Category: Thoughts

Live Out Your Calling Today

Live Out Your Calling Today

“What is my calling?” Is that a question you have ever asked yourself? I am almost certain you have met a Christian who has asked that question at some point or is currently asking it. “What is God calling me to do? Where is God calling me to go?” And probably most important of all: “What is God calling me to do with my life?”

I don’t think I have met a sincere, Christ-loving Christian who wants to waste their life. Christians want to live out God’s will for their life, to spend the time allotted to them in a God-honoring way. But this often is easier said then done, especially when you aren’t clear what God wants you to do.

Recently, I have been reading a book called “Grit” by Angela Duckworth . It is a pretty useful book which focuses on the positive effects of perseverance in life. If you are a Christian who reads your Bible consistently, you almost certainly understand and know all that Duckworth says in her book. But there was a “parable” she gave in one of her chapters which helped me think through what “calling” is and how it connects to the Biblical idea of “renewing your mind”.

Three bricklayers are asked: “What are you doing?”

The first says, “I am laying bricks.”

The second says, “I am building a church.”

And the third says, “I am building the house of God.”

The first bricklayer has a job. The second has a career. The third has a calling.

GRIT by Angela Duckworth

What the quote means

Perspective is everything

What I love about this little story is how memorable it is. You have three people doing the exact same job: laying bricks. On the surface, there is absolutely no difference between them. But when asked what they are doing, their answers could not be more different.

The first is focused merely on the task at hand: laying bricks. It simply is a task; there is no higher calling. This is why the first bricklayer merely has a “job”. You have certainly met people like this: they come to work to get a paycheck, that is all. There is no bigger picture or larger goal. There is simply the task at hand, the task they are paid to accomplish.

The second bricklayer has a bit better perspective. Rather than focusing on the task, the second bricklayer focuses on a larger goal: building a Church. This second person is connecting their work to something bigger than the individual task. They are conscious of what their work means and what goal their individual task contributes to. This bricklayer is said to have a “career.”

But it is the final bricklayer that is the most important for our discussion. This last bricklayer connects their work to something larger than their individual task, and larger than the final “product.” Despite the sketchy theology in this parable (see 2 Samuel 7 for what God thinks about David building a house for Him), I think it is a profound illustration of Biblical truth. This last bricklayer connects his or her work to God, to theology, to a their larger worldview.

And it is this bricklayer which is said to have a “calling.”

I would summarize the three bricklayers as follows:

  • The first bricklayer is focused on the daily tasks
  • The second bricklayer is focused on the end goal of the tasks
  • The third bricklayer is focused on why they are pursuing the goal

Why it is important

Don’t try to figure out God’s will for your whole life. Live faithful today.

“Calling” is a tough word to define. A lot of times, when I hear Christians ask what their calling is, what they mean is “I want to know the specifics of God’s will for my life. I want to know for certain what I am to do now and in the future.” But this certainty is not promised in Scripture.

J. I. Packer in his book “Knowing God” contrasts two views of “knowing God’s will.” What you and I often want is to see the whole picture, like if you were to look at a whole map of a subway system. You want to know exactly and with certainty all the different paths God wants you to take. But knowing God’s will is not like looking at a subway map. It is more like driving a car: you can only see and make decisions based on what is immediately ahead of you.

This parable of the three bricklayers builds on this idea. You don’t “find your calling” by figuring out God’s sovereign plan for your life. You live out a calling by connecting what you are doing in the present with your Theology. The last bricklayer has a calling by connecting his daily tasks and the goal of his job to God. God is not going to write out His sovereign will for your life in the sky for you to read. But He does promise to guide your steps as you trust in Him.

How can you live your calling? Remind yourself each day “this is God’s sovereign will for my life.” And then work for His glory, not your own. I think we need to re-define “calling” to “obeying God commands in all He ordained for you to do while staying conscious of how what you are doing connects to God’s larger plan.” In other words

You turn your tasks into a calling simply by connecting it back to God, the Scripture, and the Gospel

“What does God want me to do with my life?” is an impossible question because God doesn’t promise to answer it in specifics. But I guarantee there are daily tasks you have to accomplish each time you wake up. These tasks are the part of God’s plan for your life that He has revealed. God has prepared good works for you ahead of time so that you can walk in them (see Ephesians 2). Don’t focus on the part of God’s will that you don’t know. Focus on faithfulness today by doing all your daily tasks to God’s glory.

Takeaways

1. The most practical thing you can do each day is renew your mind with Scripture

An implication of all this is to renew your mind each day. The last bricklayer had a theological, God-focused mindset which enabled him to connect what he was doing to why he was doing it. He had a different perspective than the other two. It does not get more practical than this.

Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.

