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Good Sheperd; Pastoring

Counseling, Good Sheperd; Pastoring
When PastorSpeak Comes Home
June 2, 2010 at 6:16 am 1
During seminary, I received training in Clinical Pastoral Education (CPE). By placing seminarians in institutional settings -- in my case, the cardiac unit of Central Baptist Hospital in Lexington, KY -- CPE prepares clergy to engage in meaningful ministry with people in the midst of life's most uncertain moments.

And there is a whole conversational style that goes along with CPE. It's all part of the training. CPE conversation is heavy on the following:
  • Open ended questions;
  • Answering questions with . . . another open ended question;
  • Re-phrasing what you hear the client/patient say;
  • Hesitation to give advice or direction -- instead allow the client/patient to clarify their own feelings and opinions;
  • CPE cliches: "tell me about . . ." "it sounds like . . . " and, of course, "how does that feel?"

All in all, CPE training is invaluable for pastoral ministry. I remember thinking that my early years at Mt. Carmel UMC, which were full of home & hospital visitation, were simply an extension of that summer internship in Kentucky.

But here's where the CPE-inspired pastorspeak has become a problem for me: when I use it at home or around the office. It is now such a part of who I am and how I talk that it is hard to break out of it.

Yet there are many times when the staff I work with doesn't need a reflective listener; they need a leader who will make his wishes known with confidence and clarity.

Or when my family asks a question, they want an answer, not an open-ended response that puts the issue back in their lap.

So as I navigate the roles of pastor and boss, of counselor and father, I need to remember which mode of communication best fits the situation.

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Good Sheperd; Pastoring
Watch & See That The Lord Is Good
March 17, 2009 at 6:20 am 1
There are two schools of thought when it comes to what the music portion of a Sunday service should be like in terms of engaging people who are in the worship space but don't yet believe in Christ. (By the way, we hope and pray we have many such people each week.)

One approach says that praise and worship should be brief with an emphasis on the excellence of the band. Since most people who don't yet believe in Christ feel awkward while singing, congregational participation is a low priority.

The second approach recognizes that worship is a gift to God from people who believe. Therefore, there is a high value on participation, movement, and expression. Even if searching people think such expressiveness is a bit weird, it's still worth it.

At Good Shepherd we've opted for the second approach.

But get this: I think such honesty is more evangelistic. Here's why: when people who are unsure of the faith see Jesus' followers caught up in worship, when they hear "shout outs" to the Lord, when they find their own hands raised in praise in spite of themselves, then they know they are in the presence of Someone supernatural. They are more likely to believe.

We've recently had an outpouring of exuberant worship, especially at our 11:30 gathering. Am I worried that more claps, more shout outs, and more hand raising will somehow alienate new people?

No way.

It will bring more in.

So bring it on, all you Without Limit worshippers.
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