On the Wall with Sword and Trowel: The Challenges and Conflicts of Ministry
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About this ebook
On the Wall with Sword and Trowel is a reminder that no amount of professional training, educational instruction, and/or personal counsel could adequately ready an individual for the crucible of ministry--the confusion, pressures, heartbreak, disappointments, discouragements, and more.
There is plenty more to learn about genuine faith, dealing with doubts and fears, the destructive nature of sin, the healing/transforming power of grace, the overwhelming demands of ministry, the necessity for authenticity, the sanctity of marriage and family, the joy of serving, and the weight of duty and responsibility--all issues every pastor/servant will face and must face.
Sanford Zensen
Sanford Zensen is an ordained Baptist and former Christian & Missionary Alliance minister with twenty plus years’ experience in pastoral ministry, including twenty-five years as a professor of Christian Studies and a Christian college administrator. He has authored two five-star rated books, On the Wall with Sword and Trowel: The Challenges and Conflicts of Ministry (WIPF and Stock, 2019) and Living Deep in a Shallow World (WIPF and Stock, 2020).
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On the Wall with Sword and Trowel - Sanford Zensen
There is always more to knowing than human knowing will ever know. So the deepest knowledge can never be put into words—or spelled out in sermons, books, lectures, and seminars. It must be learned from the Master, under his authority, in experience.(1) ~ Os Guinness
Introduction
Afew months into the pastorate convinced me that I was not adequately prepared for the pressures and strain of leading the local church. Consequently, I struggled, which is not an uncommon experience among pastors in all stages of ministry. One morning, only six months into the pastorate, I found myself sitting alone in my study feeling utterly despondent over the direction of the church and my own ineptness. I cried out to the Lord, If this is what pastoral ministry is all about, I’m not sure I can last 35 more years. It’s going to take a better man than me.
And I wept.
Jon Ferguson, founding pastor of Christian Community Church (Chicago) told Christianity Today that if aspiring church leaders and pastors fully understood what ministry requires, they might not ever pursue it.
² My formal, professional training and seminary education had not equipped me to face the rigors of the pastorate or ministry in general. I’m not complaining, mind you. I had a quality, educational experience. I remember several of my professors warning a class of idealistic, energetic seminary students (of whom I was one), who wanted to change the world, about the daily routines and stresses associated with pastoring the local church, but I wasn’t listening. Frankly, I had no real concept of what they were trying to say. I simply didn’t get it. Nobody gets it, at least not until one walks through the doors of the church, attends a few disruptive, church business meetings, or stares into the swollen, red eyes of a distraught father who just learned that his precious son was killed in a car accident while traveling home. I wasn’t ready for the onslaught of evil, which came in many forms.
Feeling called to serve the local church, Nik Ripken (later a missionary to Somalia) sought the counsel of an older pastor—whose candor surprised him. You don’t want to become a preacher, Nik!
the pastor said. Churches will eat you alive! That kind of work can kill a man!
Ripken later wrote, I was suddenly wondering, if in doing so (accepting God’s call to serve) I had just condemned myself to hard labor and an unexciting life of misery.
³
I left seminary with what I thought was a solid theology, but theology, if it’s worth anything at all, must be tested in the field of experience. Seminary gave me the tools of the trade.
I knew the principles of hermeneutics and how-to exegete a passage, put a sermon together, conduct a wedding, manage a funeral, and provide oversight to administrative meetings. I had the basics, but I lacked real world experience that no lecture could ever hope to provide. I needed more, if I was to survive and successfully handle the stress and strain of ministry.
Bruce Gerencser is a former pastor with twenty-five years of experience. He observed
Young preachers begin the ministry with a lot of fervor and idealism. They go to their first church believing they are going to make a difference, that they are going to be able to do what others before them have not done… then the honeymoon period ends, and the preacher realizes that being a pastor is not what they thought it would be. Sometimes this is so devastating to the young preacher that they leave the ministry. The number of one and done pastors is quite high.⁴
I spent nearly twenty years in the pastorate serving four different, small town churches, none of which had more than 50–250 in attendance (average size of most American churches). Seminary taught me much, but not everything. No amount of professional training, personal counsel, or practical ministry (required in most M.Div. programs) could have adequately prepared me for what was to come. I had a lot to learn.
In talking with countless other pastors over the years, I’ve discovered that my experience was quite typical. One pastor noted,
I’ve had 8 1/2 years of somewhat formal theological education. In that time VERY LITTLE was practical church leadership/pastoral ministry. Of my 96 (credit) hours, less than 15 were of the practical pastoral subject matter. My earliest struggles in pastoral ministry were not in teaching, church strategy, etc., but in learning how to be a pastor and to love people. My pastoral ministry prof was a chaplain and taught the class from a heavy chaplaincy perspective. Had I not been a pastor’s kid and had the benefit of ‘seeing behind the veil’ in my home growing up, I would have been absolutely clueless.
No word more accurately describes my first few years in the pastorate than that—"clueless."
Preaching was one of the pastoral duties I most enjoyed. My own approach was expository in nature, starting at the beginning of a book or an epistle and working through to the end, verse by verse, chapter by chapter.
My first series of messages was rooted in Paul’s letter to the church at Ephesus. I reached chapter four where the Apostle wrote that God had provided the church a variety of leaders—apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, and teachers for the equipping of the saints for the work of service, to the building up of the body of Christ
(Eph 4:12, NASB) with the goal of establishing the unity of the faith
and the maturing of the local assembly and its members (v. 13). The point was simply that each believer had a role to play in the life and ministry of the church. The concept was biblically sound, and I honestly thought that a few well-constructed sermons would quickly and dramatically change the long-standing practice of an ineffective church on the verge of closing its doors. I soon learned just how wrong I was.
