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uccess without succession is failure.” That’s
what Stan Allaby said about his retirement from a 41-year pastorate
in 1997, but he could rightly have said the same thing about his
entire ministry. Just watch. Should the time ever come that he leaves
his current post as professor of practical theology at the New England
Center of Bethel Seminary of the East, you can bet he will have
mentored at least one person who could readily succeed him.
Learning by doing
It all started during Allaby’s undergraduate
studies at Gordon College in Wenham, Massachusetts, and his graduate
work at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary. While a student he
also served as assistant pastor for his home congregation at Quidnessett
Baptist Church in North Kingstown, Rhode Island. There, the Rev.
Norman S. Townsend took him under wing and trained him in the ways
of effective ministry. “He was a fantastic mentor to me,”
Allaby says. From conducting weddings to officiating funerals, “he
taught me everything.”
So upon completing school in 1956, Allaby was well
prepared to accept the head pastor position at Black Rock Congregational
Church in Fairfield, Connecticut. He envisioned Black Rock as a
place where everyone would be able to find meaningful Christian
fellowship and enrichment. Starting with a congregation of 200,
he developed a variety of ministry positions and teams to better
serve specific groups within the community. “We’re doing
this for Christ; let’s do it with excellence” became
Black Rock’s staff motto.
Mentoring for the future
Over the next 41 years, Allaby watched Black Rock’s
membership grow to more than 900 adults weekly ministering to more
than 1,500 people throughout Fairfield. But as the church implemented
one successful program after another, did Allaby rest on his laurels?
Not a chance. For 10 years prior to his retirement, Allaby mentored
and groomed his own replacement. By the time he was ready to step
down, Allaby was able to say to the congregation, “It’s
time for younger blood to take the lead, and I believe this is the
man for the job.” Subsequently, the body at Black Rock made
Allaby’s “apprentice” their new pastor.
It is fitting that Allaby would then spend his retirement
years on the faculty of Bethel Seminary of the East. Among the distinctives
of Bethel’s East Coast teaching centers are ministry involvement
and mentoring, which so closely mirror Allaby’s own educational
experience. Like Allaby, Bethel Seminary of the East students remain
actively involved in church or parachurch ministry throughout their
graduate study programs. And like Allaby, they learn from local
ministry mentors who provide knowledge, experience, and encouragement
to the students within their individual ministry contexts.
“It has always been a dream of mine to share
with young people about ministry,” Allaby says. And he is
able to do just that as he teaches and mentors Bethel students through
courses in philosophy of ministry and homiletics.
Reaping the rewards
But pastoring will always be Allaby’s greatest
passion. “I loved being a pastor,” he says. “I
don’t think there is a more rewarding profession.” And
Black Rock Congregational Church knows it well. Upon his return
to Black Rock after a two-year hiatus, the church honored Allaby
by naming him pastor emeritus. Though he now lives 100 miles away,
Allaby visits Black Rock frequently and is “happy to report
that the church is growing and doing well.”
But that should be no surprise. After all, Allaby
taught Black Rock’s current pastor nearly everything he knows.
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Jon Green of Cloquet, Minnesota,
is a senior at Bethel College majoring in writing.
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