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| November 4, 2008: Black Tuesday -- America in Decline. See our Home Page | ||||
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Find Us Faithful
A time or two before I’ve mentioned an old fellow I knew as a
young boy, and on into my teenage years. Brother Percy lived down the hill just
below the church. Arthritis had all but crippled him by the time I first knew
him. He got about with the help of a cane. Walking from his house to the church,
just a a few hundred yards away, was a major effort for him. Every time the door
of the church was open, though, he was there. Often, in fact, he was the one who
opened the door.
I really didn’t have a high opinion of Percy at the time I knew
him. It was hard for me to see beyond his crippled body. Later on, though, I
came to appreciate him as a faithful old saint who loved the Lord. When his
spirit left that bent, broken-down frame, I can see in my mind’s eye the Lord
Jesus rising to embrace him with the same words I want to hear one day myself:
“Well done, thou good and faithful servant.”
Paul wrote to the Colossians that we should do all that we do
heartily, as unto the Lord (Colossians 3:23). Not all of us have the talent or
the inclination to make beautiful music, or teach, or preach the word. All of
us, Paul says, are pats of the body of Christ, and all of us have a role to fill
(I Corinthians 12). Whether we sing in the choir, usher people to their seats,
or clean the church building, we’re a part of the ministry of the church.
One thing we don’t do nearly enough is recognize those people who
do the less glamorous jobs in the church. The Word tells us, in that same
passage in I Corinthians, that we should bestow more honor on those parts of the
body that seem less honorable. Have you ever seen a city where sanitation
workers are on strike? It’s not a pretty sight. Even well-behaved Christians
leave their mark on a church building from week to week. A place filled with
litter, dirty floors, and uncleaned bathrooms doesn’t make for a very attractive
setting for worship. And those church dinners we all enjoy? They wouldn’t happen
without people who prepare the meal, arrange the tables, and serve the food.
The point is this: No matter how humble or unglamourous the work
the Lord calls us to do, we’re doing it for him, not to please other people or
to bring glory to ourselves. The work may not even be in the church, as such.
Our calling may be to minister to those around us, in our neighborhoods, or to
pray for the needs the Lord lays on our hearts from day to day. Perhaps the most
unrecognized, but most vital, members of the body are those who intercede with
the Lord daily in the privacy of their own homes. Like Brother Percy, your role
int eh body may be just to show yourself faithful by attending every church
service, week after week for year after year.
This all presupposes that you know what the Lord has called you
to do. Many Christians, sadly, have no idea, and have never even tried to find
out. Everyone has a spiritual gift, but very few make use of theirs, even if
they know what it is. Like the worthless servant in the parable of the talents,
they bury their talent in a field, and make no effort to use it in their Lord’s
service. There is no space in this article to discuss how to go about
identifying your gifts, and your particular role in his work the Lord has for
you, but the short answer is “Ask.”
I heard a brief commentary on a Christian radio station the other
day which discussed the fact that most of really don’t like our jobs. As the
commentator pointed out, what we need is not a change in jobs, but a change in
attitude. Christ took on the form of a slave in our midst, beautifully
illustrated by the washing of the disciples’ feet at the Last Supper. Just as we
should do our jobs as unto the Lord, we should also take on a servant’s attitude
in our work in the church. Whether we sing in front of the crowd, or sit quietly
as part of that same crowd, we should give both glory and praise to the Lord for
the privilege of serving him. Whatever you do, do it in the Lord’s strength, not your own. Do it as well as he is able, not just to the limits of your own abilities. Don’t shirk your responsibilities, no matter how trivial and meaningless they may seem to you. Seek the Lord’s guidance continually, approach your tasks with enthusiasm, and give praise to God when things go well. When you feel discouraged, and feel that no one appreciates what you’re doing, talk about your feelings to the Lord and to others. “May all who come behind us find us faithful...” I can think of no better epitaph for mr, or for any other Christian, than, “He was faithful in what God called him to do.” |