Dec 20, 2019 | Extra Articles (For everyone), Features
Rosemary Walters suggests some practical ways of responding to Bishop Martyn’s vision for the future of lay ministry. ‘What next for Lay Ministry?’ – Transforming Ministry Magazine
[This article is from our Winter 2019 back issue. To read back issues dating back to 2015, please activate your subscription]
The recent booklet from CRC, Resourcing Sunday to Saturday Faith contains a wealth of exciting and practical ideas for living out our vocation as lay ministers, encouraging our congregations in their weekday witness and living out that witness ourselves. Rosemary Walters looks at how we might make best use of these suggestions in our own lives.
Here are some thoughts from the Introduction to Theme 2: Teaching the Faith
Opportunities (p. 14):
The Christian teacher
- asks questions which provoke a new way of seeing.
Challenges:
- Do we think that ‘asking questions which provoke a new way of seeing’ is most easily done in our preaching? How can we transfer this to non-liturgical situations? Are we prepared to go from delivering information to a mindset where we ourselves approach faith primarily with questions so that we can understand the approach of those who may be enquiring or sceptical?
Try this:
Look at an article in a local or national newspaper which you feel is of concern generally or to your community. What questions would you share about it if you were having a conversation with a friend, neighbour, work colleague which would bring a Christian perspective into the situation?
Opportunities:
The Christian teacher
- tells stories which invite a comparison.
Challenges:
- In our approach to Biblical narratives do we give the impression that we are insisting on historical verification at the expense of the interpretation of the story? Can we see and help others to discern the equivalents in our culture to the issues raised in the story for those who were the earliest recipients of the narrative, whether orally or in written form? Do we have a lurking suspicion that deliberately making comparisons between the story and our contemporary lives is somehow disrespectful to or trivialising the text? Are there some stories which speak so clearly across time and culture that their application to today will be obvious without further comment?
Try this:
Choose one Old Testament story, and one New Testament story about Jesus or told by Jesus. Can you think of a weekday situation where these stories have been/could be introduced naturally into discussion/conversation to provide convincing and practical comparisons to move a situation forward? What is it about these choices that makes them especially difficult or especially successful?
Opportunities:
The Christian teacher• responds to questions, shining a light to help others find their way.
Challenges:
- When was the last time any of us were actually challenged by questions about faith from inside or outside our congregations? Do we respond defensively or answer a question with a question which shows that we are enquirers as well and are genuinely interested in looking at a variety of perspectives? How do we ensure that we aren’t just interested in promoting our own answers when questions arise?
Try this:
Ask someone outside your Christian community what is the biggest question for them about meaning and purpose in life? Then only respond by asking them questions. You can answer any questions they put to you but not give your opinions unless asked. Does this seem a constructive way forward in sharing faith?
Helpful resources:
- Grove Booklets (see www.grovebooks.co.uk/evangelism)
- Ev 93: The 360 Gospel of Jesus: Every Angle for Every Person
- Ev 97: Six Big Questions: Wrestling with Objections to the Christian Faith
- Ev 100: The Gospel Message Today: Language that Connects in Communicating the Gospel
- Stroup, George W. (1981) The Promise of Narrative Theology: Recovering the Gospel in the Church. SCM.
- Cupitt, Don (1991) What is a Story? SCM.
Rosemary Walters is a Reader in the parish of St Martin and St Paul, Canterbury and a member of General Synod.
[This article is from our Winter 2019 back issue. To read back issues dating back to 2015, please activate your subscription]
Dec 17, 2019 | Extra Articles (For everyone), Features
Ruth Haldane provides some answers
[This article is from our Winter 2019 back issue. To read back issues dating back to 2015, please activate your subscription]
As I travel around the country I find that LLMs are asking similar questions: How do I communicate with millennials and younger generations? How do I tell my faith story in the twenty-first century? How do I help Christians to stand up for their faith in the workplace? What about the difficult apologetics questions arising in Sunday to Saturday faith? How can my church reach out to my community? What about focal ministers, and leading in a vacancy?
Teaching the faith
The first area we have identified is the need to teach the faith to our congregations and missional communities, particularly those new to faith. We can no longer expect adults to have had a familiarity with the basics of Christianity and the Bible through school or contact with churches during their youth. Teaching the faith involves learning to tell our faith story using words and actions. We need to break out of the box, do more than preach better sermons, write better courses and model whole life discipleship, although all of these are important. Faith, prayer and witness in everyday contexts are what underpin and shape Christian lives. Teaching the faith involves enabling others to deepen their own faith so they can live the story in the workplace, on social networks and through everyday conversations, where they can tell stories of what God is doing. This may involve leading Alpha, Christianity Explored or Pilgrim Courses, but LLMs also need to operate at a different level, for example training others to lead these courses. This is the principle of replication or multiplication – growing a network of transformational lay ministers, and of others willing and equipped to lead in different ways within our church communities. As formally trained lay theologians, LLMs are ideally placed to enable new Christians to be incorporated into the body of Christ, and to do so in a way that helps them live out their faith in everyday life.
Enabling mission in the everyday
Our second response is to the changes taking place in our society, which means we are now in a new kind of missional context. The UK is sometimes described as a ‘post-Christian’ society. What implication does that have for the Church? What implication does it have for the way we communicate with those currently disconnected from Church and faith? How can we harness a generic interest in ‘spirituality’ by signposting people to Jesus, the Way, the Truth and the Life? There is a need to actively re-imagine the Church’s engagement with wider society, whether it be in rural, township or urban situations. For example, many of our parishes are experiencing housing growth through new-build estates. Do LLMs have a role here in beginning to model and birth new Christian communities on new developments? What would training for this look like?
