Before we Lutherans snicker, we need to admit the decline of seminary vocations in our own back yard. Plus, we are in a position to see upwards of 25-40% of actively serving pastors retire within the next 5-10 years. We are not in any enviable position either. We have tried inventing alternate routes, tried substituting an online option, and offered financial scholarships to cover all the seminary tuition and still we have not made progress in the recruitment of young men as first career pastors and rely on second career seminarians as the primary seedbed of new pastors. While there is certainly nothing wrong and entirely laudable about those second career men, the truth is that many of them will only serve half as long as first career pastors and many less than that. This means that second career men cannot be the primary source of pastors for our churches though they should and must always be a strong secondary source.
This decline cannot continue. We are no better position to sustain our congregations with the diminishing numbers of men coming out of our seminaries. We must take this seriously. Sure, we have a Synod-wide program to highlight pastoral vocations and other church work careers but it is not the Synod's job to find recruits. It is the job of those in the pews and the pastors in the congregations. We better start taking it seriously.
Barriers to recruitment of young men for the pastoral vocation include:
- Lack of support from their family and friends
- Low esteem many of our people hold their pastors
- Low numbers of those families who attend weekly
- Low salaries and high educational debts
- Lack of support and encouragement from congregational leaders
- Abundance of alternative careers
- High cost of our church colleges and seminaries (not just tuition, folks)
- Naysayers who suggest that the church is in decline and not many pastors are needed
- Terrible portrayals of clergy in the media
- Thinking it is somebody else's job to encourage pastoral vocations
All of these are true and real but one of the biggest reasons never cited is prayer. Are we really praying the Lord to send out laborers and shepherds into His vineyard and flock? If we prayed more about this, perhaps the prayer would find a greater willingness in us to work for what we pray. If we prayed more about this and more in earshot of young men in the congregation, they might hear the greater need and hear the Lord calling them to consider more seriously this vocation. I have been actively serving as a pastor for 43 years. Many of my peers are already retired and my family is encouraging me to do that also. If you love your pastor and appreciate what he does, look around your parish for smart and dedicated young men and encourage them to follow in his footsteps. Pray for them. Pay for them to make their education easier. Support them by honoring the calling and the office. Rome is certainly in worse shape than we are but we could be right behind them. And it is our own fault. We have contributed to the decline at least in part by not esteeming the office highly and by presuming it is somebody else's job to identify and recruit young men to serve the church as pastors.
1 comment:
From my experience, numbers 2, 4, and 7 are either exaggerated or compounded by pastors themselves. When I think of what I've heard pastors say about the vocation, I think of them talking about those three points and in general talking about the burden of being a pastor. The added point, which may be part of what you had in mind in number 7, are comments about the loneliness and hardships on their family. It doesn't come to mind that pastors talk about being a pastor as if they actually enjoy being a pastor. I think that may even be why some parishioners feel like they have to try to not be a burden to the pastor. I think there can be a fine line between ensuring that young men know what they are signing up for, and discouraging them. I also wonder how we can elevate the stature of the vocation. I feel like the caricature of Lutheran history is that Martin Luther attacked the papist view of the ministry being holier than other vocations, so being a pastor is no more noble, manly, and heroic than any other occupation. At the same time, recent controversies seems to include an aspect of both pastors and laymen trying to put each other in their place. We aren't in a good place to start trying to recruit young men to the ministry. But, as you say, we don't have the luxury of waiting for a better time.
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