Project Synopsis
The Challenge
The calling of a pastor has always been difficult, when done well, but today it has become even more challenging due to the rapid social changes enveloping the congregations they serve. The questions of ministry today are no longer about time management, growing congregations, worship wars, or new programs. Those twentieth century issues are now an unaffordable luxury to the pastor scrambling to respond to the current storms of change, which are altering the landscape of pastoral ministry.
The pressing demand to respond as rapidly as these social changes emerge has placed congregations in a reactive mode. Their leaders, most of all the pastors, are anxious and uncertain about how to guide their churches into an unknown future. While many are experimenting with new technical changes for delivering ministry, these efforts are suffering from a lack of theological wisdom that is both practical and faithful to the deep traditions of the church. As a result, pastors feel like they have lost sight of any north star to guide the way and are now engaged in ministry by the seat of their pants. Many feel a sense of anomie and deep agitation in their souls as they respond to their fretful congregations, and they are quickly becoming depleted. Some question their calling to persevere as pastors. What they need is not another seminar on marketing strategies, but a steady theological rudder that can guide them through the churning seas of ecclesiastical life today.
As an organic entity, the church has always had to navigate change. What is unique today is the speed at which unavoidable social forces are blowing through congregations, and the need to make immediate responses. Among the new dynamics within the last ten years that are leaving a permanent effect on local churches are the following:
- a social polarization that has divided congregations between red and blue factions, and the increasingly uncompromising positions of each side on political and social issues,
- the Covid pandemic and the ongoing need to maintain virtual worship and other forms of ministry while many pews remain empty and overbuilt facilities are under-utilized,
- the rise in racial-ethnic identities within the American consciousness that affirm not a melting-pot but justice and equality and inclusion, as is evident in #Black Lives Matter,
- the ecological crisis through which creation is now groaning in travail,
- militarization in Europe, the Middle East, and a renewed threat of global nuclear war,
- the decline in denominations that has forced pastors to reach out as broadly as possible to invite new participants into community, which has led to complex questions about maintaining theological traditions,
- many in Generation Z know nothing of the church but have an open and unformed orientation to transcendence,
- significant financial pressures that are making it hard for many congregations to pay their pastors and maintain their aging buildings,
- and, relatedly, the growing number of pastors serving multiple congregations, or in bi-vocational ministry.
While there have been heroic efforts from pastors and their denominational leaders to trim the sails of the churches for this storm of change, most of the counsel is tactical in orientation. Very little is being offered that draws confessional insight from the deep well of our theological
A Response
The current challenge, if not crisis, in pastoral ministry requires a multifaceted response from denominational leaders, theological schools, ministry organizations and networks, and significant internal work on the part of the pastors themselves. This project can also provide a substantive contribution by offering new theologies for pastoral ministry in the contemporary church.
This project will develop a series of approximately ten new books focused on offering practical theological wisdom for pastoral ministry today. These theology books will arise out of a series of five in person gatherings of working pastors, totally about 60 people, representing the church’s diversity of traditions, race, generations, genders, and socio-economic settings. In these gatherings we will work in community and focus on the pressing questions of pastoral identity and mission today, and then develop theological affirmations about the contemporary calling of the clergy. The themes for the books, as well as the ten authors, will arise out of these gatherings.
The pastor-scholars who will write the theological books will contribute to a new ecclesiology and, thus, a new theological identity for the pastor who serves the church. The pastoral office exists for the church and cannot be theologically understood apart from it. Thus, while the focus of these books will be on pastoral ministry each of them will inevitably have to place that ministry in the changing context of the congregations they serve and the larger church of which they are a part.
The effort here is not to develop a single comprehensive ecclesiology or theology of ministry, but to develop diverse theologies of the church and pastoral identity that can form the life and work of Christian ministry in America today. It is also for this reason that the project will publish ten separate small theological books rather than a single edited version. Edited books have an encyclopedic feel, which sacrifices either a unifying theme or prohibits any one theme from being fully explored. A series of separate books authored by diverse authors allows each to build their own arena of theological formation on the foundations their various traditions.
The primary audience for this work is the working pastor who has been valiantly trying to navigate the torrents of change along with the lay leaders of congregations. Most of them don’t need to be convinced that dramatic change is upon us, and they have tried to keep up with the latest advice about adaptive transformation from business models, as well as the best practices of their peers. But what the seminaries hear repeatedly is that pastors are yearning for theological guidance that can renew their sense of calling for the challenges of this hour. Thus secondary, but critical, audiences for these books will also be found in theological schools and ministry organizations that strive to train and support church leaders.
