TOWARD AN EFFECTIVE MINISTRY
Chapter 9
YOUR MINISTRY
When
they had finished breakfast, Jesus said to Simon
Peter,
"Simon, son of John, do you love me more than
these?"
He said to him, "Yes, Lord; you know that I
love
you." He said to him, "Feed my lambs." A second
time
he said to him, " Simon, son of John, do you love
me?"
He said to him, "Yes, Lord; you know that I love
you."
He said to him, "Tend my sheep." He said to him
the
third time, "Simon, son of John, do you love me?"
Peter
was grieved because he asked him the third
Time,
"Do you love me?" And he said to him, "Lord,
you
know everything; you know that I love you." Jesus
said
to him, "Feed my sheep. Truly, truly, I say to you,
when
you were young, you girded yourself and walked
where
you would; but when you are old, you will stretch
out
your hands, and another will gird you and carry you
where
you do not wish to go." (This he said to show by
what
death he was to glorify God.) And after this he
said
to him, "Follow me." Peter
turned and saw following
them
the disciple whom Jesus loved ...When Peter saw
him,
he said to Jesus, "Lord, what about this man?" Jesus
said
to him, "If it is my will that he, remain until I come,
what
is that to you? Follow me!"
John 21:15-22
Peter
understood quite well that Jesus was talking to him about the kind of death he
was going to have to die ...he was going to be crucified. "O.K., so I'm
going to be crucified. What about John? Is he going to be crucified too?"
We want everybody's ministry to fit into ours. And if
their ministry isn't like ours, there must be something wrong with it. So
Jesus says to Peter,
"If
I want him to remain alive until I come back,
what
business is that of yours? You follow me."
Each
of us is called into a ministry that is distinct from everybody else's. We are
not called to follow a group, nor are we called to fit into a standard pattern
...we are called to follow the person of Jesus Christ. And as we begin to truly
follow him, each of us comes into a relationship with him which is different
from everyone else's. Instead of concentrating on Jesus and keeping our mind on
the ministry to which he has called us, we start to look around and compare.
"What
about this man, Lord? What about this woman over here?" Instead of trusting
Jesus to keep them from falling, and to show them what they need to know, and
concentrating on the ministry to which we've been called, we fall into
confusion.
For instance, there is the "full-time, part-time"
confusion ...the idea that there are some saints of God who are full-time
and there are others who are only spare time. Of course, in our own minds, the
spare time saints really don't count for too much ...it's the full‑time
ministers who set the pattern, who affect the destiny of the church, who are
behind all the outreaches in evangelism. Oh, the part-time saints say
their prayers every day, go to Bible studies and services, and when they have a
chance they go out and try to minister to people too ...but most of their time
is spent making a living ...after they're home from work, they're tired. This is a deadly confusion. Every single one of us who has been called to
follow Jesus has been called to follow him full-time.
If
any one would come after me, let him deny
himself,
take up his cross, daily, and follow me. It doesn't make any difference whether you have an
eight-hour-a-day job or not, as long as you're doing what you're
guided by God to do. It's possible that God may direct you to quit your job. And
he might also direct brothers and sisters to gather around you and support you
financially so that you can take care of your family and go out and do certain
things that you believe God is calling you to do. But you are no more
full-time now than you were before. Nor are you any more a full-time
servant of the Lord than some brother or sister who works at Cadillac, or drives
a bus, or practices law. On the other hand, the Lord may guide me to give up what I'm doing and
take an eight-hour-a-day job. That doesn't mean that I'm any less
full-time than I am now. Full-time, part-time, has nothing to
do with whether you have a job or where your money's coming from ...it has to do
with where your heart is. Then there's the "much fruit, little fruit" confusion.
We all know that if we are called to follow the Lord we are called to bear much
fruit.
By
this my Father is glorified, that you bear
much
fruit and so prove to be my disciples. Over here is Brother Slick the Soul Winner ..."Three souls a
day" is his motto. He doesn't go to bed at night unless he wins three souls
to the Lord. Over here is Convalescent Home Connie. All she ever does is spend her time
with these people who are so unimportant ...they're crippled, their minds are
gone. What kind of fruit is that? Slick bears much fruit, Connie little fruit
...in our eyes. But in God's eyes it may well be that Connie is bearing fruit
that you and I wouldn't even begin to dream of and is far out‑stripping
the superficial results of, Slick's ministry. Then there's the "well-known, unknown" confusion...certain
brothers and sisters around town, are well known ...their names are often on the
lips of saints and they're sought for advice and they draw crowds wherever they
speak. Whereas there are some brothers and sisters ..."Brother who
did you say? Oh, I've never heard of him ...I'm sure he's very sincere ...What,
you want me to take down his name, address and telephone number? You think it
would do me good to talk to him? Oh, come now, I already have an appointment
with Brother Big Time after his meeting down at Cobo Hall Tuesday night." When are we going to get it through our heads that the reality side of our
ministries has nothing to do with what is well known in the eyes of men. The
reality side of our ministries is always unknown to all but God. The things that
men see of our ministries are about as significant as the smoke that pours out
of the Edison stacks. It looks very ominous and impressive for a few moments and
then it melts into the air and does nothing but pollute. "As unknown yet
well known," says Paul ...and the only one before whose eyes we are well
known is God. Then there's the "much-risk, little risk," confusion.
Hudson Taylor went to China without a dime. C.T. Studd goes to Africa with no
support ...much risk. But is the risk taken by Hudson Taylor or C.T. Studd any
greater than that of some unknown woman in London with ten children who works
hard every day and when there's an epidemic she's out there taking care of the
sick? When they're having a problem at the church she has the guts to get up and
say what needs to be said. We are all called to take high risks, much risk. If
we're going to follow Jesus we're going to risk it all. But the risk does not
hinge on the heroics and dramatics we act out before the eyes of men, or how
many books are written about us. The risk begins in the heart. And a lot of us
husbands still haven't learned that our wives often take more risks than we do.
