Monday, October 29, 2018

513-463-7378

Hello Church,

The following is an excerpt from my 4-part series for the District's Newsletter.  It explains some personal lessons I learned from my Leave of Absence this past Summer.  Lesson #2 was in last week's blog.  This week is Lesson #1.


Get A Work Phone
              I am not Pastor Joe.  I am Joe Royer who is a pastor.   I have a personal life apart from what I do professionally… sort of.  Before my Leave, I carried 600 contacts in my phone which was always on my person, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 52 weeks a year.  Of the 600 contacts, about 585 of them were either directly or indirectly related to my job.  This is a sad commentary, mostly because it means that I only had 15 contacts that were related to my personal life…. Almost all family.
              So every time the phone made a noise, it was the church wanting my attention.  Phone calls, texts, facebook, tweets, snapchats and emails that I had routed to my phone continued to peck at me all day, every day.  I was spending every minute of every day in my virtual office.  And what about my day off or even my vacation time?  My discipline was poor.  Because it was also my personal phone, I wouldn’t turn it off.  And as you may know, it is difficult to not respond to that text or phone call when it is staring us in the face. 
              My 12-week Spiritual Leave this past Summer taught me lesson #1:  I was carrying the church in my pocket everywhere I went and it was zapping my emotional and spiritual energy.  I was becoming resentful and bitter that church was always taking, taking, taking from me.  It was time for a change.
              I am getting a work phone.  It will be on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday, 9 AM to 1 PM and 3 PM to 7 PM.  It will also be on all day on Saturday and Sunday.  It will be turned off at all other times.  Any emergencies can be referred via voicemail to the one person in the church who will have my personal number.  I can also check the church voicemail during my work hours via my work cell phone. 
              This new boundary is already making a difference for my mental health.  I am on a mission to expand my personal contacts… which means actually making new friends.  And what is the reaction to those in the church?  Surprisingly, very minimal.  Most understand.  A few were wondering why I haven’t done this before.  And, yes, a few are frustrated because I am not at their beck and call.  But I have decided that’s okay.  How?  In this 4-part series, I want to share with you other lessons that help having a work phone okay.  I hope you join me.

Be At Peace,
Joe Royer (who happens to be a pastor)


My new number is 513-463-7378.  I plan to have more energy for the church.  This will help me do that... to give me time to recharge in between the times that I commit to being your Pastor.  

Wednesday, October 24, 2018

Hi Ho Silver.... Go Away!!!!

Hello Church,

I have been invited to provide a 4-part series for the Ohio River Valley District Newsletter regarding my learning during my 12-week Leave.  I thought I would share part 2 with you.  It gives a bit of a foreshadow on how I will tweak my leadership style moving forward......

Rev. Joe Royer, who pastors Emmanuel United Methodist Church in Batavia, recently returned from a 12-week voluntary leave of absence for rest and renewal. He has four "lessons" from his time away that he shares with clergy colleagues to help with maintaining healthy boundaries.
Lesson #2: Minimize "Lone Ranger" decision-making
Have you ever made a decision that you thought was such an obviously good, sound decision that you didn’t consider that you would have to seek backing and support?  Or thought that the decision was so insignificant that no one would even care?  And then you find out later that you were wrong…. That people disagreed with your ‘Lone Ranger’ decision to the extent that it caused unnecessary discord and even major conflict? 
I am not the church.  I am an employee of the church.  I should stop making decisions that the church should be making, no matter how small or insignificant the decision seems. 
Now, for sure, there are times and places for executive decisions to be made by the pastor.  I won’t go into these few examples here as that is often between pastor and SPRC.
But I am not the church.  I am an employee of the church
I preach, teach and encourage good decision-making.  I communicate what it means to practice Christian behavior.  I administer the Sacraments.  I oversee the leadership structure of the church.  I will even review with the church the many possible decisions a church can make and possible consequences of such.  However, I will no longer take on the burden of most decisions that the church may not have any intention of backing.  This created frustration and discouragement in me and others.  It also created division between the pastor and church leadership.  Let the church be the church while you be you.
To be sure, there are issues of egos and power plays involved here.  I can’t control other people’s egos.  I can control mine.  And, yes, there are times when I KNOW what the right decision is… especially when it comes to spiritual and theological expertise.  I have a Masters of Divinity for crying out loud!  However, even when I am right, I am not right.  In other words, the battles that are created by contesting egos who think what they KNOW is right is rarely worth being right.  So…….
I rearranged the size of my ego.  If any decision can be deferred to a team of leaders, it is.  Anyone asking me for ‘permission’ to do such and such is referred to the appropriate ministry team.  If it takes 6 months of meetings to reach a decision, so be it (another decision church’s make is how to make decisions).  The church will be the church.  I will lead the church, but I will not be the church.
Yet another boundary drawn that has helped improve my self-care.  I am more at peace.  How did I do this?  Lesson #3 will dive deeper into the issue.  I hope you join me.
~ Rev. Joe Royer

Monday, October 15, 2018

Who Is That Stranger At Emmanuel?