As the books are being published, we will begin to disseminate the insights that have been gleaned through seminars sponsored by seminaries, divinity schools, denominational judicatories, and organizations dedicated to pastoral flourishing. The project will also present its insights through a dedicated website and through essays and articles published along the way.
The hope of this project is that it will be used by the Holy Spirit in the ongoing renewal of the church through the leadership of its clergy. Historically, the church was transformed as pastors carried relevant expressions of theology into their pulpits and ministries. But the transformation began with the pastors themselves whose sense of calling was renewed for the challenges they faced. And that renewal cannot only come through new strategic plans, forming networks, or even personal spiritual disciplines. It also requires grounding in a compelling theology that engages in exegesis of both our sacred tradition and the congregations the pastors serve.
This project can help meet that great need.
Project Phases
PHASE 1
Gatherings
Phase I of this project encompassed five gatherings of 12 – 15 pastors and church scholars engaging in thoughtful conversations about the contemporary issues confronting ministry today and the theological responses that rise out of the Christian tradition. The goal of these conversations was to gain greater clarity about the identity and calling of pastoral ministry to the contemporary church.
The pastors and scholars who were invited to participate in these conversations were selected with the intention of representing a wide variety of expressions of ministry in the church today. The gatherings took place in church and seminary facilities representing the geographic diversity of congregational life in America.
Pastoral Epistles
The conversations in each gathering were facilitated by pastoral epistles written ahead of time by each of the participants. Each of these epistles was stipulated to be 1500 words in length and to take the tone of an apostle writing to a young congregational pastor today. The format was not a fictionalized account of an actual ministry but focused on the theological and biblical issues of ministry, much as the Epistles to Timothy provide in the New Testament. The writing addressed the current context of ministry, with attention to the issues today that are causing the most confusion about pastoral identity and calling.
The epistles are edited and published on this website. Some will be submitted to periodicals that focus on the church’s ministry. The project’s eventual podcasts, panels, and forums will also discuss the insights gleaned from these conversations.
PHASE 2
At the beginning of 2025, the insights discovered through Phase One will be assimilated into a final report of findings, which will be made available. The project’s plan is to distill the work of the gatherings into discerning ten pressing issues confronting pastoral ministry today, which call for a substantive theological response. This then becomes the basis of the work for Phase Two of the project.
This second phase will recruit ten authors, some of whom may rise out of the gatherings in Phase One. In 2025, they will begin their work of each writing one of ten theological books addressing the specific topics of pastoral ministry for the contemporary church. The project is speaking to publishers and has not made commitments to any potential authors at this time.
PHASE 3
As the ten books are moving into publication, we will begin the process of disseminating the theological insights they are offering.
We will work with ministry organizations and the various centers within theological institutions to create a wide discussion of the insights presented by the authors, which will include offering lectures, consultations, and continuing education seminars. We’ll also encourage and facilitate speaking engagements for the authors within their own church traditions.
Interactive components will be added to this website, including live streaming of presentations by the authors with opportunities for listeners to engage them. This website will also house a platform for us to present our own seminars based on the books that we have published.
It will also be possible to work in partnership with a seminary, Bible school, and denominational judicatory to create cohorts of pastors who will meet regularly in community to work through one or more of the published books. We will partner with ministry organizations to participate in their programs for pastoral formation.
Project Leadership
Craig Barnes
Craig was raised on Long Island, New York. After graduating from Princeton Theological Seminary, he received a PhD in the History of Christianity from The University of Chicago.
He served as the pastor of Christ Presbyterian Church in Madison, WI, until 1992, when he became the pastor of The National Presbyterian Church in Washington D.C. In 2002, he became a chaired professor at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary while also serving as the pastor of the Shadyside Presbyterian Church. In 2012, he was elected president of Princeton Theological Seminary and became the president emeritus in January 2023.
In January 2024, Barnes became the director of a new project of The Association of Theological Schools on “Theologies of Pastoral Ministry,” funded by Lilly Endowment Inc. He has nine published books including When God Interrupts, Pastor as Minor Poet, and most recently, Diary of a Pastor’s Soul.
He is married to Dawne Hess Barnes who is an interior designer. They have three fabulous children, four delightful grandchildren, and a frisbee-addicted Bearded Collie.
Lindsay Clark
Lindsay hails from Ann Arbor, Michigan and is a graduate of Denison University. After a career in event planning, marketing & communications, and development, followed by four wonderful years as a youth pastor, she earned her M.Div from Princeton Theological Seminary in 2018. Since seminary, Lindsay has worked in nonprofit fundraising, serving several different organizations before joining the Humane Society of Huron Valley in her hometown in 2024.