Making decisions above my pay grade – Pastor Thought

In 15 years of serving as a pastor, I have remained a mostly “by the book” person. That is to say, when it comes to worship and liturgy, I tend to stick to the orders, texts and traditions of the church. It is not that I am unwilling to try new or different ideas,  nor is it the case that I feel compelled to follow the rubrics (stage notes in our hymnals) as if they were written in stone. However, I find the structure and careful attention of our established liturgies to be the most compelling means of proclaiming the Gospel in the worshipping assembly. Or to put it another way, you would need to convince and show me how our liturgical worship practices are not the best for saying the important stuff about God for me to change a lot of stuff. 

So this Sunday, as we observe Christ the King Sunday at Sherwood Park, there is a small part of me that is uneasy. The reason for that is that we are technically a week early! … Gasp!

This year, the 4th Sunday in Advent falls on the morning of December 24th. As you all well know, there are evening services that are pretty important to a lot of folks that day as well. 

So rather than packing Christmas full of services from morning to night, we are leaving the Sunday morning of December 24thopen and moving all of Advent forward one week, as well as moving Christ the King Sunday. 

And yes, it was my idea. Even if changing the liturgical calendar feels beyond my pay grade.

In some sense, Christ the King Sunday is a strong reminder that so much of our life of faith is not up to us – beyond our pay grade, so to speak. It can be easy to reduce faithfulness to things like following the rules, being a good person or earning our salvation. 

But as we hear the readings for Christ the King Sunday, which paint a picture of God’s intention to restore and reconcile ALL creation into something new, we can begin to see that, as individuals, we are just small pieces in the great unfolding of God’s divine work.

As creation hurdles towards God’s future, we as the Church bear witness to something that extends far beyond our personal and individual faithfulness. We are witnesses to the work of God taking place all around us, to God’s transformation of all things into the reconciled and recreated beings that we were meant to be. 

So while we move Christ the King Sunday forward by a week, we do so knowing that while we can shift the calendar around here or there, it is God who is moving all creation into a new future that we have yet to see fully. 

One thought on “Making decisions above my pay grade – Pastor Thought”

  1. As a retired United Methodist cleric worshipping currently with a progressive PSCUSA congregation, I find your liturgical decision’ interesting’. We are currently in an interim period of pastoral search so four of us retired members ( a Presbyterian, Lutheran, UCC, and UMC clergy) have been covering most of the Sundays (no interim clergy). Worship proceeds according to our ‘usual’plan with some deviation. We are maintaining the lectionary schedule with the Realm of Christ Sunday in its usual place. I think we have found
    That within a loose order of worship the Spirit calls us in many different and effective directions, even for somewhat stodgy Calvinists! No questions about pay grade,we were all ordained to listen and to think.

    Like

Leave a reply to Rev Dr Judith Jenkins Kohatsu Cancel reply