TO KNOW CHRIST AND TO MAKE HIM KNOWN

TO KNOW CHRIST AND TO MAKE HIM KNOWN

Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Reframing Leadership


The most important quality for leadership is the ability, desire, and dedication to being a good follower.

We were made to be like sheep, and sheep follow. Those who choose to follow the right person will be successful. Those who choose to follow the wrong person or things will be disappointed, at best.

Throughout the years, we have been told that leaders are those who have people following them. We have placed the emphasis on being followed rather than being a follower. Therefore, we have opened the door for all kinds of manipulation, psychoanalysts, and politics, in order to prove and sustain our leadership.

People have desired to be effective leaders because they want to be at the top of the pile rather than support the pile. They want to be effective leaders so that their organizations thrive, they become financially independent, and they have the admiration and respect of those in control.

The apostle Paul talks about leadership differently. He states this: This is how one should regard us, as servants of Christ and stewards of the mysteries of God. Moreover, it is required of stewards that they be found faithful. (1 Corinthians 4:1-2 ESVST)

In the context of discussing leadership, Paul says that true leaders are faithful servants and stewards. A good servant is one who is consumed with serving the needs and purposes of the master. They are following what is best for the master. They are subjecting themselves to making sure that what is important to the master is important to them.

Satan, at one point, wanted to change all of this and make himself the master. He did not want to follow, but wanted to be followed.

It is true that we need to live our lives in a manner that others would follow us, but this is in the context of the fact that if they follow us, they would be following Christ, for that is what we as leaders really do.

There have been great leaders throughout Biblical history who would not, in modern terms, be considered leaders, because they had no one following them.

Ezekiel, Noah, Stephen, and others would have been considered non-leaders, yet they are some of the most powerful leadership examples that we have. Moses, arguably, one of the best leaders of all time, seems to always lose the peoples attention, and they were moaners and groaners, and many times wanted to abandon Moses. The only time Moses really got in trouble was when he abandoned following Gods instructions.


Leaders need to reframe leadership.

If leaders continue to be consumed with how to manipulate, cajole, and direct the masses, instead of being consumed with loving God and delighting in His Word, we will actually be leaderless. The blind can lead the blind, but the end result is not good.


Here is a list of what would characterize good leaders:

1.     Understand that there is a God, and understand that they are not Him.
2.     Understand there is a plan, and understand that it is not their plan.
3.     Understand that the real problem in life is sin, that I am the sinner, and that all I deal with are sinners and have the same problem and same solution.
4.     Have responded to Gods invitation and have accepted His gift of life offered through His Son, Jesus.
5.     Understand that time and chance have more to do with success than skill, rhetoric, and manipulation, and that God is the one who controls the time and chance.
6.     Abide with God, and delight in His Word.
7.     Desire to put flesh onto the plans and desires of God.
8.     Desire to be put in a position to make others successful.

Leadership is really not an arrangement; it is a relationship. It is about following God and what is right, and doing so in public. It is about making those around us successful.

Moses, Paul, Peter, and others felt inadequate in their leadership ability, as they should have, because when we focus on ourselves, we are inadequate.

God is not in need of someone to lead. He wants His children to join Him, follow Him, and let Him lead. He is capable; we are not. He is able to provide; we are not. He is able to see the future. We are limited to guessing about the future. He is able to secure the victory. We are only able to hope we win.

Sheep follow. Its what we do. Leaders are the best followers, and in doing so, become the best leaders.

Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Prayer


Throughout time, we often lose perspective. The idea of evolving is different than the idea of intentionality. To speak of our faith as something that is “evolving” takes away from the idea of us making intentional choices, and places the emphasis on chance rather than choice.

Discussions on Christian college campuses about mans choice versus the sovereignty of God have placed the onus on our understanding, rather than on what might be revealed.  There are those who believe that since God is sovereign, man has no real choice, and there are those who believe that since man has choice, God is actually limited in His sovereignty.

The Scriptures clearly teach that God is sovereign and that man has real choice. In fact, if man did not have real choice, the idea of love would be a complete farce. The issues are really not sovereignty versus choice, but rather how God responds as one who knows what choices man will make.

We know that in the end, God will not lose. So we know that no matter what I do, say, or attempt to control today, in the end, if it does not line up with Gods plans, it loses. It may be difficult for me to comprehend how God allows the complete flow of idea, choices, and still controls things, but that is because I am only capable of understanding things I can understand.

