| Freedom from
Competitive Ministry
Issue 1.3
In order
to participate rightly in the Lord's work, it is imperative that we deal
with this matter of independent labor. In the thinking of some people,
a person must lay his own hand to the task or else it is considered to
be good for nothing. Whatever is done by him is deemed as having
spiritual value; what is not done by him has no value at all. When he
preaches and nobody is saved, he feels depressed. When he preaches and
people are saved, he shows pleasant surprise. This is because he looks
at the work as his own personal labor. The moment
God's children perceive the oneness of the body, they immediately comprehend
the oneness of the work. The Lord distributes his work to all, and everyone
has his share. We must not think of ourselves more highly than we ought
to think. We should be faithful to the portion which the Lord has given
each of us; but we should also respect the portion He gives to others.
Many people possess a kind of competitive attitude in which they are always
comparing their ministry "success" with others. ("What
is your church running these days, brother?")
Such comparison is absurd! As Christians,
we should admire and seek for spiritual things, but we ought not have
any emulative pretensions nor any trace of jealousy. Our attitude individually
toward spiritual work should be: "What I can do I hope others can
also do; and what I cannot do I wish someone else can do...I dare not
consider the work and its result as altogether mine. If I insist everything
must be done by me, I have not apprhended the body. The moment I apprehend
the body, immediately I realize that both my labor and that of others
mean gain to the Head as well as to the body. Let all the glory be to
the Lord and all the blessings be to the church!" Adapted
from Watchman Nee , The Body of Christ: A Reality, "The
Consciousness of the Body of Christ" (Christian Fellowship Pub.,
1978)
Making It Personal: As a leader,
do I feel pressure to "measure up" to the spiritual accomplishments
of others? Do I genuinely
value the spiritual work of other Christian leaders, or am I afraid that
their success will make me look inadequate or lessen my importance? Do I seek
to reserve the "credit" for myself by hoarding ministry opportunities
in the name of excellence, quality, or efficiency? What practical
steps could I take to empower those around me to share in the work, so
that as one body, we can bring glory to the Head -- Jesus Christ?
Devotional Reflections: 1 Corinthians
12:12-30 (Access
the Bible Online)
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