Romans 12:2, ESV emphasis added

You aren’t naturally going to wake up with the mindset “all I do today is for God’s glory.” The natural perspective of life when you wake up is that of the first bricklayer: just get done these tasks and be done with it. But as Christians, part of the privilege we have is doing all that we do for God’s glory and to make much of Christ.

Your theology should transform your most mundane daily tasks.

Don’t buy the lie that says Theology is some study of God divorced from anything you actually do during the day. There is absolutely nothing more practical than renewing your mind with the Word. It changes everything. The parable of the bricklayers argues that it is your mindset, your perspective, that matters each day. The Bible makes it more explicit: you must renew your mind or you will be conformed to this world.

2. Ask God to show you what faithfulness looks like today. Let Him work out your long term “calling.”

If God explained to you every single plan He had for your life, do you really think your life would be better? I think God is merciful to allow us to take one day at a time. Your calling is to die to self daily and subject each day’s tasks to the Lordship of Christ. That is hard enough to do without also knowing everything coming tomorrow.

“Sufficient is the day for its worries” Jesus said. You can only be certain of what God is calling you to do moment by moment. So pursue faithfulness and obedience moment by moment. As a Pastor I know once said “Do the next faithful thing.”

You might not know God’s long term plans for your life. But you know today you are called to “glorify God and enjoy Him.”

3. Consciously, through prayer and meditation on Scripture, offer each part of your day up for the glory of God

To get even more practical, doing all things for God’s glory probably means praying a lot. “Without ceasing” as Paul says. The mindset of the third bricklayer is not easy to maintain. There are dozens of distractions and sins each day that cause you to lose sight of why you are doing what you are doing, and for whom you are doing it.

Dedicate time throughout the day to read Scripture. Call out to the Lord before you start a new task. Ask yourself “how does what I am going through connect to any Bible passages I have heard lately?” It is only through focus on God that our tasks become a calling. Why? Because God has called His people to exalt Him in all things.

What tasks do you have to accomplish today at work? At home? For Church? Will you merely check the boxes? Or will you realize everything you do is done before the presence of God?

For previous posts in this ongoing series “Book Quote of the Week”, click here. If you found this post helpful, please share and subscribe below. Follow The Average Churchman on Instagram to get more content.

The Beautiful Picture of Communion

The Beautiful Picture of Communion

My Church celebrated communion, or the Lord’s supper, this past Sunday. I have enjoyed this monthly ordinance for several years now, but this past Sunday, something clicked. The Lord helped me see several aspects of communion with a clarity I did not have before. God in His infinite wisdom does not merely give us doctrinal truth in bullet point form. He gives us pictures, metaphors, illustrations so you and I can see the gospel.

Today, I want to reflect on a couple aspects of communion and how these aspects help us remember what Jesus has done. Communion is a rich ordinance and I will not cover even half of its significance and symbolism. But here are three thoughts I had as I took communion this past Sunday.

In Communion You Come to Receive, not Give

I have been reading through the first five books of the Bible for the past few months. Whenever you work through Leviticus in particular, you can’t help but be amazed at the quantity and variety of sacrifices Israel needed to make. In the Old Testament law, you had to constantly bring animal after animal to die for your sins. And yet, despite the constant sacrifices, Hebrews says

For it is impossible for the blood of bulls and goats to take away sins.

Hebrews 10:4, ESV

Contrast this with Communion. When was the last time you brought a bull or a ram to the Lord’s supper? You don’t come to the Lord’s supper with a sacrifice. In fact, you don’t come with anything to give the Lord at all.

You come to the Lord’s supper with a single thing: need. A need for Christ’s righteousness, a righteousness only provided through His blood.

God, on the other hand, comes with the needed sacrifice. And it is a once-for-all-time sacrifice: Jesus. He died, He conquered death, and He ascended to the right hand of the Father. “It is finished” means God has dealt with sin in Christ. You don’t need to “bring something to the table.” You come to receive what God has done in Christ.

It can become so easy throughout the day to day grind of life to lose sight of this. You think that something you do can make you right with God, or at least you might think God’s favor is based on your performance. But you bring nothing to the communion table. Just your sin, inadequacy, shaky faith, and a desperate need. But the table is thankfully already prepared: God has provided Christ for you.

In Communion You Get the Cup of Mercy, not the Cup of Wrath

The “cup” mentioned throughout Scripture. It is a helpful metaphor the Lord uses to communicate spiritual reality to us. Several times in the Old Testament, God refers to the “the cup of His wrath”.

Wake yourself, wake yourself, stand up, O Jerusalem, you who have drunk from the hand of the Lord the cup of his wrath, who have drunk to the dregs the bowl, the cup of staggering.

