American pastors are abandoning their posts, left
and right, and at an alarming rate. They are not leaving their churches and
getting other jobs. Congregations still pay their salaries. Their names remain
on the church stationary and they continue to appear in pulpits on Sundays. But
they are abandoning their posts, their calling. They have gone whoring after
other gods. What they do with their time under the guise of pastoral ministry
hasn’t the remotest connection with what the church’s pastors have done for
most of twenty centuries.
A few of us are angry about it. We are angry because we have been
deserted…. It is bitterly disappointing to enter a room full of people whom you
have every reason to expect share the quest and commitments of pastoral work
and find within ten minutes that they most definitely do not. They talk of
images and statistics. They drop names. They discuss influence and status.
Matters of God and the soul and Scripture are not grist for their mills.
The pastors of America
have metamorphosed into a company of shopkeepers, and the shops they keep are
churches. They are preoccupied with shopkeeper’s concerns–how to keep the
customers happy, how to lure customers away from competitors down the street,
how to package the goods so that the customers will lay out more money.
Some of them are very good shopkeepers. They attract a lot of
customers, pull in great sums of money, develop splendid reputations. Yet it is
still shopkeeping; religious shopkeeping, to be sure, but shopkeeping all the
same. The marketing strategies of the fast-food franchise occupy the waking
minds of these entrepreneurs; while asleep they dream of the kind of success
that will get the attention of journalists.
The biblical fact is that there are no successful churches. There are,
instead, communities of sinners, gathered before God week after week in towns
and villages all over the world. The Holy Spirit gathers them and does his work
in them. In these communities of sinners, one of the sinners is called pastor
and given a designated responsibility in the community. The pastor’s
responsibility is to keep the community attentive to God. It is this
responsibility that is being abandoned in spades.
-Eugene Peterson in his intro to his book Working the Angles.
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