When we go to the Scriptures, we see that God is a relational being and He created us to be relational as well. When Christ was asked about what was important, He said that we should love the Lord our God and then love each other.

This idea of love is relational and demands choice, real choice. Real choice also demands real consequences, or the idea of choice is a farce.

Sin is costly. People who choose to sin make life miserable for themselves and for all those who are affected by their decisions. If I choose to run an airplane into a building, many will die due to my choice. If God would intervene and stop me from doing so, and He can, that would be considered a miracle. Most of the time, it seems to me, that God allows the system He created to work, yet in those unusual incidents, for which only He knows why, He works outside the system and performs what we call a miracle.

To ask the question, Where is God with all the tragic events in the world? is to ask the wrong question. The real question should be this: Why has man chosen to ignore God and live with such dire consequences?

Since God is relational, relational rules would apply to how we approach or interact with Him. One of the basics in relationships is communication. God has told us that He has already communicated with us through the creation, through His Word, and through His Son.

Communication, in order to be effective, needs to be bi-directional. If it is only God speaking to me, then we have a lecture type of relationship which tends to be cold, static, and corporate. If, on the other hand, I get to respond to what He has said, we have a dynamic that sets the stage for healthy and good relationship.

For those who have no relationship with God, prayer is wish list to a genie or sugar daddy in the sky who needs to perform for them. If He does not answer their demands, then they conclude that He must not love, must not be powerful, or must not care. Often, people are driven to pray when they are convinced that they cannot control the adverse circumstances in which they find themselves.

In essence, they have no real desire for an ongoing relationship with God, and they want to use Him and His power for themselves when they have no other alternative.

I remember once talking with my mom when she was aged and living in a nursing home. She had had a particularly rough go of things, and was struggling with health and emotional issues. I told her I would pray for her. When I said those words, she looked at me with a look of terror and said, Oh no, its come to that?  In her own funny way she rebuked me. I got the message.

Prayer, in our modern world, seems to have become more about our power and less about our relationship with God. We want to hear the woes of those around us so that we can pray. When the woes are cleared up, we are first in line to talk about how critical we were in the process. I feel power and empowered and now want to continue to pray for people so that I feel significant and useful in the Kingdom work.

This seems different than what we are told about going into a closet and praying.

In fact, if it is our desire to show the world who God is, then making ourselves prominent in the process seems counter-productive. Then again, we live in an age of mega preachers, worship teams that put on extravagant shows, and churches that seem to be about men more than God, so the idea of making us the power force through prayer is consistent.

What if prayer is not informing God of what He needs to be about?

First and foremost, it is the logical relational thing to do. We love God, and naturally would talk with Him about all of our concerns. As we talk with Him, He knows what is best, we acknowledge that, and enjoy the fact that we can unload our burden to the One who can carry it, and we actually let it go.

This means that my prayers are not demands, but heartfelt discussions about life, death, and the struggles we face. This is not unlike a conversation between husbands and wives, or children and parents.

Prayer is also a wonderful time of acknowledgement. We need to keep reminding ourselves of things that we too easily forget. As we pray, we acknowledge that God is God, and we are not. We acknowledge our place as submissive brides, and our dependence upon Him for all good things. In the end, we are acknowledging our responsibility to represent Him as we are made to do, and as we should.

When Jesus prayed in the garden, He was acknowledging the obvious, that there was pain and toughness ahead, and that even though He would rather not travel down that path, He was willing to, if that was what God wanted.

He did not pray for God to deliver Him. He seemed to be acknowledging the plan, His part in the plan, and His commitment to the plan, because of His love and understanding of God, who made the plan.

His prayers did nothing to change the plans, but did everything to remind Him of the purposes of the plans. He showed His relationship with His father. He acknowledged His place, purpose, the fact that God could change it, and trusted that if He did not changes the circumstances, it would all work out.

I need to do the same.

We are also told that one night Jesus spent the night alone in prayer. The next day He delivered what might be considered the most power discourse in His earthly ministry. I do not know what the conversation the night before was about, but I can imagine those who heard the Sermon on the Mount got the gist of what was prayed about.

When I pray, it not only acknowledges things that need acknowledging, but it also demonstrates my dependence, uniqueness (holiness), faith, and submission, and allows me to live my life looking forward to what God is going to do.

