Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Ministry Happens or Catching the Wave of Providence


Have you ever given up or were about to give up because your plan didn't come together.  Most of us live our lives with the illusion that life is linear and we can plan everything out and control all the variables with hard work.  Hard work is an essential to anything worthwhile, planning is important but perhaps Spirit-led adaptability is an overlooked  aspect of your life and mine.  I came across a quote from an author who describes these as "Goose trails" (I am not sure I have ever used that expression before!)

"When we don’t pace ourselves, we tend to miss divine appointments right and left. In fact, they seem like human interruptions. We get so consumed with trying to get where we think God wants us to go that we put on spiritual blinders and miss the Goose trails He wants to take us down. The key is slowing down your pace, taking off your sandals, and experiencing God right here, right now.
...Spiritual maturity has less to do with long-range visions than it does with moment-by-moment sensitivity to the promptings of the Holy Spirit. And it is our moment-by-moment sensitivity to the Holy Spirit that turns life into an everyday adventure."  (Excerpted from Wild Goose Chase by Mark Batterson)

I almost dismissed this as perhaps just one more excuse I could use for not planning well or anticipating change well.  Then I came across a different author.  He is a pastor of a very successful and growing church in the United States.   He describes his experience while speaking across the country and coming to the realization that what worked at his church was not necessarily what would work in other situations.  

"In many church growth stories, while leaders later point to principles that "got them there," they underplay the power of serendipitous, providential events of which they were able to take advantage. " (Dave Browning)

He used an interesting phrase to capture this thought, "Opportunistic Leadership: catching the wave of Providence."  Events that we believe are serendipitous are still in God's providential hands.  They only seem serendipitous to us.  What if God was working through your interruptions?  What if only we saw them as our failures and inabilities and God saw them differently as new opportunities for Him? 

I often wonder if I will ever be sure whether they were my failures in planning and execution or God's interruptions.  Could it be that it doesn't matter now?  I need to humble myself to God's plan, and ask Him to correct or instruct me from this point on.  I need to look around and see how He wants to use today.  Does He want a new direction?  Is there someone to whom I need to minister or something He needs me to do at this interruption/failure point.  

God wants to redeem our plans, our time, our failures.  Ministry is always about Him.  Don't stop planning and working hard in ministry.  Just stop seeing every interruption as your failure (or every success as your success).  Catch the wave of what He is doing, trust Him, and get used to being humbled by a God who sees and plans in ways beyond our understanding! (The watch what He can do through a confident, humble people!)

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Sow Small Things



Yesterday we got a call from an out of town friend in need.  A friend since our first days in college.  We don't really get a chance to see each other much since I live a lot further away from that college.  His family was traveling without him and had an unexpected and scary medical need.  I couldn't do much but be a familiar face in a strange town for a little while.  It was a small thing.

Most of us do small things everyday and we think they don't amount to much.  Perhaps we are expecting the harvest too soon?

I am learning about sowing as a success goal in life.  John Maxwell has written:
Define success as sowing, not reaping.  So often people sow with the expectation of quick returns and are disappointed when that is not the case. Instead, we must sow and be prepared to wait for the harvest in due time. During that time, take a step back and recognize the immense impact you have on others. That is the true reason for living.
Then I read an excerpt from Robert Benson's book, Digging In:
“Gardens are about waiting and about hope as much as they are about anything. You wait for spring to come and for roses to bud out and for the earth to green up again. You wait for seeds to germinate and irises to spread. You wait for the dogwoods to turn white and pink and for the maple to go golden in the fall. And all the while you hold a vision of some new thing in your head, of what the garden will be someday. You cannot hurry it along, not any of it. Spring comes when it comes; roses bloom when they will; the garden grows at its own sweet pace. What it teaches you is to wait, to be patient, and to pay attention. Some morning the sun will rise, and something you have always dreamed of will come true.”
A seed is a small thing.  Most of us do a lot of small things, but it is hard to see them as valuable because our desire is so focused on the harvest.  Do small things matter?

If I eat enough small pieces of candy, I am going to gain weight and be unhealthy.  If I tell enough small lies, they will build a harvest of distrust.  Don't small things matter now as well as eventually?

Perhaps God will lead us to sow intentional, godly, small things in our lives.  Things that may not be appreciated or produce immediate harvest.  Prayer.  Scripture.  Love.  Wisdom.  Kindness.  Loving Correction.

It is His harvest anyway, isn't it.  So what?  Sow the small things that will produce a great harvest for Him.

Some of you are parents.  Sow well.
Some of you are working without much recognition.  Sow well.
Some of you have faithfully ministered to someone without harvest yet.  Sow well.
Some of you are teachers and educators.  Sow well.
Some of you serve others at your job.  Sow well.

You may be more successful than you thought!

It is His harvest, in His time.