Identifying pastoral care in contemporary Methodism

This study is concerned with the nature of pastoral care and its practice in contemporary British Methodism. Both aspects are explored by means of postal surveys of Methodist ministers, local preachers and other lay members, as well as case study interviews with circuit ministers. These explorations...

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Main Author: Burfield, David R.
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 1995
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11416/
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author Burfield, David R.
author_facet Burfield, David R.
author_sort Burfield, David R.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This study is concerned with the nature of pastoral care and its practice in contemporary British Methodism. Both aspects are explored by means of postal surveys of Methodist ministers, local preachers and other lay members, as well as case study interviews with circuit ministers. These explorations take place in the context of a brief historical overview of the roots of Methodism and a characterisation of the theological viewpoints and spirituality of respondents, which are correlated with the findings of an earlier Anglican study. At the same time a detailed portrait is painted of the biography and ministry of both ministers and local preachers as an aid to understanding their contribution to pastoral care. The nature of pastoral care is discussed and a working definition proposed which emphasises the importance of nurture rather than crisis-oriented care. The perceptions of ministers and local preachers regarding their understanding of the nature of pastoral care are examined, and the influence of theological viewpoint, gender and age is explored. Pastoral practice within Methodism is evaluated and some difficulties and areas of weakness are pin-pointed. Comparison of the perceptions and practice of pastoral care reveals that whereas ministers have a balanced view of pastoral care, frequently such care tends to be crisis-oriented and ministers driven rather than in control of the task: essentially reactive rather than pro-active. A weakness of pastoral care is that it tends to be centred on the full-time professional rather than involving the whole community of faith. It is argued that the divisions between lay and ordained members of the church need to be removed in order to permit effective pastoral care. A working model of pastoral care is proposed, within a Methodist context, which emphasises the functional nature of full-time personnel and the importance of local leadership.
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spelling nottingham-114162025-02-28T11:13:17Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11416/ Identifying pastoral care in contemporary Methodism Burfield, David R. This study is concerned with the nature of pastoral care and its practice in contemporary British Methodism. Both aspects are explored by means of postal surveys of Methodist ministers, local preachers and other lay members, as well as case study interviews with circuit ministers. These explorations take place in the context of a brief historical overview of the roots of Methodism and a characterisation of the theological viewpoints and spirituality of respondents, which are correlated with the findings of an earlier Anglican study. At the same time a detailed portrait is painted of the biography and ministry of both ministers and local preachers as an aid to understanding their contribution to pastoral care. The nature of pastoral care is discussed and a working definition proposed which emphasises the importance of nurture rather than crisis-oriented care. The perceptions of ministers and local preachers regarding their understanding of the nature of pastoral care are examined, and the influence of theological viewpoint, gender and age is explored. Pastoral practice within Methodism is evaluated and some difficulties and areas of weakness are pin-pointed. Comparison of the perceptions and practice of pastoral care reveals that whereas ministers have a balanced view of pastoral care, frequently such care tends to be crisis-oriented and ministers driven rather than in control of the task: essentially reactive rather than pro-active. A weakness of pastoral care is that it tends to be centred on the full-time professional rather than involving the whole community of faith. It is argued that the divisions between lay and ordained members of the church need to be removed in order to permit effective pastoral care. A working model of pastoral care is proposed, within a Methodist context, which emphasises the functional nature of full-time personnel and the importance of local leadership. 1995 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11416/1/283168.pdf Burfield, David R. (1995) Identifying pastoral care in contemporary Methodism. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Lay ministry Ordained ministry Ordination Philosophy Religion
spellingShingle Lay ministry
Ordained ministry
Ordination
Philosophy
Religion
Burfield, David R.
Identifying pastoral care in contemporary Methodism
title Identifying pastoral care in contemporary Methodism
title_full Identifying pastoral care in contemporary Methodism
title_fullStr Identifying pastoral care in contemporary Methodism
title_full_unstemmed Identifying pastoral care in contemporary Methodism
title_short Identifying pastoral care in contemporary Methodism
title_sort identifying pastoral care in contemporary methodism
topic Lay ministry
Ordained ministry
Ordination
Philosophy
Religion
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11416/