Thursday, June 18, 2009

The Hardest Thing to Do

Our elders will be taking a short retreat Friday evening and Saturday morning to talk through plans and goals for our church, especially for the coming year.

This reminds me of a recent article by John Ortberg, who reflects on some of the challenges that shepherds of a church must face. Let these spur your prayers for us!

After learning that the hardest thing to do in sports is hit a baseball at the Major League level...
All of this got me to thinking, What is the hardest activity in church ministry? What would it look like if I were to see a scouting report on my pastoring? It would be fascinating to do a survey and find out which aspect of congregational leadership is the single toughest challenge. Because church ministry makes hitting a baseball look easy.

There is the challenge of trying to preach fresh, creative, substantial messages that reflect the best in increasingly complex scholarship and are integrated into the preacher's soul. And to do this when people compare it to whomever their favorite international preacher is. And to do it again next week, and the week after that, until you grow old and die.

There is the challenge of casting a vision of what might be done tomorrow, when you feel the gravitational pull of human nature to slide backwards into less challenge, less sacrifice, more comfort, and more inward-focus.

There is the challenge of resolving conflict. People keep having problems with other people. They keep trying to assert influence, grab power, get their way, and resist change they did not initiate. There is the temptation to try to ignore it, smooth it over, stomp it underground, or run away. Having the patience and strength to untie the knots is a Herculean effort.

There is the challenge of acquiring and developing the right talent on the team. Finding the right people with the right gifts and putting them into the right lanes to run the right race in alignment with the big mission is a major league challenge. And the job is never done. Someone's always in the wrong lane or pulling a hammy.

There is the resource challenge, which is currently rearing its head in almost every ministry I know.

There is the worship challenge, which involves not just worshiping God with integrity and honesty but doing it in a way that resonates with an increasingly niched and diverse population.

Then there is the volunteer challenge, the change-navigation challenge, the technology challenge, the evangelism challenge, the assimilation challenge, the infrastructure challenge, and the pastoral care challenge.

There is the 1 Corinthians 9:27 challenge, which is tops on my survey: "I beat my body and make it my slave so that after I have preached to others, I myself will not be disqualified for the prize."

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