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Pastoring

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Title: Pastoring


1
Community
Pastoring
2
Pastoring
Pastoring

3
What Are the Qualities of a GoodPastor
Facilitator

4
What Are the Qualities of a GoodPastor
Facilitator
  • Pastor
  • Ability to make people feel comfortable and at
    ease
  • A personal sense of God
  • A good listener
  • Ability to affirm others
  • Freedom from parish controversies not hooked on
    particular issues
  • Responsibility and follow-through
  • Openness to change
  • Good self-esteem (Not the person who needs to be
    noticed, who grabs for attention, who appears
    unproductive in other areas of life and unhappy
    at home.)
  • Ability to work with the Pastor and staff
  • Love and concern for the church at all levels
  • Facilitator
  • Knowledge of group dynamics
  • Skills for dealing with difficult people
  • Ability to move meeting along
  • Organizational skills
  • People skills
  • Listening Skills
  • Skill at Setting a tone comfortable, safe
    attitude
  • Encourages people to share their lived experience
  • Awareness of individual needs
  • Understanding the stages of group development

5
A Good PastorModels the Good Shepherd
  • Being a pastor is the most awesome of ministries.
  • You have the gift of modeling the Good Shepherd
    for your small church.
  • You are to hold up a mirror to the people in your
    small church and help them see the God in them.
  • Help them to see their gifts as gifts to the
    community for the use of God and Gods people.
  • A pouring out of yourself into the other---It is
    most definitely not about you.

6
A Good PastorFeeds You
  • A good shepherd will keep you from spiritually
    starving.
  • Will not allow you to "fall through the cracks"
    unnoticed, neglected, or empty.
  • Every child of God can be fruitful and useful
    when being led by a good shepherd.

7
A Good Pastor Leads You To God
  • A good shepherd feeds the flock
  • "I will feed them in good pasture..."(Eze.3414).
  • A good shepherd will not leave you spiritually
    hungry. Her pastures are always green. By the
    power of the Spirit, you are given what you need.
  • "...he calls his own sheep by name, and leads
    them OUT" (Joh.103).
  • A good shepherd will always
  • "lead you OUT".
  • The call is to God.

8
A Good Pastor Seeks to Know to be Known
  • A good shepherd knows his sheep "I am the good
    shepherd, and know my sheep, and am known of
    mine" (Joh.1014). Seek to know the people in
    your SCC.
  • A good shepherd is knowing and letting himself be
    known by the sheep. You have made a commitment
    to those God has given you. Open yourself up to
    your people.

9
A Good Pastor is a Passionate Believer
  • A good pastor needs to be a passionate believer.
  • No matter how articulate and charming the PF may
    be, there needs to be an inner enthusiasm for the
    faith conveyed with emotional intelligence
    commitment
  • . Someone who is passionate, thoughtful and in
    touch with God.

10
A Good PastorSearches for God
  • A PF needs to have a student's outlook on life.
  • An inquiring mind
  • Open to taking risks when necessary
  • Not satisfied with glib answers.
  • Always willing to listen and to learn.

11
A Good Pastor
  • A good pastor needs to be credible and with
    genuine humility.
  • The resourceful and creative pastor offers
    realistic hope in difficult situations. In
    whatever circumstance, the good pastor makes
    every attempt to be there for those in need.
  • Being there and keeping confidences are important
    attributes in building trust within your small
    church.

