What Paul wished members
knew about ministers
Second Corinthians is
a highly personal piece of writing in which the apostle Paul strips himself
bare. Throughout this letter, Paul is on the defensive. As New Testament scholar
Ralph Martin explains, Paul is here dealing with severe criticisms of himself
and his ministry:
The first part of the letter
reflects what must have been one of the most distressing experiences of Paul’s
life. He had personally been opposed and insulted by an individual or a group in
the church at Corinth, which taunted him with insincerity and duplicity … he was
accused of vacillation (1:17), pride and boasting (3:1), lack of success in
preaching (4:3), physical weakness (10:10), ‘rudeness’ of speech, deficiency in
rhetorical skill (11:6), being an ungifted person (4:7-10), dishonesty
(12:16-19), posing as a ‘fool’ (5:13), and lack of apostolic standing (11:5).
Above all he is held to be a deceiver (4:8) and a charlatan (10:1), a blatant
denial of the power of the Christian message (13:2-9). (Word Commentary:
Second Corinthians, pages lxi-lxii)
Wow! That’s some ministerial
evaluation!
The God of comfort
Yet perhaps because Paul is passing
through the crucible with those pesky Corinthians, this letter also contains
some of the richest spiritual teaching Paul ever penned. It is in this letter
that we read of the God of all comfort, believers as the fragrance of Christ,
the spirit of liberty, a new creation, faith—not sight, ambassadors for Christ,
the ministry of reconciliation, God’s indescribable gift, power perfected
through weakness.
A powerful two-beat rhythm persists
throughout as Paul contrasts vital principles—death/life, distress/consolation,
present affliction/future glory, weakness/strength, sow abundantly/reap
abundantly. In short, 2 Corinthians is what we could call today, an emotional
roller-coaster. Why this emotion-etched epistle? Scholar James Dunn put it
succinctly: "[Paul] experiences Christ as the Crucified as well as the Exalted;
indeed it is only when he experiences Christ as crucified that it is possible
for him to experience Christ as exalted, that it is possible to experience the
risen life of Christ."
In this epistle, Paul gives the New
Testament’s best expose of life as a minister, a candid and personal revelation
that Paul wanted members to know about.
The perils of Paul
Paul knew this: Millions want
Christ’s crown, but few want his cross. It grieved Paul that his beloved
Corinthians (he planted the church there, after all) couldn’t see that some were
out for advantage, building themselves up at the expense of Paul’s concern for
his flock (2 Corinthians 11:18-19). It is a familiar pattern. Would-be pastors
crave power over people to make up for their own shortcomings. The self-anointed
(who often get their way, incidentally) want prestige, forgetting the call to
duty, to faithfulness unto death. Paul was richly experienced with those who
enter ministry to manipulate men and women or as mere hirelings (11:20-21).
But Paul had been through this
before. The slings and arrows of criticism, blame placing, negative projection,
misunderstanding and willful misinterpretation that are often the minister’s lot
soon drive the ministerial wannabes away, sometimes, however, only after much
damage has been done to the flock.
Formal, full-time service in
ministry, Paul knew, is no place to build wounded self-esteem or release
frustrated power urges. That’s why his words inspire today’s pastors. His
catalogue of battle scars in 11:23-29 have their modern parallels. G. Lloyd
Rediger writes:
Abuse of pastors by congregations
and the breakdown of pastors due to inadequate support are now tragic realities.
This worst-case scenario, one that is increasing in epidemic proportions, is not
a misinterpretation by a few discontented clergy. Rather, it is a phenomenon
that is verified by both research and experience.... Pastors have become more
vulnerable, parishioners more confused and less courageous, denominational
offices more political, and our whole society more numb to abuse and conflict.
Together these factors create opportunity for abuse of spiritual leaders and
even encourage its development.
There was a time in America,
especially small-town America, that if a person needed a loan from a bank, the
financial officers would often check with a pastor or a teacher to "verify a
person’s good character." No more. As Rediger points out, today the expectations
for pastors are far higher. "Megapastoring" is the measure of all things: "This
is the expectation on the part of both the congregation and the pastor that the
pastor must be a charismatic personality who can be up front at all church
activities, make them successful, and continually draw new members.
The goal, of course, is for the
congregation to become a megachurch, with hundreds of enthusiastic members,
dozens of thriving programs and an expanding budget that allows for regular
additions to building facilities.... The congregation and pastor who do not
function like a megachurch are suspected of being in decline. The pastor, of
course, is blamed and punished (Clergy Killers, pages 1-23).
These realities help explain why so
many pastors find great comfort in 2 Corinthians. From the opening chapter we
sense it will be a barnburner. "We were under great pressure, far beyond our
ability to endure, so that we despaired even of life. Indeed in our hearts we
felt the sentence of death" (1:8-9). It is full of candid disclosures: "We are
confident, I say, and would prefer to be away from the body and at home with the
Lord" (5:7). The last verses contain a heartfelt plea: "Now we pray to God that
you will not do anything wrong" (13:7).
