Pastors and Pain
- Ron Walters Vice President of Church Relations, Salem Communications
- Updated Jul 05, 2012
It may be the most cruel childhood disease of all. A real kid killer. Familial Dysautonomia attacks only one of 400,000 children, yet this genetic disorder does so in the most sinister way. It short-circuits the autonomic nervous system so its victims feel no pain. On the surface that would appear beneficial. No discomfort? No suffering? No crying? That's great. But that only proves the subtlety of this heartless killer.
Because an afflicted child feels no pain, there is no way to know if a bone is broken, an ear is infected, or a tooth is rotten. The eyes become dry and insensitive to foreign objects. Burns don't register. Cuts go unnoticed. For those who reach adolescence, 95% have spinal curvature, pneumonia, depression and constant hypothermia. All for the lack of pain.
Pain can be a good thing. It serves as nature's warning signal. An anatomical flashing yellow light. A human body with the complete absence of pain makes as much sense as giving a wristwatch to Venus De Milo. It's a nice thought but it serves no useful purpose.
Pastors are no strangers to pain. It's as familiar as a church bulletin, as common as a potluck. But I'm not talking about the pain of those you pray for in hospital rooms. There's plenty of that, to be sure. The pain I'm referring to is the Pastor's pain.
What pulpiteer hasn't felt intense pain from critiques of certain pew-sitting dragons? Name a pastor who hasn't hurt over unrepented sin, feuds, or heresy within the congregation. Who among us hasn't chaffed over unsigned letters. We vow we'll never read them. But we always do. We even memorize some of the lines.
Some pastors claim they've developed thick skin - but that's a crock. In most cases a pastor's skin is thinner, more sensitive than the average. That's why you're in this work. It was that tender heart that wanted to serve others. It was your soft soul that jumped when God came calling for volunteers. No, this is not an industry of thick skins. Hard work? You bet. High expectations? Yep. Larger than average egos? Probably. But thick skin? Not-a-one. The pain you feel is real and it serves an important purpose. God intended it to.
The New Testament's most common word for pain is Basanos, an Oriental word meaning a touchstone. A touchstone was a fine-textured velvety black variety of quartz. This very dense stone was used in ancient days to assay gold ore. It's still one of the most reliable methods. A strong-armed goldsmith would rub pure gold firmly against the flat touchstone leaving a golden colored steak. Then the suspect alloy would be struck repeatedly beside the golden mark. After rinsing away the broken debris, the two colors would be compared and the alloy would be determined to be authentic or fake. Being shattered against the touchstone was harsh but effective in finding true gold.
Some of us are, no doubt, going through that process now. Repeated blows on a touchstone tend to discourage even the best of pastors. The enduring pain may seem unfair and needless. But God's methods have always included pain. The cross and the grave served as Jesus' touchstone. His pain was undeserved and harsh, but it revealed pure gold. Paul's touchstone was a prison cell. The result? Gold. David's touchstone was a cave. Job's was an ash-heap. Daniel felt his in captivity. Abraham's was Mount Moriah. Joseph's was a pit. Each was a personal touchstone; each meant pain, but each produced gold.
Is it possible to pastor a church without experiencing pain? No. Is it possible to show your true worth without being pounded on a touchstone? Evidently not. Is it possible to turn that pain into gold?
What do you think?
Blessings,
Ron Walters
Vice President of Church Relations
P.S. If you're looking for great preaching tools, don't forget Preaching Magazine. It's my favorite. Check it out at Preaching.com. Do your congregation a favor by subscribing.