Standing on the shoulders of giants: Urban pastor wrestles with his backwoods family roots

Growing up in West Virginia, the Rev. Michael Clary always wondered about some of the archaic language his elders used, words like "yonder" and "reckon."

Then he learned that his grandfather -- a steel-mill worker and country preacher -- had memorized the classic King James Bible by listening to tapes during his long drives to the factory. He had a sixth-grade education and, if he couldn't spell something, he could still quote a verse that contained the word and then find it in his Bible.

All that scripture soaked in -- deep. Thus, "I reckon" wasn't just another way to say "probably." It was New Testament language, such as: "For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us."

These Appalachian roots caused pangs of shame during graduate school, said Clary, who leads Christ the King Church, a Southern Baptist congregation in Cincinnati.

Soon after that, "I was pastoring a fast growing church in an urban environment, and a spirit of elitism had infected us," he wrote, in a Twitter stream that went viral. "The people we felt free to mock were conservative, uneducated, backwoods fundies. … They lacked the theological sophistication and cultural insight I had acquired while doing campus ministry and studying at seminary."

The bottom line: "I had moved on. I was better than them. I was more learned and cultured. I had 'seen the world' and they hadn't."

Clary said he wrote those "words with tears in my eyes." Reached by telephone, he explained that he was facing the kinds of church tensions that arise while defending traditional doctrines in a flock located a few blocks from the University of Cincinnati. It's hard to be "winsome" -- a buzz word today -- while trying to remain faithful in a bitterly divided culture.

That's precisely why this painful, personal Twitter thread -- republished as one text on several websites in recent weeks -- rang true, noted John Stonestreet, president of the Colson Center for Christian Worldview. Right now, many religious leaders may need to rethink "our chronological snobbery" while facing declining post-pandemic church statistics and evidence that "cultural influence" can be fleeting.

In Pastor Clary's case, seminary credentials and missiological savvy replaced the hard-won wisdom of faithful mentors and elders. "In mine, theological study brought a confidence that, in many ways, became arrogance," said Stonestreet, in a BreakPoint radio commentary written with Kasey Leander. "Many others have succumbed to the increased cultural pressures of our age, embarrassed by moral convictions that were considered nonnegotiable throughout Church history. The eye rolling, head shaking, and moral grandstanding soon follow."

Clary stressed that he wasn't trying to minimize the importance of theological education or to claim that modern pastors don't face different challenges than those who served in the past. However, anyone who wants to discuss "hard times" needs to pause and reflect on the realities faced by generations of believers.

As he thought about his own family, "it began to dawn on me: I was standing on the shoulders of giants," he wrote. His great-grandfather, for example, built his own church deep in the mountains and "lived to be 102 years old and was healthy and energetic up to the very end. In his 90s, he would take fruit baskets to the 'shut ins' of his church." Strengthened by a marriage that lasted 74 years, he "stayed true to the Lord and to his calling for 80 years."

Thus, at the age of 48, Clary wrote that he "repented of my arrogance. I repented of my self-righteous attitude towards 'that old time religion.' … There are many points of doctrinal disagreement that I would have with my grandfathers. But these were men who suffered & knew how to suffer well. … Men who finished well and stayed true."

The problem, of course, is that it's impossible to turn back time and express the proper gratitude to his ancestors, said Clary, in the interview.

“There are so many times when I am facing challenges as a pastor, and I would love to talk to my grandfather and my great-grandfather. There are questions I want to ask them, now that I know that I don't know everything. … I think I'm ready to respect their answers."

FIRST IMAGE: The classic 1611 King James Version, as featured with this History Channel post: “Why the King James Bible of 1611 Remains the Most Popular Translation in History.

MAIN IMAGE: Illustration featured in the online West Virginia Encyclopedia.