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Pilgrim, priest and ponderer. European living in North East England. Retired parish priest, theological educator, cathedral precentor and dean.

Monday 16 September 2019

Called to the Priesthood, Called to be Lay

In one sense, there’s nothing provocative about that title. When we are ordained deacon, priest or bishop, we don’t cease to be members of the laos, the community of the baptised, the holy common people of God. I’ve been a lay person all my Christian life. That’s been fundamental to my vocation as a priest. The priesthood has been how my obedience to the call of my baptism has been shaped for nearly half a century.

Discerning our vocation is something we all need to do as people of faith. Often it’s far from straightforward. If only there could be Damascene moments that clearly pointed to the destined path ahead! But as we know, life is not usually like that. It can take years to recognise and respond to the call of God to take some particular direction in life. That call may at first have been no more than a whisper amid the babble of voices that competed for our attention. It almost certainly took a lot of listening, and prayer, and the accompaniment of wise, experienced friends before we were ready to say yes, even tentatively.

In my own case, it was about seven years from beginning to explore the possibility of ordination to standing before a bishop on my ordination day. How tentative those words are sounding now that I look back on the experience 44 years later! Beginningexplorepossibility. But I like words like those. They are provisional and don’t claim more than they should. Before we can rise up with confident wings like eagles, or run and not be weary, we need to learn to walk and not faint, to borrow an image from the Book of Isaiah (40.31). We need to discover how to feel our way more slowly, in God’s time and at his pace.

I think retirement is like this because it entails reimagining life in a wholly new way. You have to ask the question, what does God want me to become, and to do, here, now, in this stage of life we’re learning to call the third age? I’ve blogged on this before here, and here, and here. It’s a work in progress as I keep saying. Each time I write about it, there is something new to say about how “inhabiting” retirement is working out in the lived experience of it. And just as the journey of entering stipendiary ministry to begin with took years, so leaving it is also a journey of years, not months or days. Even if it looked as though you were working one Sunday and on the Monday morning you woke up and lo! you had retired!

I blogged a while ago about exploring vocation in the third age. I’ve since become much clearer about this. I’ve reached a (possibly startling?) conclusion that’s implied by the title of this blog even if it’s the less obvious reading. It is this: that just as I was once called to the priesthood and gladly gave my working life to fulfilling that vocation in the best way I knew how, I now discern an equally insistent call to live as a lay person once again. 

What do I mean by that?

Simply, that my way of serving God in the world and in the church will no longer be as an ordained man in public ministry. I no longer see myself called to preside at the eucharist, conduct baptisms, weddings and funerals, preach sermons, give lectures or lead retreats and quiet days. I’ve loved doing all these things and regard them as among the most privileged kinds of ministry anyone could undertake. I’ve also been immensely fortunate in living and working as a priest in beautiful environments surrounded by wonderful communities and colleagues. As I look back on my career as a curate, a theological educator, a parish priest, a cathedral canon and as a dean in two dioceses, I realise how much I have to be thankful for.

But now in retirement, the time has come to lay all this aside. I need to hand on the baton to the next generation of clergy (in whom, I’m glad to say, I have complete confidence). This decision doesn’t reflect any regret or negativity on my part. I may sometimes be grumpy with the Church of England that I serve (who isn’t?), but there is no falling out, no crisis, no parting of friends. I feel wholly positive, even excited, about renegotiating life on a new set of terms. It will open up opportunities for discovering, I hope, a different quality of life in which there will being more time for  family and friendship as well as volunteering, travel and recreation, and, I hope, productive writing. And of course to understand and make my own the spirituality of growing old. I shall continue to serve on the church committees I’m currently a member of. I intend to go on seeing clergy and ordinands for mentoring and spiritual accompaniment for as long as they want me to.  I shall go  on trying to  support the parish and diocese in whatever way I can.

I suggested in my last blog that this was the way things seemed to be leading. But I admit to being deeply influenced by watching the TV documentary about the mezzo-soprano Dame Janet Baker a few months ago. I wrote about this at the time. She made the courageous decision in her 50s to say farewell to her career in opera, and a few years later, to lay aside her recital and recording activity as well. She was at the height of her powers, and was being followed by an adoring public. In her book Full Circle, she chronicled her final year on the operatic stage and offered insights into what it was like to know that so much of her music-making was for the last time. Of retirement she said that it wasn’t about leaving a life behind so much as engaging with it more fully, in a more wholesome way. There was work to be done at that stage of life that she did not want to neglect. Human work. Heart work. The work of love. I warmed greatly to that way of putting it.