There has already been creative re-imagining of licensed lay ministry in many parts of the country. Readers on the frontline of work and society have a great opportunity to encourage and enable Christians to live out their faith in their workplace, their social networks and their communities. Their liturgical and teaching ministry means they can grasp many creative opportunities to enable others in mission, perhaps through mentoring or coaching Christians in the workplace. I am aware of ‘soul trader’ lunchtime meetings for self-employed people, of café gatherings for isolated people, of parenting courses run in the workplace, to name just a few initiatives.
Leading in Church and society
The third response is to see LLMs as leading the way, living authentically, mentoring, motivating others in their roles/vocations, perhaps getting involved in fledgling fresh expressions of Church. And doing this always with an eye to training up leaders to take over. Roy T. Bennett says ‘Great leaders create more leaders, not followers’.1 What are we creating? Who are we leading?
Refreshed vision and values
In discussing the future focus of the CRC, we agreed on the importance of resourcing LLMs/Readers for their everyday, Sunday to Saturday ministry. Our vision was established:
To resource Licensed Lay Ministers/ Readers to enable everyday mission, teach the faith and contribute to leading in contemporary church and society.
This vision is supported by our core values:
- Informing – providing examples of good practice and new models of teaching, mission and leadership
- Teaching – through learning modules, publications, online learning, online books
- Motivating – to new ways of doing things.
Responding to the need
The CRC considered how best to enable and support LLMs to play a key part in transformation of our local church communities. A questionnaire was sent out to every diocese, and it soon became clear that there is evidence of good practice throughout the country in continuing ministerial development for LLMs. There are also dioceses that are very constrained by budgets in what they can achieve in offering CMD for LLMs. The CRC is changing its focus to support all LLMs in lifelong training, as well as encouraging potential LLMs in their calling and vocation. It was therefore decided to introduce online/blended learning modules which will be accessible to all LLMs throughout England and Wales. We will also showcase good practice nationwide, to inspire and challenge others.
New identity, new resources
As part of this strategy, we are establishing a new website, introducing social media and launching a Moodle platform for blended learning modules.
The Reader is the national key publication for all LLMs/Readers in England and Wales, and its purpose is to inform, teach, inspire, build faith, share experience and give a picture of local and national developments. There are many excellent articles and resources in each edition. However, around 30 per cent of dioceses in England use the term LLM rather than Reader, and some dioceses are considering adopting other titles. In order to reflect this, from the beginning of 2020 the title of The Reader will be Transforming Ministry, with an explanatory subtitle: The magazine of the Central Readers Council. The purpose of the magazine remains the same, to support Reader/LLM ministry, and it will continue to emphasise our new direction and priorities. We are delighted that so many LLMs now contribute to the magazine, and we hope that this will continue and increase as we share with each our
initiatives and transformative ministry in our communities. We believe this is a very positive step towards the renewal of LLM ministry in England and Wales – not forgetting what has gone before, but pressing on towards our goals for the future.
Why Transforming Ministry?
Our new title refers to transforming ourselves, through our Christian journey, lifelong learning, and being equipped for ministry. It also refers to helping/enabling others to be transformed: to come to faith, to grow in faith, and to learn what it means to be disciples of Jesus Christ. And it refers to transforming our communities, wherever we lead in our church and society.
Transforming Ministry therefore encompasses our three identified pressing strands of ministry: teaching the faith, enabling mission, and leading in Church and society. Lifelong ministry and learning are at its core.
You will notice a new logo appearing in 2020, featuring the new title and the current Reader badge. We hope that it will soon become recognisable and identifiable with LLM/Reader ministry.
And as part of our new focus, we have developed a new website, the launch of which is imminent. It contains information for those enquiring about LLM ministry; news and events; and signposting to helpful articles, websites, podcasts and books. It will become the gateway to our new Moodle site, a learning platform specifically developed for LLMs to further our lifelong learning, to equip us for our ministry now and in the future. We will have links to existing courses, as well as blended learning modules specifically tailored for LLM ministry, available to all LLMs. The Moodle site will be launched at our gathering on 25 April 2020 in Birmingham – be sure to save the date. There will be more information in the next issue about this wonderful opportunity for all LLMs to gather together to network, listen, discuss and inform. We are all invited to be part of Transforming Ministry – wherever and however our calling leads.
Ruth Haldane is the CRC’s Reader Project Training Manager and a Reader in the Blackburn Diocese.
[This article is from our Winter 2019 back issue. To read back issues dating back to 2015, please activate your subscription]
Dec 17, 2019 | Extra Articles (For everyone), Features
Bishop Martyn Snow shares his vision for the future.
[This article is from our Winter 2019 back issue. To read back issues dating back to 2015, please activate your subscription]
We all have a picture in our mind of what we think the Church should be. And we all have a picture of our own ideal ministry within that Church. However, most of us find out early in our ministry that the Church is far from what we hoped it would be, and our ministry is anything but ‘ideal’.
So the question comes, what do we do when we discover the gap between the ideal and the reality? There are of course, a number of options: we can quietly withdraw and do only the minimum necessary to maintain a semblance of still being in role; we can spend our time complaining, being resentful and blaming those we think are holding us back; or alternatively, we can learn to live with the dissonance and at the same time commit ourselves to the task of reform, of finding those small, one degree changes which over the course of a lifetime make a huge difference.
The Renewed Vision of CRC
The Central Readers’ Council (CRC) is committed to the task of reform. The changes may be small and, in some cases, quite subtle but we are convinced that ten or twenty years from now, we will look back and say the changes were significant.