Isaiah 51:17, ESV emphasis added

Thus the Lord, the God of Israel, said to me: “Take from my hand this cup of the wine of wrath, and make all the nations to whom I send you drink it.

Jeremiah 25:15, ESV emphasis added

When I read these verses, I picture a glass filled up to the very top. God’s just wrath against sin has reached the brim; it is about to overflow. And now, those who filled it must drink. When you drink something, you are “taking it in”. That is the picture here: those who rebel against the Lord must take the fullness of His wrath against their sin.

But that is not the cup Christians get. The cup of wrath is what Jesus drank on our behalf. One of the most profound portions of Scripture is when Jesus prayed in Gethsemane for “this cup to pass”. It was the cup He would drink on our behalf. Jesus took what you and I deserved: the cup of God’s wrath.

What a beautiful reminder it is when get a cup during communion! A cup not filled with wrath, but a cup reminding you of “the new covenant” in Christ’s blood. As you drink, you are remember that you have taken in Christ’s righteousness. There is not a cup of wrath left for you.

In Communion You Get the Bread of Life, not Mere Physical Provision

At my Church, my Pastor is preaching through John 6. He continually emphasizes the point that the crowds came back to Jesus after He miraculously fed them to get more food. But instead of feeding them physically, Jesus teaches them spiritual truth by calling Himself the “bread of life”. Jesus contrasts Himself with the manna Israel received from God in the wilderness. God’s provision was enough to satisfy Israel temporarily, but ultimately physical bread could not bring life. Jesus could.

Jesus provides for our physical needs, to be sure. “Every good gift” is from the Lord. But communion is a time to remember Jesus’ ultimate provision: eternal life. Jesus did not live and die so you could receive physical possessions. When you come to the Lord’s table, God is reminding you Jesus provides you with life.

Just like if you stopped eating you would die, without believing in Jesus you will eternally perish. Communion reminds us “the wages of sin is death but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.” God provided manna to deal with His people’s physical needs in the Old Covenant but how glorious it is to remember God provided something so much more in Christ!

Jesus saves, He satisfies, He is all the Christian needs.

And we tend to forget that. Which is why eating a piece of bread each month corporately is a powerful reminder: without Jesus, you have no life. With Jesus, you have eternal life.

Conclusion: Don’t Just Go Through the Motions

Like anything you do regularly, it is easy to take communion for granted. But just like you should treasure each Sunday worship service, you should also thoughtfully and in faith enjoy communion each month (or however often your Church partakes of it). In communion, God is visually and physically displaying for you what the gospel looks like:

  • You don’t bring anything but your sin and need: God provides the sufficient sacrifice
  • You experience God’s mercy in Christ rather than God’s just wrath on your sin
  • Jesus has provided you with eternal spiritual life through His death and resurrection

What could be more practical than to be reminded of these truths? You and I need communion because we are so quick to forget and take for granted. Praise the Lord He knows exactly what we need: to be reminded of the things of “first importance.”

So next time you go to take communion, remind yourself of what you are actually doing. Meditate on the beautiful picture God is painting for you. See the gospel in every bite of bread and sip of wine.

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Christians Create in Response to Creation

Christians Create in Response to Creation

The sun and warmth of summer always gets me thinking about Psalm 19. Creation really does declare the glory of God day after day after day. I also have recently read a couple books which emphasize creativity: one a book on glorifying God in daily tasks (I have written a post about it here) and another on flower arranging. As I was taking a walk the other day, a thought came to my head: what do Christians do in response to the beauty of God’s creation? Christians create.

Defining Christian Creativity

Non-Christians can create and produce incredibly imaginative paintings, poems, designs, etc. It is part of God’s common grace and goodness that all people who are made in His image can express themselves through artistic mediums. But the richest form of creativity is reserved for Christians: creativity as worship. Before I move on to specific examples of how Christians create, I want to give a basic theological understanding of Christian creativity.

Theological Basis

As expressed so clearly in the first chapter of this book, God is the ultimate and original creator. God creates from nothing: the first two chapters of Genesis detail in beautiful language how God merely spoke and all things were made. The question of why God created is one many theologians have tried to answer throughout the history of the Church. Jonathan Edwards in his book “The End for Which God Created the World” gives the most compelling answer in my opinion.

God created the world to display His attributes to humanity so they would delight in who He is.

That is just my summary sentence; I recommend you read Edwards’ compelling argument yourself. Essentially, there are two points to emphasize:

  • God by creating expressed and displayed some aspect of who He is
  • God created humans to see and delight in who He is
  • One of the ways humans do this is seeing God’s attributes expressed in creation

This overarching theology of why God created is where Edith Schaeffer gets her helpful definition of art, which she says involves creativity and originality:

Whatever form art takes, it gives outward expression to what otherwise would remain locked in the mind, unshared…Art in various forms expresses and gives opportunity to others to share in, and respond to things, which otherwise would remain vague, empty yearnings.

