You are reading an entry from 10th December 2015 in Church Matters, a blog by our general editor, Paul Beasley-Murray. If you wish to leave a comment, please visit paulbeasleymurray.com.
Traditionally the third Sunday in Advent has been associated with the ministry of the church. On this day the lectionary readings focus on John the Baptist, the Forerunner. So in the Church of England next Sunday the Gospel reading for the ‘principal service’ is taken from Luke 3.7-18 which describes John calling the crowds to “bear fruits worthy of repentance”.
Whether or not the solo ministry of John the Baptist provides a good model for today’s ordained ministry is no doubt debatable. The day does, however, provide an ‘excuse’ – or should I say ‘reminder’ – for churches to pray for the ministry of the church. So for instance in the Book of Common Worship the collect for the Third Sunday of Advent is as follows:
O Lord Jesus Christ, who at your first coming sent your messenger to prepare your way before you: grant that the ministers and stewards of your mysteries may likewise so prepare and make ready your way by turning the hearts of the disobedient to the wisdom of the just, that at your second coming to judge the world we may be found an acceptable people in your sight; for you are alive and reign with the Father in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.
Beautifully constructed as the collect may be, I believe a more imaginative approach to praying for God’s ministers is called for.
Ministers need their people’s prayers, for ministry can be exhausting and discouraging. A survey of 1000 Anglican ministers in England revealed, for instance, that nearly a third felt used up at the end of the day in the parish; one in five felt frustrated by their parish ministry; one in six felt that parishioners blamed them for their problems; less than half felt they had accomplished many worthwhile things in their ministry or that they were positively influencing people’s lives in their parish ministry.
Finally, Ministry Sunday is also an occasion when the church needs to remember that God although only some are called to lead his church, all his people are called to engage in ‘ministry’ of one kind or another.
Yes, let’s make the most of Ministry Sunday.
You are reading an entry from 10th December 2015 in Church Matters, a blog by our general editor, Paul Beasley-Murray.
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