The fact that I turn seventy next Easter has concentrated the mind. I am no Janet Baker (if only!) but the human and spiritual issues feel similar: the need to change direction, the need to pay attention to matters I’ve neglected thus far. There is a time to speak and a time to be silent, says the preacher in Ecclesiastes. My time to fall silent in public ministry is coming. I won’t pretend it’s not hard, at times, to contemplate it. But it’s what my discernment  process late in life has brought me to recognise should happen.

I admit that I’m haunted by the ontology. Once a priest, always a priest. That character (as it’s called in catholic theology) is indelible. So what does it mean to lay aside the practice of priesthood, hold the order but not exercise it? I don’t know, yet. But I do know that there would inevitably come a time when old age or illness or disability would mean facing this question in any case. In my seventieth year, stamina is not what it once was. Hundreds of clergy are forced by circumstance to lay aside the exercise of their priesthood, and most do it with grace and dignity. If my discernment leads me to take this step in a more intentional way, anticipate the endgame so to speak, it’s no different in principle. And as I’ve said, living out a lay vocation in the service of God and neighbour is not pretence or play-acting. It’s what I already am and have always been.

I wrote to the Bishop of Newcastle, the Diocese in which I was once an incumbent and where we live in retirement, to outline my thinking. I hold her permission to officiate (PTO) so she had a right to know. She asked to see me so that I could explain more fully. It was a good meeting, not least because it helped to have to put inchoate thoughts into words in the presence of a kind and  sympathetic - but shrewd - listener. “It feels a bit all or nothing” she remarked. Maybe. But when you arrive at a crossroads, for whatever reason, you have to make a choice. So we reached a settlement. The deal was that I would not send her back my PTO. Not yet, anyway. “You never know” she said. True. I might need to come out of retirement to help in an emergency at the vicarage across the road. I might be asked to preside at a family rite of passage. I’ve promised to preach at the funerals of a former churchwarden and of my closest friend if they die before me. I suppose a clean ending would have pandered to my tidy mind. But instinct tells me that the Bishop was right.

Nevertheless, I am now entering the home stretch of what I’m calling my formal public ministry. I have preaching commitments during the coming months that I need to honour, including during Holy Week next year. These engagements will be all the more precious because they will be among the last I undertake. And then?

Greatly daring, I wrote to the incumbent of the church where I became a chorister at the age of eleven. In that place, the whole Christian journey began for me. What I owe it is incalculable. So I wondered whether I might recognise the part that church and its people and music had played in my life and say thank you. It’s not that I want to make an event out of preaching “for the last time”. Simply that I would love to share something of my Christian and vocational story with the community where the seed was first planted all those years ago. He has been generous enough to welcome that idea. So some time next year, aged three score years and ten, I’ll have the chance to acknowledge the debt. And in my inmost self, say farewell to a ministry that has meant everything to me. And always will.

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Here’s a link to a recent feature in the Church Times that’s relevant to this blog.

5 comments:

  1. The call to any form of ministry is protracted and full of contradictions. I spent 43 years in the Army, which was my first vocation and in the last two years looked to the future, what would it hold? But God in his way, came back into focus in my life, a focus which I had ignored since I left the Catholic Church in the eighties. Suddenly, the call, ignored for years, became insistent and demanding. Having shared this with my parish priest, we shared together a period of study and growth (I was a newly minted Anglican) before he put my forward to the DDO. Eventually after 3 years in discernment I got to BAP only to be given a Not Recommended for Training. I experienced a form of grief, but also realised that perhaps my discernment of the call might be flawed (or that of the Church) but the call remained, a little blunted and bent, but still clear and insistent.

    Sadly, there was no way back. The Bishop accepted the BAP decision and I was cast adrift, to fend for myself. I seriously considered not bothering, but that small voice was still prodding. Eventually, after 18 months, I moved diocese and parish to be nearer home. My previous parish and diocese was the one I had served in with the Army. Now retired closer to home seemed to be an obvious solution. After a few months of discussions and discernment, particularly with my SD, I found myself approaching a local parish that I attended casually to be my new home. Welcomed by the parish priest, who understood my disappointment at the ordination decision but offered a different pathway - Reader or LLM ministry. I was unsure as I recall my DDO at the time after BAP telling me not to rush into Reader ministry because I would always feel second best and would resent the incumbent in their role. But somehow the profile offered and the training provided appealed and I believe that I had and have identified how the original discernment should have gone. In the rush to the Altar, I had ignored the fact, that God's purposes are not always clear to us, they are shrouded in guesswork, exploration and assessment, none of which had helped me so far. Now, suddenly the mist cleared and the rest is history.

