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Well
Done...
Matt 25:23. His master replied,
'Well done, good and faithful servant! You have been
faithful with a few things; I will put you in charge of
many things. Come and share your master's happiness!'
(All scripture quotations are from the NIV unless
otherwise indicated.)
Even after being born again, we
don't have to go very far into either God's word or the
experiences of our lives to begin to see at least in a
measure the truth of Isaiah 55:8-9. There God says,
"'For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are
your ways my ways,' declares the LORD. 'As the heavens
are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than
your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts.'" How true
this is!
Living in a fallen, corrupted
world with a fallen, corrupted nature it is hardly
surprising that man would be naturally inclined to see
many things differently than our omniscient, perfectly
holy God sees them. In fact, the unregenerate carnal
mind is incapable of truly understanding God or
discerning His ways. 1 Corinthians 2:14. But even as
Christians we find ourselves at times acting or thinking
according to a "wisdom" that isn't from God.
When the prophet Samuel went to
anoint one of Jesse's sons to be king over Israel (1
Samuel 16), he was very impressed with what he saw in
Eliab, thinking that surely this was God's chosen king.
But God used this occasion to reveal to him a simple,
yet profound truth saying, "The LORD does not look at
the things man looks at. Man looks at the outward
appearance, but the LORD looks at the heart." (v. 7).
Truly, if we are to understand things properly -- to
learn to see things the way God sees them -- we need
wisdom and instruction from our wise Heavenly Father.
One of the many areas in which
this is true is when it comes to understanding what God
is looking for in our lives and learning how to
effectively serve Him with the sense of rest and joy
that He desires us to have. We know that God's word
tells us that we don't belong to ourselves but rather to
Him. 1 Corinthians 6:19-20. But we all tend to have our
own ideas about what this means in a practical sense.
Our natural inclination is to take these ideas and work
in our own strength to try to live up to them, believing
that we are "serving God" by doing so. Paul spoke in
Romans 10:2 of people who had a zeal to serve God, but
it was a zeal that was not based on knowledge. Needless
to say the results of this approach are neither
peaceable nor fruitful. Something else is required if we
are to have God regard us as good and faithful servants.
God wants to teach us to see things as He does and not
according to our own opinions or the world's ideas. As
our minds are changed in this way, we will truly be able
to discern what God's will for us is. Romans 12:2.
It is also important to realize
however that our carnal nature is not our only problem
when it comes to learning how to serve God. We also find
ourselves pitted against an enemy who actively works
against our minds to undermine and distort what God's
word teaches about living for Him. If we listen to
Satan's subtle lies and entertain his ideas, God's truth
is easily transformed in our minds from the easy yoke
and light burden that Christ spoke of (Matthew 11:30)
into an awful, heavy burden that is laid on our
shoulders (Matthew 23:4). The word of God becomes
seemingly full of impossible standards that we
continually fall short of and becomes to us a condemning
catalog of all that is wrong with us. Just as knowing
the truth sets us free (John 8:32), this kind of
deception binds us up, hinders our testimony to others,
and works to rob us of the joy, peace and victory that
Christ has won for us.
But thankfully God has not left
His people in the dark about this aspect of our
spiritual warfare. In 2 Corinthians 2:11 Paul, speaking
of Satan, declares that "we are not unaware of his
schemes." Ephesians 6 makes it plain that the armor of
God is fully able to empower us to take our stand
against the devil's schemes. So then what does God's
word teach us about what He is looking for in our lives?
What does it mean to "serve God" and how can we please
Him? What schemes does the enemy use against us to
confuse, mislead and discourage us in this area? I
believe that by God's grace and help, we can find
answers to these questions in His word.
Small Things
All of us tend to have a picture
in our minds of what we think it means to be a faithful
servant of God. We might envision a great preacher or
missionary winning many souls to Christ, a worker of
miracles healing the sick through God's power, or
someone of great compassion founding an orphanage or
school to care for needy children. And there have
certainly been servants of God throughout history who
have done (and continue to do) such great and important
things according to God's leading and His call upon
their lives.