“The Hidden Art of Homemaking”, Edith Schaeffer

You notice in her definition of art, Shaeffer gives the same parts that Edwards uses when describing God creating:

  • Humans create something to give outward expression to something inside them, whether a thought or a feeling or an attribute
  • This outward expression gives other humans the opportunity to share in and respond to something inside that other person

So, Christians don’t just create because it is something built into humanity. Christians create because they understand it is a way to reflect the image of God. God, the original creator, has given humans the ability to create as well.

Derivative Creators

I must emphasize a second point: God created out of nothing. Humans cannot. So what do we, as humans, use to create? We use the materials God Himself has already created. Therefore, all human creativity is ultimately dependent on God. Unbelievers are unaware of this dependency, but this is one of the ways Christians can create as an act of worship. You and I are derivative creators. We take expressions of God’s attributes from creation and then we create in response to them.

If you stop and think about it, this should boggle your mind.

God the infinite creator, made an entire universe to express His attributes and character. Then He creates humans, not just to enjoy that universe. God creates humans with the ability to take things from that universe and create themselves.

Creativity, in my opinion, is an undeniable testament to the fact humans are created in God’s image. What a privilege you and I have. Christians are derivative creators who can express themselves artistically in response to God’s creation and using raw material from God’s creation.

Having defined Christian creativity, I want to spend the rest of this post giving some examples of Christians creating in response to God’s creation.

Examples of How Christians Create in Response to Creation

Here are four non-exhaustive examples of how you can create in response to the beauty of God’s creation. My hope is to give you some examples of creativity you can try and to get your mind thinking of how you can create as an act of worship.

Arranging Flowers

As I mentioned before, I found an excellent introduction to flower arrangement. This is one easy way you as a Christian can create something using God’s creation. By taking the various beautiful flowers from nature, you can create a small, contained, creative expression. There are many philosophies and techniques of flower arranging, but when it comes down to it, you simply make something beautiful out of beauty God has created.

Go to the library and pick up a book on flower arranging. Get some nice vases. Find a flower farm near you where you can go and cut different flowers to display. If you work in a dreary office like I do, bring in a vase with some flowers in it. Brighten up your coworkers’ lives by exposing them to the beauty of God’s creation. If you want an easy and satisfying way to create in response to God’s creation, start with flower arranging. It is immensely satisfying.

Painting the Creation

Confession: I have no talent or ability to paint. However, as a “consumer” of art, I have always been astonished at people who can capture the beauty of a landscape in a moment of time. Painters have the privilege of taking something transient (a sunset, a field full of flowers, lilies on the water) and capturing it for the enjoyment of those who missed the beautiful moment. You are using your skills as a painter to capture for all time a moment of beauty in God’s creation.

If you can paint, please capture the beauty of God’s creation for others. Take others to a moment and place where the sun was shining and you were in awe of the world around you. Humans do not have enough time to travel every beautiful place in the world to exalt in the detail, complexity, and variety of God’s creation. By painting, you can share an expression of God’s glory that others might have missed.

(I will add to this: if you can’t paint perhaps you can achieve similar goals through photography or other visual mediums.)

Poetically Reflecting on Creation

This is one of my favorite ways to respond to God’s creation. Good poetry does not merely describe a beautiful scene: it gives the reader a sense of the emotion felt when experiencing that scene. By engaging a reader’s imagination and emotions, you can paint a picture with words. You can transport your reader to a place in God’s creation. And when this poetic reflection is in response to God’s creation and pointed to God, you get amazing stanzas like:

Oh Lord, my God
When I, in awesome wonder
Consider all the worlds Thy hands have made
I see the stars, I hear the rolling thunder
Thy power throughout the universe displayed

How Great Thou Art

Good poetry directs the reader’s emotions to a worthy object. As a Christian, you write in such a way to direct your readers to God. To God’s glory. And oftentimes, God’s glory in creation. I would recommend getting some poetry anthologies, especially poetry which describes nature. Then, read about different poetic forms and structures you can use. And, of course, try your hand at writing. Write first simply as an act of worship for the Lord’s eyes only. But as you improve, there will be poems to share with other believers to help them notice the beauty of God’s creation.

Conclusions

So much more could be said. Christians can create in countless ways beyond flower arranging, painting, and poetry. These are just examples to give you ideas for how you might respond to God’s creation. Certainly enjoying nature and praising God for it is a good first step. But God is glorified not only when you enjoy His creation, but when you take what He has made and create with it. The thing which distinguishes art for mere self expression and art as worship is where you are pointing people.

