TOWARD AN EFFECTIVE MINISTRY   

Chapter 2                                      EFFECTIVE

 

I have glorified thee on the earth:

I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do.                                                                              John 17:4 KJV

 

If the servant is truly as his Lord, then it follows that when he arrives at the end of his journey on earth he should be able to say as the Master did, "I have accomplished the work which thou gavest me to do." The apostle Paul was not embarrassed to say, "I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith." Paul had been given a job to do. He did it, and now he was ready to go on.

 

If we were to be told quite clearly by the Lord that we have only a few months left in this world of flesh and blood, would we not be inclined to panic? "Please, Lord, not yet! I haven't done anything. I haven't been effective... give me some more time!"

 

Please understand that I am not talking about salvation. Salvation is a gift and can be received in a split second. Any person who desires salvation needs only to turn away from the old ways of self and throw his life on the mercy of the Lamb, trusting his death and resurrection, relying on his ever‑present Spirit... and the new life of a child of God has begun.

 

But now that you are God's child there is work to be done. The redemption of this world, bought and paid for by the blood of the Iamb, only becomes reality through us. We are the salt, the light, the aroma of Christ to God among men. "You did not choose me, I chose you, and appointed you that you should go and bring forth fruit, and that your fruit should remain."

 

Is there such a thing as being saved and useless? How long are we allowed to be ineffective servants and still remain servants? What will the master do when he calls us to account for what we did with the talent he gave us and all we can do is dig it up? To be saved and ineffective is meaningless. Does not our Lord himself say that every branch in him that bears no fruit is cut off and thrown into the fire?

 

Paul may have experienced a considerable amount of suffering, pain and anguish in his ministry... but Paul was never plagued by doubts about his effectiveness. Paul knew that he was accomplishing something. In the very midst of numberless problems, disappointments and failures, Paul knew that he was bearing fruit.

 

For all the weeping our Lord did over the hardness of Jerusalem's heart, he never shed a tear over a lack of effectiveness.  Jesus, the Son of Man, knew that he was effective. John the Baptist had his doubts, the disciples were not always sure... but Jesus knew.

   

                             "My meat is to do the will of him

who sent me and to accomplish his work...

Go and tell John again the things which

you see and hear. The blind receive their sight,

the lame walk, lepers are cleansed and the

deaf hear, the dead are raised up and the

poor have good news preached to them."

 

 There is no reason why we can't be equally certain, day‑after‑day, that we are doing the work we've been given to do and that we are effective... things are getting done... fruit is being borne. There is no reason for us to forever be up in the air and in doubt about these things. Do you think the laborers in the vineyard were having nervous breakdowns about their calling, forever wondering if they were in the right vineyard? Having an identity crisis with every bunch of grapes they pick? Do you think that the servant who comes in from the field, girds himself and makes supper for his master has time to indulge in soul‑searching as to whether he should really have been working in the field that day? And when we sit around and agonize as to whether we're in the right place in the kingdom it's a sure sign that we are not effectively doing the job we've already been given. We are destroying our own effectiveness by doubting our call. Actually we are doubting the faithfulness of the One who sent us forth and has promised to be our guide. 

 

On the evening of that day, the first day of the  week,

the doors being shut where the disciples were,  for fear

of the Jews, Jesus came and stood among  them and said

to them, "Peace be with you." When he had said this he

showed them his hands and his side. Then the disciples

were glad when they saw the Lord. Jesus said to them

again, "Peace be with you. As the Father has sent me,

even so I send you." And when he had said this, he

breathed on them and said to them, "Receive the Holy

Spirit. If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven;

if you retain the sins of any, they are retained."

 

..."As the Father has sent me, so I send you." Now if he, Jesus, sent me, how can I be anything but effective? If he ordained me to go and bring forth fruit, how can it be any other way? This ought to be our rock bottom confidence ...that in the name of Jesus and in the power of his Spirit we shall turn men and women from darkness to light and from the power of Satan to God.

