Liberating Ministry From Success Syndrome
Date
2008-07-29
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Publisher
Crossway Books
Abstract
Some onlookers thought it was unusual, but few noticed when the pastor
wheeled into the church parking lot in a borrowed pickup truck. But everyone’s
eyes were upon him when he backed the truck across the lawn to his study door.
Refusing comment or assistance, he began to empty his office onto the truck
bed. He was impassive and systematic: first the desk drawers, then the files, and
last his library of books, which he tossed carelessly into a heap, many of them
flopping askew like slain birds. His task done, the pastor left the church and, as
was later learned, drove some miles to the city dump where he committed
everything to the waiting garbage.
It was his way of putting behind him the overwhelming sense of failure and
loss that he had experienced in the ministry. This young, gifted pastor was
determined never to return to the ministry. Indeed, he never did.
We wrote this book because of this story—and many, too many, others like it.
We are concerned about the morale and survival of those in Christian ministry.
Pastors, youth workers, evangelists, Sunday school teachers, lay ministers,
missionaries, Bible study leaders, Christian writers and speakers, and those in
other areas of Christian service often face significant feelings of failure, usually
fueled by misguided expectations for success.