Too far to fall: The pastor's worst fear - Failure

Failure. It's a f-word of pastoral ministry. It's the worst fear, the deepest dread. "I'd rather be diagnosed with a fatal disease than fail," one candidate wrote on his psychological assessment. "Failure - that's just too far to fall," said another.I was fired in 2003. It was my greatest vocational humiliation. After serving a church for six years, I was invited into a brief elder meeting after teaching my regular Sunday adult course and told that reconciliation and relationship with the lead pastor would be impossible, that my termination was the only recourse. Sara found out as I walked through the front door of our home in tears. Our two babies were there. We'd recently put a deposit on a new home build. There was no goodbye, no thank you. I was not even allowed to keep my own Rembrandt painting - The Return of the Prodigal Son - the one Sara had gifted me after framing it. The prodigal wasn't being asked to consider a return, I suppose.It took years to reconcile this - to forgive, to bless that church, its pastor, and the leaders I'd grown to trust and love. But the sting of failure and rejection stayed with me for a long time. I had failed. At least, that's how I narrated it. It was my worst fear as a pastor. Perhaps, even more bitter for this tender Enneagram 4 was that I felt utterly misunderstood. The short blurb in next Sunday's program didn't acknowledge the tears I'd cried for people in that place, the above-and-beyond care I offered, the new initiatives I started, the relationships we forged, the promises not delivered. Never before for me had rage and shame kissed in this way. Image result for shameFailure.It's 15 years later, and the sadness still lingers. Each time a pastoral candidate answers my question "What is the worst thing that can happen to you in ministry?" on a psychological assessment, I hear my own voice in their responses. I hear the terror of potential failure. One pastoral candidate said, "I can never imagine it and I'd never recover from it." Another said, "It would be so humiliating letting down myself, my extended family, my church." Still another said that the question provoked so much anxiety that answering it was impossible.In those days after, I wondered if we would make it. I vacillated between rage and self-contempt. I dreamed of payback. I felt the sting of my Presbytery's silence in the face of what I considered an injustice. I scrambled to launch a counseling practice, hoping that I'd be able to pay the bills before our severance was done. I had little trust that the God I called sovereign and loving and gracious could hold all of this. My contemplative practices died on that day I was fired, replaced by frantic efforts to do the job God had failed to do for me.I realized that my heart was bitter, and I was all torn up inside. (from Psalm 73, NLT). It's 15 years later. Another young pastor asked for a Skype call this week, and as we talked he said something I hear quite often, "How have you managed to "make it" unscathed in ministry? Everything you do I want to do." Honestly, I'm not sure who I'd be today without it. What if that first call was a "big win," in which I was celebrated and sent? What if I wasn't thrust into a dark night where my smaller box for God was exploded? With what credibility could I have written Finding God in the Wilderness Places (Leaving Egypt)? Would I have gotten the therapy I needed? Been called out on my own stuff?What if I didn't fail?Richard Rohr titled a book Everything Belongs. I turn 48 in a few short days, and while I thought I'd have things figured out at 40, I now know that 50 will not likely deliver either. I do sense that it all belongs, though. Each detour on the journey was beyond my control or prediction. My girls have endured two cross-country moves and seven different houses. I've shifted denominations. I've been given tremendous opportunities to be at the forefront of new initiatives. I've faced shadow sides of me that frightened me.  I've chosen to make some unorthodox moves that I sensed would grow me - risks I'm not sure I would have taken without failure.I titled a little Lent devotional I wrote a couple of years ago Falling Into Goodness. It was my way of theologically reconciling what I'd come to terms with emotionally. God wasn't at the top of the ladder but in the dust. Jesus wasn't waiting on the altar with an award, but embracing me as I wept and wept and wept. When I went to places of self-sabotage, I felt a mysterious presence. When I succeeded, I felt gratitude and a decent dose of humility, knowing that I'd fallen so far. As Augustine might put it, "God was more near to me than I was to myself" all along. Or as the father said to the older brother, "Everything I have is yours." Just breathe. Just relax into the arms of Goodness.I got a text from a student yesterday who is scared to fail. I wondered how to respond. I thought - maybe experience is our only teacher. I wanted to say something wise, even proverbial. And then, I knew. I had only the words of one deeply acquainted with suffering, a saint of the dust, Lady Julian of Norwich:

All shall be well, and all manner of thing shall be well.

 

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The myth of Narcissus and the hope of Redemption