My wife will weep more easily than I and might be afraid of certain things more
quickly than I am, but every time there's a crisis she comes out with guts way
ahead of mine ...the risk begins in the heart.
After this he said to him, "Follow me." Peter turned
and
saw following them the disciple whom Jesus
loved.
When
Peter saw him, he said, "Lord, what about this
man?"
And Jesus said, "If it is my will that he remains
until
I come back, what's that to you? You follow me." The call of the Lord to all of us ...every single one of us ... is,
"Fix your eye on me and get down to the business to which I've called you.
Get your eye off your brothers and sisters. Stop being so critical. Then your
ministry will begin to blend instead of clash. And you will find that your
ministry will begin to edify the Body instead of divide and tear." Some things to consider now about each of our ministries:
1.
Your
ministry has already begun. A lot of us think, "Won't it be wonderful when my
ministry starts!" ..."When I get through Bible college ..." Or,
"When I get to another location..." "When my situation changes
somewhat." It’s like the man who is standing on the corner with a pile of
tracts. He's on his way downtown waiting for the bus. The bus is delayed and
young chap comes up to him and asks for a tract. The man gives him a tract ...he
reads it and now he starts to ask questions. "What's this all about?" But our Christian friend, instead of concentrating on this man and his
need, keeps looking up the street to see if the bus is coming. He still thinks
that his ministry won't start until he gets downtown. He may have to go down
there every day for thirty days and never have the opportunity he had on that
street corner.
2.
Your
ministry is where you are
...not someplace else. "How wonderful it will be
when I get to China!" "When I save Africa." But your ministry has
already been given to you ...do something with it where you are! If you're not
faithful and if you're not effective in serving the Lord in the place where you
have now been put, whatever gives you the idea that you're going to be effective
anywhere else? 3. Your ministry is unique ...different from everybody
else's. It's true that we are called to blend in with each other, to pray for
one another, to help one another, and to function in harmony. But this does not
come by trying to make people copy us or set up a model for everyone to imitate.
There's only one pattern that we follow and that is the pattern of the mind of
Christ, who emptied himself of his glory and became a servant. We follow that.
We begin to serve. And as we serve, some of us are going to be fingers and some
are going to be eyes and some are going to be ears and some are going to be
noses and mouths. Each of us will serve in a unique way ...according to the
gifts God imparts to us in his Spirit. 4. Your ministry rides on prayer. We look at our Lord's
ministry ...he heals the sick, raises the dead, feeds the hungry. Marvelous!
What we don't look at are the hours, the nights, the days he spends praying,
filling himself with God the Father's life, interceding for his disciples ... "Simon, Simon, Satan has desired to have
(the lot of) you that he might sift you as wheat,
but I prayed for you (Peter) that your faith fail
not and when you are converted, strengthen
your brothers." Your ministry will be what your prayer life is. If you have a vital,
effective, living relationship with God in your prayers, your ministry will
thrive. But if your prayer life is slovenly, haphazard, unthinking, your
external ministry then becomes a sham. 5. Your ministry is going through continuous change ...it
never stops changing. It's not a matter, as so many of us want to make it, of
getting hold of a pattern and then going through the motions the rest of our
lives. God opens our eyes to new things. The situation around us makes new
demands, fresh needs come to us which cannot be dealt with the way we responded
five years ago. If we're not willing to change, we dry up. 6. Your ministry is bearing fruit. There is no such thing as
being faithful to Jesus ...abiding in him and letting him abide in you in the
place where he's put you ...and not bearing fruit ...impossible! The fact that
you're bearing fruit is not established by how many people pat you on the back,
how many people say, "Thank you," how many results you see, how many
people are, "slain in the Spirit" every time you snap your finger. The
proof that you are bearing fruit is simply the word of God. He promises that if
you abide in him and his words abide in you, you're going to bear fruit. Hang on
to that. In spite of all your limitations and in spite of all the hang-ups you
still have, you are bearing fruit. 7. Your ministry is based on the fact that your name is written in
heaven.
Rejoice,
not that spirits are subject to you,
but
that your names are written in heaven. The minute we begin to see things happening in our ministries, we are
tempted to become intoxicated by results ...caught up in seeing things change.
Our eyes are now taken away from the Lord and from his throne and soon we're
manipulating people. Things are changing, not as a result of the workings of the
Holy Spirit, but as a result of our own soulish energy. And the changes that
then come may look good on the surface, but they bring death in the end. Verily there are going to be results ...there will be fruit. Of course
miracles absolutely will follow everywhere you go, but your joy is only that
your name is written in the Lamb's Book of Life. God is your Father, you are his
child. There may be people who say, "All of this goes by me because I don't
have a ministry …I've never been called." It may well be that the Spirit
of God, in the name of Jesus, is now calling a Mary Magdalene or an apostle
Peter through this booklet. We get the idea that first you get saved, then you
get trained, then you minister. But look what happened with the apostle Peter.
He was called into the ministry before he ever knew what salvation was.
"Follow
me, and I will make you a fisher of men," said the Master. The only thing that Peter knew was that this man Jesus
had something that he wanted. He didn't know what it was to be saved.
"Depart
from me, for I am a sinful man, 0 Lord." And Jesus didn't say, "O.K., now repeat the sinner's prayer."
Jesus said,
"Fear
not. Henceforth you will be catching men," And as Peter followed he received salvation and learned all he needed to
know. Now this same Jesus calls you to a ministry which begins not at some
future time ...but today. Answer that call and he will direct you step by step in the way he wants you to go.
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