The nature of power in
Pastoral Ministry
Chapter 4
The
use of power, and its abuses
In the previous chapter we
saw how power has been an integral part of the ministry of the Church since
it’s inception, by the example of the power and authority within the ministry
of Jesus and by the authority conferred onto the Apostles and subsequent leaders
of the Church.
Power, and the authority
which often makes that power possible, undergirds the relationship between
client and minister in any pastoral encounter.
The client will have certain expectations, whether right or wrong, and
will usually come to the pastor, to a greater or lesser degree, in a position
of weakness comparative to the strength of the pastor. They will assume the pastor’s ‘expertise’,
‘concern’, ‘compassion’ and ‘wisdom’ exists for the benefit of those who seek
his or her aid or advice. Brice Avery (1996: 34) writes that,
“The
essence of a nourishing pastoral encounter is that it teaches people that they
are valued. For those seeking pastoral help this takes place in the very
special relationship with the helper.”
Problems & Confusions
The assumption on the part
of the client that this depth of compassionate relationship is also the wish of
the pastor is one that can influence the pastor for the worst. It can place a pastor in a mindset of superiority,
and leave open the possibility of manipulation or abuse. When the pastor realises the dependence shown
by the client toward them this opens up the possibility of a dangerously
unequal and ultimately abusive relationship.
If this happens it is usually the case that this occurs on an
unconscious level as the pastor often seeks to have their own needs met in the
relationship with a client. This is
probably quite common and not always harmful as client and pastor learn to meet
each other’s needs, but it brings about the possibility of serious difficulties
and ultimately fails to resolve the issues that brought the client to the
pastor in the first place. As Avery (1996: 35) tells us
“Re-enacting
our own unresolved inner dramas in the context of a victim of something that we
can identify with is a sort of Taking Disguised as Giving. It can be an unconscious motivation behind
the well-meaning help which characterizes poorly trained counsellors. It is for this reason that all credible
pastoral training revolves around the pastors’ exploration of their own inner
world.”
Avery (1996: 40) goes on to
say that it is crucial that “we tell the difference between our own hurts and
those of others.” A good pastor, then, will be concerned with their own
motivations, any tendencies they have towards controlling other, and any
weaknesses in their own character or method that might hinder positive
development in pastoral work. Avery (1996: 41) explains thus:
“…the
pastoral encounter requires a partial and mutual emotional immersion of the
pastor and the client: how else is the pastor to know what it is to be like the
client? But, and this is crucial…the
pastor has to know his or her own responses to as wide a range of emotional
contacts as possible to be able to tell the difference between their own
feelings-world and that of the client.”
A major danger of pastoral
power, then, is that the minister can use their position to play out their own
fantasies, to attempt to externalise their own hurts and make others the
victims of the pastor’s unresolved difficulties. It is not always so blatant, often both
pastor and client are completely unaware of the issues that form the background
to their relationship, they may not realise that what is really happening is the
projection of the pastor’s hurts, prejudices or agenda on to the client. This is because, as Avery (1996: 41)
explains, in a pastoral relationship where intimacy has begun,
“…the border between what is
the pastor and what is the client is blurred and dynamic. It is never completely clear and is always
shifting.”
The ‘Nine O’Clock Service’
This leads on to issues of
self-knowledge, supervision and accountability.
It is important to be aware of these issues because they so often negatively influence the
pastoral encounter. The dangers of
self-seeking pastoral power can be seen in the situation that arose around the
Nine O’Clock Service (NOS) in Sheffield.
The situation itself is well documented, especially by Howard
(1996) and the events surrounding the
breakdown of the structures of the group drew the interest, as well as the
scorn, of the national media.
Essentially the difficulties
of NOS and its eventual demise arose from the power which the leader and
founder, Chris Brain, held over those who worked with him. Brain had an obvious ‘charismatic’ power, many
beleived in Brain’s personal authority and this allowed him power over their
lives, power which turned into manipulation and control. This charismatic power was given the backing
of institutional authority when Brain was ordained in the Church of England,
first deacon, then priest. Without the
knowledge of those in the hierarchy of the Church of England, Brain’s methods
of control and his serious abuses of pastoral power had been legitimised by the
giving of institutional authority and by conferring an office and title upon
him.
