Today is the 72nd birthday of America’s greatest living songwriter, Bob Dylan.
One of the measures of Dylan’s brilliance is that many of his greatest songs (like “Up to Me,” “Blind Willie McTell,” “Foot of Pride,” and the incredible “Cross the Green Mountain”) never appeared on any of his official albums. In fact, I enjoy listening to his unreleased music from The Bootleg Series (1991) or Tell Tale Signs (2008) as much or more than his released songs. (I’m blessed that both my wife and my daughter-in-law like Dylan’s music.)
In 1963, two boxers met for a match at Dodger Stadium: World Featherweight champion Davey Moore and challenger Sugar Ramos, who knocked Moore out in the tenth round and won by a technical knockout.
After the fight, Moore spoke with reporters, complained of headaches, fell unconscious, was taken to the hospital, and died four days later of brain damage.
Later that year, a young Bob Dylan wrote a song called “Who Killed Davey Moore?” If you’ve never heard it before, it will definitely make you think. You’ll find it here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KvLFOCMbHHE
Who was responsible for Moore’s death? The referee? The crowd? The manager? Gamblers? Boxing writers? Ramos?
Each verse of the song is a protest from each of the above six parties … and each verse ends with these words:
“It wasn’t me that made him fall, no, you can’t blame me at all.”
The implication of Dylan’s song is that somebody played a part in Moore’s death. Dylan doesn’t just indict Ramos … he indicts everybody who had the opportunity to stop the carnage, but didn’t.
Dylan even quotes Ramos as saying, “Don’t say ‘murder,’ don’t say ‘kill,’ it was destiny, it was God’s will.”
In other words, let’s blame God for everything!
In the same vein, when a pastor is forced to leave a church, who is responsible for his departure?
After a pastor’s last Sunday, when churchgoers stop their whispering and start speaking more forthrightly, they often blame the pastor completely. Examples:
“He didn’t seem happy here. He should have left three years ago.”
“He never should have come here in the first place. He was the wrong man for the job.”
“He was too well educated for this congregation. He never spoke on our level.”
And on and on and on …
Maybe every pastor who leaves a church prematurely is 100% to blame … but somehow, I doubt it.
After Jesus raised Lazarus from the dead, the Sanhedrin called a secret emergency meeting. In typical fashion, they overreacted to Jesus’ miracle and misinterpreted its meaning. John 11:47-48 reports their discussion:
“What are we accomplishing? Here is this man performing many miraculous signs. If we let him go on like this, everyone will believe in him, and then the Romans will come and take away both our place and our nation.”
Then Caiaphas, the high priest that year, suggested a solution: “You do not realize that it is better for you that one man die for the people than that the whole nation perish.”
Caiaphas nominated Jesus to be Judah’s scapegoat … to blame the Roman-Jewish troubles completely on Him … and then none of the Sanhedrin would have to claim responsibility for any of their nation’s current problems.
To paraphrase Dylan’s song: “Who Killed Jesus Christ?” We can identify many possible culprits:
*The traitor among the Twelve.
*The politician Pilate who let the mob have their way.
*Every person in the crowd who cried out for Jesus’ death … and every person who failed to call for His release.
*The Roman soldiers who arrested Jesus in Gethsemane.
*The disciples who deserted their Master when He needed them the most.
*The Sanhedrin which violated its own rules because they hated Jesus so much.
*The devil who was pulling strings behind the scenes … as the film The Passion of the Christ so clearly delineates.
So who is to blame when a pastor leaves?
Let’s admit that there are times when a pastor’s personal misconduct disqualifies him from church ministry. Maybe the pastor was discovered to be a persistent gambler … or an unrepentant womanizer … or a hopeless drug addict. According to Alan Klaas, personal pastoral misconduct accounts for 7% of all forced terminations.
I would hope that even if a pastor was guilty of immoral behavior, those around him would still try and restore him spiritually and even vocationally rather than try and destroy him.
But Klaas says that 45% of the time, a minority faction causes a pastor to leave involuntarily. Notice: it’s 6 1/2 times more likely that a small group of vocal churchgoers pushes out a pastor than that their pastor sinned his way out of the church.
In a typical case of forced termination, the following parties may share some responsibility for the pastor’s ouster:
*The chairman who sided with his board buddies rather than back his pastor.
*The staff member who rebelled against his pastor’s directives and aligned himself with board members.
*Churchgoers who knew the identities of plotting members but never passed on that information to their pastor.
*The district minister who took the side of disgruntled members rather than a pastor called by God.
*Regular attendees who loudly criticized everything their pastor said and did rather than quietly leave the church.
*Christians who blamed every church problem on the pastor rather than defending him or supporting him.
Who pushed the pastor out?
Maybe the board chairman helped … as did a staff member … along with various churchgoers … and the district minister … and chronic critics … and some ordinary members.
This is by far the most common scenario … much more likely than blaming the pastor for everything.
