
What is meant by the term pastoral care?
What is meant by the term pastoral care?
Pastoral care is the Christ-centered work of shepherding God’s people through sacrificial love, attentive guidance, and faithful oversight. Pastoral care reflects the Good Shepherd and His love for His sheep.
what does the bible say?
Pastoral care is the Christ-centered calling of shepherding God’s people with sacrificial love, faithful oversight, and personal involvement. Pastoral care is modeled after Jesus, the Good Shepherd, who laid down His life for the sheep (John 10:11). It includes attentive spiritual leadership, humble service, and a genuine concern for both the pastor’s own walk with God and the well-being of the congregation (Acts 20:28; 1 Peter 5:2–3). Expressed through prayer, presence, counsel, protection from false teaching, and the faithful preaching of God’s Word, pastoral care feeds, guards, and nurtures the flock (2 Timothy 4:2–5; Titus 1:9). At its heart, pastoral care reflects Christ’s love in both word and deed, guiding the church toward spiritual maturity, unity, and hope (Ephesians 4:11–16; Colossians 1:28).
from the old testament
- God repeatedly presents Himself as the Shepherd who lovingly leads, protects, and provides for His flock, setting the model for all spiritual leadership (Psalm 23:1–4; Psalm 80:1).
- Israel’s leaders were expected to shepherd the people with justice, compassion, and faithfulness, and God strongly rebuked those who neglected or exploited the flock rather than caring for them (Ezekiel 34:2–10).
- The promise that God Himself would shepherd His people and raise up faithful shepherds points forward to the heart of pastoral care as attentive guidance, protection, and restoration (Ezekiel 34:11–16; Jeremiah 23:1–4).
from the new testament
- Pastoral care is generally based on the ideas of the pastor or elder as a shepherd in Scripture. For example, Jesus called Himself the Good Shepherd who lays down His life for the sheep (John 10:11).
- When the apostle Paul gave his final words to the church leaders from Ephesus, he shared, “Pay careful attention to yourselves and to all the flock, in which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers, to care for the church of God, which he obtained with his own blood” (Acts 20:28). Good pastoral care includes paying careful attention to one’s own life as well as to the details of those a pastor serves. A pastor is to oversee and care for the church with great love.
- In 1 Peter 5:2-3, Peter teaches: “shepherd the flock of God that is among you, exercising oversight, not under compulsion, but willingly, as God would have you; not for shameful gain, but eagerly; not domineering over those in your charge, but being examples to the flock.” His aspects of “shepherding” include willing leadership, eager service, and living as an example to those under one’s care.
implications for today
Pastoral care is generally used as a term referring to the practices pastors do to shepherd or care for individuals in their local congregation. For example, some aspects of pastoral care could include hospital visitation, visits to elderly church members, pastoral counseling, prayer with church members, premarital counseling, weddings, funerals, baby dedications, or similar practices. Another aspect of pastoral care is the commitment to sacrifice one’s own life and desires on behalf of the sheep. Jesus set the example by laying down His life for His sheep. While a pastor must care for his own life, he also sacrifices his own desires many times in order to serve others. Pastoral care is often considered as encompassing all of the areas of pastoral ministry outside of preaching and teaching. However, preaching is a primary method of pastoral care as well. A shepherd can best care for his sheep? He must feed them well. He must protect them from harmful ways through warning against false teachings. He must show love in both word and deed, offering a voice of hope to those he leads.
Recap
understand
- Pastoral care is the Christ-centered calling to shepherd God’s people with love, sacrifice, and faithful oversight.
- Pastoral care is modeled after the Good Shepherd.
- The goal of pastoral care is spiritual growth and maturity.
reflect
- How have you personally experienced Christ-like care through your pastor or church leaders?
- How do you respond to pastoral care or to your pastor shepherding you?
- How are you called to reflect Christ’s shepherding love toward others in your church?
engage
- How can a pastor practically balance strong preaching with personal, relational pastoral care without neglecting either?
- What signs help us recognize healthy pastoral care versus leadership that neglects or dominates the flock?
- How can the church body support pastors so they can shepherd with joy, faithfulness, and endurance rather than burnout?