Pastors Near Pastures

The following words, along with Francis Schaeffer’s No Little People, were helpful to me when last year we accpted the opportunity to return to East Tennessee rather than pursue opportunities with churches in larger cities:

“Few men have the courage to seek obscurity for the sake of its advantages, but there can be no doubt of the intellectual advantages of a quiet country charge. When I hear men complain of the lack of stimulus in a rural parish, or find them longing to preach to audiences more cultivated and worthy of their talents, I feel disposed to think that the poor quality of their intellectual fabrics is due not so much to lack of proper appliances, but rather to a dearth of raw material. Many a man will tell you that he owes all that he afterward became, to the circumstance that, under God, he enjoyed the quiet rural solitude, and had opportunity of uninterupted thought and reading.”

– Francis Patton, in his biography of A.A. Hodge

2 thoughts on “Pastors Near Pastures

  1. “… the quiet rural solitude, and had opportunity of uninterupted thought and reading.”

    Are you able to take advantage of this?

  2. Seaton,

    Thaks for asking. I’ve not had time the past few days to respond to your question – which probably shows I am not far enough out in the country! Actually, we’re preparing to go out of town, so everything is on an adjusted schedule.

    To answer your question, for the most part, Yes, I am taking advantage of this. There are some responsibilities that periodically hinder “uninterupted thought & reading”, but I am doing a fair amount of reading, studying – and Praying!

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