Carefully worded - visits who ???
Here, broadly, are my criteria for deciding who's most urgently in need of a visit:
- Who's asked for one?
- Who's in crisis or seriously ill?
- With whom have I had a conversation - however brief - which needs some pastoral follow up?
- Who is housebound or otherwise isolated?
- Who haven't I talked to for a while who might be in need of some encouragement/attention?
(One of the things which irritates me greatly is when someone goes into hospital, doesn't tell me, but then later complains that I didn't visit while they were in hospital. That happens a lot, but I always feel like telling them that I'm not a mind reader; I will happily visit if I know of the need! Which is why I suggested, if you want a visit, just tell your minister. Most of us are more than willing to work with you).
Why does the average congregant (the silent majority) not get a visit?
Here's a question; how many visits do you reckon a minister can do in a working week? 'Cause I have a small parish of about 130 households, and I don't usually get past the first three or four dot points on my above list (and even then the housebound often go longer between visits than I like). Because I actually have a lot of
other tasks and demands on my time, and I don't get to neglect any of them.
Sorry but my claim stands.
The average congregant does not get visits from Church leaders.
That wasn't your claim. Your claim was that church leaders don't visit, which is not the same thing.
Again I challenge any reader to testify they had a visit from a church leader except for some formal reason.
It is not happening and I am astonished you would claim it is.
Does saying, "Hey, I'd love to have a chat, could we catch up some time this week?" count as a "formal" reason? Is it really so hard just to say something like that?
As for being lonely, I don't sit at home, wait for other people to drop by uninvited, and then complain that I'm lonely. If you want to make friends, take some initiative, get out there, join a community group (my groups of choice are book clubs and community choirs, but you do you), contribute in some way, get to know people. The idea that the church's mission is to resolve my loneliness is probably not all that healthy...