Yet the dominant note throughout is
one of triumphantly holding fast to a ministerial calling in the face of great
pressure and misunderstandings. Paul has confidence that the spiritually mature
in Christ have already accepted the correction he doled out in 1 Corinthians and
that the church there is, on the whole, on the rebound.
Paul loves these troublesome
members as only a pastor could! He values their good opinion. Yet he knows that
in this letter he must not be afraid to lay some things on the line. "We are not
withholding our affection from you, but you are withholding yours from us" (2
Corinthians 6:12).
He is not hesitant about being
autobiographical in defending his call to ministry. Paul knew that Christ gives
ministers authority without expecting them to turn into authoritarians
(10:8-11). Yet the pastoral office was given to keep order in the church.
"It must be emphasized that Paul is
not moved by self-concern," writes Philip E. Hughes. "He willingly endures for
Christ’s sake any number of affronts and indignities to his own person. But when
the genuineness of his apostleship is called into question that is something he
dare not endure in silence, for it is no less a challenge to the authority of
Christ himself (The New International Commentary on the New Testament: Second
Corinthians, page 477).
Hence Paul’s references to being
flogged more severely, imprisoned more frequently and exposed to death more
often (11:24). Such personal declarations work both ways. Even today it is hard
for ministers and pastors who feel like singing the blues not to feel a little
embarrassed in reading about the perils of Paul. They help give perspective to
the peculiar ministerial trials of life in the goldfish bowl.
Fools for Christ?
So, what keeps ministers going?
What kept Paul going? Really, it is something other-worldly, beautiful and even
slightly mystical, this sense of calling that ministers have for ministry. Ask
them about it sometime. One pastor I know was told by a particularly difficult
and recalcitrant parishioner: "You know, you really seem like a fool to me,
hopelessly trying to persuade me to do something you know I will never do." Yes,
what ministers attempt to do often seems, by worldly measurements, foolish. But
if it is in a good cause for godly ends then they find comfort in being what
Paul called a "fool for Christ" (1 Corinthians 4:10).
What character trait is needed for
pastors to keep coming back week after week to people who quite often are not
listening to what they have to say? Or to never cease reaching out to those who
tune them out and then have the pastor for lunch after the sermon is over?
Can one make sense of this
indescribable, relentless sense of mission that keeps pastors riveted to their
post? Like the prophet Jeremiah, their emotions do often fail them (Jeremiah
15:18). Pastors do get discouraged, do feel abused and sometimes do lash out in
unfortunate anger or resentment against their persecutors and critics.
But most stay the course. Their
emotions may fail them, but the faith of Christ never fails them. Notice the
wisdom in this note I saw on a pastor’s door: "The pulpit calls those anointed
to it as the sea calls its sailors; and like the sea, it batters and bruises,
and does not rest.... To preach, to really preach, is to die naked a little at a
time and know each time you do it that you must do it again."
So, why do pastors stay in there?
What keeps them going? Two things are necessary to keep faithful ministers
going, growing and abounding from year to year, and parishioners need to know
this. These two essentials are a strong sense of initial calling and an unusual
love and regard for members in their care. Without these it is easy to go under
in the often turbulent ebb and flow of pastoral ministry. Let the ambitious
beware.
Paul’s sense of calling never left
him. That blinding glimpse of Christ on the Damascus road is still a classic
text on ministry. Most calls are not so dramatic. They are maybe more of a
growing sense of conviction over time when the pastor and those in community
with him slowly sense that God has indeed selected this individual for a special
work (Acts 13:1-3).
But the call—however
manifested—becomes a life raft that bothered and bewildered ministers cling to
in years to come. That’s when Christ’s reminder speaks most forcefully and
hopefully: "You did not choose me but I chose you" (John 15:16).
Supernatural love
The unusual love ministers have for
members—even for those who hurt them—is sensed throughout 2 Corinthians.
Even though Paul needs to reprimand this church, he still wants things to work
out between him and them. "We have opened wide our hearts to you … open wide
your hearts also" (6:11-13). He interjects: "I speak as to my children." And in
a magnificent short declaration he plunges to the heart of the member-minister
relationship: "For we do not preach ourselves, but Jesus Christ as Lord, and
ourselves as your servants for Jesus’ sake" (2 Corinthians 4:5).
That just about says it all. Paul
is not in it for himself. He wants members to know that the most basic common
ground between them is a mutual relationship with the risen Lord. Every true
minister of Christ understands that even in corrective matters he must proceed
in meekness, for he is often "instructing those that oppose themselves." The
true pastor does this with a deep Christlike sense that most people—even those
who may hate him temporarily—are their own worst enemies (2 Timothy 2:25, King
James Version).
Such attitudes reach the very
heights of Christian love and empathy as well as Christian service. But Paul
well knew that such depth and maturity of character and outlook are vital parts
of any ministry that lasts. The calling is sacrificial, abiding. God takes the
minister’s life and then gives it to the people after placing within his
servants a godly concern for the members (8:16). That’s how ministers endure.
This is why Paul could say: "Thanks be to God for his indescribable gift"
(9:11).
Neil Earle
Copyright 2005
