THE SHEPHERD’S PATH

PASTORAL RESIDENCY (PT 810 & PT 820)

The D. James Kennedy Institute of Reformed Leadership 

THE SHEPHERD'S PATH

PASTORAL RESIDENCY COURSE

A Message from Dr. Michael A. Milton

The rates of burnout and dropout in the Gospel ministry are horrendous. Pastoral dropout creates wounds in the pastoral family and the Christian community. The costs are beyond monetary. Now more than ever, we need spiritually resilient shepherds and congregations to stand for Christ in our time. That burden is what led the Lord to have me found this ministry. Foundation-funded, research-based, peer-reviewed, and prayer-supported, the Pastoral Training Model is now available to ministers from all Christian denominations. We hope you will join us for an internship (stage one is a free add-on) or a post-seminary Pastoral Residency (12 core competencies over a year with monthly stipends). 

Quarter 1
GENESIS

Genesis establishes the spiritual and doctrinal foundations of faithful ministry. Residents return to first things—conversion, catechesis, and calling—so that the work of shepherding begins where it must: with the living Gospel, a formed mind, and a tested sense of divine vocation. This quarter frames ministry not as a career but as a consecrated life under Christ.
CONVERSION
This module anchors ministry in the miracle of new life in Christ. Residents reflect on the theology of regeneration, repentance, faith, assurance, and perseverance, and they learn to shepherd others from a living experience of grace—not mere professionalism. The resident begins the year remembering that pastors are first disciples.
CATECHESIS
Your growth in Christ through the Word of God is central to your “one sermon” throughout your ministry. This module focuses on catechesis as the Church’s means of forming believers in God’s whole counsel. Residents engage with historic catechisms and confessions, learning to teach doctrine clearly, pastorally, and faithfully across generations.
CALLING
This module addresses the nature of the call to pastoral ministry—internal, external, tested, and affirmed by the Church. Residents examine their own calling with sobriety and gratitude, learning to distinguish ambition from vocation and endurance from mere enthusiasm.

Quarter 2
ADJUSTING

This module grounds pastoral ministry in the reality of personal conversion and ongoing repentance. Residents reflect on the Gospel not merely as a message proclaimed but as the life-shaping reality that sustains pastoral identity. Attention is given to assurance, humility, and the pastor’s need to live daily from grace.
FAMILY
This module focuses on the pastor’s household as a primary arena of faithfulness. Residents reflect on marriage, parenting, spiritual leadership in the home, and wise boundaries between ministry and family life. This is not an “add-on” to ministry training—it is formation for ministry that will last, protecting both shepherd and flock from hidden collapse.
SPIRITUALITY
This module strengthens the resident’s interior life with God through habits of grace: Scripture, prayer, repentance, worship, rest, and spiritual resilience. Residents develop a sustainable rhythm that supports holiness and endurance. The aim is a pastor whose public ministry is supported by private integrity and daily communion with Christ.
PARISH
This module trains residents in the lived realities of parish ministry: shepherding systems, congregational culture, leadership rhythms, and faithful administration. Residents learn to care for the whole flock, not merely tasks or events. The parish becomes a place not of survival, but of steady pastoral presence and covenant responsibility.

Quarter 3
SELF-AWARENESS

This module clarifies and tests the nature of vocational calling to Gospel ministry. Residents examine external and internal call, ecclesiastical confirmation, motives, humility, and long-term endurance. The resident learns to pursue the ministry as a sacred trust, received from Christ and stewarded for the good of His Church.
VISITATION
This module forms the resident in the ministry of presence—bringing Christ’s care to homes, hospital rooms, crisis moments, and quiet conversations. Residents practice listening, prayer, pastoral wisdom, and compassionate steadiness. The focus is not efficiency, but faithfulness: showing up as a shepherd, carrying the Word of life into real suffering.
COUNSELING
This module equips residents for biblical pastoral counseling with discernment and humility. Residents learn to distinguish shepherding care from clinical care, applying Scripture to the burdens of sin, suffering, grief, conflict, fear, and spiritual discouragement. The goal is a pastor who speaks truth with tenderness and can guide people toward Gospel hope.
PULPIT
This module strengthens preaching as both proclamation and pastoral care. Residents grow in clarity, courage, structure, biblical faithfulness, and Gospel-centered application. Preaching is treated not as performance, but as a weekly act of shepherding—feeding, warning, consoling, and forming the congregation through the public ministry of the Word.

Quarter 4
PRAXIS

Praxis gathers the year’s formation into the sustaining practices of ministry: Word, Sacrament, and Prayer. Residents learn to lead Christ’s Church with reverence, theological clarity, and humble confidence. This quarter reinforces the sacred center of pastoral vocation: feeding the flock through the means of grace and persevering in prayerful dependence upon God.
WORD
This module centers the resident on the ordinary means of grace through the ministry of the Word: preaching, teaching, reading Scripture, and pastoral exhortation. Residents learn to handle the Word with reverence and precision, serving Christ’s people with nourishment rather than novelty. Faithful ministry begins and ends in faithful Word ministry.
SACRAMENT
This module trains the resident to administer and protect the sacraments with theological integrity and pastoral sensitivity. Residents reflect on baptism and the Lord’s Supper as covenant signs and seals, and on the shepherd’s role in fencing the Table, nurturing faith, and maintaining reverence. The sacraments are treated as holy gifts to Christ’s Church, not mere symbols.
PRAYER
This module calls the resident into deeper dependence upon God through prayer—private, family, corporate, and pastoral. Residents practice prayer as intercession, confession, worship, and warfare, recognizing it as the hidden engine of public ministry. The year culminates where lasting ministry must live: on the knees.
"The Antidote to Burnout." The Pastoral Training Model. Shepherding Shepherds to Shepherd the Flock. 
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