Synod 2023 reviewed and approved the reports of the synodical deputies during its work Monday (June 12). These are ministers, nominated by classes (regional groups of churches) and appointed by synod to serve as synodâs deputiesâthose entrusted to ensure that Church Order is properly followed in several types of actions taken by a classis. The deputies report every year to synod, the broadest assembly of the Christian Reformed Church.
Article says three such deputies should be present whenever the cooperation of synodical deputies is required, âas stipulated in the Church Order.â
Actions requiring their cooperation include:
- admitting as ministers in the CRC pastors entering from other denominations (Art. 8)â12 instances reported to and approved by Synod 2023
- approving examined candidates (Art. 10)â23 instances
- approving of service outside of a congregational pastoring role that âis consistent with the calling of a minister of the Wordâ (Art. 12-c)â15 instances
- loaning a minister to another denominationâseven instances, and extending the loanâ six instances (Art. 13-c)
- releasing a minister to ministry outside of the CRCNA (Art. 14-b)â14 cases
- releasing a minister to a non-ministerial role (Art. 14-c)âfive cases
- releasing a minister from a congregation (Art. 17-a) â 20 cases
- readmitting a minister to office after a non-ministerial release (Art. 14-e)âone case
- approving positions for commissioned pastor (Art. 23-a) as âkeeping with synodical guidelinesââ45 cases
- approving individuals as commissioned pastors (Art. 23-a)â10 cases
- approving a commissioned pastor in a solo pastoring role (Art. 24-a)âfive cases
- concluding the service of a commissioned pastor (Art. 24-d)â14 cases
Bernard DeYoung, Classis Huron, inquired whether synodical deputies might be called upon to do exit interviews in some of the cases of pastor release, âto gain information that could be helpful for the pastor church resources committeeâwhat to be alert for and what to listen for?â DeYoung didnât want the receiving of this long list to be âjust perfunctory,â but that it might prompt some provision of âaftercare, to help stave off what seems to be a growing list every synod.â
Synod parliamentarian, Kathy Smith, said classes, with the help of regional pastors, have the best position from which to be involved in something like exit interviews. âThe synodical deputies' role is restricted to concurring, or not, with what classes have done. Exit interviews would be outside of their purview,â Smith said.
Synod president Paul DeVries agreed that DeYoungâs suggestion would be âgood for classes to hear.â
Later in its work, synod did approve the creation of an exit interview process for one type of ministry scenario. It instructed âthe Office of General Secretary to create an exit interview/ministry postmortem learning process for classes, churches, leaders, and their families to use when burnout occurs in bivocational ministry.â
In addition to approving the synodical deputiesâ reports, Synod 2023 also recognized the retirements of 21 ministers of the Word and nine commissioned pastors, concluding this part of its work by praying for the lives of these ministry servants.
Synod 2023 is meeting June 9-15 at Calvin University in Grand Rapids, Mich. Find daily coverage from The Banner news team at thebanner.org/synod. Visit for the synod schedule, webcast, recordings, photos, committee reports, and liveblog. Synod is the annual general assembly of the Christian Reformed Church.
About the Author
Alissa Vernon is the news editor for The Banner.