    Now after two years of licensed ministry, I have to surrender my licence at 70, but thankfully the journey can continue with PTO, remaining in my parish, but exploring a call towards some form of lay chaplaincy.

    One life work comes to an end, and another starts. It has taken 12 years to reach this point, so God, obviously wasn't in the hurry that I was at the start of the process.

    And I regard that whole life in the Army, where I had many pastoral responsibilities as transferable directly into ministry, but with some underpinning of theology and scripture to assist me. And of course, some excellent colleagues and friends and family.

    I don't believe that I am the finished product, there may be more to come, but I can wait more patiently in hope and expectation for whatever is revealed.

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  2. I am discerning a call your blog makes interesting reading

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  3. Michael, thank you for this post.

    We each have our own path to which we're called. I had to retire from legal practice early because of post-polio issues. But early retirement provided time for serving on church and school related boards. Ultimately that had to come to the end. However, a surprise happened when I told my parish rector/cathedral dean that I needed to step down as chair of the finance committee. She asked if I would be willing to take a monthly service at an extended care hospital: distribution of the reserved sacrament/Holy Communion by extension. Our diocese does not formally have licensed lay ministers but an irony is that I have an LL.M. of the legal variety. The dean's decision is not as bizarre as it may sound. I went through ACPO/ACCM 44 years ago and in my fifty's completed half the course work (and the three hour exams) for the University of London's B.D. by extension. So here I am this week, the same age as you, preparing a short homily for this coming Sunday. Retirement led to my being called to do something completely different from my earlier life.

    I noted in your post that you contemplate having time for further productive writing. I look forward to seeing what results and hope that you will post in this blog news of any publications.

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  4. Thank you Michael. It's really helpful to know that someone else is wrestling with these issues, and to hear how their explorations are going.

    I too have wondered about letting go of Permission to Officiate. It has been really good to have been able to go on ministering as a priest since leaving full time parish ministry. But like you I have been sensing a call to something else, if that is the right way to put it, although it really is like being in a 'cloud of unknowing'. Nothing is clear, although unreliable energy levels make something clear! So it's not just about what to do, but also about coming to terms with declining health and death. It affects everything, including where to live, and what to do with the time and health that are still available. Do I carry on with the work (outside the formal structures of the church) that I’ve been engaged in for many years now? Do I stop altogether? Am I still a priest? And if so, what does that mean? Always I come up against the fact that my time left is very limited; where once it stretched into the future, the terminus is now being 'announced' and I have to begin to get ready to get off.

    I have just read a book about all this: Travels with Epicurus: Meditations from a Greek Island on the Pleasures of Old Age by Daniel Klein. 'Our society worships at the fountain of youth...But in the process, are we missing out on a distinct and extraordinarily valuable stage of life?'.

    I could go on, but that's enough for now. Thank you Michael for sharing of yourself and your explorations so generously and helpfully.

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  5. Dear Michael
    I have recently been reading your blog about calling to priesthood, and calling to be lay. I found it very moving, and this must have been a difficult decision for you. Having said that, I was not surprised. From soon after your retirement you were writing about the joy of sitting in a pew with your wife, and taking forward the elements with her. I wondered if this might be a conclusion that you would come to at some point.

    You have written (here and elsewhere) about the process of ministerial formation. I am sure that you have considered, though, that this process is not just about the formation of a priest, it is also about the formation of you as an individual. That formation has made you the person you now are, and will continue to be.

    For those of us exercising a lay ministry as Local Preachers in the Methodist church the choices are easier. We can simply say that we now feel unable to offer regular dates for the plan, but we retain our status, and can take occasional services when and if we feel able. I think Bishop Christine was wise in suggesting a similar approach for you, at least at the moment. It’s not just about being available to fill in should local illness arise but also about who you are.

    I would like to repeat my plea from just before we both retired – please keep on blogging. Your wisdom, depth of scholarship, and understanding are widely appreciated. I recommend “Woolgathering” to my trainee local preachers and worship leaders. I know that they, like me, find them very valuable. There is so much rubbish on the Web that it’s great to point them to something which is readable, yet profound and challenging.

    However the way ahead stretches out for you, I am sure that you will continue to guide those, both lay and ordained, who seek to work out their discipleship in the confusing and troubling situation our country finds itself in. Of course, I can (and do) testify to the importance and value of lay ministry. For me too it’s an integral part of my identity.

    I hope this doesn’t all sound too presumptuous, but I have so appreciated your ministry here in Durham and later through your blogs, that I wanted to write to tell you so.
    Wishing you every blessing as you continue to seek the appropriate way ahead.


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