We started to outline some of those changes in the booklet Resourcing Sunday to Saturday Faith. This has been warmly received and we want to thank those of you who have offered feedback. We hope many more will use the booklet to facilitate discussions between Readers / LLMs, clergy and other ministers.
The next step on our journey is a new title for our magazine – Transforming Ministry – and a new website. We hope that both will convey a sense of movement and dynamism. See also Ruth Haldane’s article on page 7. My aim in this article is to give some context for the changes within CRC and place them in the wider landscape of ‘reimagining ministry’ in the Church of England.
Ministry for a Christian Presence in Every Community
Earlier this year, the Ministry Council of the Church of England agreed a new vision statement titled Ministry for a Christian Presence in every Community. It starts with a wonderfully succinct statement about the purpose of the Church:
We are called to participate in and be transfigured by the dynamic being of the Triune God. Through God’s work of creation, Jesus’ incarnation and the gift of the Spirit we know God as relating and sending to realise God’s Kingdom. This relating and sending is God’s mission into which the Church is called to be wholeheartedly as witness and agent. Ministers serve God’s mission by enabling the Church’s participation, through the energising power of the Spirit.
The document then goes on to speak of the ministry of the whole people of God. This is hugely significant. It does not start with ordination (as in some previous documents), but neither does it play down the importance of ordained ministry:
It is from the Body, where everyone is called by God to worship, witness and service, that some are called to particular ministries to build up the Body and to represent and enable the ministry of the whole Church. This pattern is rooted in Scripture and expressed in the liturgies of ordination.
And there is a significant section on lay ministers:
Lay ministers exercise these gifts in particular ways to equip the saints for ministry in their communities and contexts. They are authorised by the bishop or others acting on the bishop’s behalf. This may involve licensing, authorising or commissioning depending upon the ministry. The range of lay ministries is constantly developing in response to God’s gift and call, and includes Reader and Licensed Lay Ministers, Church Wardens, youth and family workers, evangelists, pioneers, administrators, children’s workers.
Each lay ministry will involve discernment, equipping and continued support, and it is for bishops to ensure that this is undertaken in ways appropriate for the form of ministry.
Perhaps most significant of all is the document’s outlining of the shape of ministry needed at this moment in our history. There are four areas which are particularly highlighted:
- Ministry is relational, with God, the Church and the world – which implies the need for lifelong formation such that we grow in relationship with God, church and world.
- Ministry is missional, called to proclaim the gospel afresh in every generation – which emphasises the need for ministers who can equip others to proclaim the gospel in work and deed.
- Ministry is collaborative, given to build up the body of Christ – so all ministers need to know how to work in teams.
- Ministry is diverse and adaptive, as one body fosters many ministries – highlighting the need to discern the gifts of every baptised Christian and be open to new approaches to ministry.
Increasingly, these four characteristics will shape not just the work of Ministry Council but also the work of the whole Church in terms of discernment, training and support for all ministers. The change in emphasis may be subtle, but again it is all about changing course one degree so that over time we end up in a different place.
A new discernment framework and formation criteria for all ministers
Alongside this vision statement, a sub-group of ministry council chaired by the Bishop of Berwick has been conducting a ‘future clergy review’. Central to this review is the proposal for a new ‘discernment framework’ for those exploring ordination. Following agreement in principle from Ministry Council and the House of Bishops, I have now begun discussions with the Bishop of Berwick about how this new discernment framework might also apply to lay ministries. These discussions are at an early stage and we recognise the need for wide consultations before anything is agreed, but in summary the framework proposed involves a grid with six broad criteria each applied in four areas.
The criteria are:
- The call of God
- Love for God
- Love for people
- Wisdom
- Fruitfulness
- Potential
And each will be explored in terms of a candidate’s relationship to the Church, the World, God, and the Self.
I believe this provides a helpful framework for discernment and if applied well, carries the potential for a far more healthy approach to ministry which has less to do with a simple ‘yes’ or ‘no’ to ordained ministry or to a particular form of lay ministry, and much more to do with establishing where, on the wide spectrum of different ministries, someone is called to be.
It is also worth stating that a key driver in these changes is our learning about safeguarding. This will be much more explicit within the discernment work for all ministers and there will be much higher expectations of all ministers to be able to articulate a clear theology of safeguarding and know how to practice the Church’s new policies and procedures.
A new Lay Ministries Advisory Group
Readers of this magazine will know that Carrie Myers has been appointed to a new national role in the Church of England – Lay Ministry Officer. It has been a real joy to start working with Carrie and one of our first steps has been to establish a new sub-group of Ministry Council called the Lay Ministries Advisory Group. I’m also delighted that Canon Paula Gooder has agreed to act as Co-Chair of this group with me (hopefully modelling good clergy – lay collaboration!) We have high hopes that the group will raise the profile of lay ministry generally, enabling us to truly celebrate all that God is doing across the church. We will also be looking to address specific challenges e.g. the barriers experienced by people of certain backgrounds to entering authorised or licensed lay ministry. In time, we will be looking at the Bishops’ Regulations for Reader Ministry and possibly even the Canons – but we won’t rush these! Similarly, I don’t think that I am alone in not liking some of the terminology and titles we use – in my own diocese we are exploring calling all lay ministers ‘Associate Ministers’ as a title which will mean something to those outside Church, while also encouraging collaboration within the Church.
We will also be liaising with the Research and Statistics department at Church House Westminster who have started a major new research project into lay ministry. This is intended to give a much clearer picture of where we are now (and the diversity across dioceses) such that we can celebrate, grow and support lay ministry across the Church.
So where does this leave CRC?
I hope you will agree that all this constitutes an exciting new landscape for ministry generally, and lay ministry in particular. For some the changes may not be radical enough. For others, they will be too much. For me, they are ‘one-degree shifts’ which will have a long-term effect.
