I  was sixteen years old, traveling with my church youth group in the New  Mexico mountains: listening to an American missionary talk about his  work in Korea. Blah, blah, blah the speaker went on. Calling us to  action. It meant nothing to me. But it just so happened, as I zoned out  from whatever he was talking about, that the Spirit of God started  chattering in my soul. I experienced that night what my faith community  confirmed to be a "call to ministry." I had no idea what I was getting  into, but the sense of God's calling that began that night, has guided  and motivated me now for more than 33 years.
Because  of this call, a call to serve God in the context of the church, and to  help my church build bridges with persons beyond its walls, I have  worked my tail off!  Sixty- and seventy-hour weeks much of the time, often  pursued with an urgency that John Wesley and many of you know all  about. The urgency, the internal Call to Action, that comes from the  Holy Spirit.
I am not bragging here. This is just how it works. It is hard to diddle around with a Call burning in your soul.
So  I have benchmarked my work constantly (and a bit ruthlessly) across the  years. I cannot imagine not doing so! No bishop or DS asked me to do  so. I did it because I believed the work mattered! Because I believed  God demanded it!
In  my first appointment out of seminary, as associate pastor to a suburban  church, I decided in my first week on the job (the last week of June)  that we needed to double the number of children's church school classes  from 9 to 18. This would entail quadrupling the number of teachers by  August. I convened a group that walked with me through the church  membership roll, discussing each name, in terms of their potential to  teach. I started calling with A, and secured my last teacher somewhere  in the W's in early August. That year our church school attendance rose  from 370 to over 500. I did this because I believed that it mattered to  get more people into Christian formation experiences.
A  few years later I was appointed to a church that was consistently  taking in 200 new members a year. But I wanted 300. So I began to  calculate, and to work a series of strategies that would kick that  number over 300 within a couple years.
Some  would say I was driven. Yeah, maybe... But I always took my day off,  came home for dinner, played with my kid, and so forth. I just believed  this work was really important - and so I kept careful score about key  metrics that seemed connected to fulfillment of the mission. I  constantly re-arranged my time to make sure that the most strategic  things happened.
I  no longer serve as a pastor. I now coach pastors. And I cannot count  how many times in the past month I have gently but directly asked my  pastors "How are you going to know you are making progress in the next  six months? How will you know that you are on track in your mission?"    Ultimately, they set benchmarks for themselves and I help them reach  those goals. It is a ministry of accountability and encouragement. I  believe in accountability.
I  have learned over the years that accountability has very little to do  with motivation, and that it rarely ever motivates a person to work  harder.   Pastors work hard because they are passionate about their  work. That passion is almost always connected to their experience of  God's call.  It grows from within their soul.
My  denomination is moving into a season of renewed accountability. Long  past due! Some of our bishops now want a report card from their pastors  every week. Maybe overkill, but a little accountability will not hurt  The United Methodist Church.
What  might hurt is the disappointment five years from now when, after all  our dashboards and report cards, the numbers are still going into the  tank. That could very well happen, if we assume that accountability will  produce the motivation now lacking.   The motivation that produced the  Book of Acts came from a place higher than the Council of Bishops.
If  the United Methodist Call to Action yields anything, it may be because  the bishops themselves take action to remove ineffective pastors from  vital places of service when those persons persistently fail to grow  their churches or meet reasonable benchmarks in changing community  situations. If the Call to Action yields anything, it could be because  conference leaders do what it takes to help their conferences recruit  women and men passionate and competent for the work of growing the  church.  Shift some elders to the bottom of the stack and put some full  time local pastors in charge, if that is what it takes!
To  my friends in the episcopacy, thank you for caring about our church  enough to call us to action - but now the church looks to you for  action. When we see some $20,000 salary cuts begin to show up across the  connection in response to pastoral ineffectiveness, that is when we  will know you all were serious.

 
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