Serving With Discernment
by Maranatha Chapman
As
I sought the Lord for what He would have me share in this article, I sensed
He wanted to encourage those who regularly seek to love and serve His
people, who are dedicated to edifying and building up the body of Christ.
My prayer is that these words will help and enable you to serve with even
greater discernment and effectiveness. If, however, you find that you
still predominately serve and give with selfish
motives-in order to be noticed by others, because you "need to be needed,"
or for whatever it is you can get out of it-then
these exhortations are not the main thing you need to be focusing on.yet.
I encourage you to primarily keep honestly embracing your struggle before
the Lord and continue inviting Him to purify your motives and make your
love for the brethren sincere and unfeigned (1 Pet. 1:22). But as you
see you are walking and abiding in His love-sacrificial love where you
truly lay down your life purely for the benefit of others-then these things
can help your serving all the more. I make this distinction because I
want you ladies to understand that this article is not so much about having
your motives purified as it is recognizing some "tools" that will help
those of you already serving from a good place to serve even more effectively.
Consider
these scriptures:
Let no unwholesome word proceed from your mouth, but only such a word as is good for edification according to the need of the moment, that it may give grace to those who hear. (Ephesians 4:29)
"Who then is the faithful and sensible slave whom his master put in charge of his household to give them their food at the proper time? Blessed is that slave whom his master finds so doing when he comes." (Matthew 24:45-46)
Jesus therefore answered and was saying to them, "Truly, truly, I say to you, the Son can do nothing of Himself, unless it is something He sees the Father doing; for whatever the Father does, these things the Son also does in like manner." (John 5:19)
"For I did not speak on My own initiative, but the Father Himself who sent Me has given Me commandment, what to say, and what to speak." (John 12:49)
The common thread in all of these scriptures is that the Lord has specific
and unique actions or words that are "tailor made" for each and every
situation, and He will direct us when to do or speak them at His appropriate
time. We all know that timing is critical, and can mean the difference
between ministering life and edifying someone or ministering death and
heaviness and tearing them down. We have all no doubt seen many examples
of this. Jesus, our precious Lord whom we are to correspond to, is our
ultimate example of how we should walk in this. He did "nothing"
on His own initiative, but only acted and spoke as He saw the Father so
doing.
The Lord has chosen to use each of us and the particular vessel we are
in order to impart what is on His heart to others. Of course "part of
the package" in this is that we each have unique personalities and natural
tendencies that these things from Him must pass through. There is nothing
wrong with this; it is God's own design. But if we respond to needs merely
out of our own personality, limited understanding, and natural tendencies,
instead of actively watching and listening for the Lord and only doing
or saying what is on His heart, we are likely failing to give "the proper
food at the proper time." We may say or do things that are technically
true, helpful to some extent, warm, and even scriptural, but if they are
not what He is imparting "according to the
need of the moment," they will not ultimately build them up, or at least
not nearly to the extent "the proper food" would if it had been given
instead.
The needed commodity I am talking about here is discernment
that is rooted in love. It can only be acquired through
practice (Heb. 5:14)-and, yes, we will make mistakes in the process of
gaining it-but it is the key ingredient to bridge someone's need with
the Lord's provision through the members of His body. Motivation-wise,
our heart may be in a wonderful place in relation to desiring to serve
those around us, but if we are not walking in discernment as to how
the Lord would have us serve and what
the "proper food" is, we will typically respond in one of two ways. I'll
call these "feely" responses and logical responses, and we'll look at
them each separately.
"Feely" Responses
Just
because something is "heartsy," deep, or sentimental, it does not necessarily
mean it is of the Lord. Just because tears are shed, emotions are displayed,
and people are opening up and being vulnerable, it does not necessarily
mean the Holy Spirit is at work in that situation. Let me share a story
to illustrate what I mean by this.
One
day I got together with some sisters for fellowship and encouraging one
another in the Lord. Many things were shared and talked about during our
time that were very edifying, and the Lord was truly moving among us.
Then, a dear sister began to share of some struggles in an area of her
life and asked for us to stand with her in prayer. I'll never forget what
happened after that.
Another
sister started telling us about a story she had read somewhere that had
a similar thread to what this sister had just shared with us. It was a
moving story that brought some tears and made you feel all warm inside.
This then reminded another sister of something from her past and she shared
some very moving childhood memories, and, being typical ladies, we all
began to blubber. Our time together very quickly turned into a sharefest
of heartsy stories, sweet remedies, and sentimental quotes and anecdotes.
After
a little while, one sister abruptly interjected and asked, "Is this really
what is on the Lord's heart?" The sister who had originally shared her
struggle and need for prayer graciously then told us that all of the things
we shared were very heart-warming and yet none of them really met the
cry of her heart, encouraged her faith, or seemed to possess the quality
of the Holy Spirit. We unanimously bore witness to the truth of what she
had just said, and knew we had just been on an emotional ride. Even though
it was pleasant, sweet, wholesome, heart-warming, and true things were
shared, even things about the Lord, He was not in it. We had gotten off
of what was on the Lord's heart and moved onto what was on ours.
These
ladies are particularly close-knit and honest with one other, and all
of them have a tremendous desire to only be about whatever the Lord has
in a situation and be faithful to only say or do what they sense is from
Him. We all chuckled for a moment at how easy it is for us as women to
get caught up in "the oozy feely heartsy stuff." It didn't take hardly
any time before we were all back thoroughly enjoying the Lord together
again, and we found what was on His heart for the sister who had shared
her struggle. In the end, she was very built up and encouraged. This incident
made quite an impact on me and afterwards I asked the Lord to teach me
to be more discerning between what is good and okay and what is really
His specific provision for a particular situation.
