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The Country Parson

01 Dec 2009, by Tim Keller

Young pastors or seminarians often ask me for advice on what kind of early ministry experience to seek in order to best grow in skill and wisdom as a pastor. They often are surprised when I tell them to consider being a 'country parson' -- namely, the solo pastor of a small church, many or most of which are in non-urban settings.  Let me quickly emphasize the word 'consider.' I would never insist that everyone must follow this path. Nevertheless, it is worth thinking about. It was great for me.
 
Many young leaders perceive that the ideal first ministry position would be a position on the staff of a large church with an older, mature pastor to mentor them.  The limits of this model are several. You can't teach a younger pastor much about things they aren't actually doing. And in a large church they aren't a) bearing the burden of being the main leader, b) leading a board of elders, c) fund-raising and bearing the final responsibility of having enough money to do ministry, d) and doing the gamut of counseling, shepherding, teaching, preaching. In a smaller church as a solo pastor you and only you visit the elderly, do all the weddings and funerals, sit by the bedside of every dying parishioner, do all the marriage counseling, suspend and excommunicate, work with musicians, craft and lead worship, speak at every men's retreat, women's retreat, and youth retreat, write all the Bible studies and often Sunday School curriculum, train all the small group leaders, speak at the nursing home, work with your diaconate as they try to help families out of poverty, evangelize and welcome new visitors to the church, train volunteers to do some (but not all) of all of the above tasks, and deal with the once-a-month relational or financial crisis in the church.  No amount of mentoring can teach you what you learn from doing all those things. 
 
Some will be surprised to hear me say this, since they know my emphasis on ministry in the city. Yes, I believe firmly that the evangelical church has neglected the city. It still is difficult to get Christians and Christian leaders to make the sacrifices necessary to live their lives out in cities. However, the disdain many people have for urban areas is no worse than the condescending attitudes many have toward small towns and small churches.
 
Young pastors should not turn up their noses at such places, where they may learn the full spectrum of ministry tasks and skills as they will not in a large church. Nor should they go to small communities looking at them merely as stepping stones in a career. Why not? Your early ministry experience will only prepare you for 'bigger things,' if you don't aspire for anything bigger than investment in the lives of the people around you. Wherever you serve, put your roots down, become a member of the community and do your ministry with all your heart and might. If God opens the door to go somewhere else, fine and good. But don't go to such places looking at them only as training grounds for 'real ministry.'
 
My own pathway of personal development began with nine years of being the pastor of a small church in a small town.  This equipped me well for church planting in New York City, because, when you start a church, you must be a generalist, not the specialist that large churches create.  I repeat -- I am not proposing that everyone follow the same course.  Being a 'country parson' is not the right move for everyone. But for some it is.

Comments

Gary Ware
12/02/2009
It is concerning that there seems to be more implicit value placed on pastoring Christians who live in major cities than those who live in provincial or rural areas.
Nobody says it, and pastors can 'hide behind' a sense of call, which few will ever question.
It doesn't make sense that the Holy Spirit is actually orchestrating a move where rural  churches (read Christians) are effectively disdained while city ones are pursued.
Perhaps less emphasis by pastors on their personal development and more on the opportunities to serve would help.
I know that the overwhelming majority of pastors do have servant hearts, so I'm somewhat confused about the blind spot about rural ministry.

Jeff Downs
12/02/2009
"...solo pastor of a small church, many or most of which are in non-urban settings."

I can not imagine anyone turning down an opportunity to pastor a small country church.  Perhaps this is simply due to the fact that this is the were I desire to shepherd God's people.

Mike
12/02/2009
Tim, you nailed it.  I couldn't agree more.  This kind of experience will confirm and help develop one's pastor's heart.  Unfortunately, many have missed this kind of experience, when offered, and thus become mechanically corporate or sterile managerial in their pastoral ministry.  To often it cultivates an arrogant confidence that would have been diffused by a smaller ministry experience.  Pastoral ministry of any size must have a heart.

andyrowell94
12/02/2009
In the United Methodist Church virtually all of new seminary grads are assigned by their bishop to rural small churches.  But because of his experience with this, Will Willimon, now a bishop in the UMC, notes the other side--warning of the danger of the development of bad habits as a solo pastor and the good possibilities for learning as an associate pastor.  As great pastors of pastors, both Keller and Willimon see the beauties and dangers of small church ministry.

