The Kingdom of God or Kingdom of Success?
Argue all you want to about
pastors and leaders of ministries
and non-profits owning mansions,
luxury cars, or jets. There
are people out there who can
justify about anything, so the
argument will continue. When
they are used in the service of
the mission, I can understand
and stretch quite a bit and have
defended some of these things.
However, I think the tipping
point in our thinking is the fact
that we’ve simply become way
too accommodating to the culture.
Whatever happened to salt
and light? Whatever happened
to a higher calling? Whatever
happened to “In the world, but
not of it?” Are we trying so hard
to fit in, we’ve lost the distinctive
character that God has
called us to?
The very thing that made
Mother Theresa and her ministry
to lepers in India distinct is
that she turned her back on the
trappings of success. She didn’t
value possessions in the same
light as the CEO of a major corporation,
or the CEO of many
religious organizations today.
As a result, her work became
legend. I think what we’re seeing
with many pastors and ministry
leaders today is a yearning
to be “successful” in the eyes of
the world.
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“Love your God
with all your heart, and love your neighbor as yourself.” |
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I’ve written before that far too
many church and ministry leaders
are insecure, and having the
“prizes” of success surrounding
them helps shore up their fragile
egos. But Jesus didn’t care
about the trappings of what was
considered successful in His
world. Some of his harshest
words were for those who had
sold their soul for the appearance
of success. But what is the
measuring stick for success in
the teachings of Jesus?
Love. That’s it.
“Love your God with all your
heart, and love your neighbor as
yourself.” In fact, Jesus said all
the laws of the prophets hang on
that simple (but difficult) principle.
Note he didn’t mention anything
about having more servants,
staff, disciples, houses, or
golden chariots. He didn’t even
mention freedom from their
Roman oppressors – which is
what every Jew wanted more
than anything. He only mentioned
love.
I’m not against wealth or
material success. I wouldn’t
mind having a beach house
before I die. I admire leaders
who know how to create financially
successful companies, or
innovate in the marketplace.
But when it comes to ministry,
if you want to be distinctive,
why are you pursuing what the
world considers successful?
For years, we’ve used a "business"
model in church – in a
legitimate effort to get religious
organizations working at a more
efficient, business-like level,
trying to make them more productive.
But the fact is, that
won’t ultimately work, because
as writer and consultant Jim
Collins (Good to Great) says, a
business is driven by profit, but
a non-profit is driven by mission.
The two can’t be confused.
Often that pursuit of success
in the world’s eyes comes at the
expense of people. I know
major ministries that are growing
and expanding, but not paying
their vendors and suppliers
for 90-120 days (or more). Or
flying in jets and living like
kings, but paying their employees
minimum wage. Unless
they’ve recently changed their
policy, one national media ministry
refused to pay for their
employees health insurance.
Ask them why, and they’ll probably
say that they are just trying
to reach more people and use
the money for ministry. But
what kind of ministry happens
when it’s at the expense of the
very people who work there?
How do you justify abusing the
trust of those you’re in charge
of, in any effort to extend God’s
kingdom in the world?
Jesus could have done a lot of
things in His lifetime – build a
temple or synagogue, start a
new religious sect, preach to
thousands, or get involved in
politics. But He chose something
radically different. He
picked 12 guys and invested his
life into those 12 people. He
loved them, taught them, and
cared about them.
And that handful of people
changed the world.
Get the attention of the world
by being distinctive. And be distinctive
by pursing love. Not by
having your pastor drive a Rolls
or Bentley, or having a mansion,
or having a retinue of servants
(sorry- assistants) at his or her
disposal. Or even having a successful
media ministry. Be distinctive
by telling the truth, loving
people (whether you agree
with them or not), and by pointing
others to the Kingdom of
God, not the kingdom of success.
Garry
CG |