I want
to clearly say the Lord can be in a very heartsy and emotional time. I
have seen Him break someone's heart open and they could not stop weeping.
I have also seen Him many times use a touching story that someone told
as "the proper food at the proper time" and it did "give grace" to the
ones listening. And I have witnessed many instances where the Lord dramatically
uncovered someone's deeply hidden hurt and pain, and restored things from
their past. The key is our finding what is of the Holy Spirit and going
with that. But in the process we need to be careful not to ever assume
that something is of the Lord based merely upon human feelings.
Logical
Responses
Just
because someone is speaking truth or quoting scripture, it doesn't necessarily
mean they are imparting what the Lord has. Some of you may be thinking,
"Wait a minute, the scriptures are always good and speaking truth is always
appropriate," and I would agree. But even so, is what
you are giving "the proper food" for that time? It may be "food" in many
situations that will nourish the hearers, but is it "the proper
food" for this particular situation? Is it a timely word
that "gives grace. according to the need of the moment"?
The Pharisees could quote scripture but they were not full of the Lord.
We can take a particular truth or principle and try to impart it to someone
in need, but if it is not what the Lord is speaking for that time, it
is just wordy clutter.
Have
you ever been in a situation where you were hurting and you simply needed
someone to be understanding, or be with you so you were not alone, or
just to remind you that you are very loved, but what you were given instead
is a teaching or truth? I remember years ago when I was in the middle
of my second miscarriage and was at home grieving the loss of this child
with Matthew and close family members. I had already just been through
a very difficult time with my first pregnancy ending in miscarriage, losing
the baby at 12-13 weeks with hemorrhaging so bad I had to be hospitalized.
That was one of the hardest things I had ever gone through, and yet here
I was two months later grieving over my second child. At the time, I was
offering my desire for children to the Lord, knowing I might not ever
have any (I just gave birth to my fifth a few weeks ago, by the way!)
when someone came by to "comfort" me. When they came through the door
I was crying and saying, "I want my baby." They immediately interrupted
and said, "Oh you're young and you have plenty of time left for having
kids!" In my grief I responded by saying, "But I really wanted this
baby."
I knew
the truth that my child bearing was the Lord's, He is sovereign, I can
trust Him no matter what, and even though there are many things I do not
understand, He does. I also knew the reality of my age at that time and
that, barring some unforeseen tragedy, I should have many years of child
bearing left to go. But these truths and logical facts were not what I
was needing at that particular moment in time. I simply needed to cry
and grieve and release the baby to the Lord, and have others with me in
doing that.
A few
hours later, someone else came by to "console me." They communicated how
much I was on their heart and said they wanted to give me something that
would help (I never doubted their sincerity), so they went to their concordance
and found a number of scriptures about death and decided this was fitting.
They then proceeded to go through each one on their list. I love the holy
and inspired written word of God, but it was very obvious that the fragrance
of Christ and the comfort of the Holy Spirit were not coming through what
she was giving. I appreciated her heart and her effort to do me good,
but this did not encourage my faith, bring me peace, or help me to more
deeply feel His love and embrace at that time. It left me feeling that
I had been preached at and even a little "messed with." In talking with
these ladies later, they both apologized for being insensitive and I assured
them I harbored no offense.
I share
this example in order to make the point that we must find what the Lord
has in any given situation and not rely solely on logic or deductive reasoning
to determine what to give or how to try to love people. His words-whatever
He is speaking now-bring life. They edify, they build up, they comfort,
they confront, and they bring peace. I could go on and on, but I think
if we look back over our own experiences when can see pretty clearly when
something was of Him and when it was not. Our challenge is to not wait
until after the fact to determine this, but rather to be discerning what
the Lord has in the moment and giving it.
In
closing
When
we hear of a need or encounter a situation where we can tell the Lord
would have us somehow serve those involved, we need to immediately seek
Him for what He would have us give or do or
say, and not allow our brains or emotions to be the determining
factor. It is not that our mind or emotions are bad-the
Lord gave them to us-but they need to be capacities the Lord flows
through with His Spirit and life rather than the initiators
of our actions and words. The Lord may have us give them a hug, cook them
dinner, tell them a story about a time we were going through a similar
situation and what He did, share a scripture, pray, or just quietly be
with them. The effect may be quite emotional, very matter of fact, or
somewhere in-between. He may have us say something that seems more like
simple common sense to us or He may anoint us with revelation and wisdom
from above. The point is that He is always faithful to speak to the situation
or direct us in what to do, but if we are busy acting on our assumptions
or initial impressions, we will fail to recognize His provision of "proper
food" and proper timing. We have to be "slow to speak," (James 1:19),
still (not impulsive), and listen and watch for what He has. If we live
with our ear inclined to the Lord and become familiar with His voice (Jesus
said, "My sheep hear My voice and follow Me," John 10:27), over time we
will grow in our discernment and learn to better recognize Him in the
midst of these situations. The result is that our giving will be much
more effective and edifying, and the body of Christ will truly be built
up.
Kindling Publications
6303 CR 233
Tyler, Texas 75707-3147
USA
www.KindlingPublications.com
