“If I must boast, I will boast of the things that show my weakness.” 2 Corinthians 11:30 (ESV)
This is the seventh in a series of blog posts called, “My Top Ten Mistakes in Ministry (That I Can Share Publicly.)” After many years of ministry experience as a church planter, pastor and seminary professor, I think I’ve finally learned that one of the best kept secrets to surviving well in the ministry is to stop making the same old mistakes that others (like me) have been making for decades. Instead, let’s all start making some brand new, bold, innovative and creative mistakes!
We began this series with an introduction called, “Ladies First” in which veteran church planter wife, Shari Thomas, addressed the tough topic, What I Wish I Had Known About Church Planting from the perspective of the church planter’s/pastor’s spouse. We then took a look at:
- Mistake #1: Failing to Understand the Importance of How I Define Ministry Success.
- Mistake #2: Managing My Time and Not Managing My Life
- Mistake #3: Not Understanding the Difference Between my Goals and Desires.
- Mistake #4: Not Understanding the Difference Between Pursuing the Grace of God and the God of Grace.
- Mistake #5: Not Understanding the Way Up is the Way Down
- Mistake #6: Not Understanding the Priority of People Over Programs
Mistake #7: Not Understanding Product Living VS Process Living
I have to confess that I belong to what Pastor Mark Buchanan calls the Cult of the Next Thing. Buchanan writes, “It is dangerously easy to get enlisted. It happens by default–not by choosing the cult but by failing to resist it. It is dangerously easy to get enlisted. It happens by default–not by choosing the cult but by failing to resist it.”
For me the Cult of the Next Thing is sinful discontentment cast in religious terms. It has its own sacred terms like: our ministry vision, our mission, our goals, our objectives. Please don’t misunderstand, these are good things, but we begin to believe that we can’t ever really be happy until we get them.
This Cult also has its own Mantras we church planter types often quote: I’ll be happy when we have a certain number of people in worship every Sunday. Or I’ll be happy when we are self-supporting financially as a church. Or I’ll be happy when we are self-governing with our own elders or deacons. I’ll be happy when I’ve been able to pass this baton (you name it) to another leader. I’ll be happy when I’m not sick anymore…when the kids are older…when the kids are gone….
And this Cult has its own shrines in other ministries that are doing better than ours. And it has its own ecstatic experiences: those fleeting moments when you finally reach a goal you’ve been living for and looking to for so long. It feels great. But like sand through your fingers it ever so quickly slips away from you. So then you must look ahead to the next experience.
Author Isaac Rubin writes, “The joy and happiness from the process lasts much longer and can be much more satisfying over the duration of your life. But if you are totally goal-oriented in a success-oriented culture, and if the product is the only goal, you will destroy much of the possibility for true joy and happiness in life. That is because almost all of your life has to be the process and not the product. If you can’t learn to appreciate and enjoy the process of living itself, there goes your joy in life.
If you get nothing out of the doing, because you are always looking for the high that will come at the end, you’re in serious trouble. But if you learn to be nourished by the whole process, that result at the end of the road, positive or negative, is not terribly significant. You just go on to the next process. You must learn to understand and appreciate “Process Living” because the process is really what life is all about. We are in process 98 % of the time. If you are living for that final 2%, you’re in trouble. And the truth is most of us are in serious trouble.”
The story is told when Alexander the Great conquered the entire known world, he wept because there were no more worlds for him to conquer. The opiate of winning the next battle was now gone and he was left trembling in withdrawal, unable to live and love life in the present.
Elizabeth Elliot summed it up well, “ Don’t let your living for tomorrow slay your living for today.” If you’re not very careful you will always be living for tomorrow and find yourself being robbed of all of your todays. I wish someone had talked straight to me about that common and so costly mistake in life and ministry.
Steve Childers is the President & CEO of Global Church Advancement, an inter-denominational ministry that provides church planting training, consultations, and resources for church planters, pastors and missionaries throughout the world. Steve has trained Christian leaders from more than 50 countries (curriculum in five major global languages), representing over 200 denominations and mission agencies in 5 continents (& 5 languages). Steve is also an author, Professor of Practical Theology (since 1995) and the Director of the Doctoral program at Reformed Theological Seminary, in Orlando, Florida, where he teaches church planting, missions, evangelism and spiritual formation. To learn more about GCA:
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December 1st, 2010 at 4:31 pm
After reading your #1, I felt comforted to be in the company of brethren like you. After coming to the USA from Africa and acquiring a College education in theology in Atlanta and afterwards going into ministry back in Africa and “failing”, what hurt most was not the lack of outward success: but the clear lack of correct success perspective as you shared it here on the part of my overseers and my fellow believers in the mission field.
One of my Pastor friends said to me ” are you not angry at God that He failed to do those things you trusted him for”? With all due respect that must have been the first time in my life I heard something so foolish form a minister….making me feel that somehow God is my robot that I could at my will make do the things I please.
Lately the Lord is reminding me of Stafford’s Hymn written in 1871 on a voyage from London when the Captain pointed to him a spot in the Atlantic where his (Stafford’s) wife and four daughters had drowned in a ship that sunk.
“When peace like a river attendeth my soul “when sorrow like sea-billows roll”
“whatever my lot- thou hast taught me to say
It is well with my soul
It is well with my soul
( that deep realization is true success, great success, lasting success)
I feel left in the back woods, overcome by obscurity here in Massachusetts – yet within me and daily in prayers and in his word I see clearly a relationship with My Lord that is alive and full of Hope.
February 9th, 2011 at 1:05 pm
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