12
The Cost of Pastoring
  • An invitation by the Lord to a shepherding and
    pastoring ministry is an invitation to die, to
    enter fully into the paschal mystery Death is the
    price that Jesus paid, and it is the cost that
    faces us as well if we are to become more and
    more identified with the ultimate Pastor, the
    Lord who leads all men and women to the Father
  • Those of us who have received such an invitation
    should be soothed, but not overly so, by the
    words of Isaiah Oh, come to the waters, all you
    who are thirsty, though you have no money, come
    Buy corn without money, and eat, and at no cost,
    drink wine and milk (Is 55 1)
  • The prophet says there is no cost because ones
    soul will live The call is to life, he says, to
    embrace birth and growth, conversion, abundance
    and fruitfulness But the path to that embrace is
    one of death It is paved in pain, sorrow,
    darkness, uncertainty and purification
  • The death to self is a call that every Christian
    hears to some degree, and through it comes a new
    wholeness But for the shepherding person, the
    call is central. Those who resist or deny this
    movement toward nakedness will surely find their
    ministries gone stale For those who heed the call
    in faith, those who choose to die and rise in
    Christ, there is a new strength, a new integrity.
  • As pastors we first are called to be honest about
    ourselves, our weaknesses, our human limitations
    And that can be death in itselfdeath to our
    idealized selves, to the notion that, as pastors,
    we should be unfaltering and pure and ever
    certain of the word of the Lord
  • It is humbling to have to love and encourage
    another while still painfully aware of ones own
    sin In the beginning of ones pastoral ministry,
    ones vision is nearly always limited by a
    preoccupation with unworthiness. But the pastor
    who listens to the Lord will be asked to step
    beyond those limitations and into a closer
    relationship with him That relationship is one of
    trust. We are not delivered at once from our
    unworthiness. We are not suddenly blessed with
    certainty in the face of doubt We are not
    transformed into sinless beings or made over into
    the ideal pastors we think we should be
  • Rather, we are freed to be what we are. We are
    freed to be persons in Christreal (not ideal)
    persons We are freed to be human beings, weak and
    sinful, but loved in our weakness and sinfulness
    Our emptiness and powerlessness acknowledged, he
    can be power in us
  • Mike, a young man in my household, recently has
    been called to share in the pastoring of New
    Jerusalem He is 24 years old and is painfully
    aware of his inexperience. His obvious gifts and
    his ability to listen and understand what is
    shared with him do not blind him to the truth of
    his youth. Mike says that he often is tempted to
    pretend he is something he isnt, that a
    lingering macho image still taps him on the
    shoulder occasionally asking permission to cloak
    his uncertainty and fear with a slick veneer of
    certitude It is in opting instead simply to be
    his weak but real self that Mike chooses to
    remain in the light
  • No one ever is called to build community or to
    pastor another until he or she has experienced
    the Lord so intimately that he or she dares to
    stand in who he or she is, and knows he or she is
    loved right there The first step into Christian
    adulthood is behind us when we have received this
    gift, which only the Father can give In praising
    and acknowledging God, we cry out for the good
    news to be written on our flesh and we respond to
    the gifts that surround us
  • This openness to the Lord frees himand usso
    that he can reveal our selves to us. The
    revelation shatters our defenses and masks No
    longer do we need an ideal image of the mythical
    person we ought to be Mike can discard his
    macho veneer. No longer can he be destroyed by
    the negative self-image that the ideal was
    designed to cover Mike knows that neither his
    fear nor his need to control his life can destroy
    him because the Lord loves him as he is And the
    Lord continually frees and redeems him.
  • Mike and all of us, pastors and pastored alike,
    are chosen. We are loved. When we are known,
    the contrived costumes can be shed to reveal our
    true selves. My own experience has been that when
    I pull off my gloves I can get a better grip.
  • This realization of the real both releases and
    exposes ones self in Jesus, and it expands ones
    vision and ones capacity for ministering. Having
    acknowledged ones identity as weak and
    dependent, Jesus begins to strengthen and bless
    that identity through a closer walk with him And
    there is more pain and more death involved I
    begin to be aware of a new cost to be paid for
    the privilege of serving his people He asks me to
    walk beside him no longer as servant but as
    friend
  • My pain before was in my darkness Now the pain,
    mixed with joy, is that he wants me, although I
    am unable and not ready, because he needs me. He
    needs me The self he gave me as freedom and gift,
    he now asks me to return freely, just as he
    returned himself freely to the Father. He asks me
    to let go of ego in order to be with him in dying
    for his people What the Father asked of the Son
    for the sake of the people, what Jesus asked of
    the church throughout history, he eventually asks
    of his pastoring people He asks us to die once
    again.

