Kathryn Puckett Kathryn Puckett

Surviving Divisive Issues in a Normal Sized Church

A fundamental difference exists between normal sized churches (According to Lifeway Research, churches with less than 100 in worship are normal with over 57% of churches in North America being this size.) and large churches (Churches with greater than 100 in worship). Normal sized churches are not organizations, they are organisms. They are family. Everything in a normal sized church is based on relationships. Without healthy relationships, the normal sized church dies…

Read More
Kathryn Puckett Kathryn Puckett

The Call to Suffer

The call to ministry is a call to suffering.  When we began ministry, we started with an idealistic view that we would serve a growing congregation of people enthralled with our messages, receptive to our leadership, and loving in response.  Yet the dream soon becomes a nightmare. While it is true that most people love and appreciate our ministry, we also encounter criticism, rejection, and hardship.  Sometimes, this rejection comes from people we consider our closest friends. Ministering to broken people is…

Read More
Kathryn Puckett Kathryn Puckett

Do You Have the Right to Dust Off Your Sandals?

When Jesus sent out the twelve, he instructed them with the following: “[11] And whatever town or village you enter, find out who is worthy in it and stay there until you depart. [12] As you enter the house, greet it. [13] And if the house is worthy, let your peace come upon it, but if it is not worthy, let your peace return to you. [14] And if anyone will not receive you or listen to your words, shake off the dust from your feet when you leave that house or town. [15] Truly, I say to you…

Read More
Kathryn Puckett Kathryn Puckett

Read It Like You Mean It!

We’ve all been there, whether it was a church service, a wedding, or a funeral. We’ve all been somewhere that the Word of God was read out loud and it was dreadful. Perhaps you were even the culprit! I know I have been. The reading was flat and monotone. It didn’t rightly reflect the tone of the original author. Apart from just being boring, why is this such a problem? When we read, we communicate something to ourselves and our hearers. Do we actually believe what we’re reading? Do we understand…

Read More
Kathryn Puckett Kathryn Puckett

Lessons From the Reformation

If you have spent any time serving in rural church ministry, you probably don’t need any reminding of some of the unique challenges we face. Do you struggle from a lack of resources? Are you lacking workers with which to share the load of the ministerial duties? Is there tension within your church stemming from a very diverse congregation? If so, you are not alone. As odd as it may sound, it is times like those where I have often found great comfort from church history…

Read More
Kathryn Puckett Kathryn Puckett

Utilizing Church History and Tradition

Not that long ago, I was sitting in my pastor’s office, browsing his impressive library. I picked up one of his books, a thick one on church history, and commented, “I would never be able to read something like this.” At the time, I had a low view of church history…

Read More
Kathryn Puckett Kathryn Puckett

Getting Stuck in a Rural Place

Do you live in a rural place and feel stuck? Do you pray that God would call you to a place bigger and better than where you’re at now? Well, that was me. I was right there with you. I tried to leave twice, but in God’s providence, He kept me in a rural place. Let me explain…

Read More
Kathryn Puckett Kathryn Puckett

Loners are Losers

In the pantheon of great cinematic heroes, Clint Eastwood rises near the top. Before he was a cop with a .44 magnum or a grumpy old man with a Gran Torino, Eastwood portrayed mysterious loners in classic westerns. He even played a gun-toting preacher once. He rode out of the wilderness as a singular and enigmatic hero. He wasn’t there to make friends. He was there to stand alone and save the day. Pastor, you're not Clint Eastwood…

Read More
Kathryn Puckett Kathryn Puckett

Entrusting to Faithful Men in Rural Places

One Sunday evening, as a teenager, I stood in a pew with a hymnal in my hands at small country church in PA. I had been hearing Pastor Rob preach verse by verse through the Scriptures Sunday after Sunday. After growing up in stale religion, it was like fresh rain to the soul. Suddenly the congregation sang: “Jesus what a friend for sinners, Jesus lover of my soul. Friends may fail me, foes assail me, He may Savior makes me whole!” In that moment, God regenerated my heart…

Read More
Kathryn Puckett Kathryn Puckett

Rural Ministry: The Need is Great, but the People are Few

I still remember the collective gasp when I shared in one of my seminary classes that I live and minister in a town of 8,000 people. I was stunned by the amount of shock my peers displayed—8,000 is not that small! Our discussion inevitably drifted towards my plans for utilizing my degree in such a small town. To be honest, I’m uncertain about what God has in store for me in the coming years, but I am sure of one thing: God has given me the desire to strengthen the rural church…

Read More
Kathryn Puckett Kathryn Puckett

Hope for Legalists and Liberals

One sleepless summer night, on the top bunk of an old camp bed, I became a Christian. The next day I became a legalist. 

Growing up, when I thought about church, I thought rules. There were rules about music, rules about friends, rules about clothing, rules about which church van to ride in, and — I was convinced — rules about the rules!

As I wrestled with the idea of trusting Christ I resisted because I didn’t want to follow Jesus if that meant submitting to endless rules…

Read More
Kathryn Puckett Kathryn Puckett

The Resonance of Rural Ministry

Pastoral ministry is a taxing assignment, no matter the size or context in which you are serving. Big or small, established or planted, urban or rural, each of these paradigms presents the pastor with a particular set of stresses and burdens that necessitate a holy dose of grace, humility, faith, and brotherhood. Notwithstanding what your ministry environment looks like…

Read More
Kathryn Puckett Kathryn Puckett

Living "at home" in the Gospel

Being at someone else's home, whatever the occasion, can be an intimidating experience. We want to put our best foot forward to be the perfect guest. We may not be sure of the customs and culture within that home, so we want to be careful not to overstep our bounds. What a relief it is when our host tells us to "make ourselves at home." Implied in that comment is that we are to consider the host's home our home…

Read More
Kathryn Puckett Kathryn Puckett

The Need for Personal Discipleship in the Rural Church

“When I wake up in the morning, and the alarm gives out a warning, and I don't think I'll ever make it on time. By the time I grab my books and I give myself a look, I’m at the corner just in time to see the bus fly by.” This theme song from the 1990’s tv show Saved By the Bell captures the feeling most pastors experience each week…

Read More
Kathryn Puckett Kathryn Puckett

Encouragement for Rural Pastors

Pastors need to be encouraged.

How does that statement strike you? Do you believe it’s true, even for you or your pastor?

Paul’s ministry in the book of Acts, and the testimony of his epistles, demonstrate the value of encouragement. The Apostle himself…

Read More
Kathryn Puckett Kathryn Puckett

The Bigger the Place the Bigger the Impact?

Growing up in Philadelphia, I would think of the endless possibilities of gospel influence that lay before me in a city of 1.5 million people! "Just think of the impact I can have with all these people being here,” I told myself. "After college, I'm coming back here to plant a church. The bigger the place, the bigger the impact.”

Well, God had other plans…

Read More