As I continue to visit Readers and LLMs in different dioceses (and you may be interested to know that our links with the Church in Wales are growing – they are busy translating the CRC booklet into Welsh, and next year I will be speaking at a Scottish Episcopal Church event), I am continually struck by the extraordinary commitment and energy of Readers. And I am also struck that the question: ‘What is distinctive about Reader / LLM ministry?’ never seems to go away (witness recent letters in this magazine). But this is not a question which worries me. I don’t believe something needs to be distinctive to be valued. What matters is that the ministry is offered as an act of service to God and to God’s people, that it is offered in collaboration with the whole variety of other ministries, and that our primary aim is to build up the Body of Christ (even though that Body, in its expression here on earth, is far from the ideal we might picture in our mind).
Increasingly, we hope that lay ministers will respond to the three pressing needs of the Church which we have discerned – teaching the faith to those new to the faith, enabling mission in the everyday, and leading in Church and society. This is where CRC will be focusing its energies in the years to come as we seek to support dioceses and individual Readers. In this way, we hope to play our part in ‘transforming ministry’.
The Right Reverend Martyn Snow is Bishop of Leicester and Chair of the Central Readers’ Council.
[This article is from our Winter 2019 back issue. To read back issues dating back to 2015, please activate your subscription]
Feb 16, 2018 | Extra Articles (For everyone), Features
Alison Hassall is both a Reader in active ministry and a practising spiritual director. She believes the two vocations marry well together, as she explains.
[This article is from our Spring 2018 issue. To read back issues dating back to 2015, please activate your subscription]
When people are accepted for training for Reader/LLM Ministry in the Diocese of Oxford, they are told that they should have a spiritual director. I suspect that some other dioceses say the same. For some this is baffling: What on earth is a spiritual director? It can sound rather forbidding. And where do I find such a person? Then there has to be the question as to what help one could bring. I have an excellent spiritual director who is a splendid help to me in my own journey of faith. I would not be without one. Also I am a spiritual director, and see that vocation as part of my LLM/ Reader ministry.
The role of a spiritual director is primarily to listen and be alongside, recognising that it is really God who is the director. If you like, there are three of you all together in confidence: director, directee and God. It becomes a sacred space, albeit a safe, friendly one where you can divulge thoughts, feelings, ideas, as you feel comfortable but do not have to if you prefer not. The director will possibly reflect some things back to you, maybe use silence to allow realisation or even sudden surprise. But the director does not direct! The title can be off putting, but it has become so long in usage that it is hard to change. Some prefer spiritual accompaniment or even soul friend but the latter, a title from the Celtic tradition, is slightly different.
As a Reader, one comes up against all sorts of people, all sorts of situations which require discernment, often tact in working with others, and at times it can all be challenging. I am now working with my fourth incumbent. With each fresh one there have had to be adjustments, some give and take perhaps. How supportive I have found the safe listening ear of my spiritual director. Being able to talk honestly about things in total confidence is important and, I feel, essential for the practising Reader. Family issues too can come to the fore. A Reader took the funeral of a brother with Down’s syndrome a while ago. This was a brother whom the Reader scarcely knew. Yet, following that the pain and grief surfaced rather unexpectedly. To be able to talk it all over with a spiritual director provided huge relief and also clarification about very real and deep feelings.
In so many ways I see that spiritual direction is important for a Reader to keep the enthusiasm and purpose of their calling. Often, being a minister in the church can be taxing, discouraging and exhausting. A spiritual director is there to understand both highs and lows, to remain alongside through delight and difficulty and really be a safe, sustaining haven for the lay minister. Remember, the real director is God, so always you both are listening for that guidance. Indeed, some directors I know will pull up three chairs, one for the director, one for the directee and one for God. I like to think of this metaphorically, as it were, but I do understand that for some this could be a helpful visible reminder.
A good spiritual director is also likely willingly to explore prayer opportunities and open doors to different ways of praying in different circumstances. Someone in a licensed ministerial position could become stale in their prayer, often without realising it. Introducing something different, even experimenting with prayer might revitalise the whole ministry. From time to time, the spiritual director might well offer some variety. So, someone who prayed daily with a set ‘Quiet time’ for years was introduced to taking space to ‘be’ with God with no other agenda, and notice signs of God in walks or pottering about the garden. This person found a new freedom and delight in the presence of God – having got over the guilt of ‘not praying properly.’ Of course, for someone different who is undisciplined in prayer, something more structured could be just the job to trigger a new contentment as they pray, possibly taking a fixed ‘quiet time’ for a spell. Talking it all over with someone steeped in prayer who has a vocation to be alongside is amazingly helpful.
Something that I particularly like about spiritual direction as a ministry is that it is totally non-denominational. I have recently worked with a splendid team on a Week of Accompanied Prayer consisting of Roman Catholics, Anglicans and Baptists, and including priests, ministers and lay people, male and female. Great! Reader ministry is wider than the obvious preaching, teaching and pastoral. I consider that in some ways perhaps you can preach and teach by listening, in a curious sort of way. Listening gives huge value to a person. Spiritual direction means that I am alongside all sorts of people from a variety of denominations and, indeed, none, in their daily walk with God. Sometimes they may not realise that they are on that walk, that journey, at all and might even baulk at reference to God. But they are. And what a joy it is when such an individual comes to the realisation that God is alongside them. I love spiritual direction as a ministry, feel hugely privileged to be called in this way, and love the people who come, whether for a short time or, sometimes, for a good number of years. It fits in well with Reader ministry, in the twenty-first century when so many are disbelieving and unwilling to discuss matters of faith. In some way, it is a healing ministry. As you listen attentively, so the hurting person relaxes and becomes freer and so starts to let go of their burden.