13
The Cost of Pastoring(cont)
  • That can happen in many different ways He may ask
    us to die to our cherished points of view, to our
    own personal visions, to our need to be right
  • As a pastor, I often have found myself frustrated
    and angry that others did not meet the
    expectations I had for their spiritual growth.
    With some I felt they were choosing their own
    riches over the treasures laid before them by the
    Father Then the Lord blessed me with a very
    humbling and enlightening experience.
  • One young woman in our community was filled with
    such darkness from her past lifea darkness that
    deeply colored her behavior and mannerismsthat
    it was extremely difficult to trust what she did
    and said None of the other pastors in the
    community felt that they had a sense of the
    Lords action in her I myself was ready to
    express my despair with her through a
    confrontation that surely would have been taken
    as a rejection But in a moment of conversion, the
    Lord suddenly gave me his love for her and his
    understanding. He told me that she was his
    responsibility and that I could stand beside him
    as he loved and believed in her. It was a sudden
    revelation, but from that moment I never again
    failed to recognize the purity of her heart and
    her desire to grow And I was able to share my
    conviction with the other pastors. Today, the
    young woman is a happy, vibrant servant of Gods
    people
  • Jesus had taught me that through him I could be
    pulled out of my self-centeredness and
    self-certainty to receive the confusion and
    darkness of another. He gave me his heart and
    called me to love his brokenness in my sister. I
    could listen with his ears, perceive with his
    eyes. I could name my sister by the name he would
    call her. But I had to let go of my own ideas
    first I had to die
  • As a woman religious, I have often seen this
    death to self exemplified in religious superiors
    who have worked for years to build the kingdom,
    only to see their visions swept away by a new
    conversion or a deeper call In our times we have
    seen whole communities changed seemingly
    overnight by tides that wash away the old ways,
    leaving the ground fertile and ready for new life
  • The challenge, the call, is to let go of the old,
    even though ones very person is deeply entwined
    in it, and to remain open for the Lord to speak
    his new word to a receptive heart. That, brothers
    and sisters, is death
  • I am reminded of an elderly cousin, who had been
    a pastor for many years With Vatican II, nearly
    everything in his priestly world changed But he
    responded He didnt close himself He retired as
    pastor, but remained as pastor emeritus Now, at
    86, he lives and models the resurrected Christ in
    the midst of his people His own way of doing
    things has largely disappeared, but he remains
    undismayed. Nothing matters because everything
    matters Crucified and risen, this man now can
    walk peacefully in
  • any situation. He cannot be scandalized by evil,
    because he sees the Father in and beyond
    everything. His life now reveals more directly
    than ever to his parishioners the prayer of
    Christ and Christs union with his Father
  • There is a peace in such a death As pastors we
    have gone beyond the point of needing success or
    certainty as a sign of the Lords action in our
    work If we are in darkness it is because we
    resist the loneliness of death and continue to
    cry out to the Father for deliverance
  • Caryll Houselander, the British spiritual writer
    of the 1940s and 1950s, is an example of a
    pastor who dies peacefully to self She knew in
    her own life the passion of Jesus and so was able
    to recognize it in others She was able to bring
    peace and comfort, especially to the mentally and
    emotionally ill It was Jesus heart she brought,
    and her own sickly body was able to sustain the
    grief of the broken and to be a channel of love
    and freedom to them.
  • In our own community we suffer the daily pain of
    choosing to listen to one another in a real way.
    Those with the role of pastor and any others
    with pastoring hearts continually die to
    themselves in order to receive and understand
    what is spoken by another.
  • In one sense, Jesus never placed conditions or
    exacted a cost But by placing fire in a pastors
    heart, there remains only one way to go, one path
    to walk, one life to give It is impossible to do
    anything but choose to let Christ die and live in
    him We who have dared to let this process begin
    in us can look to the Mother Teresa, the Jean
    Vaniers, the Dorothy Days of our time. Each has a
    unique personality But each has walked into the
    face of darkness, loved it, and come out on the
    side of life
  • The vocation to be a person at the service of the
    Spirit in others means the ability to read the
    signs of the times For the spontaneous and
    liberal Charismatic, structure and even a bit of
    institutionalization may be a sign of the lord
    For those still clinging to empty rituals, the
    Lord will beckon toward risk and surprising
    places The quiet of contemplation, the calming of
    our busy-ness, and the silent waiting will be
    signs along the way For some the signs will
    trigger that first revelation of self, for some
    they will be the call to align oneself with
    Jesus mind, for some they will be the call to
    die to self and rise in him.
  • Expect to be trusted by the Lord if he places you
    in a pastoring role The trust will be in your
    gifts and in your life He will trust your
    energies, your ideas, your fruitfulness And he
    will trust that even in dying with him, the
    fountains of life will spring up, pulsing forth
    from the depths he himself has carved in you.
  • Pat Brockman, OS U, author of this article, is a
    member of New Jerusalem Catholic Community,
    directs retreats and gives spiritual direction
    Her other ministries include facilitating groups
    of varied denominations

