Having guilt feelings
that you are in the marketplace – and not in ministry?
Sometimes
believers feel that being in the marketplace carries little weight in God’s
eyes. They think being in the world out there is “second-class” in God’s eyes –
and being in ministry is “first-class”.
Those
in “full-time” ministry may have a collar or a title before or after their name,
all of which tend to confer an aura of respectability.
However,
this unwarranted guilt trip will be corrected once we reframe our mindset.
First, we need
to understand the concept of spheres of influence.
Loren
Cunningham, founder of Youth with a Mission (YWAM), shares what he calls
the “Seven Mountains of Culture” –
Family, Church, Education, Media, Arts and
Entertainment, Business and Government –
that believers can make a difference in.
Linking it
to Jesus’ concept of the kingdom (Luke 17:21), he points out: “The kingdom
is in your heart; it’s within you. Whenever Jesus is on the throne of your
heart, the kingdom has come. And when
you go into a sphere, the kingdom has come into that sphere.”
Now why mountains?
It is based on what Caleb said in Joshua 14:12: “Now give me this mountain …”
Like Caleb, believers should claim these spheres of influence as their
inheritance.
Paul, the greatest
apostle, sets us an example. He was a self-supported tentmaker who delivered
the Gospel without cost to the hearers. We can find no trace of a
secular-spiritual divide in his life.
Indeed, there
shouldn’t be an artificial divide between the laity and clergy as both are
actually “full-time” for God, not just the latter. Honest work, be it secular or spiritual, is
held in esteem in God’s eyes.
A missionary is one
sent by God on a mission. Whether you’re a school teacher or a missionary who
goes to a foreign land to witness, you are sent by God. Whatever you’re called
to is holy, be it “secular” or “spiritual”.
Second, believers need to understand the theology of
the priesthood of believers. The apostle Peter affirms that we are a royal
priesthood (1 Peter 2:9). We need to reclaim our positions as “priests” and
“kings”. We are able to minister to others because our competence is from God
(2 Corinthians 3:5, 6). The Holy Spirit guides us with wisdom and empowers us
to perform the task God has called us to do.
If we are competent “priests” empowered by the
Spirit, then we should be able to serve God wherever we are placed – even
if it’s outside the four walls of the church. However, we still need to
submit to the spiritual authority of our church leaders and recognise the special
offices that God has appointed (Ephesians 4:11, 12).
Third, for some believers, their “stint” in the
marketplace may be God’s way of preparing and
training them before calling them * into “full-time” ministry. Nothing happens by
chance in the scheme of God’s design for our lives: http://limpohann.blogspot.com/2013/01/the-status-quo-principle.html
So, in view of the above three
reasons, marketplace believers need not go on a guilt trip. In fact,
they should positively embrace their calling to be salt and light in the world:
Footnotes:
* But the question is how do we determine our calling? Is it to
become a “full-time worker” or a marketplace minister?
Believers need not
fret when this issue arises. Missionary Norman Grubb has this bit of practical
advice:
Do not give a thought
about how you should become a transformed Christian and serve your community.
Walk with God, not ahead or behind but beside Him … accept yourself, be
yourself, love yourself! He has mapped out His plan for you even before you
were born. So start by appreciating that you are a special person and specially
gifted by God. For what purpose? That is not your business. That is God’s
business. Get on with your daily occupation and put all your heart into them …
“Be still and know that I am God” … So be still; have faith in God and enjoy
Him until He opens the door where you are to serve Him.
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