I have been a spiritual director for a good many years now. I still remember my first formal directee. Having finished my training, I wondered how and when I would ever start seeing people. Where do they come from? I am not sure now how but I found that first I had one person coming, then it expanded to six and not that length of time later, I was having to limit the number to ten. In practice I find that most come through personal recommendation. It is important to have the right director; both parties need to be comfortable and relate to each other sympathetically. As a spiritual director, a wide variety of people will confide in you as you explore together whatever crops up. Also you come across so many and different people, whether one to one or vicariously through the situations your ‘directees’ find themselves in. You can also be thrown at times. I have never forgotten the person who arrived and quickly explained his quandary: should he leave his wife for someone else? I found it hard to remain calm and attentive as I heard this – indeed I almost felt panic! That is when one has immediately to put all one’s own reactions, prejudices, etc. aside and listen attentively. Several years and many hours of being prayerfully alongside this man, he revealed he was still with his wife and children and would remain so.
Confidentiality has to be key. I heard of one interesting person, Mary (not her real name) with an almost storybook horror family: an alcoholic husband, two teenage sons one of whom seemed permanently at home, whether it was a school day or not. The other was seldom at home. He was 16, went off to school each morning but his mother suspected he seldom made it into school. She also believed he was on drugs of some description. With all that, she tried to take space for God. Mary longed to be able to spend time with God and every time she met her spiritual director they would try and sort out how best to do this in her life. The next time she came, it was just the same. And the next. Somehow she was not able to carry through what she had desired and they had discussed. The spiritual director felt they were getting nowhere, although she understood that her role was to remain alongside Mary no matter how long this situation went on. Eventually, several years later, Mary moved away.
Looking at this sort of situation helps me. I now realise that at one time I should have found that situation hard to deal with whereas now I would cope more effectively and certainly would be more comfortable being alongside someone who was unable to move anywhere at a particular stage of her life. As a spiritual director, the role is to accompany and not worry if there is no movement. It is not our role to get progress or make things better – although we might often want to be able to do just that.
Spiritual direction is a chance to be with a person in a loving and privileged way. It is a rewarding vocation and one that works well with the call to be a Reader. As it is a somewhat hidden ministry, even if people in the pews know it exists, they often assume that it is only for the so-called important ministers up front. Perhaps Readers, with their combination of often being up front, and being part of the laity, are just the people to advertise it to a congregation. To talk about it naturally, introduce it to your congregation as something for them is really helpful and perhaps the best place to make it known.
During the Week of Accompanied Prayer in our parishes, mentioned above, eight spiritual directors gave up their time for the week to come to our area and give some 30-40 minutes each day to each of three to five individuals. This time was for talking (and listening) about prayer. In effect, each of the eight was being the spiritual director or retreat giver to three to five people for the week. Such a week can revive a group of churches as individuals’ relationship with God through prayer deepens. Brilliant!
I would like to encourage Readers to have a spiritual director, even if the particular diocese does not require it. To operate effectively in the calling, perhaps it is essential. But it is vital to find the right person with whom you can be open and whom you trust. As well as this, spiritual direction is a joyous vocation and some Readers are ideally suited to it. So it is right to be open, if anyone feels a hint of a call that way, then pursue it. There are numerous training courses all over the country. If you find it impossible to dig one out, the Retreat Association is a good starting point.
Alison Hassall is a Reader in the Oxford Diocese, a Spiritual Director and a Trainer of Spiritual Directors.
[This article is from our Spring 2018 issue. To read back issues dating back to 2015, please activate your subscription]
To find out more
Retreat Association – info@retreats.org.uk phone: 01494 569056
Clare Charity Centre, Wycombe Road, Saunderton HP14 43F
SpiDir (Spiritual Direction) website – (Diocese of Southwark)
www.Soulfriend.org.uk (Berkshire, Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire)
Feb 16, 2018 | Extra Articles (For everyone), Features
The Church of England has a problem with the laity, says John Griffiths. Here he argues for a theology of Reader ministry built on the foundations of a theology of the laity.
[This article is from our Spring 2018 issue. To read back issues dating back to 2015, please activate your subscription]
The 2017 report to the Archbishop’s Council Setting God’s People Free states: ‘One reason why the contribution and role of the laity is misunderstood and under-valued may be the absence of any systematic theological framework for thinking about lay engagement and leadership”.1 For want of a strong theology of the laity, Readers can feel impelled to ask if they can form a minor clerical order. Or even if they can be ordained deacon without being called to the priesthood. I believe this misses the point. Reader ministry comes from our identity and experience as laity first and foremost. I hope to show that a theology of the laity is the foundation of Reader ministry and that Readers don’t have to strive to be a proxy or an imitation of those in holy orders.
The distinction between the laity and those in holy orders centres on the calling of the latter to be permanent public representatives of the Christian faith. Readers too are called to a public role, but without the dog collar they are less visible than the clergy. Our role is less to represent and more to be present. As lay people we know that God has known us from before birth and has formed us in the context where we have been placed. We trust that God speaks through every experience that we have. These are the materials through which the word of God is filtered. The Incarnation fuses God’s mission with the context into which the Son of God comes.