Bob Dylan was right. When Davey Moore died, there was plenty of shared responsibility to go around.
And when most pastors leave a church unwillingly, it’s rarely their fault completely. (When the church did well, was he alone entitled to all the accolades?)
Rather than taking the political perspective of the Sanhedrin (which tried to blame everything on one person), let’s adopt the more mature viewpoint of that 22-year-old folksinger from Minnesota (who held multiple parties responsible for a tragedy) and ask:
“How did I contribute to the pastor’s departure … and how can I make things right?”
Check out our website at www.restoringkingdombuilders.org You’ll find Jim’s story, recommended resources on conflict, and a forum where you can ask questions about conflict situations in your church.
Having Problems With Your Pastor?
Posted in Conflict with the Pastor, Pastoral Termination, Please Comment!, tagged control freak pastor, manipulative pastors, pastor severance package on July 1, 2013| 4 Comments »
Many Christians are having problems with their pastor.
In fact, here are three common phrases people use to find this blog … along with my thoughts on each phrase:
First: “control freak pastors”
For my money, a control freak is someone who tells others what to do and how to do it.
A control freak pastor tells the janitor, “Here’s how to sweep the stairs.” He tells the women in the kitchen, “Here’s how to organize the refrigerator.” He tells the music director, “Here’s how I want the band to look on stage.”
Since the CFP (control freak pastor) doesn’t trust those around him to do ministry well, he’s constantly telling people, “No, don’t do it that way … do it this (my) way instead.”
While a pastor should set high standards for ministry – after all, we represent God Himself – he needs to recruit gifted leaders, train them, turn them loose, and then take his hands off their ministries.
When people are looking for help with a CFP, I suspect they’re upset because they believe their pastor is interfering with their ministry.
My guess is that a high percentage of pastors are CFPs. Here are two ways to deal with them:
First, ask your pastor, “What does success look like in my ministry?” Ask him to use a single phrase: “There’s no visible dirt on the stairs … you can see and access everything in the refrigerator … band members fill the entire stage.”
Second, ask him, “If I meet your standard of success, will you let me do it my way?”
If the pastor agrees, he only appears to be a CFP. If he doesn’t agree … or agrees and reneges … he may be a CFP … and only you can decide how much you can endure.
Of course, if you’re a control freak … that could very well be the issue!
Second: “manipulative pastors”
What’s the difference between manipulation and motivation?
When a pastor is using manipulation, he wants you to do something because it benefits him. When he’s using motivation, it benefits you.
Here’s the difference:
The manipulative pastor says, “I want every family in this church to give $1000 toward retiring our mortgage so I can sleep better at night.”
The motivational pastor says, “I want every family to give as God leads you so we can retire the mortgage and free up funds for ministry to your family and unchurched friends.”
The manipulative pastor will violate you to get what he wants … and you can sense that intuitively.
The motivational pastor will never make you do something you’re uncomfortable doing.
Manipulative pastors are me-centered; motivational pastors are others-centered.
Here’s a simple question to determine whether a pastor is being manipulative or motivational:
“Do you want me to do this for your benefit or for mine?”
A better question might be, “Do you want me to do this for your glory or for God’s?”
My wife and I once attended a church service where a guest speaker was manipulating people to come to the front. I took her by the hand and said, “We’re out of here.” We left and never looked back.
If your pastor must use manipulation to get people to attend, give, or serve, call him on it … and if he doesn’t change, leave and never look back.
Third: “pastor severance package”
When a church’s governing leaders are thinking about removing their pastor from office, they usually want to know whether they need to give him a severance package … and if so, how much they should give him.
If the pastor is married and/or has kids, the answer is “Absolutely.” Since pastors don’t pay into unemployment, they’re not eligible for it … and most pastors live paycheck to paycheck.
It all depends upon the church’s finances and the pastor’s tenure.
Some church boards choose to give their pastor as little severance as possible … maybe a month or two … especially if the church doesn’t have much money in reserve.
But a good rule-of-thumb is that a pastor be given one month’s severance for every year he served in a church.
In our day, nearly half the pastors who are forcibly terminated never return to pastoral ministry. They need healing … retraining … and assistance … especially if their wives don’t have a full-time career.
Dismiss a pastor without a severance package, and you may destroy his family … and the faith of his wife and kids … or force him to start a church nearby … in which case your church may become his mission field. Pay him well, and he can afford to move away.
Dismiss a pastor with a token severance package … far less than your church can afford … and you may hurt his family and your own church as well.
Do you want God’s blessing on your church? Then treat the departing pastor with generosity and dignity. A friend who served a church as an interim pastor actually went to the church board and got the previous pastor more severance money than he was originally promised.
And if I was a pastoral candidate following a termination, I would want to know what kind of severance the outgoing pastor received because that would speak volumes about how I’d be treated in a similar situation.
I’ll write more about these phrases another time.
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