Wednesday, June 15th, 2005
Two Choices in Any Ministry
The theme verse of our staff conferences this summer was 2 Corinthians 1:12 . This verse reads in the NASB , “For our proud confidence is this: the testimony of our conscience, that in holiness and godly sincerity, not in fleshly wisdom but in the grace of God, we have conducted ourselves in the world, and especially toward you.”
Paul contrasts two approaches to ministry. One approach is rooted in “fleshly wisdom.” We derive such wisdom from the world around us. The other approach is rooted in “the grace of God.” Such an approach grounds itself in the undeserved love of God that we find abundantly in Jesus Christ. An approach rooted in the grace of God will produce “holiness and godly sincerity” that results in a clear conscience and a legitimate confidence in what we have done.
It seems today in ministry we have no shortage of conduct rooted in fleshly wisdom. The church measures success purely by numbers and expanding buildings. We study business practices and then implement them in the church. The consumer, i.e. the person we are trying to reach, is always first. We discover his or her “itch” or felt need and then tailor our worship to scratch that itch.
Fortunately, in rural communities such an approach doesn’t work very well. Oh yes, occasionally the church shopper will stop by and not enjoy your “goods”—the programs, the music, and the facilities. Mostly, however, people are looking for substance in small communities. They want a pastor that knows them and they know him. They want a pastor that knows how to be a shepherd. Small community life, by its nature, can detect whether your conduct is rooted in the grace of God or rooted in fleshly wisdom.
I ran across the following account in a monthly report. In it, a missionary wife is writing about her Village Missionary husband. As you read this account, see if you can tell whether it is conduct rooted in the grace of God or rooted in fleshly wisdom.
Of what does the life of a pastor consist? It consists partly of my husband being concerned with the needs of a particular couple in the church. The husband is 83 and has lung cancer, and the wife is 80 and has MS and Alzheimer’s. They’ve been married 33 years, with nine children between the two of them. The husband is in a hospital 2 ½ hours away, and the wife is home alone. st1:personname> Don has been to the hospital four times—maybe five, I’ve lost count—in the last three weeks. I contemplated today all that has taken place this month. He has visited the wife, who is 15 minutes away from our house, two times a day. Between the pastor, our family, and the church family, cards have been sent, phone calls made, visits, food brought in, rides given, bills paid, bathing helped with, household chores done, haircuts given, groceries and supplies bought….Only by the grace of God! My husband has been trying to inform the couple’s grown children about the seriousness of the situation—they have been appreciative but not involved with their parents. What is the value of a pastor? I am grateful that God has put a shepherd’s heart in my husband. He is very gentle, patient, and “hands-on” with people (much more so than I am—I guess we balance each other out). When I think about the other people who have needs that he has been there for, and his other daily/church/family responsibilities, I am appreciative and thankful to God that he is able to do these things. I believe we have many “Priceless Pastors” amongst our Village Missions family!
Thank you so much for your prayer and financial support of such missionary pastors, who derive their conduct from the grace of God!
