Wednesday, June 19, 2019

Are You Called To Be A Spiritual Mentor?


Dear Friends,

When we started the ministry at the assisted living home nearly four years ago, a woman came up to me and addressed me as “Father.” As an Evangelical Protestant pastor, I was uncomfortable with that title and asked her to call me “Pastor John.” She looked at me, hesitated a moment and said, “Okay Father.” I have long since given up trying to correct those who attend the church services and today the residents and staff call me “Father” or “Padre.” (Padre is from the Latin word “pater” and literally means “father priest.”) Most of the residents are one or two decades older than me and their own fathers have passed on many, many years ago. But as they now journey through this last season of life, they reach out to a spiritual father to hold their hand and help them through it. It was humbling and more than a little disconcerting when I realized that God had given me to them to fill that role. It seems like no matter where we are in our life, we need a father.

On a personal note, I had one of those significant birthdays last week that put a zero in my age. I am normally too engaged with the present to concern myself about the past, but for awhile, that pending birthday had brought me to a place of nostalgic remembrances of my life to date. Faces, names and episodes that had been buried in my memory and long forgotten about were now being vividly recalled. Then last Sunday was Father’s Day. Because I never fathered a child, I’ve been uncomfortable when people wished me a happy father’s day. As when people at church call me “Father,” it has always felt like an undeserved title. Was I really a father? Uhh..no..not really. 

But then a few days ago, God showed me something through this personal “documentary” of my life that had been the focus of my thoughts. He was showing me that from when I was a young man, I had been in the role of “spiritual father” to more than I could count. When I became a pastor, my mother told me that she was not surprised because I had spent so much of my life helping others by being their listener, counselor and mentor long before I was ordained. 

You don’t have to be ordained to be a spiritual mentor. I’ve known men who had been the spiritual father to many and have known women who were the spiritual mother to many. Some were also biological parents to children and some were not. But they were the “father” that their friends sought out for help when life got tough. They were the “mother” that a co-worker turned to for advice. They were the one who offered love, support, empathy, encouragement and sometimes loving correction. In this day when we are told that we must be strong and self-sufficient in all things and at all times, we will still sometimes need that spiritual father or spiritual mother to help and guide us through the circumstances of our lives Proverbs 19:20 and help us to build our faith and grow in the Lord.

I read about a Baptist pastor who had a friend that was an Episcopal priest. The Baptist envied his friend because those in his Episcopal church called him “Father” and saw him as their spiritual father. In the Baptist pastor’s church they called him by his first name and saw him as a casual friend. The Baptist pastor was struggling because he saw the need of many in his church for a “father” figure, but in most Protestant congregations, the pastor is just the one who has been hired to manage the church, lead the service and preach a sermon. A “spiritual father” was the roll of the priest for 1,500 years until the reformation when Protestants discarded nearly all aspects of church tradition. The Baptist pastor was wistfully longing for all male clergy to once again be called “Father” and to be the spiritual parent that the church so desperately needs today. For some, the word “father” brings a feeling of love, trust and security, but for others, that same word may elicit feelings of shame or fear. Pastors hear father stories of neglect, indifference, abuse and abandonment that some psychologists call the “father wound.” 

Psychology Today says “Fatherhood turns out to be a complex and unique phenomenon with huge consequences for the emotional and intellectual growth of children.” When we grow up with a father who abandoned or abused us, we will unconsciously seek a Godly father to fill that void in our life and heal that “father wound.” People come to church to seek God and to find healing and wholeness for their lives. In too many churches we attempt to accomplish that by using uninspiring lectures (sermons) that simply tell people how they should live their life. Sometimes that works, but contrast that with the ancient church where, through the grace of God, seekers found spiritual fathers and spiritual mothers who gave them wisdom, advice, empathy and encouragement and who took them by the hand to lead them to their Heavenly Father.

A caveat here. If we have an unresolved father wound, we cannot be a spiritual parent to others until we have been healed by God and made whole again. We tend to replicate our childhood family dynamic in any current relationship. For example, studies show that we are taught how to manifest our anger by our fathers. If our father expressed his anger under control, most likely we will too. If our father raged, threw and hit things, most likely we will too. For those of us who feel called to be a spiritual parent to others, our own soul wounds must be healed by God and fully understood by us in order to prevent us from passing on the hurts we suffered to those who we mentor. 

Are you called to be a spiritual father or a spiritual mother? The need is great. Your church is filled with those who need a spiritual parent. They need the love of Jesus radiating through you. May God guide you and give you wisdom.

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