Don’t create to draw attention to yourself. Use your creative energy to draw other people’s gaze to the glory of God.

“The whole world” is filled with God’s glory. But people seldom notice it or attribute it back to the Creator. Christians create because it is our great privilege to guide others to “see and savor” the beauty and magnificence of God.

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The Underappreciated Blessing of Duty

The Underappreciated Blessing of Duty

When you hear the word “duty” what do you think of? A soldier? A parent? Someone doing something they don’t really want to do?

I recently purchased an anthology of English romantic poetry and read a poem by William Wordsworth called “Ode to Duty”. The intriguing title immediately attracted my attention. You can read the whole poem here, and I recommend you do so. But a couple lines stood out to me that discussed the relation of duty to desire. I think they are significant enough to discuss and reflect on here.

Me this uncharted freedom tires;

I feel the weight of chance-desires:

My hopes no more must change their name

I long for a repose that ever is the same

“Ode to Duty” William Wordsworth

What the quote means

Contrasting duty and desire

In these lines, Wordsworth is presenting a contrast between desire and duty. He uses profoundly vivid images to do this. He calls his own changing desires “uncharted freedom” and “chance desires.” He describes his own hopes as something almost chaotic and untamed. They change. There is a wildness to their freedom.

And these changing desires are not insignificant: Wordsworth says he feels the weight of them. Weight has a connotation of something burdensome. Think if you are carrying a heavy backpack: it’s weight drags you down and burdens you. Depending on how “weighty” something is, you might use up a lot of your energy to carry it. Wordsworth uses this imagery to describe your desires.

Then, Wordsworth presents duty. Unlike personal desires, duty is described as something constant and unchanging. Personal desires are chaotic and liquid, but duty is ordered and solid. And this unchanging nature of duty brings “repose” or rest. This is in contrast with the weight and burden of changing desires. Wordsworth’s point is simple:

Your personal hopes and dreams are always changing and burden you by their shifting goals. Duty, on the other hand, is constant and gives the peaceful rest of knowing what is required of you.

Why it is important

Duty sets in order our shifting personal desires

I think one reason “Ode to Duty” stuck out to me is how accurately it paints our modern culture. You and I live in a world that elevates personal desire above everything. And it is exhausting. The wisdom of the age says being true to yourself and following your dreams brings freedom. But how often the opposite is true! If you live solely for your own desires, Wordsworth says, you are in bondage to something chaotic and always changing.

Ask yourself these questions:

  • How often have your own personal goals or plans changed?
  • When was the last time you fulfilled some dream or goal of yours? How happy did it really make you?
  • Have you ever received something you really wanted, but after receiving it, realized it wasn’t what you thought it was?

The point here is you often do not really know what you want. You think you do, but you can want the wrong things. Or end up meeting a goal that ends up disappointing you. Or, to Wordsworth’s point, you might wake up today with a completely new set of ideas and goals than you did yesterday.

If you live based on your own changing feelings, dreams, and desires, you are setting yourself up for a chaotic life.

So how does duty help? Duty gives you a set of responsibilities and expectations apart from your own dreams and desires. Put another way, desire is internal and duty is external. Your desires shift almost daily and change as you change, but duty gives you expectations that are long-lasting.

I interpret what Wordsworth says in these lines as duty frees you from subjecting yourself to constantly changing desires. It brings a rest of knowing what is expected of you and knowing that those expectations don’t change easily. I don’t think Wordsworth’s point is to never have desires. That would remove an important part of what it means to be human. But personal desires and goals must be submitted to an external, rigid standard it you are to have a good life.

Duty and the Christian

Now, all that was merely reflections from a work of art. But I think it accurately pictures the tension you see in Scripture between duty and desire. Now, the word “duty” I have found can get a bad rap in Christian circles. A common response to duty is “well, God wants you to serve Him with your heart. God loves a cheerful giver. It is not enough just to obey God, you must want to obey God out of love for Christ.”

And I 100% agree. But I think “duty” means more than just “doing something you don’t want to do.” I would define duty as “external responsibility.” Something outside of yourself that has a claim on how you live your life. Now, you can “do your duty” either joyfully or begrudgingly. Christians should be in the joyful group. But I don’t think it is debatable that the Bible gives a standard of duty that promises a joyful life. It is a set of responsibilities that starts with Jesus and the gospel and permeates to every aspect of a Christian’s life.

God in His word has given us a set of responsibilities to set in order our often chaotic, selfish lives.

“Duty” is not a depressing word for the Christian. Like Wordsworth describes, God’s commands, imperatives, and responsibilities lead to a more restful life than living for self and your own desires. Why? God’s word does not change like your desires and dreams. You can know what God expects of you. You can’t know how you or your own goals will change. But “Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, and forever.”