14
The Cost Of Pastoring by Pat Brockman KEY POINTS
  • The need to be honest about ourselvesour
    weaknesses, our limitations
  • Its essential for us to knowand for our SCC to
    know that we are not perfect
  • The challenge to look beyond limitations and to
    trust in the Lord.
  • The need to die to ourselves.
  • Dying to selfto our cherished points of view, to
    our personal vision, to our need to be rightis
    central to pastoring
  • The call to really listen to others

15
The Gist
  • Empower people
  • To deepen the prayer experience in small church,
    pull others alongside you to help.
  • Invite others to opportunities you find that you
    think uses their gifts
  • Prepare you meeting with resources to challenge
    their spirituality, ideas of justice, call to
    ministry
  • Practice a healthy personal prayer life that
    connects into every corner of your life.
  • Use your leadership gifts. Being a PF will
    require a bit of organization and encouraging
    people to follow. Much wisdom and people skills
    are needed.
  • Develop a servant's heart and teachable spirit.
  • A PF must have true spiritual humility, and a
    deep respect for our parish and our Pastor,
    Father Tom
  • Promote and be present at the PF Meetings, PF
    Retreat and SCC events. This helps you and the
    other Pastoral Facilitators feel connected and
    supported.

16
Becoming A Pastoral Facilitator
  • What most appeals to you about becoming a
    pastoral facilitator?
  • What is your biggest reservation about becoming a
    pastoral facilitator?

17
Building Community
Building Community
18
Never doubt that a small groupof thoughtful,
concerned citizenscan change the world.
Indeed, it's the only thing
that ever does.
Margaret Mead
19
Community provides a safe, comfortable place
for people to pray, leading to deeper
personal interaction richer prayer experiences
20
When a person is added to or subtracted from a
group, it becomes a new group.
  • Members must shift their roles to adjust to the
    change
  • Community cant develop while these adjustments
    are being made. A group needs to be stable to
    grow into community.
  • This is the reason why the model of small church
    communities that we follow ask SCCs to go through
    a process when adding people.

21
Ideas for Building Community
  • Provide opportunities for people to interact in
    different ways by going to events as a group
  • Go to Mass together
  • Share a meal together
  • Perform community service together
  • Know and ask about the ministries that each is
    serving. Their success is the communitys
    success. Make mention of the service in the
    group.

22
Things You Can Do to Strengthen Community
  • Distribute a list of birthdays and email
    addresses
  • Call members and inform themof another members
    illness orfamily problem if this would not
    break a confidence.
  • Ask the members to call each other during the
    week.
  • Foster a feeling of value to the group in each
    person by asking others to take leadership in
    creating or facilitating a meeting, hosting a
    meeting, sending out reminders, calling absent
    members, bringing refreshments.

23
Deepening the Bond in Your Small Church
  • Use the parts of the SCC meeting to help create
    community
  • Keep the same Review of Life partners for a few
    months at a time. This gives pairs of members an
    opportunity to get to know each other on a more
    personal level. Their closer bond creates a
    closer bond in the small church.
  • Be creative when dividing into small groups.
    Since people tend to sit in the same seats, if
    you count off to divide groups, the groups will
    not vary much. Write names on slips of paper and
    ask one member to choose three papers. This
    becomes her group.
  • Use the Basic Agreement Among Members
    Evaluation to help keep your church on track.