However, it reveals something
about the way our carnal minds work that we would
naturally tend to judge service to God according to how
grand it seems and how publicly visible the results are.
Our natural inclination is to regard such callings as
noble and worthy of great respect, while disdaining the
humbler and more private things that God may set before
us as small and unimportant by comparison. However, this
kind of carnal reasoning doesn't harmonize with what
God's word teaches.
Consider the word of God to
Zerubbabel through the prophet Zechariah. As the leader
of the group of Israelites that had returned to
Jerusalem following the Babylonian captivity, Zerubbabel
was charged with overseeing the reconstruction of the
destroyed temple. After the foundation was completed
shortly into the daunting project, fierce opposition
from the surrounding peoples brought work to a halt for
several years. God raised up the prophets Haggai and
Zechariah in part to encourage the people to finish the
work they had been given. After receiving words of
encouragement for Zerubbabel in Zechariah 4:6-9,
Zechariah said in verse 10, "Who despises the day of
small things? Men will rejoice when they see the plumb
line in the hand of Zerubbabel."
Consider the implications of this
seemingly simple statement. The picture described here
is one of a man using a common tool to carry out a
mundane construction task. It is hard for our natural
minds to imagine that such a thing could have any
spiritual value or could be in any way important in the
eyes of the omnipotent God of the universe. Yet God said
that this would be an occasion for rejoicing both among
the people and for Himself! Why? Simply because that was
what God had given Zerubbabel to do at that time. In
God's sight there is no more precious and pleasing kind
of service than humble submission and obedience to His
will for our lives, whatever that may be.
Whatever God would give us to do
is the greatest thing we could possibly be doing.
Wherever He would place us is the greatest place we
could possibly be. Contentedly and earnestly yielding to
His calling for our life, whether great or small in our
own eyes, will bring peace and fulfillment to us and
great joy to God. Satan will certainly try to work on
our carnal minds to convince us that our various
callings and our lives as a whole are small and
unimportant in the big spiritual picture. But God, whose
ways are high above our own, tells us not to minimize or
disdain such "small things." They're not small in God's
sight.
The Greatest
Servant
This principle is clearly
demonstrated in Matthew 18:1-4. There the disciples
asked Jesus who was the greatest in the kingdom of
heaven, no doubt wondering what mighty works must be
done or what great words spoken to merit such a
prestigious title. However, Jesus' answer painted quite
a different picture. After calling a little child to
come to him, Jesus said, "I tell you the truth, unless
you change and become like little children, you will
never enter the kingdom of heaven. Therefore, whoever
humbles himself like this child is the greatest in the
kingdom of heaven."
What an amazing truth! Once again
we see that the greatest service we can offer God is to
simply humble ourselves to His will, walking by faith
wherever He would lead us. In Romans 12:1 Paul wrote,
"Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view of God's
mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy
and pleasing to God -- this is your spiritual act of
worship." This is what God is looking for in our lives
and is the key to how we can truly worship and please
Him. The more we learn to do this through God's power
the more we will experience the renewing of our minds
that will enable us to see and understand things more as
He does, and less according to the world's pattern.
Romans 12:2. As we learn God's ways we will see that His
truth does indeed set us free from the error of our
carnal minds and from the lies of the enemy.
God values this surrender and
genuine faith from the heart far more than any external
expression that may result from it. This is not an
exclusive calling, able to be obtained by only an elite
few. Every one of God's children, no matter what our
circumstances, calling, or abilities, can offer service
to God with which He is greatly pleased.
Consider the Bible's testimony
about Enoch who was of the sixth generation after Adam
(Genesis 5:1-18). Except for a brief quote attributed to
him in Jude 14-15 we have no biblical record of any
great words that Enoch spoke or any great works or
miracles that he did. But we know from Genesis 5:24 and
Hebrews 11:5 that he did not experience death, as God
supernaturally took him from the earth at an appointed
time. How did Enoch merit such an unusual intervention
by God? What did he do that so greatly pleased Him?
These scriptures tell us simply that he "walked with
God" and it was because of this that he "was commended
as one who pleased God." What a simple and glorious
testimony! I pray that more and more God will be able to
say of my life and yours that we "walk with God."
