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Q What advice would you offer seminary graduates for them to be successful pastorsā€”at a time when more and more ministers are being separated from their congregations?

A Thanks for asking. The last time I was privileged to address seminary seniors, I told them that they should walk with God, love their people, and get a life.

As for walking with God, I shared with them how most of my prayers have been with my eyes wide open. Like the time I was driving to find a member of another church in our neck of the woods. I had to inform him that his young toddler son had been killed in a terrible accident. Ministers get invited into peopleā€™s lives at critical moments and thus need to literally and steadily feel the presence of God in their own.

Along the way Iā€™ve met some wonderful people. Folks I loved to be on our lifeā€™s journey with. But Iā€™ve also had some I just couldnā€™t stand. People who complained about everything and never spoke a positive word. Those who were fiercely critical, even to a young, tender soul just starting in ministry. Words can hurt. Yet I am called to love even those I donā€™t likeā€”to love my own secret enemy. Itā€™s been that way in every charge since my first.

Now the most important thing. By ā€œgetting a lifeā€ I mean that successful ministers typically have a delightful sense of humor. They do not take themselves overly seriously. Theyā€™re able to relativize things, to see the situation from many different perspectives, not just their own. A good sense of humor is not a matter of being able to tell a good joke in every sermon. Rather, itā€™s to see the ironies and the surprises and laugh, yes, even at ourselves.

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