I just returned from a week long worship leader's conference and something pretty amazing happened while I was gone. The worship band was able to rehearse and prepare for Sunday without me. What?! NO WAY! Try it sometime yourself. It works.
In my life as a missionary and now as a pastor, I have said numerous times that my job is to work myself out of a job. That is, I need to train people to be able to do things I do because there will be a time when I will not be there to do them. Even though I have said this over and over and I believe it is what I need to do I have too often failed in this regard. I tend to hold tightly to the things I am responsible for and give token efforts to make it look like I am "training others". The past several months I have been very purposefully letting go of things. This past week is an example. Normally I would rearrange the rehearsal schedule so that I could work with the team after I get back. Instead of focusing solely on the conference I would work through the week on the Sunday set-list and be e-mailing during seminars or miss out on important hang-out and discussion time with those I went to the conference with. This time I made a commitment that I would let those I left in charge do it and I would not step in unless they asked for help.
Sunday morning came and I showed up to the morning rehearsal not to lead but to play acoustic and sing background vocals. It was great! I had to keep fighting to not take charge but to let K.W. lead. This was one of the most enjoyable services I have had in a while.
Here is what I am trying to get at. No one, not you, not me is indispensable. Nor should we every think we are. The Apostle Paul writes to his dear friend and student, Timothy and tells him "The things you have heard me say in the presence of many witnesses entrust to reliable people who will also be qualified to teach others." (2 Timothy 2:2) Yes, Paul is talking about teaching the Word of God but I think the principle applies here. We who are called to ministry are called to be faithful and work hard but we are also responsible to train others to do the ministry along side of us and even train them to be able to do it on their own and eventually train others also.
So the next time you think you are indispensable think about what life would be like without you. Have you been faithful in training others to carry on without you. Jesus did.
Sunday, July 26, 2009
Thursday, July 23, 2009
Second-hand God
We live in a world of experts. When we need our car fixed we take it to a mechanic. When we need toilet installed we call a plumber. When we need to cook a roast we look to the Food Network stars. I believe this has infiltrated the church and our people too often turn to “God-experts” to get their problems solved instead of going to God Himself. We have become a consumerist society that would rather have someone else do the work for us than spend the time learning to do it ourselves.
Just take a walk through any Christian bookstore and even some of the other bookstores and you will see rows and rows of book written by men and women telling us something about God or something about how we should live our lives to be more successful, blessed, and just plain more spiritual. Now don’t get me wrong, I think there is value in reading books, I have a rapidly growing library myself, but I do think that these countless books often make the problem worse. Stay with me.
The danger in having and relying on “God-experts” is that we live vicariously through them. We rely on them and get our only spiritual food from them second-hand. There is nothing wrong with listening to sermons, reading books, attending seminars, etc. I do it myself and I learn a lot through them. The problem comes when we rely on them for our only source of spiritual food. My pastor is a great theologian. In his sermons he does an excellent job of teaching the truth of God’s Word. If I were to rely on his sermons alone and in effect get my knowledge of God second-hand and I would be lacking. I would not truly know the word of God but rather only what PJ says about the word of God. Are you tracking? As Christians our responsibility is to dive deep into the word of God ourselves.
If I want to lose 20 pounds it would seem silly for me to stand outside 24 hour fitness and look through the windows at the people exercising and never go in. Or what if I stood by the door and asked people what it was like when the exited? I would likely hear responses about how they feel better, have more energy, have lowered their cholesterol and blood pressure. But does any of that do me any good if I don’t enter in myself and climb on the elliptical? NO! People we need to stop doing that very same thing with our faith. We need to stop living through others and start putting the effort into learning ourselves.
I will leave you with these two thoughts. “If crisis were to hit your life today, would your knowledge of God be found to be too thin?” and “Don’t look for shortcuts to God. The way to God is vigorous and requires total attention.”
Just take a walk through any Christian bookstore and even some of the other bookstores and you will see rows and rows of book written by men and women telling us something about God or something about how we should live our lives to be more successful, blessed, and just plain more spiritual. Now don’t get me wrong, I think there is value in reading books, I have a rapidly growing library myself, but I do think that these countless books often make the problem worse. Stay with me.
The danger in having and relying on “God-experts” is that we live vicariously through them. We rely on them and get our only spiritual food from them second-hand. There is nothing wrong with listening to sermons, reading books, attending seminars, etc. I do it myself and I learn a lot through them. The problem comes when we rely on them for our only source of spiritual food. My pastor is a great theologian. In his sermons he does an excellent job of teaching the truth of God’s Word. If I were to rely on his sermons alone and in effect get my knowledge of God second-hand and I would be lacking. I would not truly know the word of God but rather only what PJ says about the word of God. Are you tracking? As Christians our responsibility is to dive deep into the word of God ourselves.
If I want to lose 20 pounds it would seem silly for me to stand outside 24 hour fitness and look through the windows at the people exercising and never go in. Or what if I stood by the door and asked people what it was like when the exited? I would likely hear responses about how they feel better, have more energy, have lowered their cholesterol and blood pressure. But does any of that do me any good if I don’t enter in myself and climb on the elliptical? NO! People we need to stop doing that very same thing with our faith. We need to stop living through others and start putting the effort into learning ourselves.
I will leave you with these two thoughts. “If crisis were to hit your life today, would your knowledge of God be found to be too thin?” and “Don’t look for shortcuts to God. The way to God is vigorous and requires total attention.”
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