We can see another example of how
God sees these things in the account of the widow
mentioned in Mark 12:41-44. As Jesus watched, many rich
people put their large offerings into the temple
treasury. But then a poor widow came and put in a tiny
amount, not even worth mentioning in comparison to the
great offerings that had already been given. But Jesus
took special note of this and pointed it out to his
disciples saying, "I tell you the truth, this poor widow
has put more into the treasury than all the others. They
all gave out of their wealth; but she, out of her
poverty, put in everything -- all she had to live on."
God saw someone who truly wanted from their heart to
give their all to Him. Because of that sincere
conviction, her gift to Him was far greater in His eyes
than the gifts of all the others regardless of how much
money it involved. It was a case of spiritual quality
over natural quantity. May God help us to learn to view
such things as He does.
Unique Creations
If we are to learn to lay hold of
the truths in faith, it is vital that we understand
God's foreknowledge and purpose concerning His children.
We are not random accidents whose arrival into God's
kingdom took Him by surprise and forced Him after the
fact to haphazardly fit us into His plans somewhere. The
same God who makes each snowflake unique wants His
people to know that He knew us before we were born and
He created each of us as a uniquely loved individual and
with a unique purpose for our lives.
We can see a clear example of this
in Jeremiah 1:5. There God told Jeremiah, "Before I
formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born
I set you apart; I appointed you as a prophet to the
nations." God's custom plan for Jeremiah's life was made
before he was born, not according to anything he had or
hadn't done, but according to God's sovereign purpose
alone. We also see similar thoughts expressed by Isaiah
and the apostle Paul. Isaiah 49:1, Galatians 1:15. In
Psalm 139:13-16 David spoke of being known by God in his
mother's womb, saying in verse 16, "your eyes saw my
unformed body. All the days ordained for me were written
in your book before one of them came to be." What
security and hope we have when we commit our lives into
God's hands!
It is especially important to
understand this truth in a society such as ours where
the idea of random, chance evolution is so prevalent and
so adamantly preached by its adherents. We're
continually blasted with the message that not only is
human life on earth a random, meaningless accident, but
the very existence of our planet and the universe itself
is just a cosmic "lucky break" with no purpose beyond
what we choose to assign to it. If we are deceived into
building our thinking on such an anti-biblical
foundation, we will be prone to be an easy target for
Satan's messages of discouragement and worthlessness.
The truth of God's word reveals
that He knows each of us so personally and intimately
that He even has the very hairs of our head numbered!
Luke 12:7. He is always mindful of what is going on in
our lives (Isaiah 49:15-16, Psalm 139:7-10) and in His
love He has intricately planned for each one of us.
Ephesians 1:4-5 says, "For he chose us in him before the
creation of the world to be holy and blameless in his
sight. In love he predestined us to be adopted as his
sons through Jesus Christ, in accordance with his
pleasure and will." Romans 8:28-29 also confirms that
every child of God has been called according to God's
purpose and predestined by Him to be made like Christ.
How encouraging it is to know that God is with us and is
in control of the circumstances of our lives and that we
can trust in His loving purpose for us.
Different Kinds of Service
Although God loves and values all
of His children equally, as unique individuals we don't
all have the same calling or follow the exact same path
in our spiritual journey. In 1 Corinthians 12 Paul was
writing to the Corinthian believers concerning different
spiritual gifts and callings within the church. In
verses 4-6 he says, "There are different kinds of gifts,
but the same Spirit. There are different kinds of
service, but the same Lord. There are different kinds of
working, but the same God works all of them in all men."
After listing a few different gifts he goes on in verse
11 to say, "All these are the work of one and the same
Spirit, and he gives them to each one, just as he
determines."
All of our various gifts and
callings come from God according to His sovereign
purpose. As a result, different ones may offer service
to God in many different ways. But the ability and
strength needed for any such genuine expression of
faith, whether it seems spectacular or insignificant to
us, comes from the same source. God is pleased and
blessed not by how "much" we produce in His name, but
rather by what He sees in our hearts as we engage
ourselves in whatever He has set before us.
