Swathes of Curates are about to be unleashed upon the Church of England. Do they know what they are letting themselves in for? Over the next few years, what shape of local church leadership will they be trained for? Over to guest blogger Andy Griffiths...
BEING TITUS: A NEW MODEL FOR INCUMBENT
MINISTRY
Most people
either didn’t notice Titus, or they did notice but were disappointed that it
was him who’d come.
In the first
category is Luke, who never mentions Titus at all, despite at least twelve
apostolic team members being name-checked and despite Titus having been (on the
evidence of the letters) a key figure in the expansion of the Christian
movement. Outside the book of Titus,
Paul names him twelve times in letters, but he does so in such a way that he
makes clear that no one else shares Paul’s high view of him. In Galatians 2.1-3 we learn that the Jewish
believers were unconvinced that people like Titus were converted at all; in 2
Corinthians 8.23 and 12.18 we learn that the Corinthians were disappointed that
it was Titus whom Paul sent with a letter, and so Paul has to justify his
choice at length. Titus was a
disappointing nobody.
In other
words, Titus is an ideal patron saint and model for incumbent ministers
today. And a new model is very much
required. Chelmsford Diocese, for
example, is calling churches to move from being “communities around a Minister”
to being “ministering communities”. Most
parishes will gladly sign up to this aspiration – but where does leave those of
us who are “Ministers”? Take Galleywood, the parish which I have
served as Vicar for 10 years. Its PCC (Church
Council) is chaired by a layperson, its life is largely run by a lay
“administrator and vision coordinator”, there are multiple licensed and
authorised lay ministers doing over 50% of the leading of worship and preaching,
and pastoral care in the hands of an able pastoral care team which I do not
lead, so what’s my role? Surely it’s not
only the Eucharistic prayer and volunteer management? Is there a way I can meaningfully discharge
my “cure of souls” without being central to church life?
My concern
here is mostly with Anglican incumbents – I include Priests in Charge, Vicars,
Rectors, Team Vicars, and Ministers in Charge – all those to whom is entrusted
the “cure of souls” of a given parish or set of parishes, whether they happen
to be paid or not (though as a matter of fact the enormous majority of
incumbents are paid). In the Church of
England, there is an additional complication, because a high proportion of incumbents
will be retiring in the next 10 years – about half, by some estimates, so that
an influential article spoke recently of “the leading of the 5,000”, suggesting
that there will be approximately five thousand paid Church of England incumbents
left, compared with 23,235 in 1901. So there’s
a danger that those of us remaining will be stretched ever more thinly and be
ever more isolated. I want to suggest
that the book of Titus provides a fourfold model that is life-giving. It has to be worth a try.
FROM INCUMBENT AT THE HEART OF A
PARISH, TO INCUMBENT AS APOSTOLIC TEAM MEMBER
Titus (and
the letters to Timothy) have a special status in the Bible. They give us a window into the organizational
structures of the early church. The
later they are – and New Testament scholarship continues to debate their date –
the more significant this window becomes, because it implies that we are seeing
a mature church after the first flush of charismatic enthusiasm. To put it bluntly, the letters to the
Corinthians presume a context extremely different from the contemporary Church
of England, but when we read 1 and 2 Timothy and Titus we are on slightly more
familiar ground.
And a quick
reading of these letters reveals one simple fact: there are no Vicars in Crete
at this time. At no stage is Titus
commissioned to be their Pastor or Parish Priest. Instead, we see teams: an apostolic team that
Titus is part of, and a team of elders/overseers in the Cretan church(es) whom
he is to select and assist.
We have
relatively little information about how the apostolic team functioned. For example, was it “a team led by an
apostle” or “a team of apostles”? (Both
seem to have been the case at different times – an example that is contested
for quite different reasons is Andronicus and Junia in Romans 16.7). My own view is that apostolic teams were
“flatter” in structure than a first reading of Acts might imply. Paul, though not a person with a lack of
self-belief, seems to have been wary of acting alone in any way, and even the
letters we commonly refer to as “Paul’s epistles” often had multiple authorship
(Paul and Silas or Paul and Sosthenes or Paul and Timothy or whatever).
With direct relevance to Titus, take Paul’s
words in 2 Cor 12-13:
Now when I went to Troas to preach the
gospel of Christ and found that the Lord had opened a door for me, I
still had no peace of mind, because I did not find my brother Titus there. So I
said goodbye to them and went on to Macedonia.