In the introduction to his
detailed study of the situation Roland Howard writes that the story of NOS was
not the story, as the Church of England thought, of a radical new ‘youth
movement’ that empowered members of ‘Youth culture’ but that, as Howard (1996:
6) explains
“The real
story is of betrayal and abuse…Moreover, it is of a priest manipulating,
controlling and dominating the minds of several hundred members who thought he
was ministering to them. The real story
is about an insatiable desire for power, which was fulfilled by money and
sexual involvement. This power was power
to damn, power to humiliate, power to enter people’s minds and power to control
them.”
This is the danger of
pastoral power, when individuals drawn by the charisma of a leader who they
believe wishes only the best for them, find the trust which has been placed in
that leader is ill-founded and misappropriated for his or her own ends. NOS is an extreme example of how pastoral
relationships can be abused and result in damage rather than healing for the
client, and indeed the pastor. The
result of the Nine O’Clock Service’s difficulties was that the congregation,
hurt and confused, either moved away from the Christian Community altogether,
or needed intense care and counselling to go beyond their wounds and start to
build trust in the pastoral ministry of the church again.
The principal, though not
sole, agent of the abuses of NOS, Chris Brain, also, needed counselling to
examine his own motivation and the results of his manipulative strategies. It is likely that he was ultimately unaware
of the true extent of the mental and spiritual pain he was inflicting on those
he used to meet his own power-hungry ends.
Howard (1996: 133) tells us that Brain told a national newspaper
“To find
that I am some kind of abuser of people I dearly love, in the areas I most
passionately believe in, and thought I had worked so hard for, fills me with
utter despair and I do not know what I can say.
I am sorry for the consequences of what I have done. I can see what I could not see before and I
am profoundly and desperately sorry.”
There are questions about
whether this confession and apology is completely genuine, but many of those
associated with Brain do maintain that he seemed to act without full knowledge
of the negative effect he was having on the lives of those who had put
themselves into his hands.
There is little doubt of the
fact that the structure’s of NOS were in themselves set up to give Brain
complete control, they were engineered so that even in his absence he remained
a ‘shadowy figure in the background.’ Many
church structures in mainstream denominations have the aim of keeping the
minister at the head of the leadership structure, but few function so overtly
to ensure the power of the leader is always felt and powerlessness is
considered appropriate for all others.
The structure was engineered to make all activity of NOS dependent upon
Brain.
Oscillation
Dependency is not
necessarily a negative concept, it is possible to have a model of appropriate
dependence upon the pastor. Such a model
would be one which allows the pastor to make painful observations which are
able to move the client on towards healing, one which opens up the
possibilities of fruitful pastoral development and ultimately to self-awareness
and wholeness on the part of the client.
This model of appropriate dependence is put forward by Bruce Reid
(1974) in his book ‘The Dynamics of
Religion’ and revolves around a process which he names ‘oscillation
theory’. Reid (1974: 41) explains
“The
picture of the life of the individual is one of periods of engagements with
various tasks, alternating with periods of disengagement which may be creative,
defensive or simply periods of rest, we have called this alternative process
‘oscillation’”
This theory is pertinent to
our discussion in this chapter and in the next and so bears some in depth study
as we considering applying its principles to our concerns.
Reid’s understanding of
‘oscillation’ is introduced by using the image of a child’s dependence upon
parents, as part of the process of maturing.
Reid (1974: 41: 13) uses the example of children learning to swim,
saying that when, for instance, the mother accompanies a child into the
swimming pool the child will strike out and explore the water, returning
occasionally to rest, and gain physical and emotional strength through
reassurance of the presence of mother before striking out further and further
in the pursuit of self sufficiency in the water. This might seem a purely anecdotal argument,
but the Reid’s book carries on to show the application of this analogy to
pastoral life.
Using a variety of sources
of evidence and by interpreting and applying the works of a number of
psychological and social theorists Reid comes to the conclusion that human
beings need a certain amount of security in their lives, especially in their
relationships, in order to achieve integration as individuals and become a part
of the community/society, in other words, to function fully in everyday
life. He tells us (1974: 15)
“We have
used the term ‘oscillation’ to refer to the alternation of the child and the adult
between periods of autonomous activity and periods of physical or symbolic
contact with sources of renewal.”
