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Reasons why the church would be better off without clergy

by philipedwards @ 27/04/2008 - 12:38:59

by Christian Smith

1. God doesn’t intend such a profession to exist. There is simply and unequivocally no biblical mandate or justification for the profession of clergy as we know it. In fact, the New Testament points to a very different way of doing church and pastoral ministry.

2. It crushes “body life.” We can see in the New Testament that God doesn’t intend church to be a formal association to which a rank-and-file membership belongs by virtue of paying dues and attending meetings, an association which is organized, guided, and governed by a professional leader (and, in larger organizations, by an administrative bureaucracy). Yet that is exactly what most churches are.

3. It is fundamentally self-defeating. Its stated purpose is to nurture spiritual maturity in the church-a valuable goal. In actuality, however, it accomplishes the opposite by nurturing a permanent dependence of the laity on the clergy. Clergy become to their congregations like parents whose children never grow up, like therapists whose clients never become healed, like teachers whose students never graduate. The existence of a full-time, professional minister makes it too easy for church members not to take responsibility for the on-going life of the church. And why should they? That’s the job of the pastor (so the thinking goes). But the result is that the laity remain in a state of passive dependence.

4. What it does to the people in that profession. Being a member of the clergy as we know it is difficult. Doing it very well is almost impossible. Yet good-hearted men and women, convinced that they are serving God in this way, admirably pour their lives into this task. What they encounter as professional clergy, however, is stress, frustration, and burn-out.

Got this from an awesome blog called Post-Congregational Christianity

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The_WalrusThe_Walrus [Member]
http://www.doctor-dark.co.uk
27/04/08 @ 14:18

I'm guessing you have not read anything recent by Richard Dawkins...

I just find him so negative. I did watch a bit of his TV series though.

The_WalrusThe_Walrus [Member]
http://www.doctor-dark.co.uk
27/04/08 @ 14:33

No, he's very positive. I have not seen the TV series people refer to, but "The God Delusion" is a cracking read. I suppose I shouldn't tease you though, especially as I really ought to be asleep. G'night!

neonmeatdreamsneonmeatdreams [Member]
29/04/08 @ 04:57

In my understanding Islam, the fastest growing religion in the world has no official clergy, except for some the ayatollahs.
Imams are selected from the community with no formal training but supposedly with a deep understanding of their religion.
Is it not a problem that by having no organised diocese that the holy books can be twisted and changed to meet a persons particular agenda. for example like the Quran has for some Muslim terrorists and the Bible to some Branch Davidians.

Stafford [Visitor]
http://staffordg.blogspot.com
02/05/08 @ 11:01

You seem to be very anti-clergy saying that the bible doesn't teach that they exist but rather a different way is taught (but not expanded on this post) that I would guess to be something similar to your [not boring]house church. Being a pastor is crushing, causes burn-out and frustration and implied that it is because this role was never meant to be. By saying those things, you seem to point to what you are doing as a more appropriate and biblical (by example)way of ministry that isn't plagued by such defeats. But two days later, your "back sliding" post says that you are pressed for time for church, burnt out, and frustrated that your organic fellowship isn't coming together the way it used to or you want it to. If only you could be paid by fellow believers so that you don't have to work and can devote more time for shepherding your flock... oh wait, thats called a pastor and that only leads to frustration and burn out. Don't be so quick to write off the value of vocational ministry, it is needed and just because it isn't practiced by example in the bible doesn't make it anti-biblical.

Hi Stafford

Thanks for your thoughtful comments on my blog.

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