Formation to Transformation | A Worship Devotional
Your pastor went quiet and you wrote the whole story. The budget meeting you were not in. The new org chart somebody mentioned at coffee. The ending where you are replaced and the church does fine without you. None of it happened anywhere but in you, and you have been carrying it like a forecast. If you have been in worship ministry long enough, you have a version of this. The senior pastor's tone in a text feels off, and inside of an hour, you have built a whole movie out of it. Some of this comes from real history. Some of you have been at a church that ended badly, and the body learned a fired-soon filter that the new church cannot turn off. New pastor is not the old pastor, and you know that. The filter still runs. Paul says it is a very small thing that he should be judged by them. He is not minimizing them. He is putting their assessment in its place. He is not even justifying himself by his own opinion of himself. He says, I do not judge my own self. The Lord judges me. That is not a weapon you wave at your pastor. It is the opposite move. Paul is saying my standing does not move when your opinion moves, so I can hear what you say without my identity being at stake in your sentence. An executive pastor named Ed put it this way. He said, I used to tell my bosses, I serve at your pleasure. If for some reason I am not meeting expectations, I do not need to be there anyway. That is not passive-aggressive. He means it. He is saying my faithfulness is not contingent on whether I keep this job. I can do this work free, not afraid. The next time your pastor goes quiet and you start writing the story, notice you are doing it. Name the filter. Ask the question instead of feeding the script. Hey, I want to make sure I am not reading into this. Anything I need to know? Most of the time the answer will be, no, I have just been buried. And the script in your head will deflate. The work it takes to ask is small. The freedom on the other side is real. Serve up the chain like the Lord is your judge. Bring the concern. Make the case. Let go of the outcome. You can be honest without auditioning. You can disagree without spiraling. You can hold real respect for your pastor without making him your jury. A question to sit with today: what story about my pastor am I treating as fact? Read the written version and get extra notes at ryanloche.substack.com.
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