by Charles R. Swindoll
Read John 15:20; Acts 24:16; Hebrews 6:10
In recent posts, I have written about God's servants feeling
used and unappreciated, experiencing undeserved disrespect and resentment, and
having hidden greed---a desire to be rewarded.
From these very real and common perils, there emerge at
least three timely lessons for all of us to remember.
Lesson one: no servant of God is completely safe. A tough
truth to accept! We who give and give become increasingly more vulnerable as
time passes (read John 15:20). Truth be told, there are times we'll get ripped
off. We will be used. We will feel unappreciated. But realizing ahead of time
this will happen, we are better equipped to handle it when it comes. The proper
perspective will guard us against stumbling into peril. Lean hard on the Master
when you serve others.
Lesson two: most of the servant's deeds will be initially
unrewarded. That's a basic axiom we must accept (read Hebrews 6:10). If you are
the type who needs a lot of strokes from people, who has to be appreciated
before you can continue very long, you'd better forget about being a servant.
More often than not, you will be overlooked, passed up, placed behind the
scenes, and be virtually unknown. Your reward will not come from without but
from within. Not from people but from the satisfaction God gives you down
inside.
Much of the ministry requires this mentality. A pastor may
stand at the door of the church following his sermon and shake hands with the
flock as everybody says nice things about him (my friend Howard Hendricks calls
this "the glorification of the worm," a description I certainly agree
with), but in reality, if that man preaches for those few moments of
flattery---and most don't---he's in the wrong business.
Lesson three: all motives must be honestly searched. Before
jumping, think to ask why (read Acts 24:16). Before accepting any tangible
gifts of gratitude (and there are occasions when such is perfectly acceptable),
probe into your reason for doing so.
Check your motive, fellow servant.
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