Takeaways

1. Continually read Scripture so you know what God requires of your life

If you claim to be a Christian, you are claiming to have an objective, unchanging standard of truth to base your life on: the Bible. So read it. Study it. You cannot live according to God’s standard if you don’t know God’s standard. See what the Bible has to say about your marriage. Meditate on the implications the Bible has on how you work. What place should local Church life have in your week?

Ask yourself “Do I think about my own goals and dreams more than I think about God’s word?” As Christians, you and I need to be preoccupied with pleasing God through obedience to His word. Not to earn His favor. You have that in Christ. But if you are a new creation in Christ, you have the Holy Spirit to empower you to actually bear fruit and live a life pleasing to God. So get to know your duty. Study Scripture to know what God requires of you in every facet of your life.

2. Stop living your life based on your constantly changing dreams

This is a tough one in modern culture. To live for something or someone other than yourself is a radical idea. Living according to a standard outside of yourself is an even more radical idea. Conforming personal desires to an unchanging standard when those desires clash with that standard is about as radical as you can get these days. But ask yourself: Is following your dreams and pursuing your goals bringing you peace and happiness? Or is it exhausting you?

Wordsworth says in “Ode to Duty”, it is the latter. In my own personal experience,the more I focus on my own dreams, the more I lose my happiness. Why? Because most of my ambitions are either sinful, selfish, or transient. Perhaps you want money. Fame. Success. Living for these goals is not going to give you the happiness you desire. But if you submit your life to the word of God, happiness is not just hoped for. It is promised:

How happy is the man
who does not follow the advice of the wicked
or take the path of sinners
or join a group of mockers!
Instead, his delight is in the Lord’s instruction,
and he meditates on it day and night.
He is like a tree planted beside streams of water
that bears its fruit in season
and whose leaf does not wither.
Whatever he does prospers.

Psalm 1:1-3, HCSB emphasis added

Don’t listen to the lies of the world. Living for your own desires will destroy you. Subjecting yourself to the duty of “glorifying God and enjoying Him forever” is the only path to lasting happiness.

3. Joyfully live out the duties God requires of you

It is not enough just to know your responsibilities or avoid living for your own desires. You must actually live in obedience to have the rest Scripture promises. Again, this is not an obedience which tries to earn God’s favor. This is not subjecting yourself to the rigid laws and regulations that Christ has abolished. But it does mean taking the commands of Scripture seriously.

The gospel does not remove duty. It gives you the power and motivation to actually fulfill what God requires of you.

One of my favorite verses is 2 Peter 1:3 “His divine power has given us everything required for life and godliness…” Everything. You don’t need your own desires fulfilled in order to live a good, happy life. You need to run to Christ to receive the power you need to live in obedience to Scripture.

Wordsworth in “Ode to Duty” sees a profound rest and freedom in living for duty rather than living for your changing desires. Christians have something better than mere duty, man-made rules, or culturally constructed standards. Christians have the unchanging standard of the living God, the creator of the universe. And this God has granted them, in Christ, the forgiveness and power needed to live in accordance to that standard. Don’t despise the word “duty”. It is a beautiful word for the Christian.

This post is part of an ongoing series called “Book Quote of the Week.” Click here if you missed the previous posts in the series. Subscribe and share below. Follow The Average Churchman on Instagram so you don’t miss any content.

10 Conversation Starters for Church Interactions

10 Conversation Starters for Church Interactions

I think everyone finds Church interactions difficult from time to time. Sometimes, the problem is with you: perhaps you came to Church with a wrong set of expectations. Perhaps you weren’t excited to come to Church or the week wore you down. But I think sometimes the biggest difficulty people have in Church interactions is simply not knowing how to start a meaningful, spiritually focused conversation.

Whether after a Sunday service, during a small group, or even just meeting one-on-one with another Christian, there is always a need for helpful conversation starters. Conversations starters that create an environment of trust and care which then leads to mutually encouraging spiritual conversation.

Today, I want to give you 10 conversation starters you can use in Church interactions. They are in no particular order, and the list is very much non-exhaustive. But they might start you thinking about how to best initiate a conversation with another believer.

1. What is going well in your life this past week?

You could replace “going well” with any number of related phrases. The goal with this question is to start talking about what actually has been going on in another person’s life. It is very non-threatening: the person you are talking with can think of the good events of their past week and select the one’s they want to discuss. From there, it is easy to continue the conversation and move it into a more explicitly spiritual direction.

2. What things have been tough this past week?

This question is a little more direct and invasive. I wouldn’t necessarily lead with this one unless you know the person pretty well. But maybe after you talk about the good things that went on in someone’s week, they will be more inclined to share what was difficult in their week. Use wisdom with this question. Church interactions need to be based in love and care for the other, so don’t push this question if the other person is not ready to open up in this way.

