Resources Every Rural Pastor Needs
I had a conversation with a pastor from out of
state at a conference. He told me he was from a small town in the Southwest.
“How small?” I asked, as I am always curious about small towns. “Oh very small” he assured me. “Only 15 thousand people or so.”
Depending on your background, you might think
that is a small town too. Or maybe you
know some places to take that brother to show him what a small town really
is. That’s more people than live in the
whole county where I pastor. And my town
of 3500 is the big city compared the towns of 1,000, 600, or 300 around
us. Pastoring in rural communities has
it own set of challenges and difficulties as well as it’s set of pleasures and
privileges. Pastoring is a challenge no
matter the size of the community, but having the right set of tools can make
the job a little easier.
It’s possible to drive a nail with a rock, but
it sure is easier with a hammer. It’s
possible to pastor a rural church without these tools, but your life will be
much easier if you keep these resources close at hand.
- Patience and
Perseverance - If you are like me you are already rolling your eyes at
this one, but it’s true. Things move slower in a small town. Everything in
town is within a mile of everything else, but things just move so slow. I
don’t just mean the line at the Dairy Queen either. Change happens in
rural churches and communities, but it happens slowly. A rural church in need of revitalization
can hold out much longer than a city church. The rural church pastor must
learn to work in the ebb and flow of the rural community, and this means
he needs patience. It’s possible to swim against the current, but it takes
more effort than you probably have. When you work with patience, using the
strengths of a rural community to your advantage, then things will change
eventually. I can promise you it’
won’t happen as fast as you want it to, but if you stick with it then even
those things that don’t want to change will change with time.
- Acceptance
If you come to a small town from the big city, you will have to fight the
urge to change the church and community into what you think it should be
like. Your church is never going to
be like the mega church in the state capitol, so quit trying to make it
that. The rural pastor needs to get over the idea that the church is his
canvas on which to paint his masterpiece.
It is not the place for you to implement all the systems and
structures that you learned at the latest conference. The church is God’s canvas, not yours.
The pastor is no more than the brush, a tool in the hand of the
master. Only when wielded by an
expert does the pastor have any power to do good. Our attempts to change churches systems
and structures often hinder our ability to do the real work of ministry,
that of bringing people to the Lord and discipling them. There is a time for change, and when we
embrace the natural rhythms of the church we will find that those things
change without much effort or strife.
Accepting the idiosyncrasies of the rural church allows us to see
that it too is the wisdom of God made manifest in its community.
- A Place to get away - There is nowhere in a rural community that a pastor can go where he is not still the pastor. A small town pastor can have a much larger impact on people as he is known by many, even those who don’t go to his church. At the grocery store, the feed store, the ball game, the bank, and the Christmas parade he is always the pastor. More than that the pastor is often expected to be at all or most of the community events. I’ve been in the community long enough that I am regularly called pastor by people that I don’t know that well. This is a blessing as it allows us to have impact outside our church walls, but it can also be an added stress. Even large mega church pastor can wander in a gas station or Target in his big city and people won’t know who he is. The rural church pastor needs somewhere he can go where he can be himself. This might mean going to larger city nearby, or on regular vacations, or to family gatherings. This is often harder for rural church pastors to accomplish as they are usually the only full time staff person, and there are fewer people to pick up the slack when they leave. Every pastor needs a regular Sabbath, but rural pastors often have limited means and time. Even just the matter of having to drive 2 hours to get to a big city makes it harder. Only with intention can a rural pastor obey the command of God to rest from his work.
- Flexibility
Most research says that 80% of churches have under 150 in attendance. This
means that at the majority of those churches, the pastor is the only full
time staff person. Sometimes
there’s a part time youth, childrens, or music leaders, but the majority
of the work often falls to the pastor.
A rural church pastor might like to sit in his office day reading
great theologians, but he also will have to help order church supplies,
fold bulletins, help with the youth, plan the parade float, lead in
outreach, be the IT person, plan mission trips and more. All pastors have to wear multiple hats,
but the rural church pastor will find himself doing it more regularly.
This means he must use his time wisely as he wears all hats he has to
wear. Flexibility is needed if a pastor wants to be effective in a rural community.
- The ability
to send - We often think of rural churches as never changing and stuck in
their ways, which can be true. But there are other parts of rural churches
that are constantly changing. You
might think of a large church from large cities as the one who send
missionaries, and that’s often true. But rural churches often send their
best and brightest away to the large cities. Study after study shows that rural
communities are shrinking, that more people are moving to large
cities. A glance around most
churches in small towns shows that there is often a generation
missing. It’s often missing in the
town as well, as young people don’t want to stay in small towns. They
leave for school or work and don’t often come back. There are exceptions, of course, but as
a rule this is true in most rural churches and towns. This means that rural pastors are often
pouring into kids and youth that they will never reap the benefit from
their leadership as they grow and mature.
I can think of numerous students that I have loved with all my
heart, who benefited our church even as teenagers, but who left our small
town for bigger and greener pastures elsewhere. I’m not mad at them, but I must
understand that this is a part of rural church life. It’s not just students either. Families
frequently move after their kids graduate, or senior adults who have been
mainstays in the church for decades move to be near their kids. The rural church pastor is constantly
losing leaders and having to replace them. We can let this make us angry
towards the big cities and carry a chip on our shoulders, or we can see it
as a sending opportunity. This
means I must be purposeful in my work and discipleship in order to best
equip these people to be servants of God and the church wherever life
takes them.
Pastoring is difficult no matter where we find
ourselves doing it. There are certain challenges unique to pastoring in rural
churches and towns. The good thing is that the same God who called us to these
communities will be the one who equips us to do the work of ministry
there. A pastors nature or temperament
might make him more suited to ministry in one place than another, but where
ever he is he must learn to stay on his knees in front of God for his
people. These five tools won’t make the
work of the shepherd easy, but they will make it easier.
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