For an effective transition, the stresses and anxieties
surrounding it must be acknowledged and addressed. It is important that pastors
take care of themselves and tend to family needs especially during this time. It
is also important to be sensitive to the losses that are occurring with all
involved in making adjustments to a new church, home, and community. Talking
about feelings among family members helps in this time of adjustment.
Getting to know church leaders, contacting/visiting
parishioners who have pastoral needs, and meeting with the Pastor/Staff Parish
Relations committee and other major leadership groups are among first priorities.
Analyzing the church’s history and recent data of the church’s vital signs are
helpful in diagnosing the church’s current state. Members also often need time
to process grief at the loss of their former pastor. Pastors should practice
good listening skills especially during the initial months of a new appointment.
It is helpful to have a P/SPRC meeting within the first
several weeks after moving. At this “get acquainted meeting,” the pastor should
review and interpret the church’s ministry priorities. Use key words like
Worship/Preaching, Teaching, Pastoral Care, Mission/Outreach, Evangelism, and
Administration. Have P/SPRC members prioritize ministries based on their
understanding of the church’s needs. Pastors should also share personal
priorities based on skills and gifts for ministry. That usually leads to creative
discussion (as the priorities are often different) and compromise. (The list should
be reviewed in six months and adjusted as necessary.) This model has proven effective
in beginning pastoral appointments and helps the pastor focus on the perceived
needs of the church. Many pastors encounter difficulties when they impose their
own agenda and ministry plan (that may have worked in a previous appointment)
upon a new congregation and fail to discern the reality of their new challenges
and opportunities.
While meeting leadership, members, and data gathering are
crucial, a pastor must do more than that in the first year. This is not a time for
coasting or waiting. Many pastors opt to maintain the status quo. Leadership
will rightly expect more. Both leaders and members will look for leadership
from the pastor. The pastor will often need to initiate working with the lay
leadership to discern a clearer vision of a preferred future and develop a ministry
plan that addresses that unique vision.
A primary role of a pastor today is often that of being a “change
agent.” It is a suggested rule that a pastor initiate no major changes the
first year of an appointment. However, this rule may not apply when immediate
change is required to have a “turn around” experience. Effectively initiating
change requires education and good communication, and is more readily accepted
when explained as being biblically based and theologically sound. In such
cases, leadership should be open and willing to work cooperatively with the pastor
in bringing about changes necessary for the church to have a vital future.
What happens in the initial months of a new appointment
should build a foundation to move the church forward and enable a more
preferred future to God’s glory. Effective transition results from a
cooperative undertaking between laity and clergy as partners in ministry. The
question for pastors becomes, “How can my ‘call’ find expression in this church
through using my gifts to address identified needs?” For leadership and members, the question is,
“What more is God expecting of this church to be faithful as the body of
Christ?” As pastors and laity clarify roles, expectations, and responsibilities,
and answer questions together, they can achieve effective ministry to the glory
of God.
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