These sources of renewal
take many forms for different people, as stated above, it may simply be rest,
or solitude. It may be ongoing involvement
in a group, or family life. For the
purpose of this essay, though, we will particularly consider being an active
part of the church, or having an active concern for the spiritual side of one’s
life as the main source of renewal for those with whom pastors have most
contact.
Dependence & Regression
Reid’s concept of
oscillation can be expanded by using the terms ‘regression’ and ‘dependence’
which he uses as the basis for his theory.
Reid contests the often negative uses of these words and explain that
both ‘regression’ and ‘dependence’ can
be functional or dysfunctional. For instance,
to immerse oneself fully into a play or a novel one has to suspend certain
critical faculties which, he claims, amounts to a form of regression. In a similar way, says Reid, participation in
worship involves similar actions. Reid (1974: 23) writes ‘In worship our
thoughts and feelings are engaged by narratives, images and ideas which refer
to a world, or a realm of experience, other than our working or social lives.’
In this way our engagement
with the world of worship does not conflict with our everyday reality. Reid (1974: 24-25)uses the example of the
hymn ‘Dear Lord and Father of Mankind’, stating that to read and sing the lyric
to the hymn, which is concerned with personal submission to God, regret for rebellion against God and
confession of the human tendency to disobedience of God, is to attempt to
engage in a reality beyond the everyday but still a part of it, that is to use
faith-language to express one’s own personal concerns about lifestyle. In this hymn there is a concern that if God
wants the very best for human beings than we are foolish and wrong to ignore,
avoid or disregard God’s will.
Reid tells us that the
individual who might feel very embarrassed about saying the words to the hymn,
and expressing such submission and humility, in any other context can, without
self-consciousness, embrace the event of joining in the words and of
assimilating their meaning in the context of worship due to a sense of
appropriate dependence and regression.
Because of this positive aspect of appropriate regression and dependence
the words are not considered incongruous with daily living and the individual
does not feel a negative tension between the two realities of the daily
experience of life and work and the experience of worship.
Reid (1972: 25) elucidates this concept by using
talk of two ‘frames of mind, or ways of experiencing a world.’ He explains these by talking of
“…one of
which is oriented towards recognising and dealing with present and future
realities in the ‘public’ world, which we have called W-activity, and one which
is oriented towards images which may be connected with the public world, but
which originates in imagination, ‘in the mind’, which we have called
S-activity. Regression is the process by
which S-activity becomes dominant, and W-activity becomes subsidiary or is
suppressed altogether.”
Much of Reid’s thinking is
based around the worship events of the Christian community as the focal point
of the pastoral encounter in the Christian Community. For Reid all pastoral contact takes place
against the background of the worshipping fellowship. From this fellowship the pastor gains their
authority, identity, role and function.
In this is the foundation for all contact between pastor and client.
For Reid the focal point of
the adult oscillation process is in the gathering of the community at such
events as the Holy Communion, the Eucharist.
At this moment the pastor becomes a facilitator of the community’s
engagement with the reality that exists beyond the everyday. The pastor makes it possible to move to
‘regression’ and because of this an appropriate
dependence is fostered, this is more obviously visible in denominations
where there is a notion of ‘priesthood’ where the priest is the only one able
to ‘preside’ at the sacrament of the Eucharist. Developing this understanding
Reid (1974: 32) uses two terms with regards to ‘dependence’ and, though
lengthy, the appropriate quote is worth giving in full as he explains,
“We have
therefore coined the phrase ‘extra-dependence’ where ‘extra-’ means ‘outside’, to refer to
conditions in which the individual may be inferred to regard himself as
dependent upon a person or object other than himself for confirmation,
protection and sustenance.
Correspondingly we use the term ‘intra-dependence’…to refer to
conditions in which the individual may be inferred to regard his confirmation,
protection and sustenance as in his own hands.”
Worship, for Reid, is
concerned with allowing the movement from intra- to extra- dependence and back
to intra-dependence. This is the
foundation for Christian activity and of pastoral activity in general - in
allowing people a safe space to ‘receive’ the unconditional love and support of
either God, the pastor or the congregation they can move on to a state of
self-reliance and personal strength.
