Anointing, Authenticity, Authority, Integrity, Preaching

God is Eavesdropping

No Comments 02 April 2008

Press the arrow to listen to the Newsboys sing In Christ Alone as you read today’s devotion.

Scripture
You see, we are not like the many hucksters who preach for personal profit. We preach the word of God with sincerity and with Christ’s authority, knowing that God is watching us. 2 Corinthians 2:17

Observation

When a young leader is first called by God to be a preacher life is so simple. He is young, idealistic and and best of all poor. It is always easier to give Jesus everything when a preacher is wearing blue jeans with empty pockets. Mortgages and family make life complicated. The more that is added the fuzzier the whys of ministry can become.

Paul used an ugly word for some preachers: huckster. That barbed-wire epithet conjures up images of something between a door-to-door vacuum cleaner salesman and a side show hustler at the carnival. It’s an unpleasant word used for shock effect. Paul wanted leaders to run from the misuse of ministry straight into the arms of Christ.

To pastors whose lives have become complicated and whose motives have compromised, Paul reminds us that the goal of preaching is sincerity and authority. Sincerity comes from the Latin, meaning “without wax.” If a corrupt potter wanted to sell cracked pots, wax would be mixed with the appropriate color and the fissure would be filed. Honest potters stamped their pots with the word sine cere to attest that no wax had been used. Preaching gets its sincerity from a person solidly about Christ. Authority is speaking only what is spoken to him and not what he has conjured up on his own.

Application
How does a pastor get sincerity, authority and flee from the sleazy images of manipulation? By speaking every word with the awareness that God is listening. That simple fact clarifies every motive. Meeting the Lord at the end of life and giving account for every idle word spoken, is unavoidable. But the daily awareness of God’s eavesdropping is a personal choice. If I live with a consciousness of God’s constant inspection of me every word I speak will be attached to right motives.

Prayer
Father, I want this sincerity and authority, so open my eyes today to your listening presence. Amen.

Faithfulness, Integrity, Pastor, Success

Advice from Pastor Paul

1 Comment 13 February 2008

Scripture
“And now I entrust you to God and the message of his grace that is able to build you up and give you an inheritance with all those he has set apart for himself. “ Acts 20:32

Observation
There were sniffles and Kleenex around the room as Pastor Paul read out his resignation letter to the elders. They had been through so much together and now he was saying goodbye for good. They would never see his face again.

In that emotion drenched moment Paul laid out what had motivated his ministry over his 3 years in Ephesus. His lessons there would do any pastor good now.

Three words were behind all that Paul did.

Assignment
Empty
Generous

Assignment? To tell all about grace.
But my life is worth nothing to me unless I use it for finishing the work assigned me by the Lord Jesus—the work of telling others the Good News about the wonderful grace of God. I declare today that I have been faithful. Acts 20:24 & 26

Empty? To deliver every message in full so that no one who heard him was without excuse.
If anyone suffers eternal death, it’s not my fault, for I didn’t shrink from declaring all that God wants you to know. Acts 29:26-27

Generous? To finish empty, not coveting a cent that was not his own.
“I have never coveted anyone’s silver or gold or fine clothes. You know that these hands of mine have worked to supply my own needs and even the needs of those who were with me. And I have been a constant example of how you can help those in need by working hard. You should remember the words of the Lord Jesus: ‘It is more blessed to give than to receive.’” Acts 20:33-35

Application
This was not Paul’s resignation from ministry but his releasing of the ministry to the leaders around him. They were now responsible. Though I did not stand in that room, it is as if Paul reaches out to me across the centuries and hands this ministry over to me too: “I entrust you to God and the message of his grace.”  I am just as responsible as the elders of Ephesus to fulfill my assignment, to die empty and to be generous for the sake of the message.

Prayer
Father, thank you for Paul’s example. I pray I have many decades yet before I speak words such as he did. When I do, help me to speak as he did. Ephesus was Paul’s last and greatest ministry before Rome. In many ways he did his best work there. I ask that my future experiences in leadership will be infused with all the lessons of my past experiences in leadership so that my greatest work is yet to come. Amen.


I'm Phil McCallum, a husband, father and most of all one of the people Jesus loves. I'm privileged to serve Evergreen Community Church in Bothell, Washington as Senior Pastor where people love enough to believe "it's all about relationships." In 1982 I made a vow to read God's word daily and apply it to life. Each day I write out my reflections. Some days I post those on my blog. It's a little personal but it's my hope it will stir you to go deeper still. Learn how I do my devotions. These are my thoughts and not necessarily those of the ministry I serve. By the way check out the computer study Bible Glo. I highly recommend it.

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