The Learner
This is the story of a young man fresh out of seminary who becomes the pastor of a church seeking a new leader. Somebody, they advertised, “. . . who can relate to young people. Somebody who can offer us creativity. Somebody who can take criticism. We want somebody who likes challenges and is a great preacher. We are still learning about lots of things, and we hope that our new
minister is too, but it wouldn’t hurt if s/he is also a miracle worker.”
The man who got the job was still learning, and he knew something about miracles. He had been part of one on a golf course. It hooked him on the game forever. So when the church called him, they confronted something new with the golf, but a challenge as old as the scriptures emerged as well: homelessness.
Prologue
The visitor said, “ . . . and they’ll make you sign statements where you pledge to behave.”
Everyone chuckled. One of the seminarians replied, “Tell me more.” “Well, congregations vary, but my first church was very clear up front that their clergy better not get into a – they called it – complicated relationship with a member. It might diminish one’s objectivity as a spiritual leader.”
The other visitor chimed in, “Yeah, that’s chapter and verse for many churches. Even if they are two consenting adults, a pastor’s primary relationship is to the parishioner, and it must be maintained. As a trusted mentor, not a friend or business partner or lover. Or part of a member’s regular golfing foursome . . . ”
Chris interrupted, “Even in congregations led by our graduates? Won’t they be tolerant? Won’t they treat us as individuals? The churches that hire us?”
“. . . Some are very strict. They say that if the pastor-member relationship is no longer primary, then it needs to be severed in order for the parishioner to find a new spiritual leader. She or he may even have to stop attending that church.”
Twelve first-year students and two ordained alums had gathered in what was known as the Lower Room, a relaxing place for libation and conversation in the basement of a big, old, white frame house in the cluster of seminary buildings adjacent to the University of Chicago campus. Its bulletin boards were plastered with notices of upcoming events and things for sale. Photos under the heading of
“Trouble Makers” plastered the walls: Mother Teresa, Reinhold Niebuhr, Martin Luther King, Martin Luther, John Dewey, Jane Adams, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, and Gandhi, all stared right back at you. In a space labeled “Image of the Month” was an 8” X 10” glossy black and white print of a homeless guy dozing in a sleeping bag curled up at the bottom of a south side street sign. “This could be Jesus,” was scribbled on the wall next to the picture. Following it in a different hand: “Duh, no kidding.”
These aspiring ministers of God were tapping into the experiences of two ordained graduates of the seminary who were back in Hyde Park for a conference about the future of Christian youth in mainstream America, but the topic of the moment was dual roles.
The first alum went on, “The simplest way to understand dual roles is that it’s a conflict of interest. Parishoners’ needs must be protected and come first. There was a minister’s covenant or code – or whatever they call it – that I signed at the time of my ordination. It says that I will not use my ministerial status, position or authority knowingly to misguide, negatively influence, manipulate, or take advantage of anyone in any way.”
Chris gasped, “Wow, not anyone?” and everyone laughed, but he didn’t think it was funny. Recently, he had dreamed of holding forth from his pulpit while a member who would become his future wife stared up at him from her pew.
The second alum said, “Without communicating clear boundaries up front, dual roles can become hard to manage, and harm a lot of people . . .”
Other students interrupted.
“. . . Can’t congregations and clergy create their own special agreements? Ones that are mutually sensitive and respected?”
“. . . What if they’re not a member of the church – the other party? Does that make a difference?
“. . . What about relationships with young people, like teenagers in confirmation?”
“. . . It better be platonic.”
“. . . Or intellectual.”
“. . . Hey, even intellectual ones can cause trouble if they go in certain directions or too far. Be careful.”
“. . . What about sports? What if you like one team and they like another?”
The first alum spoke up. “Well, that’s usually all in fun, but it can go too far. Emphasizing sports. Ad nauseum. Pardon the image, but talking about sports is a lob shot or gimme putt for many ministers: Easy and irresistible. But be careful. Don’t be known primarily as an athlete who came to The Lord, even if it’s true.”
The second alum added, “All of this is especially dicey if you are an unmarried pastor in a small town, since many people that you meet are either current parishioners or potential ones, assuming you covet new acquaintances like most of us shepherds do . . .”
A student went, “Baaa, baa.” Only a couple of the others smiled.
“. . . Hey, sports are important to lots of people. Too important, I think in many cases, but this never gets written into pledges about behavior, and please don’t get me going on and on about Sunday morning soccer games and how they suck kids out of churches.”
These topics were not new to Chris and his classmates, but talking about them in a group that included ordained ministers was sobering confirmation of what they had learned here and there: Being a minister of God is complicated and challenging