Whilst wary of simply transplanting this model on to individual pastoral
relationship the model of ‘safe space’ is one that many modern Christian
groups, such as ‘Holy Joe’s’ and ‘Grace’
in London and the ‘Late Late Service’ in Glasgow are striving to model and to
promote.
It must be noted that the
priest does not become superior to the congregation in these times of
‘extra-dependence’, she or he remains as part of the community and, through the
use of authorises or accepted forms, words, orders of service, takes on a role
in common with the people as well as distinct from. Without a congregation, except in Roman
Catholic churches, the Communion cannot occur, and even in Roman Churches the
theological justification of ‘The Communion of The Saints’ sets the background
at which the priest is able to celebrate the Eucharist alone.
Beyond Reid’s theories
If Reid is correct, and the
assumption of this study is that his observations are useful and helpful, then it can be inferred that the pastor gains identity from the community
of faith. Authority and Pastoral power,
as mentioned in Chapter 1 above are taken from one’s position in the community
or organisation to which the pastor is connected. Even if an individual exercises an informal
pastoral ministry, with people seeking his or her advice due to a belief in the
wisdom and compassion of that individual, there would still usually be some
recognition by the community (social and/or spiritual) of that individual’s
pastoral role. In Reid’s terms, the
pastor enables a community to move to ‘extra-dependence’ and back to
‘inter-dependence’ when the community acknowledges the pastor’s position and
role.
To enable this to happen the
pastor seeks to be a part of that community, not apart from it, and they will
gain energy from the ongoing encounter with and within that community and will
therefore be able to reach out to those beyond the community with compassion
and openness. This places the onus for
support of the pastor on the church fellowship, but leaves the pastor in a
position where she or he must be a person of honest and integrity, of
vulnerability and accountability. This
leads us on to look at the structures of the Church.
3 comments:
A couple of questions arise for me - I hope they are focused enough.
Your paper so far reminds me a lot of the psychology I studied in my 20s. But - outside of such relational aspects of the secular world of Freud, Adler, Jung, Rollo May, Paul Tournier, and all of these are aware of projection, transference, inequality of power and so on, you write of "the example of the power and authority within the ministry of Jesus and by the authority conferred onto the Apostles and subsequent leaders of the Church."
This begs a question related to the circumstances of the chosen people in the 1000 years prior to the institution of church and Eucharist etc. How was healing effected without the explicit example of Jesus - e.g. as in the claims of Psalm 103? How does this relate to your thesis of being a pastor 'in Christ'? David counts YHWH as his Shepherd. Psalm 119 suggests that YHWH's testimonies are his counselors (using the JB translation instead of my own, but the sense could be as they have it).
Another question that is begged is the notion of leader. Is pastoral care always a leader-follower type of care? This could occur, it seems to me, if the one being cared for is in some way subservient because of a particular offence. And in that case, the pastors in the hierarchy of the church have a potential conflict of interest. But here we touch on issues of enforced correction rather than healing.
Allowing just a NT quote, James says, confess your sins to one another, and you will be healed. This contrasts with the Psalms where confession is to YHWH (Psalm 32:5 confess=give thanks - same word in Hebrew) This is the only place in the Psalms where confess and sin are used together. (It's rather rare in the TNK - Nehemiah 1 is an interesting example for this man while confessing the sins of all the people bears the name of NACHAM, to comfort, and he is the one who rebuilt the temple, much as the paraclete, Hebrew nacham, builds the new temple).
clarification, in Ps 119:24, it is the poet who claims YHWH's testimonies as the poet's counselors
Your question takes the statement out of context, Bob - by which I mean (not in a confrontational way) that my MA writing is relating to the Church, NOT to the action of the Spirit in the pre-Christian era. Likewise - no, it's not always leader-follower, in fact as the thesis develops more and more I relate to the community as the place in which pastoral care happens, and the minister's calling is one expression of this. But writing as a minister in training and in my first yearss of ordained ministry, for an MA in Pastoral Ministry meant that my context and audience were particularly focussed. :-)
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