From Ministry to Theology: Pastoral Action & Reflection
by John Patton
On This Page
Description
Originally published: Nashville : Abingdon Press, 1990. Includes bibliographical references (p. 123-128).Tags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
A pastor’s life is never boring. In any one week I may counsel someone on how to pay their gas bill by stretching their grocery budget with the foodbank, shovel snow from the walkway, pray for the mourning, and preach God’s word. Each of these events can be interpreted theologically (yes, even shoveling snow), but it doesn’t happen automatically.
Patton makes the case that “theological conceptualization does not grow immediately out of pastoral experience. At its best the process is slow” (13). In From Ministry to Theology, Patton describes how ministry and theology are related.
"Pastoral practice and theology are related through the imagination and its empowerment of pastoral theology’s three essential elements: action in show more ministry, relationship in community, and interpretation of meaning" (21).
In order to get to theological interpretation, Patton employs a phenomenological approach which first immerses the person in the details of the actual situation itself while bracketing out the human desire to ascribe meaning to the event. This enables the person to avoid the error of slotting diverse experiences into presupposed categories of meaning.
This type of reflection may seem antithetical to the fast-paced demanding life of the pastor, but it produces genuine theological insight into the daily life of ministry. show less
Patton makes the case that “theological conceptualization does not grow immediately out of pastoral experience. At its best the process is slow” (13). In From Ministry to Theology, Patton describes how ministry and theology are related.
"Pastoral practice and theology are related through the imagination and its empowerment of pastoral theology’s three essential elements: action in show more ministry, relationship in community, and interpretation of meaning" (21).
In order to get to theological interpretation, Patton employs a phenomenological approach which first immerses the person in the details of the actual situation itself while bracketing out the human desire to ascribe meaning to the event. This enables the person to avoid the error of slotting diverse experiences into presupposed categories of meaning.
This type of reflection may seem antithetical to the fast-paced demanding life of the pastor, but it produces genuine theological insight into the daily life of ministry. show less
Ratings
Members
- Recently Added By
Author Information
12 Works 580 Members
John Patton is the emeritus professor of pastoral theology at Columbia Theological Seminary in Decatur, Georgia, and a retired United Methodist minister. He is the author of many books, including Pastoral Care: An Essential Guide and Pastoral Care in Context: An introduction to Pastoral Care. Dr. Patton is also an associate editor of Abingdon's show more Dictionary of Pastoral Care and Counseling. show less
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 73
- Popularity
- 430,240
- Reviews
- 1
- Rating
- (3.75)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 3

























































