February 2, 2014
Transcription
February 2, 2014
February 2, 2014 MESSAGEMINDER !! !! !! !! ! !! !Psalm 78:4b !! (emphasis added) !! !! ! ! ! ! ! ! “…WE will tell….” The Power of ‘We’ By Jonathan Stone Hebrews 10:24-25 instructs us to spur one another to love and good deeds, “not forsaking our assembling together.” There are two things that strike me about that passage. First, it is interesting that I need the church in order to be spurred on to good deeds. I can see that I need encouragement, support, accountability, fellowship, and many things. But can I not figure out at least how to do good deeds on my own? ! One of the reasons that I need to be a part of a church in order to do good deeds is that I cannot objectively see which good deeds I am gifted to accomplish. When a person stops to consider his or her gifts, strengths and weaknesses he or she often turns inwardly to do a sort of self-inventory. 1 This certainly can be helpful, and self awareness is important. However, it should be pointed out that one important aspect of identifying and prioritizing gifts in an individual is by paying attention to feedback offered to him or her from others. ! As individuals we have a tendency to get lost in certain ideas about our gifts that may not be accurate. When speaking of gifts in Romans 12 the Apostle Paul instructs every one of his readers to “not think of himself more highly than he ought to think; but to think soberly” (12:3). The word soberly means to see something rightly or accurately, to see it the way it really is. We think of this admonition as a guard against pride, but it is more than that. It is specifically given to us in the context of how our gifts might be used to help the rest of the Body of Christ. ! Because of the tendency to get a distorted view of ourselves it is important for us to listen to the feedback that we get from the Body of Christ regarding our gifts, and how God might want to use them. As we pay attention to this we begin to sense which of our gifts are being called upon by those around us. In this way the body of Christ calls forth the right gifts at the right time from each of us. I may have rightly discerned several personal strengths that I possess. However, it is often the feedback from the body of Christ that will let me know which gifts are being summoned at that time. MESSAGEMINDER February 2, 2014 Second, I find the words our assembling together to be interesting. In English the word assembling has two different ideas to it. It can simply mean to gather together, and it is that sense that we typically understand Hebrews 10:25. But it can also mean something else. It can refer to a more diligent and intentional process. You know, that process of taking a thousand little pieces and putting them together in a slow deliberate way until a finished product emerges. It takes patience. It takes understanding, too. One must know where to start, what order to proceed, which parts fit into other parts, etc. If you have ever assembled a piece of cheap furniture that comes in a compact box you know this process all too well. It can be a frustrating process. You also know this, every single piece that comes in that box is necessary if that piece of furniture is going to become what it is designed to be. ! Likewise, building the church can be tiring, even frustrating. It requires patience. It requires knowledge and understanding, insight into which parts go with other parts, an understanding of where to start and how to proceed. Most importantly, if it is going to become what it is designed to be, every part must be used. You need the church, and the church needs you. ! Perhaps you are saying, “The church needs others with bigger and better gifts, but the church does not really need me.” Let me tell you a story about encyclopedias. Up until 1993 there was one main !! !! !! !! !! ! ! ! ! ! ! 2 encyclopedia. It was the Encyclopedia Britannica. But in 1993 an exciting new encyclopedia was launched that was much different than the 1,000-pound set of books we were all use to. It was Microsoft Encarta, an entire encyclopedia on a CD that you stuck in your computer. ! Microsoft hired a small army of writers, supervisors and professors to verify the information. People with Masters degrees carefully researched information, a team of writers compiled it, a group of editors corrected it and Microsoft published it. Then a few years later, the game changed again. Encarta decreased in popularity, and was eclipsed by another encyclopedia. Do you know what the most popular Encyclopedia in the world is today? Not Britannica. Not Encarta. It’s Wikipedia. ! Wikipedia didn’t hire professors and editors to write the content. They didn’t build a giant staff to make sure everything was correct. Do you know who writes the articles at Wikipedia? That’s right...you and me. Other people. Everybody. No professionals...just everyday people who contributed. The lesson to learn from Wikipedia is that everybody can accomplish more than somebody. The church is a volunteer organization...it’s the power of everybody working together. That is both the power and the beauty of being the church. That God has brought us together for His mission. Just like the piece of furniture we mentioned earlier, some assembly is required, but the finished product is a beautiful display that was designed by God Himself. You are a piece in the box, and every piece is required!