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The Burdens of a Pastor

May 18th, 2012
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I ask all those who are not in the office of parish pastor to read this. Pause. Read it again and then, if you are so inclined, to get down on your knees before your Almighty God and ask Him to bless and keep your pastor faithful. HT: Musings of a Country Preacher blog for this excellent post.

Among the many issues that I have heard our Synod President address, the lack of good preaching hits closest to home for many pastors. At least, it does for me.  Despite years of preaching, I find that I am only beginning to understand the challenges a preacher faces.  It will take many more lifetimes to find the solution to those challenges.

Pastor Harrison’s comment, however, reveals a challenge and burden that goes an entirely different direction, but is worth examining.  His complaint is that too often, pastors preach a generic law.  A symptom of this, he says, is the constant talk of we:  “We sin,” “We need forgiveness, etc.” Instead, he says, the pastor is to speak the Word of God to the people.  That is: “You sin,” “you need forgiveness,” etc.  An excellent point, to be sure.  This brings me to the burden of the Holy Ministry.  Pastors speak the Word of God to their people.  When they are doing it right, they are bringing both the law and Gospel to them.  That is, “You are a sinner. God forgives you.”

But even more than just saying, “God forgives you”, the pastor stands in Christ’s stead and says, ‘’I forgive you.”  He does this in Holy Absolution to be sure, but he also does it in his preaching. He does it as he administers the sacrament.  It is what the pastor does.  But what is missing from this is the “For me.”  The pastor can not continually give forgiveness, without at some point receiving it.  Or, put another way, the pastor has no pastor. Pastors are somewhat on their own.  In the average parish, the pastor serves alone at altar and pulpit.  Monthly pastor’s conferences are not the same thing.  There is no “Here is my pastor” for the pastor.  It is the burden of the office.

This is not intended as a complaint.  Just as observation.  How do pastors deal with this? In this age of easily printed books and electronic gadgetry, there are any number of devotional works a pastor can use to help himself.  There are apps for that.  There are all sorts of things.  I read a great deal. I study and write.  I make sure the sermons apply to me too.  And yet…

If I were giving advice to a young pastor, fresh out of the seminary, it would be this: Find a Father Confessor.  We can debate endlessly about whether pastors should go to their circuit visitor or district president for confession, or whether they should find someone else.  But do whatever it takes to find someone to whom you can confess and from whom you can receive the absolution.  You need it.  You need to be told that your sins are damnable, and that you are forgiven those very sins.  And you need to hear it from a mouth not your own.  Not a rotation of pastors who serve as preacher at pastor’s conferences.  You need to hear from A mouth.  Someone who knows your sin, and forgives you anyway, just as you do for your people.  (Do not pick your best friend. The relationship between pastor and penitent is different.  As a penitent, it will change your relationship to your friend.) Find someone and do it.

It is the best defense (next to the Lord’s Prayer) against the attacks of Satan.

Oh, yes, and pray the Lord’s Prayer, as well.  Pray it often.

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  1. May 18th, 2012 at 09:56 | #1

    The Shepherds of Our Lord are constantly in my prayers. I have seen one our Pastors empty himself out to the point he committed suicide . I have preached to my Pastor Friends to Love themselves! The advise ” Find a Father Confessor.” All pastors have to have a Father Confessor. My life was changed for ever because of the Pastor pastor we lost so many years ago to suicide.. I have strived to clear a path for my Pastor friends using the Bible verse:

    Honor your father and mother, and, You shall love your neighbor as yourself.”
    (Matthew 19:19 ESV)

    Our Lord did not say Love your neighbor more than yourself. You are no help to your fold if you do not Love and take care of yourself first!

    This might be of great help to someone one the edge of suicide.

    http://www.lutheransonline.com/suicide

  2. May 18th, 2012 at 10:50 | #2

    As someone who has such a relationship – praise be to God – I think it is worth saying this as well:

    Pastors, you must be willing to speak those words of absolution as a father confessor. When another pastor approaches you about this as a possibility, take it as a part of your vocation just as when one of your parishioners comes to you and asks.

    In my time trying to find a father confessor, I found time and time again that I received the following responses all too often:
    a.) What do you need that for?
    b.) I don’t have the time
    c.) I don’t feel comfortable with that
    d.) You should talk to…..

    You’re a brother pastor, be one.

    in Christ,
    jW

  3. Joanne
    May 21st, 2012 at 00:01 | #3

    I might suggest that the pastor’s immediate family needs to find a Father Confessor too, besides their husband or father. They need the privacy just like each pastor does. I’m a strong believer that the pastors have to serve each other in what only they can do, “ego te absolvo.” It makes a world of difference when the pastor knows the particular sins that are bothering you when he forgives you.

    Hear the difference: I know your sins and I forgive you. I don’t know and don’t want to know your sins, but I’ll forgive them whatever they are. Are you sure you would? Am I sure you would? God hates doubt about the forgiveness of sins.

  4. May 24th, 2012 at 10:27 | #4

    The ancient spiritual fathers noted that we fall and get up, fall and get up, again and again. Absolution is commanded by Christ; it is His blessing to try over and over and over until He calls us out of this life. But there is no absolution without confession, just as there is no communion with coming to the chalice, and no baptism without coming to the water.

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