Here is the quote from Willimon's blog: http://willimon.blogspot.com/2009/05/advice-for-new-pastors-part-three.html

"The next few years could be among the most important in your ministry, including the years that you spent in seminary, because they are the years in which you will form your habits that will make your ministry. That?s one reason why I think the Lutherans are wise to require an internship year in a parish, before seminary graduation, for their pastors and why I think that a great way to begin is to begin your ministry is as someone?s associate in a team ministry in a larger church. In a small, rural church, alone, with total responsibility in your shoulders, in the weekly treadmill of sermons and pastoral care, if you are not careful there is too little time to read and reflect, too little time to prepare your first sermons, so you develop bad habits of flying by the seat of your pants, taking short cuts, and borrowing from others what ought to be developed in the workshop of your own soul. Ministry has a way of coming at you, of jerking you around from here to there, so you need to take charge of your time, prioritize your work, and be sure that you don?t neglect the absolute essentials while you are doing the merely important. If you don?t define your ministry on the basis of your theological commitments, the parish has a way of defining your ministry on the basis of their selfish preoccupations and that is why so many clergy are so harried and tired today. Mind your habits."


ryanplantz
12/02/2009
Thanks for this,Tim. Slowly but surely realizing that in my youthful arrogance, I'm not wise and God is all wise. (Is. 55:8 being tattooed on my forehead right now).

Wayne Park
12/02/2009
10 years in a rural place far removed from NYC, and I have learned that there are no ideal people for the church; there are just people.

mrlauterbach
12/02/2009
Excellent thoughts.

While serving a church is a large metro area as a young man, a wise woman in the church told me, "Mark, you should serve ultimatley in a metro area.  But you need a few years in a country church to find out that people change slowly, people are all garden variety, and you are just like them."

I did not follow the path she recommended, but she was correct in her rationale.

Brian Hennon
12/08/2009
Thank you!  Too many young men who feel called to lead a church get their start as a youth/children's pastor, knowing full-well they are not called to that type of ministry and are merely using it to pad their resume.

benrey
12/10/2009
I have had the best of both worlds with being on the ground of an urban church plant in Boston.  We have been meeting weekly since September and it has been great to be one of two pastors on staff of a growing urban parish.  I am daily experiencing the challenges of teaching amongst business, counseling amongst pain, discipling amongst brokenness, fundraising amongst recession and learning how to build structures and lay leadership on the front lines.  And the rector is only a few stages ahead of me in life, which provides for a great example.  Good words.

 

Jesse Wisnewski
01/17/2010
@ Dr. Keller, First off, I've had the opportunity to meet your son, Michael, while attending a summer class at Gordon. Second, I worship with some friends of yours in WV, Jim and Debbie Harris. Next weekend I will begin the ordination process through the New River Presbytery. After served in the EPC and nearing the completion of my M.Div., I'm excited about this opportunity. My question is this, "In your opinion, what is the likelihood of a PCA congregation that fits the 'country parson' criteria extending a call to a graduating seminarian?" Thanks for your time and I look forward to your response. Cheers, Jesse.

Mike
03/11/2010
Tim - God brought me to Him through your preaching and small group ministry and I have since attended seminary in the south! Praise God! I know you are very busy so I appreciate that you find the time to share your opinions on blogs and such. My most recent conclusion about pastoring is that all those roles you list above describe so many gifts that hardly anyone has inclusively, I don't know how any man can glorify God in it all. My two cents to any man is - go out and get some real world work experience before going to seminary (or before pastoring). If we want people to take our leadership seriously we need to understand the world in which everyone else lives.