Hello Church,

We want to set an objective for each of you:  make a new friend at Emmanuel.

We know some of you have many friends at Emmanuel.  We want you to make just one more.  Here is why:

We had a good Leadership Team meeting on Monday.  Our mission continues and most of you are getting it.  Our attention has shifted.  For the rest of the year, we want us to focus on relationships within the church.  We want to create an environment where we can be more tight-nit.  We want more genuine friendships to emerge.  We want love to flow... not just in a biblical because-Jesus-says-so kind of way, but in a I-can't-wait-to-see-my-friend-on-Sunday kind of way.

Here is the tricky part:  it can't be forced.  It should be organic.  Making a friend because church leadership says so isn't authentic.  It becomes just another task.  And tasks are things we are trying to get away from... at least until next year.

So our encouragement to you is to bring out your authentic self at church and be conversational with others.  Be yourself and don't be afraid to get to know each other.  I bet there is at least one person at Emmanuel you don't know.

I tighter-nit church will have advantages when the time comes to get back to being busy.  Yes, we have an agenda.  We have a vision.  I have a plan.  It will be in accordance with the church and the Holy Spirit.  Part of that is, for now, to be still and just know each other... .and know God even better.

God is Good,
Pastor Joe

Tuesday, October 9, 2018

Please Don't Be Mad At Me... But...

Hello Church,

Do you get it yet?  Emmanuel's Leadership has decided on a 3 month renewal time.  Do less.  Connect more.  Stop being busy.  Start being relational.  I'm going to keep preaching and teaching it.

Why?

We need a fresh start.  We need to erase the board and start with a blank look.  We need empty space, but more than that... we need to have energy to start filling the board again. 

We don't currently have nearly enough energy.  There are individuals here and there that are still chugging along, but as a whole, the church is not motivated to expend energy.  This is clearer to me now than ever before.  For the love of God, we need to gas in our spiritual gas tank.... literally for the love of God.

So I am going to be saying 'no'.  I am going to encourage our Leadership to say 'no'.  Please don't be mad at me.  I am semi-desperate to get this message out.  I am so convinced of this strategy.  We need a buffer between what was and what will be.  God wants us to be still and to know that He is God. 

A time is coming soon when we will have a whole new list of tasks to accomplish.  But it isn't now.  Now is the time to fill ourselves with the love of one another and God.  Now is the time to just be in Christian Fellowship and be friends and learn that we all have the same cause... to be the church.

Do you get it yet? 

If we don't, we will not be ready to move forward together come 2019.  And if we do not move forward, it will be painful to be the church. 

So please don't be mad at me when I say 'no.  I want to get you ready for something new.  God has plans.

God is Good,
Pastor Joe

Tuesday, October 2, 2018

A Different Pastor

Hello Church,

It's official.  It's October.  My mission begins!  I am encouraging you to renew yourself.  I am meeting with anyone and everyone and preaching it and teaching it.  Ready?

Relax.

Chill out.

Reconnect.

Talk with one another.

Fellowship.

I will be all about this for the next 3 months.  My desire to talk about tasks has gone away.  I want us to sit back and think about how we know one another.  I want us to prayerfully contemplate who we are and how we relate with one another. 

I think some haven't taken be seriously enough yet.  It's okay.  I understand.  As a pastor who has been task/results oriented, I have minimized the significance of fellowship.  That pastor no longer exists. 

So if you come to me because such n such needs to get done, understand that I will seriously consider as to whether or not it is a task that the church NEEDS to get done.  If it can wait 3 months, then it probably will. 

We are a tired church.  We need to rest.  Don't worry.  It's only 3 months.  It goes fast. 

So everything we do, I will try to turn it into a fellowship time with minimal tasks.... everything..... worship, ministry team meetings, special events, study time, etc..... 

We can't move forward if we are too tired to move forward. 

3 months.... October... November... December.... and then January is here.  Get rested.

God is Good,
Pastor Joe