It has been nearly
four years since I retired from fulltime pastoral ministry. At the time I
wondered how the transition was going to change my ministry, which I have
always considered to be a lifelong calling and never dependent on a church
paycheck – although the salary certainly helped pay the bills.
For the most part I have declined opportunities to do traditional
ministry. I have declined all requests to be an interim pastor at churches in
surrounding towns. I declined most invitations to be the guest preacher in
other pulpits. I needed time away from the pulpit to recover my land legs. Like
sailors needing time to adjust to land life after an extended time at sea, I
needed time to see what it was like to walk the Christian life without leaning
on a pulpit.
Strangely enough, in recent months the coronavirus pandemic has
aided my ministry. Enjoying the slower
pace that the pandemic brought, I used the time to start a podcast and a video
YouTube Channel. I don’t preach online. I talk about spiritual matters in an
informal manner.
What I say has changed as much as how I say it. When I was a
church pastor I had the responsibility referred to as “care of souls.” I ministered
to people at all different stages of the spiritual journey. Whenever I crafted
a sermon, I was very aware that it would be heard by a wide variety of people
at different stages in their physical and spiritual lives. That determined what
I said.
Now without the responsibility for other’s souls, I find
myself looking more carefully at my own soul. I write and speak to clarify my thoughts
about what I am experiencing spiritually. I speak from where I am, out of where
I am – not to where other people are. I “speak forth” rather than “speak to.” If
people happen to be where I am spiritually, then they will tune in. If not,
they will tune out. Either way is fine. It turns out that I reach more people now
than I ever did when I was a pulpit jockey.
This new ministry has deepened my spiritual life. One of the
reasons I chose Christian ministry as a profession was so I could spend time developing
my own spiritual life. I admit, it was selfish. But it worked … to a degree. Pastoral
ministry was more time-consuming than I ever imagined, but I also focused on
what I love the most – spiritual matters. Now that I am retired I have even
more time to devote to the spiritual adventure.
In classical Indian philosophy of life, there are four stages
of life known as ashramas. The first is the Student. The second is the
Householder. The third is Retirement. In ancient times, people withdrew from society
and retired into the forest to devote themselves fulltime to spiritual
practice. In reality most people did not do this, but it remained the Hindu
ideal. (The fourth stage is renunciation, a life of monastic-style vows, taking
on voluntary poverty. Something I am not yet ready for - although I am striving
for simplicity.)
Most Americans today, who can afford to retire, use
retirement to catch up on all the things they wanted to do earlier in life, but
did not have the time or the money. “Eat, drink, and be merry” as the retired
preacher of Ecclesiastes advises. Those
who cannot afford to retire must continue in the householder phase. Many people,
who can afford to retire, choose not to. Instead they continue in the second
stage of life until the end. Very few use retirement as a time to devote themselves
to spiritual pursuits. I have embraced this stage in my life gladly and
wholeheartedly!
When I look inward at who I am and who God is, it puts
outward matters in perspective. My inner vision is sharper, even while my
physical vision and hearing is dimmer. What I see astounds me, and I share it
with others. I have no choice. This is who I am. Through the responses I
receive regularly from listeners around the world, I have discovered there are
a lot of people who see what I see. They are where I am. We are one.
In my ministry I share what I see, which is what Jesus saw. He
called it the Kingdom of God. My teaching is more like the message of Jesus and
less like the church’s message about Jesus. It is more focused and unequivocal.
I am less concerned about offending those who are afraid of the light and more concerned
about bearing witness to the Light.
A pastor friend of mine who is still in the pulpit is
worried that his bold and prophetic preaching will get him fired by his
congregation, with the attendant financial hardship that would involve. I
empathize with him, but I have no such fears myself.
I still get the occasional sniper taking shots at me from
the dark corners of the Church. Those attacks still wound me, but I am learning
how to let them move through me with less resistance. As Jesus wisely practiced
and taught us, “Resist not evil.” My ministry is still the joy it has always
been, but now the joy is fuller and deeper, and it shows no signs of
diminishing. I am eternally grateful for this blessing of the ministry of
retirement.