The word that sometimes is used to describe God in the King James Version is the word husbandman. That is an interesting word. [1] The husbandman is the farmer. He is the one who planted and works at setting the right environment so that growth can take place. My prayers allow me to watch the husbandman at work, and to anticipate what is yet to come from the arrangement of His circumstances or environment.

We were made to abide with God. This abiding time yields fruit. This fruit is not the fruit of our goodness, our ability, or our genetic make-up. It is the fruit of choosing to abide, to commune, to make certain that nothing hinders our connection to the only one who can produce the fruit.

And fruit production is incredibly important as that is why we are a plant in the first place, and those who do not produce fruit are wasted plants in the farmers field.

As one reads John chapter 15, it is easy to see that it is intentional intimacy, and that limiting things that diminish that intimacy that matters. Therefore, prayer matters immensely in that it is the thing that allows us to complete the cycle of intimacy and that eventually produces fruit.

I cannot help but wonder about what Satan has done to infiltrate this important aspect of intimacy with God and replace it with a look alike to make us think we are more important in the process than we really are.

Somehow prayer has become associated with prayer chains that inform many about the needs of few, in order to unleash the power of God on the needy. With what I know about God is that He cares greatly for the needy, and with or without our prayers, He will act. The danger in this type of format is that we begin to place the emphasis on our method, our prayers, and our diligence instead of Gods love, power, mercy, grace, and plans.

The prayer chain may be a good way for churches to communicate, or it may be a good way for churches to commensurate responsibility among the masses.  It could be a great tool to drive our people to their knees, or it could be destructive in that it places the onus on us, instead of God.

Since prayer is relational, and we are told to pray continually, then the prayer chain could be a way to inform us as to what is happening so that as we are informed pray-ers.

No matter what the format, if the prayers of Gods people are put in place to use God rather than love Him and proclaim Him, they are more of a tool of Satan than of God. If our prayers are for ourselves, our comfort, or our enjoyment of this life, we have missed the purpose of prayer.

Often times we are asked to pray for things that seem to need no prayer. If someone is beating their head on a rock and is praying for God to stop the immense pain associated with such things, I would think that is a waste of our prayer time. To pray that one is not pregnant after illicit affairs, or that one could be healthy after they have neglected their health all their lives seem like a use of God, rather than a relationship with God.

Prayer is something that overflows from the loving and grateful heart, and I am sure that prayer chains can be useful to those who love and live in that manner.

Public prayer is another interesting issue. Jesus warned us against putting on a show with our prayers, or using our prayers to impress others with our relationship. [2] He also warned us against the idea of using empty phrases to try to impress God and others with our sincerity. [3]

Prayer is not something we use to impose our will on God and others, but is rather a special opportunity to spend time with our Heavenly Father. As an older dad, I no longer need to provide for my daughters, yet I love when they take the time to sit and talk with me about life. I like it when they send me lists of things they are doing, what they are thinking and talking about, and share about the activities in which they are involved.

When my loved ones have a need, I would like to know about it in order to be with them. Recently I had an operation. I wanted my wife by my side. When I had operations as a boy, I wanted my mom by my side. When I go through tough times in the future, I want those I love by my side.

Its a relational thing, not a cure thing. In the end, we will see that all things should have been all about God. My prayers allow me to make it that way now. My prayers are not about changing history, but allowing me a front seat in watching history change. I get to talk with the One who will prevail. I get to communicate with the One who can make a difference, and accept that when He does not change the circumstances, it is still part of the overall victory plan.

Some see praying as a burdensome activity that must be done or disaster could strike all that we love and enjoy. This makes prayer something that is a responsibility, instead of a privilege.

My prayers change me, give me hope, and bring me peace.

In some weird way, my prayers change nothing but me, and that is a good thing, for which I am grateful. I enjoy talking with my husbandman and waiting for the fruit that will inevitably come.




















[1] And Noah began to be an husbandman, and he planted a vineyard:
(Genesis 9:20 KJV)
I am the true vine, and my Father is the husbandman.
(John 15:1 KJV)
[2] But when you pray, go into your room and shut the door and pray to your Father who is in secret. And your Father who sees in secret will reward you.
(Matthew 6:6 ESVST)
[3] And when you pray, do not heap up empty phrases as the Gentiles do, for they think that they will be heard for their many words.
(Matthew 6:7 ESVST)