God may call someone to preach to
hundreds or thousands every week and reveal to them
wonderful truths from His word for the benefit of the
people. God may give another great musical talent and
teach them to write or sing songs that can edify His
people and speak to the hearts of lost sheep. Praise God
for every one of these vital ministries that has truly
been raised up by God!
But another may be a wife and
mother who doesn't publicly do any great thing for God
that men would take note of. But through God's help she
is faithful to His word, loving her husband and
diligently caring for her children and teaching them the
fear of God from their youth. God doesn't overlook such
a one or consider her minor or unimportant. He sees her
desire to be faithful to His calling for her life and He
hears her earnest prayers for her home and her family.
God is just as pleased with such genuine service to Him
as he is with that of the preacher or singer.
Regardless of our specific
calling, this kind of faithfulness to God's word is what
He is truly looking for in our lives. He sees fathers
who are faithful to His word in providing for their
families and being the spiritual heads of their homes.
He sees employees who are diligent at their jobs,
working faithfully as unto the Lord as the Word teaches.
Ephesians 6:5-7, Colossians 3:22-24. He sees those who
do as Jesus taught in Matthew 6 and give or pray or fast
in secret, sacrificing to God not to be seen by men but
because it is truly in their heart to do so. Jesus said
of those who do such things that "your Father, who sees
what is done in secret, will reward you" (v. 4, 6, 18).
I sincerely believe that the day will come when we will
see many faithful servants of God that mankind as a
whole never knew anything about who will be greatly
honored by God for their simple and sincere devotion to
Him.
What God
Requires of Us
Satan desperately desires to rob
God's people of the peace and joy that comes when we
enter into God's truths by faith. He will work
diligently to paint God as a harsh taskmaster who makes
impossible demands of our own human strength and ability
and whom we have no hope of ever really pleasing. We see
this attitude reflected in the wicked servant in the
parable of the talents in Matthew 25:14-30. He was given
1 talent by his master, but unlike his faithful fellow
servants, he didn't put it to use but rather buried it
in the ground. When giving account of this to his master
later he said, "I knew that you are a hard man,
harvesting where you have not sown and gathering where
you have not scattered seed. So I was afraid and went
out and hid your talent in the ground " (v. 24-25). He
saw his master as harsh and unreasonable, making unfair
and unrealistic demands of him that he had no right to
expect. So, paralyzed by fear and this false picture of
his master, he produced nothing.
However, as we are seeing, when we
look through the light of God's word, Satan's lies are
exposed and destroyed and an altogether different
picture of our Heavenly Father is revealed. We see him
not as a stern and impersonal monarch who is asking
something of us that we are unable to do. Rather, we are
able to correctly see Him as a loving father who only
requires us to yield whatever He has given us back to
Him. When Paul wrote to the Corinthian believers
regarding the collection he was taking up for the saints
in Jerusalem he said, "For if the willingness is there,
the gift is acceptable according to what one has, not
according to what he does not have." 2 Corinthians 8:12.
It is not spiritual heroics that God seeks, but rather
humble and genuine surrender. What more can we be than
what the potter has made us? Like the boy who gave his
meager lunch of bread and fish to feed the 5000 (John
6:1-13), we simply surrender our all to God and we trust
Him to make it sufficient for whatever He has ordained
for us.
Consider Moses' words to the
Israelites before they entered Canaan in Deuteronomy
10:12-13. There he said, "And now, O Israel, what does
the LORD your God ask of you but to fear the LORD your
God, to walk in all his ways, to love him, to serve the
LORD your God with all your heart and with all your
soul, and to observe the LORD's commands and decrees
that I am giving you today for your own good?" Micah 6:8
says, "He has showed you, O man, what is good. And what
does the LORD require of you? To act justly and to love
mercy and to walk humbly with your God." Are these the
harsh commands of an angry God or the peaceable counsel
of a loving father who longs to draw His children into a
deeper relationship with Himself?
Serve God with all of your heart.
Obey His word and thank Him for His mercy. Walk humbly
with Him in all of His ways. This is what God is looking
for in the lives of His children. It's true that such
genuine faith will lead to some form of external
expression according to God's calling. So-called faith
that produces nothing is not genuine faith. James 2:17.
