Pastors

From the Editor

My job is to pray for you, whether you’re a Christian or not.

Every pastor has gotten the question. Sometimes it’s direct: “So what exactly does a pastor do?” Other times it comes indirectly: “Would you be willing to … (fill in the blank)?”

A couple weeks ago, I heard a beautifully succinct summation of pastoring. I was worshiping with a congregation made up mostly of twenty-somethings who had not been raised in church. As the service began, the pastor introduced himself and his calling.

“My name is Tom,” he said. “I’m a pastor here. It’s my job to pray for you, whether you’re a Christian or not, and to talk with you about Jesus, whether you’re a Christian or not. That’s what I do.”

It’s just that simple, and it’s just that complicated. Because talking about Jesus leads us into all aspects of life. And when we pray for people, the deeper, unresolved parts of their lives inevitably surface. It has always been this way.

Around A.D. 400, famous North African bishop Augustine described a pastor’s job: “Disturbers are to be rebuked, the low spirited to be encouraged, the infirm to be supported, objectors confuted, the treacherous guarded against, the unskilled taught, the lazy aroused, the contentious restrained, the haughty repressed, litigants pacified, the poor relieved, the oppressed liberated, the good approved, the evil borne with, and all are to be loved.”

How’s that for a job description!

In fact, a vice president of human resources for Motorola once told me, “Pastors have more transferable skills than they realize.” Especially supervising volunteers. “If you can describe your experience working with volunteers, you’d be surprised how quickly that gets the attention of [hiring] managers.”

So, the next time someone asks you what you do, just give them the ABC’s of the pastor’s task. A pastor is …

Ambassador, advocate, administrator

Baptizer, building usage consultant

Confidante, confronter, community builder

Discussion leader

Encourager, emotional baggage handler

Funeral companion

Grace giver, grounds inspector

Historian

Interpreter

Justice seeker

Knowledge dispenser

Latent gift discoverer

Mediator, missionary

Nurturer

Organizer, opportunity spotter

Public speaker, problem solver

Questioner, quarterback

Reviewer, Robert’s Ruler

Spokesperson, spiritual director

Teacher, trainer

Unifier, utility player

Volunteer coordinator, vision caster

Wedding ceremony presider

X-traordinary ingenuity with limited resources (like figuring out a way to use the letter X)

Youth advocate, Yule celebrator

Zeal stoker, zoo keeper (okay, so it just seems that way).

We recognize the simplicity and complexity of ministering in the name of Jesus. In this issue of Leadership, we explore how pastors today are faithfully representing the Eternal One in a world constantly morphing through time and trends.

Leadership is also convening a gathering of pastors, February 13-17, 2001, to explore this theme. We’ll do our best to make you laugh and make you think. You’ll be stretched and encouraged to develop your own unique ministry, whether you’re in a city, suburb, small town, or rural area.

Details at www.nationalpastorsconvention.com

Marshall Shelley is editor of Leadership.

Copyright © 2000 by the author or Christianity Today/Leadership Journal. Click here for reprint information on Leadership Journal.

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