 

We don't hire somebody to do this for us ...nor do we send another in our place. We are to be the salt of the earth, the light of the world, the city set upon a hill, beginning where we are. If we are faithful where we are and the time comes when our Lord wants us in China or Pakistan or Egypt, he will make it clear. We are to know that we are servants of the living God, ambassadors of the Messiah... and we labor in the place where he puts us, knowing that our labor is effective.

 

Then why do so many of us feel so useless so much of the time? Because we take our eyes off the One who called us and the work he called us to do and fix them on other men. We compare ourselves with them, measure ourselves against them, and soon we're caught up in their work instead of our own. This leads to three diseases which undermine our effectiveness as servants of the Lord:

 

1.     The Celebrity Syndrome. In this set of symptoms the Kingdom of God is distorted into a Christian Hollywood where the common folk fulfil their lives vicariously by following the activities of the stars. You turn on your Christian radio station and find out what Christian celebrities will be passing through town this week. Then you buy your ticket for the latest Christian rock concert, or make reservations at the Hilton where a well known brother will speak at the Christian Businessmen's Supper Club. Or you run to a meeting where Sister Total will speak on Christian Womanhood and will also autograph copies of her latest book.

 

These may be dedicated, committed people. But they are being used by Satan at least to this extent: they are allowing themselves to be portrayed as more important ...their ministry and work as of more value than that of the numerous unknown people who faithfully serve. Our Lord relentlessly teaches that this is not to happen among us. The greatest among us must be the least ...the leader as one who is a lowly servant ...as a slave.

 

There is no such thing as a Christian celebrity.  Those who allow themselves to be cast in that role are robbing glory from the living God. There is only one big name among us ...the name of Jesus ...the One who made himself the lowest of all. You will never take your work  seriously, (the work Jesus himself gave you to do), nor will you do it effectively so long as your mind is dazzled by any name other than the name of the lowliest man who ever walked this earth.

 

2. Be on guard against the Success Syndrome. Voices are being  raised right now which say in effect that if you really get hold of the gospel from the right end, everything you touch will turn to success.  We need to note the difference between bearing fruit and being a success.  You were called and ordained to bear fruit for the Kingdom of God .... and  you will. But the way of bearing fruit is not the way of success, but  the way of death.

 

 "Unless a grain of wheat falls into the ground and

                    dies, it remains alone. But if it dies, it bears

 much fruit. He who loves his life loses it; but

 he who hates his life in this world will keep it

 for eternal life."

 

 You are going to be falling into the ground and dying every day.  You are going to fail in the eyes of men again and again. And you will  willingly lose your life as you walk a path that takes you through  devastating problems, tosses and turns you on waves of disruptive cir­cumstances. And in the process you will bear much fruit that the Father may be glorified.

 

3. Watch out for the "Christian Heavy" Syndrome. These are the folks on the other end of the spectrum who spurn big names and would  rather spit than be a success. But what a production they make out of their "total commitment to the Lord." It's as if they are the only ones in the world who really love Jesus ....as if they are the sole preservers of the New Testament Christianity ...they are the only true believers left. If you get caught up in their world you will never bear any lasting fruit. You will be far too busy being really heavy... really serious ...and weeping over everyone else's apostasy. 

 

Jesus said to them again, "Peace be with you.  As the

Father has sent me, even so I send you."  And when

he had said this, he breathed on them  and said to them,

"Receive the Holy Spirit. If  you forgive the sins of any,

they are forgiven;  if you retain the sins of any, they are

retained."

 

If you have met Jesus alive from the dead ...if he has given you his peace ...if he has breathed on you and told you to receive the Holy Spirit, be sure of this: he has sent you to do what the Father sent Him to do. Jesus has sent you to touch lives with forgiveness in his name ...to warn the impenitent of judgment in his name ...to lay down your life in his name ...You can do that every day wherever you are. And you can know that as you do, you are effective ...you will bear fruit.

 

When the end comes may we be able to say to the Father though the Son,

 

"I have glorified thee on earth, I have accomplished

the work thou gavest me to do."