I saw a Twitter post the other day asking for favorite
Eugene Peterson quotes. Well, some of
those would would take more than the 280 characters Twitter allows. I’ve read pretty much everything he’s written
so I have a lot of quotes. Perhaps I’ll
do a couple of blog posts. This post focuses
on some of my favorite quotes on pastoral life.
Pastors will appreciate these quotes.
But non-pastors might find them educational as well …
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America’s 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 stationery
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. —Working
the Angles
I had never articulated it just this way before. “You are at your pastoral best when you are
not noticed. To keep this vocation
healthy requires constant self-negation, getting out of the way. A certain blessed anonymity is inherent in
pastoral work. For pastors, being
noticed easily develops into wanting
to be noticed. Many years earlier a
pastor friend told me that the pastoral ego ‘has the reek of disease about it,
the relentless smell of the self.’” —The Pastor: A Memoir
Pastoral work consists of modest, daily, assigned work. It is like farm work. Most pastoral work involves routines similar
to cleaning out the barn, mucking out the stalls, spreading manure, pulling
weeds. This is not, any of it, bad work
in itself, but if we expected to ride a glistening black stallion in daily parades
and then return to the barn where a lackey grooms our steed for us, we will be
severely disappointed and end up being horribly resentful. — Under the
Predictable Plant
So sinner becomes
not a weapon in an arsenal of condemnation, but the expectation of grace. Simply to be against sin is a poor basis for
pastoral ministry. But to see people as
sinners—as rebels against God, missers of the mark, wanderers
from the way—that establishes a basis
for pastoral ministry that can proceed with great joy because it is announcing
God great action in Jesus Christ “for sinners.”
—The Contemplative Pastor
It is not the pastor’s job to simplify the spiritual life,
to devise common-denominator formulas, to smooth out the path of
discipleship. Some difficulties are
inherent in the way of spiritual growth – to deny them, to minimize them, or to
offer shortcuts is to divert the person from true growth. It is the pastor’s task, rather, to be
companion to persons who are in the midst of difficulty, to acknowledge the
difficulty and thereby give it significance, and to converse and pray with them
through the time so that the loneliness is lightened, somewhat, and hope is
maintained, somehow. —Five Smooth Stones for Pastoral Work
Most pastoral work takes place in obscurity: deciphering
grace in the shadows, searching out meaning in a difficult text, blowing on the
embers of a hard-used life. This is hard
work and not conspicuously glamorous. —Under the Predictable Plant
The pastor is the one person in the community who is free to
take men and women seriously just as they are, appreciate them just as they
are, give them the dignity that derives from being the “image of God,” a
God-created being who has eternal worth without having to prove usefulness or
be good for anything. —The Pastor: A Memoir
Your task is to keep telling the basic story, representing
the presence of the Spirit, insisting on the priority of God, speaking the
biblical words of command, promise and invitation. —The
Contemplative Pastor
In the disordered time in which we live, pastors can’t get
along without [psychologists] Dr. Wall and Dr. Hansen. But their work is not my work. Knowing they are there to do their work, I am
free to do my work. And my work is not
to fix people. It is to lead people in
the worship of God and to lead them in living a holy life. —The Pastor:
A Memoir
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There are so many more quotes I’ve gathered in my files, but
these are enough for now. Worth chewing
on. Worth considering. Worth practicing.
Wow, that's some good stuff, John! I'm not a pastor, but the words there speak a lot of truth to all believers.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing, and have a good one,
Mike