24
Basic Agreement Between Members
  • 1. Don't miss, except for emergencies. A group
    works because members make the group a priority.
    Each member must make a commitment to each other.
  • 2. Share yourself. Let people know you to the
    extent you are willing. How you feel and how you
    look at life matters.
  • 3. Listen closely to others. Don't give advice,
    counsel or therapy or comment on what others say,
    but let people know you understand and are trying
    to appreciate the feeling they are expressing.
  • 4. Never argue your point or badger another . Be
    yourself, be firm, but don't try to win others
    over to your viewpoint. People can be different.
    In fact, differences enhance a group.
  • 5. Try to show support to each person in the
    group. Help people see their strengths and
    confront them when they are not using their
    strengths.
  • 6. Expressing negative feelings can be helpful.
    Bottled-up feelings can set up unspoken barriers.
    Avoid ridicule or attack. Focus on how someone's
    behavior in the group affects you and how the
    situation can be improved. A one-to-one talk can
    help sometimes.
  • 7. Don't talk about people behind their backs.
  • 8. Nothing said leaves the group.
  • 9. Take responsibility for the life of the
    community. Take a turn facilitating or hosting
    the meeting. Do something that might help another
    s contribution to the group get noticed. Call
    an absent member. Pray for each other.
  • Taken from "Creating Small Church Communities"
    Third Edition by Father Arthur R. Baranowski,

25
Evaluation
  • To keep focused, a Small Church Community
    needs to periodically evaluate the interaction
    between members and the growth of the small
    church community.
  • What would deepen and improve our listening to
    each other? To our lives? To God?
  • How do we handle disagreements and conflict in
    this group?
  • Does our SCC see itself as church? How do we fit
    into the total vision of the parish? How can we
    grow in our sense of belonging to the larger
    church? Be specific.
  • How is this SCC meeting helping each of us be
    different in our family, work place, society,
    attitude toward the poor of the world? Be
    specific.
  • Do we often get bogged down in small talk? In
    discussion from the head instead of speaking and
    listening to life experience? What specific ways
    can we agree to that would deepen our time
    together?
  • Is our SCC depending too much on one or a few
    people? What are the ways that each person in our
    SCC is taking responsibility for the group?
  • What is the best thing we have going for us? What
    is the main obstacle to growth? To the group get
    noticed. Call an absent member. Pray for each
    other.
  • Taken from "Creating Small Church Communities"
    Third Edition by Father Arthur R. Baranowski,

26
Some Ways Your Members Can Participate in
Building Community
  • Pay attention to what the others in the group are
    sharing and feeling.
  • Make an effort to share from the deepest level
    possible, contribute from your heart.
  • Greet each person warmly.
  • Pray for the members of your small church.
  • Support each other in faith and also in life
    events.
  • Start your own small church traditions.
  • Bake and share.
  • Share your spiritual music tastes with your scc
    at meetings.

27
What is the Difference between a prayer group and
a Small Church Community?
  • A prayer group can become very member centered
    and isolated while a small church is connected to
    the larger church through the PF who encourages
    the members to keep the focus on the larger
    church.
  • Because of the components of the SCC meeting and
    the encouragement and support of Core, Father
    Tom, and other PFs, an SCC develops the
    characteristics of the parish church in
    miniature
  • formation
  • prayer
  • community
  • a respect appreciation of the parish church
  • Service/Mission

28
Church as Community
  • You are a church family or small church.
  • All persons in the church share the same Holy
    Spirit and so are brothers sisters to each
    other.
  • There is a basic equality with each other
  • Each person has a gift or talent the community
    needs.

29
Conflicts and Disagreements
  • Are Inevitable
  • Being faithful to God requires that all parties
    in heated discussions
  • recognize their common status of imperfection
  • be forgiving and accepting of one another in love

30
The Good Shepherd
  • That's pastoring.
  • Revealing
  • the mind
  • of God
  • to all,
  • Against
  • life's odds,
  • Leading
  • them
  • Relying
  • on God's wisdom.
  • That's you,
  • Seeks what God sees,
  • Transferring it onto hearts
  • Thomas R. Bridges

Like He, we must be. The Shepherd of all
shepherds Placing Himself in harm's
way. Seeking those who have gone astray. Your
mission being greater than you, Was the Master's
too. Leadership that is filled with
self-sacrifice, Warring off the wolves,
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