When I read the following quote from David Weinberger's book, "Too Big to Know," I wondered if the position and expectations of the local minister was changing rapidly, even from the time I entered seminary in 2003.
Weinberger describes the former way of education for a professional career:
"People study hard and become experts in particular areas.
They earn credentials—degrees, publications, the occasional Nobel Prize—that
make it easier for us trust them. They write books, teach classes, and go on
TV, so that we all can benefit from their hard work. The results of that work
go through vetting processes appropriate to the type and importance of its
claims, providing us with even more assurance of its accuracy. As new discoveries are
made and sanctioned, the body of knowledge grows. We build on it, engaging in a
multi-generational project that, albeit with occasional missteps, leads us
further along in our understanding of the world. Knowledge is a treasure,
knowing is the distinctively human activity, and our system of knowledge is the
basis for the hope that we might all one day come to agreement and live in
peace.
We’ve grown up thinking that this is how knowledge works.
But as the
digital age is revealing, that’s how knowledge worked when its medium was
paper. Transform the medium by which we develop, preserve, and communicate
knowledge, and we transform knowledge."
In my short nine-year ministry, I have often experienced a certain amount of anxiety regarding the amount of knowledge I've managed to retain from my seminary degree (three years, full-time graduate school). While teaching classes, leading groups, preaching sermons, and offering pastoral care, I have been self-conscious about the amount of knowledge I share with, repeat, or impart to my parishioners.
My experience in the DMin program at McCormick Theological Seminary, and specifically in this most recent course, "The Gospel and Global Media," has transformed the model of ministry into which I am growing. The role of the Pastor is not necessarily to "know" the most information, but to lead in such a way that knowledge is sought after, discussed, prayed about, and used to live into faithful discipleship. The truth is that there are plenty of sermons, worship services, and online Bible studies, but the role of the pastor is to exhibit wisdom in preaching, teaching, leading, and caring, in order to discern God's word in the midst of a mass array of words.
Weinberger writes:
"In a networked world, knowledge lives not in books or
in heads but in the network itself. It’s not that the network is a super-brain
or is going to become conscious. It’s not. Rather, the Internet enables groups
to develop ideas further than any individual could. This moves knowledge from
individual heads to the networking of the group. We still need to get maximum
shared benefit from smart, knowledgeable individuals, but we do so by
networking them."