The
Search for a New Rector
A time of search for a new Priest is an opportunity
for growth, change and excitement. You will receive guidance
from the Diocesan Deployment Office, but here is an outline of
how events may unfold. Remember that this entire process should
begin and end and be constantly covered with prayer.
Your Vestry
will be asked to appoint a Search Committee. These will be
ten to fifteen parish members who can work together and represent
a cross-section of your parish. The Search Committee will be
charged to work together and work confidentially. They will
be sifting through confidential data and conducting sensitive
interviews. Their goal is to find and select candidates whom
they will recommend to the Vestry for a call to minister to
their parish. The search should not begin until after the sitting
Rector has left. The Vestry will be charged with finding and
signing a Letter of Agreement with a priest to serve as Interim
while the search is being conducted.
This is a
time for change. You will not be allowed to recommend any assistant
priest you might have to become your next Rector. This is a
time for prayer and introspection. A first step will be to
conduct a parish survey and write a parish profile. You want
to take a look at who you are and where you are going. You
want to draft a profile of the priest you are looking for and
an estimate of the financial package you are able to offer.
The national church maintains a database of all Episcopal clergy.
The next step is to submit your profile to them and they return
resumes on selected clergy. You will also advertise in such
publications as The Living Church and Episcopal Life. The
Deployment Officer of the Diocese will screen all candidates
to assure there are no red flags in the person’s file. Some
of these matches will look good to you. Others will not be
interested in you. Still others will be matches that only a
machine could envision.
It is important
to remember that you are calling a priest to your parish to
also have a role within the Diocese. If the priest is called
from afar, he will come under the responsibility of your Bishop.
Also, your Bishop knows his own clergy and may know who is
ready for a move.
Your Search
Committee will pour over the resumes they will receive. Often
it is helpful to ask prospective candidates to answer a few
short pertinent questions in essay form and also to send the
committee tapes of a sermon or two. They will select a "short
list" with whom they will conduct telephone interviews.
A conference call with a speaker phone seems to work best.
Some Search Committees have reported that priests look different
to them on the phone than on paper. Stacking order will change.
Be aware
that contacting clergy is a very delicate process. Their congregations
may not know that they are looking to make a move. If you expose
their search, you can harm their ongoing relationship with
their parish. Most candidates will have a preferred address
designated on their CDO Profile.
After the
phone interviews, the Search Committee will review their "short
list" and select candidates to personally interview by
visiting them in their present parish. Background checks should
be done at this point. These candidates will then be invited
to visit the parish and meet with the Search Committee and
the Vestry. The parish pays to bring the candidates to them.
It is wise to invite the clergy spouse, if there is one, to
see the parish also. An interview is conducted by the Search
Committee with the Vestry present. Each of the interviewees
meets with the Bishop. The Bishop has the option to veto any
candidate, and this is best done during the interview phase.
After the
interviews, the Search Committee recommends the final candidates
to the Vestry. The Vestry elects the priest and they ask the
Diocesan Bishop to issue a call. The Priest and spouse may
be invited to come for a week, to meet other church leaders
and explore the community and if necessary to begin house hunting.
Finally the
details of a Letter of Agreement are worked out between the
Vestry and the priest and the next phase of parish life begins.
The
above is only a general outline. When a rector resigns or retires,
the Senior Warden should notify the Bishop
immediately and also make contact with the Deployment Officer’s
office at 561-656-0868. The Diocesan Deployment Officer will
work with your Vestry and Search Committee closely and with more
detail than is outlined above.