takes hours and hours.
Then there's a bulletin to prepare each week, numerous letters to send,
and correspondence to answer. Since a church is a corporation, there are
legal and tax forms to file. Though there's a treasurer, the pastor may
have to help decide which bills to pay and which to hold until enough
money comes in. Fund raising usually falls on our shoulders, too.
Administration is invisible but indispensable.
Called To Serve
High-living televangelists to the contrary,
pastors aren't in it for the money. Not hardly. Many pastors start by
paying off the debts of four years of college and three years of
graduate school. With the kind of education and the skills pastors
possess, in secular work they might double or triple the salary they
earn in a church. Yet many choose to take second and third jobs to
subsidize their salary so they can continue to follow God's call--to
care for His sheep, for you. Pastors typically put in 60 to 70 hours per
week. For money? No. Because God has called them to serve.
Spiritual Leader
I've left the most important until last: a
pastor's primary role is as a "spiritual coach" to help each member to
develop a personal relationship with God and learn how to serve God in
his or her own personal ministry.
All this takes place behind the scenes--in
living rooms and restaurants, at workplaces and backyard BBQs--amidst
life's routines and its most grueling crises. "Why did this happen to
me, pastor?" "I'm afraid, what should I do?" "How can I become a real
Christian?" "How can Justin and I stay together after this?"
We pray for you, for each member of our flock,
and God answers us.
Pastors are not off in some ivory tower. We are
with you on the front lines of life, grappling with the core issues of
our common existence.
I know that Hollywood depicts pastors as wimps,
as losers. But I can tell you we partake of a satisfaction and joy that
far outweighs the glitz and glitter of an executive suite or a red
Porsche in the driveway.
What do pastors do on days other than Sunday?
Look for sheep who are wandering. Sheep who live as if to say, "Our
family is too busy for God." Sheep who are too dull to know that God is
for real and that life only comes by once. Sheep who don't know that the
Good Shepherd poured out his lifeblood to rescue them. Sheep who are
lying lost and hurting, waiting for someone to care, to notice, to bring
them wholeness, to find them before they die alone.
That's what pastors do. Care for sheep.
[1] Psalm 23:1-4 (NIV). [2]
John 10:11 (NIV).
(by Dr. Ralph F. Wilson)