One way of illustrating this is with the words of Jesus aged 12, now an adult in Jewish understanding, telling his parents in the temple he had to be ‘about my Father’s business’.2 Those who interpret this devotionally (I must spend more time away from the world on religious matters) or sacerdotally (I must spend more time in the temple) miss the force of what Jesus is saying. Neither of these interpretations fit. Jesus doesn’t keep running away to the temple to be about his Father’s business but returns to Nazareth and is obedient to his parents, working in Joseph’s family business. The greater part of Jesus’ incarnational life is as a lay person immersed in the world. When he begins his ministry as the Christ announcing the Kingdom, he assumes a new role as intermediary and calls together a group of disciples whom he trains to be apostles in a representative role. It is the hidden life of Jesus the layman which the laity follows. And like Jesus at that time of his life, much of our service in the world is invisible and unrecorded. But Jesus in his workshop is still Jesus incarnate – the power of God present and active in the world.
The laity does have a ministry. St Paul, always the radical, addresses a struggling group of Ephesian Christians by flipping the conventional authority of Old Testament Scripture and replacing the tag ‘The Law and the Prophets’ with a new one ‘The Apostles and the Prophets’, the foundations on which the temple of the Ephesian church is based.3 Paul likes the idea so much he uses it a second time in Chapter 3: “the mystery of Christ … has now been revealed by the Spirit to God’s holy apostles and prophets”.4 The apostles and the prophets are working out the implications of the incarnation of Jesus Christ. The laity has a prophetic role not as futurists, or ecstatics, but interpreters of the word of God in and for their culture. Readers trained to be ministers of the word are the most highly trained lay exponents the church possesses. It is significant that Dr John Murray, a father figure and shaper of the Reader movement and master of Selwyn College where Readers went to train, used to regularly lecture on The Prophethood of the Laity.5 Paul in Ephesians 4 goes on to describe those with leadership gifts as equippers.6 It is the laity who is being equipped to minister in the world. Readers have a foot in both camps as equippers and lay ministers.
St Peter, writing to the refugees and expatriate Christians in Asia Minor, calls a group of exiles ‘Proclaimers of God’s wonderful acts’.7 The extended metaphor sets them in the role of temple singers and poets – but they are hundreds of miles away from the Jerusalem temple. It is lay people that Peter addresses. It is the laity who are expected to declare the acts of God.
It is ironic that during the twentieth century, also called the century of the Holy Spirit, that confirmation, demoted from being a sacrament at the Reformation, has further been marginalised so that baptism is now considered to be sufficient for the infilling of the Spirit and for Christians to take communion.8 I was surprised to find that in reading over half a million words to research this article there was almost no reference to confirmation, the laying on of hands by a bishop, praying for infilling by the Holy Spirit so the laity can be sent into the world to serve. The Fresh Expressions report of 2012 refers to confirmation only as what it calls ‘a form of intensive membership’,9 what church members do in and around their churches. Perhaps 500 years after the Reformation it is time to remedy the collective amnesia of a church that doesn’t recognise that the laity ARE Spirit filled and sent.10 Recognising the New Testament roots of confirmation would be a start even if this is just Jesus breathing on his disciples! On the day of Pentecost Peter urges his Jewish listeners to be baptised in order to be filled with the Holy Spirit, to fulfil the words of Joel that the Spirit is poured out on everybody young and old. Until we remember that the laity also has hands laid on them, clericalism will continue to infantilise the laity.
If you are beginning to see the potential represented by the laity and their service in the world, can I also point out that at least half of the books of the Old Testament were written by lay people, and that the authors of a fifth of the New Testament books were not apostles. The scriptures have not only to be read but interpreted by the laity because it is their experience of God at work in the world which the scriptures themselves embody, and which the laity are called to carry with them.
Having laid the ground of the theological identity of the laity, we can now turn to the office of Reader. We are not in holy orders. But we are called to be ‘out of order’ in the words of Bishop Robert Paterson. The office of Reader means that having been trained in the scriptures to a similar level to ordinands, we are authorised ministers, licensed to a particular parish, in submission to our bishops, supported by our incumbents and shaped by the congregations to which we belong.11 We are not itinerant ministers but authorised within a specific context. The statement of arrangements is tethered to what we do in and around church buildings and church services. But our ministry does not finish at parish boundaries any more than that of the rest of the laity. Readers are one of the most brilliant inventions of the Church of England, a body of ministers of the Word, not a clerical order; spending the majority of their time as ministers of the word out of order and unaccounted for. One reason why the Central Readers’ Council, The Reader and diocesan Reader gatherings are so important is that they enable us to practice mutual accountability. So much Reader ministry is outside of their statements of arrangement. It is for other lay ministers of the Word to evaluate whether we are being faithful to our calling. Since we are not a clerical order there are limits on how much we can be managed in and through our work in church activities and church buildings.
Setting God’s People Free distinguishes between the gathered church and the sent church.12 Readers have a role to play in the sent church as much as the gathered church. Increasingly, they are doing this in many roles including chaplaincy. The box below outlines some archetypes found in scripture which have bearing on the roles of Readers.
Archetypes for Reader ministry
- The Prophet
There are two traditions through the Old Testament, first the institution expressed through the priesthood and the temple and the lay movement represented by prophets. The prophets, always a lay movement, spoke the word of God to the culture. These two movements can also be traced in and through the New Testament as well.
There is a prophetic role for the laity in general and for Readers in particular as authorised ministers of the word which arises directly from their experience as laity as they encounter the word of God.13
2. The Poet
A poet is a maker and performer of words, the wordsmith.
See Sally Buck’s brilliant chapter in the 2016 anniversary book about Reader Ministry where she uses George Ling’s typology of the seven spaces in which ministers of the Word operate.14 We are trained to read the Word, and to be read by it. And to commend the scriptures to people whether in sermons, study or in conversation. Words are our currency, whether we use words written by others, or whether we sit down to write or speak our words ourselves.