Having laid out what I believed to be the biblical model, I informed the church that I couldn’t (and wouldn’t) do ministry alone—which was precisely the opposite of what this congregation (like so many) was accustomed to seeing. Much to the dismay of some church members, I insisted that each one find their place, roll up their sleeves, and get to work. The dead,
I reasoned, needed to rise, and walk. I was convinced that the laity must be involved, and my objective was to see that happen.
For starters, I insisted that laypeople prepare and print the weekly bulletin (if they wanted one), call the congregation to worship on a Sunday morning, fill the baptismal pool when needed, pray, read Scripture, make announcements during church services, etc., freeing me to focus on faithfully declaring the Word of God to the best of my ability. From the beginning, I attempted to train and prepare the church body for the work of service,
encouraging, exhorting, and admonishing the saints to live out their faith at home, in the work place, and in the community. I saw that as my primary responsibility—and took it very seriously.
Three months into my ministry, following a Sunday morning service, I was standing at the front door of the church greeting people as they left the building. Because I was new to the church and the community, a deacon remained at my side to introduce me to those individuals I had not already met. The very first man out of the sanctuary (whom I later learned was quite influential) leaned in close and whispered in my ear, When are you going to grow up and be a man, and run this church by yourself?
I was stunned and responded, You apparently didn’t hear a word I said in the last 30 minutes.
He turned and started out the door.
Sensing the tension, the deacon beside me immediately tried to smooth things over. He said, "You better be careful, Al. The pastor is going to have you up there (on the platform) one of these days."
To which the man shot back in anger, The hell he will!
and marched out of the church. He never came back.
I sighed… and thought, Welcome to the pastoral ministry.
That was my first lesson. No doubt, there were more to come.
The focus of this book is practical in every respect. The principles and observations are mine and grow out of my own personal and professional experience. I share them humbly in hopes of limiting the surprise of ministry
for those (clergy and laity) who are called to the toughest of all divine assignments—serving the local church.
My prayer is that God might graciously use my story and the accompanying supplemental material to better prepare the ministry novice, encourage the veteran, and buildup followers of Christ, enabling each to hang in there,
fulfill their divine calling to service, and stay on the wall
building and rebuilding the Kingdom of God for the glory of God. Like many before me, I quickly found that I needed a trowel
in one hand and a sword
in the other!
Yet, across the gulf of space… intellects fast and cool and unsympathetic, regarded this earth with envious eyes, and slowly and surely drew their plans against us.(1) ~ H.G. Wells, War of the Worlds
CHAPTER 1
THE GREATEST BATTLE OF ALL—FAITH
Little did I know that the pastorate would take me to the front-lines in the greatest cosmic battle of all—the fight for the souls of men and women and my own spiritual survival. It is indeed a War of the Worlds.
As a young pastor, I found myself in a war zone at my first church trustee meeting. The board had decided to have the sanctuary of the church repainted. The bid came in at $2100 for the project. So, to avoid having to go to the church for final approval, the board opted to pay the contractor in three payments of $700 and thus bypass the congregation. This action would be a clear violation of the church’s by-laws which stated that any indebtedness above $700 would require a duly called business meeting. I interrupted the meeting and informed the board that we must adhere to our own constitution and governing policy and that we should not and cannot proceed further in this manner. Though I did not say it, I felt strongly that the plan was deceptive, dishonest, and certainly disrespectful toward the church body. Much of the board vehemently disagreed, and I found myself in a fight. I held my ground and didn’t back down. In fact, I went on the offensive and warned the board that, should they ignore or reject my counsel and insist on moving forward with this project without calling a business meeting of the church, I would stand in the pulpit on Sunday morning and inform the congregation. Furthermore, I advised them that they could be held financially responsible to pay the contractors for work completed should the church vote against the project. Tensions ran high.
The next afternoon while I was away on a pastoral call, the chairman of the board showed up at my house yelling at my wife, Who the hell does that young pastor think he is coming in here and telling us what we can and cannot do?
She didn’t respond to the attack but quietly and graciously informed the man that I was not in my office and closed the door. I never imagined that such a battle over doing right
would ever have to be fought within the context of the church. I was naïve.
Ron Walters, who wrote monthly letters to 50,000 pastors and church leaders, reminded them (as if they didn’t already know) that
Despite its public persona, pastoring is filled with stress. It’s an ecclesiastical toxin that saps your energy; a stubborn pimple on the face of the church; a mental battering ram that beats on your office door. At times it’s the enemy standing on the other side, but sometimes it’s your sheep. Either way, it’s a workplace staple and the single biggest drain to a pastor’s personal joy.(2)
The stress is inevitable. In just a few verses (Ephesians 6:10–12), the word against
(pros) is repeated five times by the Apostle Paul, as a reminder to the church, to stand firm
in the faith in the most trying of conflicts, opposing the onslaught of the kingdom of darkness. Détente is not an option in this great battle.
Spiritual conflict is all too real in this world, and the pastor, ministry leader, and any follower of Christ desiring to serve the interests of His kingdom will most certainly be in the thick of the fight. There is no escape. On every street corner in the community, including within the walls of the local church, God’s man or woman will be under fire, living, serving, and fighting against the "strategies of the devil… against evil rulers and authorities of the unseen world, against mighty powers in this dark