3. What has God taught you from His word this week?

For conversations amongst believers, I can’t think of any better question. Don’t just focus on life circumstances and talk about your own life. Part of the encouragement of talking with fellow Christians is talking about the Lord. What He has done. What He is teaching you from the word. I personally am incredibly encouraged when I hear what God is teaching other believers in the word. Use this question often.

4. How has God been growing you spiritually this past week?

This question is about how the Lord is orchestrating someone’s life to conform them to Christ. Maybe the person you are talking with has had some victory over a besetting sin. Maybe he or she had an opportunity to evangelize. This question isn’t about just hearing about the other person’s week. It goes a step further and asks how God has worked in another person’s week. I would encourage you to ask this question with increasing frequency, especially if you want better conversations with believers at Church.

Spiritually-focused questions tend to spark spiritually-focused conversations.

5. How was work for you last week?

This question won’t necessarily lead to some deep spiritual discussion right away. But it is an easy way to get a conversation going. Most people can remember one or two major points from their work week. And the reality is, how someone works and lives out their faith at work is an important form of spiritual discussion. How someone practically exercises their faith in Jesus day to day at work is often a good indication of where someone is spiritually.

6. How have things been with your family this week?

Work is one context where people live out their faith. Family is an equally important context to talk about. This question is pretty basic, but you will never learn how someone’s marriage is going or the struggles someone might have raising their kids without asking. The goal of Church interactions is not simply to “know all the details” of someone’s life. It is showing care and love by making yourself available. And family life is one of the most important contexts where another believer might need prayer, wise advice, or encouragement.

The goal of asking another person questions is not to force an answer. It is to demonstrate a care, love, and interest in that person.

7. How can I pray for you specifically this coming week?

This is a good “closing question” but, depending on the context, you might ask it earlier in the conversation. I once read a quote that essentially said “specific questions get specific answers.” So limit your question if you want specific prayer requests. Ask about the coming week so the other brother or sister has to think about what they actually need prayer for in the coming days. And then follow up when you do pray for them. I think a lot of “connection” and “getting to know” fellow Church members comes from praying for one another. By asking, you are already setting the stage for a follow up conversation where you ask “I was praying for ______ like you asked me. How did the Lord respond to the request this past week?”

8. What stood out from the sermon for you?

Church interactions that occurs after a Sunday sermon should often start with this question. Don’t be a Christian who hears a sermon, nods their head, and then moves on to lunch plans. The best way to guard against this is to talk about the sermon with other believers as soon as possible. Another good way might be to use this free sermon meditation workbook and work through it with another Christian. Talking about the sermon will focus your conversation on Christ and His word.

9. What has excited you this past week?

I am always interested in what excites other people. What are they passionate about? What is the topic which they could discuss for hours and not tire? This question gets at that. In Church interactions, you want to get to know the other person as a person. If a lot of friendships start because of shared interests, then you must figure out what interests other people in order to figure out if you have similar interests. Asking what excited a person in the past week will give a picture of their interests. Maybe it is a book they read. Perhaps their garden started blooming. Whatever it is, get to know the people you worship with each week and what “fires them up.”

10. What has caused you to praise God this past week?

Finally, what events or moments occurred in someone’s week that resulted in praise of the Lord? As Christians, we should rejoice when our brothers and sisters rejoice. God is worthy of all praise, so if He proved His faithfulness to a brother or sister, that is reason for you to thank Him for that faithfulness. Let other people’s life events be avenues for you to worship God. As you get to know Christians, notice and remember what God is doing in their lives. That same God, the living God, is active in your life.

I hope these 10 questions will help you in future Church interactions. Maybe keep a couple of your favorites in mind for your next small group. Regardless, seek to know and love those around you. In a lonely culture, simply initiating and continuing a conversations is often enough to make another person feel loved and cared for.

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Learn Manhood from Christian Men

Learn Manhood from Christian Men

I have been thinking about Christian manhood a lot lately. Maybe it is because Father’s Day just passed. Maybe it is because my firstborn son’s due date is next month. But perhaps it is simply because I have found it incredibly difficult to get a straightforward definition of Christian manhood in American culture.

From society and many Christian circles, what I hear most is what manhood is not. Every definition is full of what men don’t do rather than giving a positive definition. More helpful Christian thinkers give positive statements, like men are called to lead, provide, and protect. Other Christians rightly emphasize key character traits men should develop, like self-control. Some call you to look to Jesus and His roles as prophet, priest, and king for insight.

The goal of this post is not to critique any of these models or even to define what Christian manhood is. The point I want to emphasize is not what Christian manhood is, but where Christians should learn what manhood is.

