Archive for November, 2008

Service Week 4

Sunday, November 16th, 2008

The last two weeks we have talked about timidity and laziness being two reasons why we don’t serve as we should. This week we are going to be discussing pride. I believe that the two previously mentioned reasons could also be forms of pride. We are timid because we don’t want to look stupid. That is pride. We are lazy because we believe that our leisure is more important than serving someone else. That is self-centered and prideful. When we don’t serve because we think we have already done enough, we are puffing up ourselves and our works beyond the needs of others.

I believe, if we look closely we will see that many times we serve so that others can see us. We choose to serve in ways that we know we will do well not for the benefit of others, but so that we can feel good about ourselves. We can look back and say “See what a good job I did.” We try to find ways to slip into conversations the service that we have done or are planning on doing. We tend to rate services on a scale of really big service to small service, then we value others’ service based on that scale. Therefore, someone who volunteers at a homeless shelter every week is valued more highly than the person who daily sends encouraging e-mails. This rating system is based on pride. We want to see which service is the most highly rated for the least amount of work (maybe that is laziness, too).

We have been fooled by this worldly standard of service. We overlook those who are giving their last two mites, while trying to make sure that everyone is looking at us while we throw in our few coins. In the reading this week it says “The flesh whines against service, but screams against hidden service.” This brings us to this week’s assignment. I want all of us to try to serve people in a way that others won’t find out about it. It may take some creativity, but I think that if we try we can do it. Maybe someone will find out what you did, and if that happens there is nothing you can do about it. But the point of this exercise is to change our mindset from seeking approval and praise from others to serving in order to become more Godly.

Service Week 3

Sunday, November 16th, 2008

There are many reasons why we don’t choose to serve when we should. Over the next few weeks we will be looking at some of these reasons. This week we will be looking at timidity. This is the one I struggle with the most. Sometimes we see the need, we want to fulfill it, but we just can’t work ourselves up to doing it. We talk ourselves out of it by saying things like “the person probably wouldn’t really want the help”, or “if they needed help they would ask,” or “I wouldn’t do a good job helping anyway”.the list could go on forever. We are afraid to get out of our comfort zones and DO something. I read somewhere that “faith is action based on belief.” James says faith without action is dead. When we let out timidity keep us from serving, we are weakening our faith. We are putting our desire for comfort over our desire for Christlikeness.

“Spiritual maturity is directly proportional to Christ-centeredness. To be more preoccupied with the subjective benefits of the faith than with the person and pleasure of Christ is a mark of immaturity. The Spirit bears witness to and glorifies Jesus Christ; spiritual experiences, whether personal or corporate, should center on Christ and not ourselves. The tendency of some people and movements to glorify the gifts of the Giver more than the Giver of the gifts is incompatible with Biblical portrait of the ministry of the Holy Spirit”- Kenneth Boa Conformed to His Image, p.294

Every day this week I would like us to serve someone we don’t know. This may be something as simple as letting someone on the tram ahead of you or as time consuming as walking with someone to carry their basket. I know, that we are not always in control of the opportunities for service, especially when we are serving people who are unknown to us. But, I believe that if we look and pray for these opportunities, they will present themselves. This assignment will call all of us to step out of our comfort zones and look toward other people. I pray that good results from these acts of service and that good will spur us on to greater boldness for His Kingdom.

So, your assignment:

-Pray for service opportunities

-Daily serve someone you don’t know

-Bring a list of these services to the next meeting

Service Week 2

Sunday, November 16th, 2008

This week we are going to look at all of the ways that we saw to serve last week and determine why we did some of the things and not the others. I know that there are so many avenues of service out there that we can not possibly serve in every opportunity. But why do we choose some service over others? Are we more likely to serve people who look like us, who seem nice, who we already know? The answer for me is yes. I sometimes tend to serve people who I think I could serve more easily. To be honest, some times I also want to serve in a way that requires me only to do a big one-time service and get it over with. I don’t want to do the small seemingly insignificant continual acts of service- the types of service that call us to make ourselves uncomfortable for the comfort of others on a regular basis.

‘Wouldn’t it be grand if Christ’s call to the life and to finding our mission involved a one-time decision followed by ceaseless joy and success? Paul’s life provides evidence that following Jesus is a tumultuous road.

Okay,so we’ve made a decision and chosen the life. We’ve rejected non-discipleship Christianity and made a firm, lifelong commitment to follow Jesus. Yet we must still live it out daily in the middle of temptation, weakness, illness,opposition, and the appearance of failure. Everyday we must again say, ‘Yes, Jesus, I’ll follow you today. I’ll resist heading out on my own just because I don’t like the results you gave me yesterday. I won’t bail out even though others are abandoning ship like rats. And I’ll follow you today even though I feel I’ve misunderstood your mission for me and that’s why I’m depressed.’

Choosing the life involves both attitude and action, and the battle is waged as we live out the life each day.’

Bill Hull The Complete Book of Discipleship: On Being and Making Followers of Christ, p. 127

Do we choose discipleship even when it requires us to get out of a comfort zone and do something we wouldn’t normally do?

Every day this week I want us to go out of our way to serve in a manner that is unnatural to us. When we get together to talk about this, it may surprise us to hear about the things that are unnatural to others. A lot of times, we tend to think that what is natural to us should be natural to others. God had gifted all of us differently and our natural ways of service is just one of those many gifts. Please keep a list of the different ways you serve this week. It doesn’t have to be a long explanation of what you did, just a brief summary to share with everyone. To help us think about different ways of service I have attached a section from Foster’s Celebration of Discipline in which he discusses ’service in the marketplace.’

So, this week your tasks if you choose to accept them are:

* Pray daily for opportunities to serve
* At least once a day serve in a way that comes a little unnaturally for you.
* Keep a list of the ways you served