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This Side of the Pulpit » Entries tagged with "pastor’s life"

Does Pastor Have an Opinion?

“How does Pastor feel about that? Does he have an opinion about it?” Such a loaded question! Yes, you can be sure pastor does have an opinion about it. Pastors are human; we have opinions about having opinions and more opinions about not having opinions. Of course we have our own ideas and expectations. But the pastoral ministry means realizing that you have opinions about half of everything and of those, half you really feel strongly about. Half of those may be things that need to be addressed sometime. Half of those things need to be addressed soon, and half of those need to be nipped in the bud. That leaves us at about 3%. That still may be too high. Maybe it’s only 1/4 of things that you have opinions of. The … Read entire article »

Filed under: Theology

A Rant which May not Impress You, if Read Correctly

“How many of us have actually ever read through the Bible? We get bits and pieces of it, but never read through chapter-by-chapter.” A layperson said this to me the other day. The more I think about it, the more upset I get. I get upset with myself for not reading Scripture devotionally as often as I should. But I get really upset with others if its true. Is it true? Are you all completely ignoring the Word of God to such an extent that your only exposure to it is the readings on Sundays and the bits and pieces and verses you might read in The Witness or the occasional Bible study you attend? Seriously? You call it the Word of God, the eternal Truth, the Revelation of our Lord Jesus Christ, … Read entire article »

Filed under: Theology

Admitting Inexperience and Leading Nonetheless

Some of the Lutheran pastors and I were supposed to study Greek this morning, but instead, we spoke about causistry and pastoral practice–wedding stuff, mostly. It is fun and thought-provoking, to consider what I usually do and how it differs with some of the other pastors’ practices. But one bit of discussion stood out for me: the importance of being earnest, of just speaking the truth. Admitting ignorance, admitting inexperience, admitting weakness. It’s actually quite powerful. It relaxes you, it relaxes those around you. It helps your hearers or co-workers or audience know what to expect. It’s even more authoritative, though it sounds like it would be the opposite. Leaders don’t want to admit they are wrong or uncertain or inexperienced. They want to be heard and followed. But when the leader … Read entire article »

Filed under: Theology

Back with Both Feet In

Back with Both Feet In

Something about returning from vacation and being up to your neck in work and church and family schedules… it makes you want at least another week just for decompression. Ease back into it, you know? Maybe I should be preparing better. In happy news, Christmas Eve worship was beautiful, Christmas Day was wonderful, St. Nicholas was good to us, God was good in providing safe travel, the in-laws were doing well, all things considered and we … Read entire article »

Filed under: Personal

Merry Christmas and Auf Wiederlesen!

An early Merry Christmas to all of you. This will be my last post until after the new year. I’ll be spending time with the family until Monday, when we will all load in the car and drive, drive, drive to Tennessee to see my in-laws. I’m looking forward to being offline for the next ten days. I may go through Skyrim withdrawal, but that might not be a bad thing either. I have mixed feelings about being gone next week. We have a number of folks here having surgery and going through some heavy trials, and part of me wants to be around or available. But I want and need to see my in-laws who are having health issues, and Marjorie’s uncle who is ailing with MS. I commend them … Read entire article »

Filed under: Personal

National Lutheran Pastor’s Wives Day

National Lutheran Pastor’s Wives Day

Ok. Actually the commemoration of Katherina Von Bora, the wife of Martin Luther. Legend has it she was the author of the “What does this mean?” portions of the catechism, as Martin would ask himself that aloud, and Katie told him. Like a good pastor’s wife, full of wisdom. They would also write and direct children’s Christmas programs for their kids at home, since that sort of thing didn’t happen at church. Give thanks for Katherina today, … Read entire article »

Filed under: Theology

A Generation Gone

I find it sad when I meet the children of faithful members and I ask them where they live and they say, “Oh, I live here in Enid.” Then I find out they are going to a church of another denomination. As a parent I know that we only have so much influence on our children. But I look at my congregation and see an entire generation missing from our pews. Seriously. There are exceptions, to be sure. But I wonder what happened then, and what happens now, and what I can do as a parent and pastor to prevent that in the future. Any ideas? … Read entire article »

Filed under: Uncategorized

Gettin’ Down on Friday and the Weekend

Gettin’ Down on Friday and the Weekend

The plan is to clean the garage out thoroughly this weekend, while it is still nice, or nice-ish. Mom and Dad are coming next week to spend Thanksgiving with us. I am taking a few days off before and after the Feast, and Dad and I plan on doing some trim work in the kitchen and dining room and then addressing the dining room table which needs to be taken apart, cleaned, sanded, rebuilt and … Read entire article »

Filed under: Personal

Thoughts on Confirmation Instruction

When I teach confirmation it seems I spend more in two subjects: the Ten Commandments and Christology. The Commandments just seem to require a long time to explain commission and omission of each commandment,and to make sure they understand them. Then we get to the Creed. I spend a lot of time emphasizing in every way I can that you can’t cut Jesus in half (separate the two natures in a nestorian way). I also drill into them that the Trinity does not have “Parts” and neither does Jesus. There are Three Persons, and Two Natures, but One God and One Jesus. I don’t speak so much about Jesus as Prophet, Priest, and King, nor even about the states of humiliation and exaltation. I remember being drilled on those when I was in … Read entire article »

Filed under: Theology

Working from Home

Day three of working from home. Olivia was one sick little girl, but is doing better today. I plan on finishing my sermon for Sunday and working ahead on a few more sermons, which will free me up next week to make some shut in visits and focus on some other projects too. It is nice having a job which allows me to do some work from home, but I do miss going into the office and having the interaction there. I wouldn’t want to work from home all the time, but I appreciate the flexibility. How many of you have jobs you can do from home (in part, at least)? Are you more or less productive? … Read entire article »

Filed under: Personal