3. The Levite
This is not a helpful archetype – not least because without a consecrated space Levites could not operate. It positions us in perpetuity as support to the priesthood so we are back to being ‘vicar’s little helper’ again. Of course part of our role is to work collaboratively with the clergy but our identity is distinctive and different. We are not deputies for when the clergy are absent but have a contribution to make which is complementary. We have to resist the gravitational pull of a clericalism which undermines our identity as lay ministers.
John Griffiths is a Reader in St Albans diocese. He is writing a book about his first ten years as a Reader
[This article is from our Spring 2018 issue. To read back issues dating back to 2015, please activate your subscription]
Notes
- 1 Setting God’s People Free, p.13
- 2 Luke 2: 29.
- 3 Eph. 2: 20.
- 4 Eph. 3: 4.
- 5 Hiscox, Celebrating Reader Ministry, p.4.
- 6 Eph. 4: 12.
- 7 1 Peter 2: 9.
- 8 International Anglican Liturgical Commission, Toronto, 1991.
- 9 Fresh Expressions in the Ministry of the Church, p.129.
- 10 Through the Ambassador Scheme, the Diocese of London is re-imagining confirmation to do this.
- 11 There is no laying on of hands. The bishop presents a licence to the Reader.
- 12 Setting God’s People Free, p.9.
- 13 To find out how highly Paul rated prophecy, see I Cor. 14.
- 14 Instruments of Christ’s Love: The Ministry of Readers, ch. 1.
To find out more
Archbishops’ Council. Setting God’s People Free. 2017. Available to download at: https://www.churchofengland.org/sites/default/ files/2017-11/gs-2056-setting-gods-people-free. pdf
Dawson, Brian and Kirsten Dawson. Confirmation: An Anglican Resource Review. Anglican Diocese of Dunedin, NZ, 2009. Available to download at: http:// calledsouth.org.nz/downloads/liturgical-resources/ templates-for-worship/Confirmation_an_anglican_ resource.pdf
Hiscox, Rhona. Celebrating Reader Ministry. Mowbrays, 1991.
Joint Anglican Methodist Report. Fresh Expressions in the Ministry of the Church. Church House Publising, 2012.
Kuhrt, George W. and Pat Nappin. Bridging the Gap: Reader ministry today. Church House Publising, 2002.
Lay Ministries Working Group. Serving Together. C of E, 2016. Available to download at: http://www.ministrydevelopment.org.uk/serving-together
Martineau, Robert. The Office and Work of a Reader. Mowbrays, 1970.
Rowling, Cathy and Paula Gooder. Reader Ministry Explored. SPCK, 2009.
Tovey, Philip, Sally Buck and Graham Dodds. Instruments of Christ’s Love: The Ministry of Readers. SCM, 2016.
Serving Together. Lay Ministries Working Group Report 2015/16
Setting God’s People Free. Feb 2017 Report from Archbishops Council
Feb 16, 2018 | Extra Articles (For everyone), Features
Having recently commemorated 500 years of Reformation, we should keep our eyes, ears and hearts open to God’s Spirit inspiring us to change, argues Carrie Myers. Is Reader ministry ripe for reformation? Should we join the diaconate? Or perhaps we will cease to have a distinctive licensed role?
[This article is from our Spring 2018 issue. To read back issues dating back to 2015, please activate your subscription]
When I was exploring vocation several years ago, Reader ministry emerged as the obvious, perfect fit for me. I was sure then and am sure now of God’s calling me to this ministry. But as I read more about it, it was hard to pin down what it actually is that a Reader does, or is. Although we have an apparently clear remit as ‘a teaching, preaching and liturgical ministry in a pastoral context’, there is huge variety in Reader ministry even within my diocese as we each seek to use our own gifts and to serve God in our parishes and beyond.
I’ve also become more aware of wider conversations in the Church about our ministry. On the one hand, some areas and some Readers are warm to the idea of us joining a permanent diaconate. On the other, some see the burgeoning of more lay ministries as a challenge to our particular identity.
Is our ministry so different from ordained ministry?
Over the past few decades, what used to be a clear distinction between clergy and Readers has become increasingly blurred, not least due to the proliferation of ways in which ordained ministry can be exercised. We are no longer especially distinctive in not being employed by the Church, as self-supporting ministries have increased and many priests are also in secular employment, or retired from it. The emergence of Ordained Local Ministries in the 1980s means that we are no longer distinct in being locally called to and from our own parishes. In addition, recent discussions regarding the role and function of deacons have demonstrated great overlap in function with Reader ministry. Like Readers, deacons have a liturgical and pastoral role, and emphasis on mission and a role in assisting, rather than presiding. We are by no means the only ministers who straddle Church and world in the famous image of a bridge, used so frequently, nor the only people who take part in ministry and mission in our places of work. And we are by no means the only ministers who may, at times, have to challenge the notion that we have an inferior ministry, which isn’t quite on a par with that of our parish priest!
I know Readers who are keen to be ordained into the diaconate, as a natural extension of their ministry. And of course God may call us all to different ministries at different times. But I want to argue for our lay status as something vital to our – certainly to my – vocation.
This is firstly because, when I started exploring my own vocation, I was sure it was not to sacramental ministry. Readers are ministers of the Word, but those who are ordained become ministers of Word and Sacrament. While all are baptised into the priesthood of all believers, there is still a special and particular vocation of ordained ministry.
I am saddened and, if I’m honest, a bit offended, when people ask me if I’ll be going ‘on’ to be a priest, as if my current ministry is a stepping stone, rather than something which is exactly where I believe God is calling me to be. Or if I had ‘thought about’ ordained ministry as if, in my years of exploring vocation, that might not have been something which was tested either by myself or others. Reader ministry is complementary to ordained ministry, not inferior to, or in competition with, it. As a Church, we need to explore collaborative ministry, rekindle a vision of the body of Christ with a multitude of roles and vocations, rather than viewing ministries as a hierarchy.
