10Publishing, 2016
I think I was given this at an FIEC Pastors' Network meeting a year or so ago. A freebie.
The brief chapters glance at themes
like, 'Ministry as Service', 'Ministry and Suffering' and 'Ministry and
Prayer'.
I guess this is aimed at aspiring and newbie pastors, with a nod to more experienced ministers.
Biblical teaching on ministry is
assumed rather than spelled out. There's nothing much on the call to pastoral
ministry, the scriptural pattern of pastoral ministry, and so on. That said, this is part of a series. Other titles (which I haven't read) are devoted to The Call, Why Free Church Ministry? and related topics.
The format is chatty and anecdotal,
with the author drawing extensively on his own ministry experience. Quotes from
the Bible, plus the thoughts of other writers are thrown in for good measure.
You'll find a dose of realism here, seasoned with encouragement to serve the Lord with joy.
Maybe it's because I tend to be more guarded in publicly expressing my inmost feelings that the author's confessional style grated on me a bit.
We're all different. Extroverts may find it a struggle to spend long and lonely hours
in study and sermon prep. As a self-contained introvert (which, I think Hardyman would agree, isn't the same
as being a cold hearted sociopath), that aspect of ministry is a necessary way
of recharging my batteries.
I don't tend to find these 'bite
sized' efforts very satisfying. In their reading Ministers (and wannabes) should aspire to
something a bit more meaty that will stretch their minds and stir their
souls to the depths.
Then again, the weighty Some Pastors and Teachers by Sinclair Ferguson wouldn't have fitted quite so neatly into my
back pocket for reading when my wife had a hospital appointment.
Shouldn't look a gift horse (or pony - 101pp) in the mouth, I suppose.
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