I had a hard time, sitting down to write this
post, with how I was going to refer to what I'm trying to talk about.
It's a difficult idea. Three terms came up in conversations, in
reading, or in thinking about things. What I'm talking about is
certainly related to the priestly vocation,
the calling that is considered in mainstream clergy to be a call to
the priesthood – but we have no separate priesthood; we have rather
a priesthood of all believers, and unlike some other groups with
something approaching such a priesthood, we do very little to
emphasise a priestly role for some over others in the liberal branch
of the Religious Society of Friends. It's also related to the idea of
the teaching ministry,
a term in mainstream Christianity (and in some less mainstream
churches) for the service given by suitably qualified members of the
faith community in shepherding and guiding the spiritual development
of their companions in their faith. A term perhaps more comfortable
for liberal Quakers is spiritual accompaniment,
which means much the same – in terms of goals – as teaching
ministry, but with less implication of a didactic approach.
Whatever term you might
prefer, the idea is this – that sometimes we need help from another
person on our spiritual journeys, not just the help of the inward
teacher, and perhaps that some people are suited or called to that
work, perhaps only for a time.