One of the great joys of the past couple of years was to preach at a service where my best friend presided for the first time. We studied theology together at university, discussed vocation together over the years and were now both exercising the ministries to which we had been called, which in that service perfectly complemented each other. Neither of us is in a ministry that is superior to the other, or better. Of course there are things she can do which I can’t, like giving blessings. And there are things I do which, in a parish, she can’t, like being a Christian in a secular workplace. To conflate our ministries would diminish both.
Because, for me, the appropriate distinction between ordained and Reader ministries is precisely and obviously that Readers are lay. The Church needs both a more theologically sophisticated and simple to comprehend understanding of this lay status, and positivity about it, rather than turning Readers into mini, replacement or understudy clergy. As part of this, it is vital that the Church has a clear, public ministry for the laity, and that the laity has a strong, theologically articulate voice in the Church. I hope and believe that with a priority for lay discipleship and ministry within Renewal and Reform, and the proliferation of lay ministries, we may be getting closer to that.
One ministry among many
Given this renewed priority of ministry of the whole people of God, is having a licensed, separate Reader ministry still appropriate at all?
In recent decades there has been a proliferation in the range and exercise of lay ministries, with many functions overlapping with those of Readers. What a blessing that increasing numbers are exploring ministry and vocation! But it has resulted in a situation where there could be two people doing exactly the same things, but with one having studied for three years and being a licensed Reader, and the other having no training or licensing. Should all lay ministries be labelled and licensed, or should none?
I appreciate, as a Reader, I’m pretty biased. But I would argue for Reader ministry to remain as distinctive. While it may become one among many more licensed lay ministries, there are things which distinguish it from some, though not all, other lay ministries. These include the requirement for discernment of a calling, a bishop’s license and being Canonically governed. We are required to be mature in faith, have accountability in and for our ministry and are under authority beyond our own parish context.
Reader ministry also requires a high level of training in order to nurture and develop spiritual gifts, a source of some debate in these pages and more widely. At its best, this training ensures, as far as possible, the quality of Reader ministry, for example in ensuring sermons are delivered based on a sound theological understanding. I would not wish to argue that no one without training should be encouraged to develop their gifts; a practice sermon may help someone along the road of discernment of a calling. However, training is vital in the regular exercising of public ministry and good teaching. It also, for me, brought the great gift of training with people from all sorts of parishes, broadening our perspectives and ensuring we look beyond our own traditions. In a Church seemingly increasingly polarised and at odds with itself, this aspect of the training serves as a correction to that tendency. Readers can present a different perspective on relationships and attitudes towards other traditions, as well as the wider world.
As a group of several thousand lay ministers, I also believe Readers have a powerful representative role. In our ministry, leading worship, teaching, in pastoral care and everything else we do, we embody the fact that it is not only clergy whom God calls. Readers are a symbol of the calling of laity and the ministry of the whole people of God. One does not have to be called to ordination to exercise gifts to serve your congregation and local community. Readers help to demonstrate to the congregation and the outside world that you do not need a dog-collar to be ‘holy’; being lay means they can sometimes witness to this more powerfully than clergy.
Although some Readers may feel squeezed out by additional lay ministries – licensed or otherwise – this feels to me like a wonderfully vibrant time in which Readers, as highly trained, theologically and spiritually articulate laity, can help to lead the Church in really nurturing the gifts of the whole people of God. Interestingly, there is little, if anything, within the expected outcomes for Reader training which suggest that one of our roles is to spot and encourage gifts and callings in other lay people. I would argue that this is a really important role for a Reader and, precisely because we are not ordained, we can be better placed to have conversations with other lay people exploring a calling or seeking to grow in faith and discipleship as they explore how to serve Jesus in a culture and context which sometimes makes it hard to see how.
A ‘cordon bleu’ lay ministry?
All that said, I do think we must be wary of, and resist the urge to, consider ourselves superior to other lay ministries, in the way that some consider ordained ministers superior to us! While I am sympathetic to the concern behind the promotion of Reader ministry as ‘cordon bleu’ ministry to ensure that Readers are recognised and allowed to minister as they deserve (for example as in the Church of England’s Working Group on Review of Reader Ministry in 2008) we should be very wary of creating more hierarchies in the Church. Instead, how can we, as Readers, help create a culture where all gifts, callings and vocations are seen as equally valued parts of our wonderfully diverse body?
Having an abundance of different lay ministries, some with training, licensing and even a Canon or two may make our own ministry less distinctive, and result in some overlaps in function, but better to have overlaps than gaps! I suggest that some messiness is entirely appropriate for the Church – the gifts of the Spirit can hardly be forced to fit into humanly constructed categories. As ministers and disciples we are all given different gifts for the building up of God’s kingdom, and part of our discernment process is how we best exercise these to spread the joyous gospel we proclaim.
The Readers I know are inspiring people with a strong theological voice, who work collaboratively with ordained and other lay ministers in mission and ministry. They convey their own sense of vocation while encouraging the gifts and discipleship of other laity. They are a part of the work of the whole people of God in mission. I hope and pray that our ministry continues to flourish and to support others – lay and ordained – in shared ministry and mission for the glory of God.
Carrie Myers is a Reader in the Putney team ministry in the diocese of Southwark. She is one of the younger members of General Synod with a keen interest promoting lay ministry.
[This article is from our Spring 2018 issue. To read back issues dating back to 2015, please activate your subscription]
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