Sunday, October 28, 2012

A Week in the Life

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The Rev. Dr. Skip Ferguson
Manassas Presbyterian Church
Manassas, Virginia
October 28, 2012
A Week in the Life
Psalm 34 (selected verses)

It looks like a framed letter.
It hangs on the wall behind my desk.
The type is too small to read unless you are right in front of it.
At the top it says very simply:
“What is a Pastor?”

It was given to me by a good friend from Seminary
when I was first ordained.
I don’t know anything about the person who wrote it,
but the words have always resonated with me,
which is why I keep the document visible, prominent.
It is a reminder to me of the vocation
to which God called me.

The document speaks of the usual things we think of
when we hear the word, “pastor”:
Someone who leads worship and preaches;
Someone who presides at weddings, baptisms and funerals;
Someone who teaches;
Someone who counsels;
Someone who prays for himself and others.

But it is these words that I find most meaningful:
A pastor is someone who is “welcomed into people’s lives.”
Welcomed into people’s lives.
To be there, present,
at the birth of a child;
at a marriage;
at a graduation;
a retirement party;
a golden wedding anniversary:
the many different joys that fill our lives.

To be welcomed into a person’s life isn’t limited, of course,
to the joyous times.
It is also includes times of struggle,
of sorrow,
of grief:
a job loss,
the unraveling of a marriage,
a serious illness,
the death of a loved one.

To be a pastor is to be present,
present in such a way
that in time we learn a person’s worries,
fears,
regrets,
frustrations,
as well as those things they are most proud of,
that fill them with contentment,
satisfaction,
happiness,
peace.

To be a pastor is to walk into one hospital room
where the news is good,
the sense of relief and joy palpable;
and then walk into another hospital room
where the prognosis is dire,
where hope has left the room.

To be a pastor is to open the pages of the Bible to all,
to lead men and women,
young and old,
faithfully through the pages of God’s written word
as tour guide, teacher,
interpreter, translator,
even at times re-enactor,
helping the readers to find understanding,
to make sense of the words,
to hear God’s voice,
to see their own lives in the pages, the stories.
It is to remind each reader how essential it is
that we read the Bible through the lens
that is the Living Word,
our Lord Jesus Christ,
so that the grace and mercy of God always comes through.

To be a pastor is to help readers and listeners
look beyond the obvious in the stories,
that, for example, when we hear
that Jesus cured someone of blindness,
the story may well be about a miraculous physical healing –
eyes that had never seen color or shape or light before
suddenly opened to all the world –
but that the same story also surely is teaching us
that we all suffer from some degree of spiritual blindness,
that even those with perfect vision
fail to see what God wants us to see,
what is so often right in front of us.

To be a pastor is to be a “myth-buster”,
to take stories and myths that have been built up over
more than two thousand years
and separate them from what we know,
from what the written word truly reveals.

It is, as just one example,
to take even great works of art,
as I did this past week with the Bible Study class,
paintings by master artists from the 14th, 15th, 16th centuries,
paintings commissioned by the church
to help the faithful learn Bible stories,
paintings I viewed last week when I was on Study Leave,
and point out where the artist strayed from the Bible,
where the artist took license and where, from that,
myths and misunderstandings have arisen.             

To be a pastor is to marvel at the world,
to stand in awe of God’s creation in the earth
the oceans, and the heavens above.
It is to stand in awe of the sheer power of nature –
as we all surely will the next few days –
to stand in awe of the sheer beauty
of all that God has entrusted to our care.

To be a pastor is to acknowledge that life can be difficult,
life can be profoundly unfair,
even to the faithful.
It is to acknowledge with Job,
that there are things we don’t understand,
thing which we don’t know,
can’t know,
will never know or understand.

To be a pastor is not to live an easy life
but it is to live a joy-filled life;
It isn’t to live a lucrative life,
but it is to live a rich life.

To be a pastor is to go through life
singing the psalmist’s song:
 “I will bless the Lord at all times,
his praise shall continually be in my mouth.
My soul makes its boast in the Lord;”

It is then to invite others to join in the singing:
“…O magnify the Lord with me,
and let us exalt his name together.”

It is to sing the psalmist’s song of confidence and trust:
“I sought the Lord and he answered me,
and delivered me from all my fears.
Many are the afflictions of the righteous
but the Lord rescues them from them all.”

It is to sing the psalmist’s song with all the faithful,
         “O taste and see that the Lord is good;
         happy are those who take refuge in him.”

These are all the things a pastor does,
all the parts of a pastor’s life,
the things that fill up the days, the weeks.
But of course, these are all things that every one of us does,
all things every one of us is called to do,
in different ways and in different times,
for aren’t we ALL called to ministry
in the name of Jesus Christ?

My name may be the one listed as the pastor,
but our bulletin reminds us
that every member of this church is a minister,
that the roster of ministers here in this congregation
is more than 400 strong.

And we cannot overlook our dedicated, committed staff –
they too are ministers:
Deborah Panell through the ministry of music;
Melissa Kirkpatrick through the ministry of learning;
Krista Brocker through the ministry of hospitality and outreach;
Russell Jackson through the ministry of
care and property stewardship;
Lisa Faust through the ministry of financial stewardship;
And Chris Fox and Jody Ritner through the ministry
we offer to the children of our community.

It doesn’t matter that you haven’t gone to seminary
or been through ordination exams –
you are a minister,
part of the staff of this church.
Remember: the first group of ministers
had no seminary training, either!
As Frederick Buechner has observed of the twelve men Jesus called:
“There is no evidence that Jesus chose them
because they were brighter or nicer than other people.
In fact…they were continually missing the point,
jockeying for position,
and when the chips were down,
interested in nothing so much as saving their own skins.
Their sole qualification seems to have been
their initial willingness
to rise to their feet when Jesus said, ‘Follow me’.”

You, I, every one of us here
have done the same thing:
we have each responded to Jesus’ call to follow him,
said yes to Jesus,
said yes to his invitation: “Follow me.”
Said yes to his invitation to minister in his name
as we share the gospel.

Barbara Brown Taylor was right when she wrote:
“Somewhere along the way
we misplaced the ancient vision of the church
as a priestly people –
set apart for ministry in baptism,
confirmed and strengthened in worship,
made manifest in service to the world.
…Somehwere along the way we turned
clergy into purveyors of religion
and lay people into consumers.”

I am no purveyor of religion,
and I am guessing none of you think of yourselves
as “consumers of religion.”

The full time staff of this church is just two;
but the staff of ministers numbers almost 500 –
all of us called to be present in one another’s lives,
sharing joy and sorrows,
the good and the bad,
the ups and the downs,
nurturing one another,
learning with one another,
caring for one another,
praying for one another,
building each other up as we build this body,
together, all of us singing the psalmist’s song:
“I will bless the Lord at all times;
his praise shall continually be in my mouth.
My soul makes its boast in the Lord;
O magnify the Lord with me,
and let us exalt his name together….
O taste and see that the Lord is good.
Come, O children, listen to me…
Magnify the Lord with me
and let us together exalt his holy name.”

AMEN