| Avoid the Graveyard
Issue 1.4
The erosion
of character usually begins with neglect: we stop reading the Word, or
worshiping with God's people, or taking time to meditate and pray. We
stop hungering for holiness and exercising spiritual disciplines. We stop
making sacrifices that show our special love for Christ and His people.
We do our job mechanically, because our heart isn't in it. In time, we
even find ourselves "making arrangements to sin," convinced
that what nobody knows, we can get away with. The process
is deadly: first the drifting, then the secret sinning, then the hidden
eroding of character that ultimately leads to the embarrassing public
fall. As time goes on, we find it more convenient to sin (we don't have
to be tempted, we tempt ourselves) and easier to laugh it off. "It's
not really serious," we say to ourselves, "God understands and
forgives." We stop enjoying
the good people and healthy experiences of real life, looking instead
for substitutes in a fantasy world of our own creation. In our imagination,
where nobody can see it, we build our own secret world where we
have the power and we enjoy the success. In this alternate world,
we satisfy unholy appetites that family and friends would be shocked to
discover. We think we can enjoy these sins "safely" because
all this corruption is hidden in our private picture gallery. Our imagination
gives birth to sin, and sin, being a murderer, grows up and starts to
kill (James 1:15). Character dies, devotion dies, a happy home dies, a
reputation dies, a ministry dies--and perhaps the minister dies too. What
could have been a fruitful garden becomes a trash heap and then a graveyard. Adapted
from Warren Wiersbe, 10 Power Principles for Christian Service,
"The Foundation of Ministry is Character" (Baker, 1997)
Making
It Personal: Have I been
neglecting spiritual disciplines because I am so busy with my work for
God? Are there
any reoccurring sins in my life to which I have grown accustomed? Am I using
the "freedom" of ministry to indulge in sins of sloth, like
lust, overeating, and laziness?
Devotional Reflections:
Colossians
3:1-17 (Access
the Bible Online)
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