There is never a purposeful action without intentionality. Something always motivates and animates anything requiring exertion and effort. People just don’t put themselves out, tire themselves, and spend time and resources without a reason behind it.
There is always a why behind the what.
Because it wanted the other’s banana, chimpanzee A hit
chimpanzee B with a rock and took the banana from him. The chimp would have
left his contemporary alone if he hadn't wanted the banana.
The key is not going about the work of God joyless,
emotionless, like some robot or automaton who just drudges through life, but
going about it with the right motivation. When someone’s heart is not in
something, you can tell.
People in ministry are either motivated by a calling on their
lives, a vision God birthed in them, or by something other. That other is a big
tent that covers countless possibilities and motivations. To be sure, money,
fame, or control are all in lead positions, but there are other things just as
corrosive that motivate men.
When motivated by a sincere love for God, the task itself is
more important to you than the outcome or the results. God told you to do a
thing, and you did it to the best of your ability, and the rest is up to Him.
You don’t have to struggle, and you don’t have to fret. You don’t have to pull
up pie charts and graphs, have projections, or estimate revenue. You rest easy,
having done what He commanded you to do, knowing that He who began a good work
will be faithful to complete it.
When motivated by self, ego, pride, or money, it’s all about
the results. It becomes a results-oriented endeavor, where it’s not so much
about obedience toward God and obeying a command but about building, growing,
expanding, and increasing. It becomes about how many, how much, and how often
rather than about faithful obedience to the plan and purpose of God for you and
your life.
The telltale sign is whether you are the central focus of the
entire enterprise or God is. If it’s all about a man, then it’s not about God.
If it’s all about God, then it’s not about a man. Even the best of men are only
men in the end.
After a seven-year hiatus, I was able to go back to my home
country recently. Many things have changed, but some have remained the same,
and as I always used to on prior visits, I went to see my grandfather’s grave
in the village he was born in. It is an unremarkable grave with an unremarkable
gravestone, my grandmother’s final resting place next to his, and not far from
where he lies, his brothers who have also gone from this world.
Remarkable as his life was, it ended as all lives must, a
mortal among mortals, sharing the same soil as those whom no one save their
relatives had ever heard of. It’s a sobering perspective, to be sure. Still,
one that keeps me grounded in the reality that it’s not about me, just as it
wasn’t about him, and in the end, our faithfulness is measured by how faithful
we were in that which He commanded us to do, not what we managed to accomplish
on our own.
If the sail is taut, and the wind is blowing in the right
direction, you don’t break out the paddles trying to row. You sit back and let
the wind and the sails do the work. At least, I think that’s how it works, I’ve
never been sailing, but I’ve seen clips of a sailing regatta or two. Your job
isn’t to make the boat move; it’s to keep it headed in the right direction.
As long as the Word of God is your compass, you know you’re
headed in the right direction. As long as you lean on it and trust it to guide
you and show you the way, you know you’re homeward bound. In the end, that’s
all that matters. Are you moving forward? Are you making progress and headed
toward the place Jesus went to prepare for you? Is the prospect of seeing Him
face to face and being welcomed into His kingdom exciting and exhilarating, or
is it a reason for dread and apprehension?
Because you know where your final destination is and what
awaits you, the storms that may come from time to time, the strong wind and the
battering waves don’t bother you as much as they would others who don’t have a
destination in mind. Even when we sorrow, we do not sorrow as others who have
no hope. We do not grieve as the world grieves. It’s not that we are removed
from the human emotions of heartache and pain and loss; it’s that we, the
children of God, deal with them differently than the rest of the world does.
It’s one thing to mourn as though all was lost forever, never
to be restored or reunited. Another to mourn with hope in your chest in the
full knowledge that one day, you will hear “well done” and be welcomed into His
presence, along with those faithful servants who went before you, likewise
having received their reward.
What does any of this have to do with the importance of what motivates an individual to do the work of God? Everything. If you are motivated by anything other than the sincere desire to serve God, you may be seen as having succeeded at life, at having attained positions and possessions, but fleeting as they all are, one day, they will be no more. If your motivation is the love of God and the furthering of His kingdom, then what you will attain will not be temporal but rather eternal. You will receive what no man can take from you, from the hand of God Himself, who knows how to reward the faithful and obedient.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
No comments:
Post a Comment