Here Paul –
even though God had “opened a door” for his ministry – could not operate
without Titus. It was Paul and his team,
or nothing. If we ask “why couldn’t Paul
preach without Titus around?” we might answer psychologically (“he just didn’t
feel comfortable”) or practically (“Paul was physically weak, at least at this
point, and needed Titus to be his spokesperson, or to physically hold him
up.”)
But there seems also to have been
an ecclesiological point: Paul, on principle, was not in favour of going it alone
– that would have modelled quite the wrong sort of Christian life.
So Chelmsford
diocese is modelling what it calls “Mission and Ministry Unit Teams” (MMU
Teams). An MMU team contains several incumbents,
and may also contain other team members including some self-supporting priests,
working together to serve a set of local churches and supporting the local
(largely unpaid, and sometimes including “locally deployed” self-supporting
priests) “ministry teams” in each local church.
Take, for example, Southwest Chelmsford Churches, a MMU comprising 5
churches in 4 parishes, served at present by 3 incumbents, a curate and a
flourishing lay team. I am one of these
incumbents, and have the “cure of souls” for one of the churches in the MMU;
but I am also licensed as an associate priest in the other 4, and have
responsibility across the five churches in the areas of Vocation, Vision and
Pioneering. My colleagues Stephanie and
Carol each have the cure of souls for two churches each, are again licensed as
associates to all the churches in the MMU, and have responsibility
(respectively) for Education, Evangelism and Worship and for Community
Involvement, Pastoral Care and Spiritual Growth. It so happens that I am at present also
“Warden of Ministers”, which means that I have the responsibility of drawing us
together for regular clergy meetings, and also inviting lay people appointed by
each church to meet with us; but Southwest Chelmsford Churches is a
self-consciously egalitarian MMU, and neither Stephanie, nor Carol, nor I are
in any sense the “leader” of the Unit. (I was LITERALLY appointed on the toss of a
coin).
If asked to describe my role, I tend to say “I’m Titus”, which is
unhelpful for anyone who has not read this post. My intention is not to try to recapture the
first Cretan church in some fundamentalist, proof-texting way, but to maintain
that there is a resonance between the apostolic team implied in the book of
Titus and the structures we are discovering here in mid-Essex.
I
think this “Chelmsford Model” has significant advantages over similar schemes
in other parts of the Anglican communion, which group churches into clusters
but then still treat incumbents as sole practitioners. It has something in common with
what I saw when I received the hospitality of the Augustinian Canons in Poitou, in western France. Sixteen local
parishes come under the “episcopé » of four
(stipendiary) priests, who live in the centre of the area. Each parish has its
own équipe animatrice, a lay team which is responsible
for the ongoing liturgical and spiritual life of the parish. One Sunday a
month, a priest from the central team visits the parish, celebrates mass,
provides episcopé, and
trains and supports the équipe animatrice as to how they
can lead services of the word over the next three weeks. In Poitiers diocese
the policy is to avoid communion by extension, as it is felt to devalue the
real Mass. In Poitiers diocese, the équipe animatrice (also referred to as ‘anciens’, elders –
though they say this makes them feel
old!) are all equal
members, without one of them being appointed as ‘team leader’.
So the first
part of my fourfold description of incumbent ministry today is this: Incumbents have a responsibility to work
together in teams. It would be good
if training included how to work in teams To those who say that incumbents are too
eccentric, too autonomous or too awkward to do so, I can only point again to
the eccentricity, autonomy and awkwardness of Paul, and say “if he had to do
it, so do we”.
Andy Griffiths has taught in a theological college in Hungary for five years, worked in France for 5 years and is now a Vicar in Essex, but his main claim to fame is that he went to college with David Keen.(Editors note - these are Andy's words not mine!!) So that’s why he’s “guest blogging” four posts about incumbent ministry. This is the first. Follow the links below for the others (will go 'live' as the posts go up)
Fresh Expressions of Vicar 2: How to get the Vicar out of the Way.
Fresh Expressions of Vicar 3: The Only Thing We Really Have to Say
Fresh Expressions of Vicar 4: My Generation, Your Generation, Regeneration
Fresh Expressions of Vicar 2: How to get the Vicar out of the Way.
Fresh Expressions of Vicar 3: The Only Thing We Really Have to Say
Fresh Expressions of Vicar 4: My Generation, Your Generation, Regeneration