But it is our hearts that God truly desires, not our
efforts and accomplishments. Praise God that these
things are not only for a super-spiritual few, but are
available to every one of us through Christ!
Attacks of the
Enemy
We cannot expect to lay hold of
Bible truths and enter into the joy and rest that God
has for us unopposed. Peter writes (to Christians) in 1
Peter 5:8, "Be self-controlled and alert. Your enemy the
devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for
someone to devour." While the devil certainly cannot
pluck us out of God's hand (John 10:28-29)...and that
doesn't mean that it's impossible to "get out of God's
hand"---as Christians, we don't lose our "free will to
choose". The devil, however, can rob us of the joy and
victory that is rightfully ours through Christ if we
don't properly combat his lies with God's truth.
One approach Satan will take is to
try to minimize God's calling for our life. He will
continually work against our minds to try to convince us
that we are unimportant and insignificant in God's
kingdom. He will mockingly declare that the "small"
things God is accomplishing in or through us don't
matter much in the grand spiritual scheme of things. But
we know that our enemy is "a liar and the father of
lies." John 8:44. As we learn to recognize such earthly,
unspiritual, devilish wisdom (James 3:15), we can more
quickly and more consistently cast it down and have
greater victory in our lives.
Romans 14:4 says, "Who are you to
judge someone else's servant? To his own master he
stands or falls. And he will stand, for the Lord is able
to make him stand." When under this kind of attack from
Satan, we would do well to remember this simple yet
powerful truth.
What place does the devil have to
tell us whether we are or aren't serving God
effectively? Who is he to say what is and isn't
important in God's sight or what God's expectations of
us are? Even if he knew, surely the enemy of our soul
and of God would never share such important truth with
us! Has not Christ purchased us with his own blood? 1
Corinthians 6:20, Acts 20:28. We no longer belong to
ourselves and certainly not to the devil, but to God. It
is He and He alone who has the right to direct the paths
of our lives and He alone who has the authority to say
whether or not our lives are pleasing and acceptable to
Him.
And God has not left us to
ourselves to try to measure up to what He wants us to be
on our own. His promise to every one of His children is
that "he will stand, for the Lord is able to make him
stand." Philippians 2:13 says, "for it is God who works
in you to will and to act according to his good
purpose." Praise God that our ability to live for Him
and to fulfill His purpose for our lives is not
dependant on our strength or wisdom.
I
recently heard a Christian brother describe this battle
by saying "I refuse to use the devil's ruler to measure
God's work." Amen! We should thank God for everything
He's doing in our lives and everything He has given us
to do even if it seems minor and unimportant to us.
Let's not let Satan cheapen God's work in and through us
by suggesting it doesn't really matter. May God help us
to be able to say as Paul said in 2 Corinthians 10:5
that "We demolish arguments and every pretension that
sets itself up against the knowledge of God, and we take
captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ."
A Practical
Example
I
remember hearing our pastor refer from time to time to
an experience he had at one point in his ministry. He
had been used by God at times to travel to different
locations and hold large meetings in which many people
were brought to Christ. And he had seen God move in many
mighty ways at various times throughout his ministry.
But in time God led him to a place where (as he saw it)
he was simply pastoring a small church with no great and
grand spiritual things seemingly taking place.
One day he was praying and asking
God why things were this way and why he couldn't be
doing something more productive with a greater spiritual
impact. God spoke to his heart through Jesus' words to
Peter in John 21:18. There Jesus said, "I tell you the
truth, when you were younger you dressed yourself and
went where you wanted; but when you are old you will
stretch out your hands, and someone else will dress you
and lead you where you do not want to go."
This simple word from God
ministered the faith our pastor needed to continue
serving diligently where God had placed him even though
he couldn't fully see God's purpose in it at the time.
In time however God opened many doors to enable him to
share the word through radio, television, publications
and the internet. As a result of his being faithful and
content where God had placed him, I and many others were
brought to faith through his ministry. But this is not
just a lesson for preachers. Learning how to let God
lead us and how to be content being in His will is
critical for every one of us if we are to learn to serve
God with joy and rest.

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