Leadership Thought: For Those Serious About Serving and Who Are Looking for a Towel and Basin.
Dear
Friends,
It is
true that leadership has more to do with service then status, for "humble
work becomes holy work when it's done for God."
As
part of our hospitality ministry when I served on staff at Calvary Chapel, Fort
Lauderdale, the pastors would meet to pray before the services. We would pray
something like this: "Lord help us have your eyes, ears, and heart that we
might see, and hear, and feel as you see, hear, and feel and help us to be
available for whatever ministry you might have in store for us this
day."
And
so often, as we would go forth in the spirit of this prayer, God would surprise
us by providing opportunities to minister to people in ways we had never
anticipated. Whether praying with a person at the altar after service, helping
someone who had lost some money in the soda machine, or walking with the
visitor rather than directing them to the sanctuary or the nursery, we would
discover that serving in such menial ways would often open the door for greater
ministry.
Saint
John of the Cross, a 16th century mystic said it so well: "A Christian
should always remember the value of his good works is not based on their number
and excellence, (and I would add their outward significance) but on the
love of God which prompts him to do these things. Little things become big
things when they are done in the spirit of love."
When
I think of people in the Bible who possessed servant's heart, I think of a
little-known servant named Onesiphorus. Paul is in prison and his good friend
Onesiphorus is searching for him. Paul writes, "May the Lord show mercy to
the household of Onesiphorus, because he often refreshed me and was not
ashamed of my chains, On the contrary, when he was in Rome, he searched hard
for me until he found me" (2 Timothy 1:16-18).
As I
read these verses, I could almost feel the beat of Onesiphorus's heart as he
searched hard for his good friend. Some translations use the words,
"eagerly searched," which convey the idea of intensity and
determination. He was not to be thwarted in his effort to find his beloved
friend and prisoner, Paul.
I
close with the words of D. L. Moody who wrote: "A good many are kept out
of service for Christ because they are trying to do some great thing. Let us be
willing to do little things. And let us remember that nothing is small in which
God is the source."
So,
grab your towel and basin and begin serving. It might not be washing feet, but
instead it might be something as simple as holding a hand, shedding a tear,
making a meal, or offering a listening ear. Show me just such a person, and I
will show you a person with a servant's heart, and one who brings great joy to
the Master.
Yours
in faith and friendship,
Tom
P.S.
"If I cannot do great things for God, I can do small things in a
great way." James Freeman Clarke
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