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Does Your Minister Work Just One Day A Week?
Each Sunday morning your minister enters the sanctuary and leads in worship
by preaching and praying. Usually they greet you at the door and give you
a hearty handshake and a warm, "Hello, how are you?" and for some of you,
that's all you see of the minister until next Sunday morning.
But, who are they beyond Sunday? Where have the come from? How did they
learn to do what they do? Indeed, what do they do from Sunday to Sunday?
Until 1966, ministers in the Presbyterian Church in Canada were men who
trained at either Presbyterian College in Montreal or Knox College in
Toronto. But in 1966 the General Assembly (the highest court in our
denomination) approved a decision which allowed women, as well as men, to be
ordained as both elders and Ministers or Word and Sacrement. Today, students
for the ministry are also able to study at the Vancouver School of Theology.
Ask your minister to tell you about their years of study in preparation for
ministry. Which professor was their favourite? Which course challenged them
most?
Your minister has a variety of responsibilities to attend to in order to
make Christ visible in your midst.
Some of these are:
- Home, hospital, and nursing home visits
- Funerals
- Session meetings
- Worship preparation
- Bible study
- Communicant's classes
- Baptism and Communion
- Presbytery involvement
- Counselling
- Marriage preparation
- Weddings
- Meetings and phone calls regarding the life and work of the church
- Community involvement
Ask your minister what aspect of ministry is most fulfilling for them.
Ask your minister how you can be supportive of them.
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