Both Proverbs and the New Testament Epistles are clear: men should learn what manhood is from other godly men around them.

Books on Christian manhood are useful, but limited

Books often cannot advise you in specific situations

I have read my fair share of articles and books on Christian manhood. Especially when I was dating my wife, I was incredibly curious about what it meant to “be a man” in the relationship. The answers I got were helpful and got me thinking. But I realized deep down I wanted a book that prescribed what Christian men do in every situation. But that is the limitation of good books: they can give you wisdom and cause you to think, but they are static teachers who cannot advise you in specific situations. A lot of my struggles with “what Christian manhood is” arises from living my normal life.

In daily life, I don’t often ask “what is Christian manhood?” Instead, I ask “how does a Christian man respond to this specific situation?”

As helpful as books are for understanding the Bible’s teaching on what Christian manhood is, to actually live as a Christian man requires something more than reading books. You need practical wisdom, practical advice, and specific answers to complicated life-situations. What you need is wisdom. And thankfully, the Bible tells you where you can get that wisdom.

God provides wisdom through Christian men

Be watchful, stand firm in the faith, act like men, be strong.

1 Corinthians 16:13, ESV emphasis added

I have always found this verse interesting. Paul seems to imply a few things in saying “act like men”:

  • There is an objective thing called “manhood”
  • You can express your manhood by how your act
  • You can either act like a man in response to a situation, or you can respond by acting like something other than a man

The question is: where do you learn how to act like a man if books are insufficient? Where do you get the wisdom you need to respond to life-situations as a Christian man would? The answer I think is given both in Proverbs and the New Testament: other Christian men are the best source for Christian manhood. Now, I will caveat all this with a verse from Psalm 119.

How can a young man keep his way pure? By guarding it according to your word.

Psalm 119:9, ESV

Compare all the advice you get to God’s word. Even godly, Christian men who have lived many years might occasionally give you advice or thoughts which do not line up with Scripture. So take everything back to the text. That said, God seems to think other Christian men are often the source of wisdom and instruction for other men:

  • “My son, do not forget my teaching, but let your heart keep my commandments, for length of days and years of life and peace they will add to you.” Proverbs 3:1
  • “Where there is no guidance, a people falls, but in an abundance of counselors there is safety” Proverbs 11:14
  • Train up a child in the way he should go; even when he is old he will not depart from it.” Proverbs 22:6
  • “Iron sharpens iron, and one man sharpens another.” Proverbs 27:17
  • One generation shall commend your works to another, and shall declare your mighty acts.” Psalm 145:4
  • “Be imitators of me, as I am of Christ.” 1 Corinthians 11:1
  • “And what you have heard from me in the presence of many witnesses entrust to faithful men who will be able to teach others also.” 2 Timothy 2:2
  • “Remember your leaders, those who spoke to you the word of God. Consider the outcome of their way of life, and imitate their faith.” Hebrews 13:7
  • “Likewise, you who are younger, be subject to the elders.” 1 Peter 5:5

From these verses, there are a couple things to see:

  1. Christian manhood is taught by Christian fathers to their sons
  2. Christian manhood is taught by Christian men from older generations
  3. Christian manhood is taught by a multitude of men, each sharpening each other
  4. Christian manhood is taught by observing and imitating godly men around you
  5. Christian manhood is taught within the Church by elders who both teach and model Christian manhood

From this, there seems to be two main ways you learn Christian manhood from other Christians: they directly teach and instruct you, and you watch their life and imitate them. Practically, how do you do this?

Ask godly men around you direct questions

If you want instruction from the godly men around you, you are going to have to start asking questions. I don’t mean high level “what is your theology of manhood” questions. Ask direct, specific questions on how Christian men should live and respond to life situations.

I guarantee there are several men in your life worth learning from. They are just too busy being Christian men that they don’t have time to write books about Christian manhood. You have to extract their hard-won wisdom by sitting down and talking. Asking. Showing an interest. The man with five kids, a job, and who runs the sound room at Church probably has more profound thoughts on Christian manhood than you think. But to get them, you need to approach him, set aside some time, and come with questions.

What are some questions you can ask? Here is a non-exhaustive list of topics off the top of my head.

Ask about Church

  • How do you balance family life with Church involvement?
  • What does “leadership in the Church” mean for you?
  • Do you serve the Church as an individual or involve your family in the ministries you are in?
  • What are your thoughts on giving generously to the Church while still providing for your family?
  • How do you choose what ministries and meetings during the week you attend?
  • How do you make sure you don’t take on too much responsibility at Church?

Ask about family

  • What does “leading your family” mean to you?
  • How do you disciple your wife and children?
  • How do you manage and steward your money well?
  • What are your thoughts on children and technology?
  • When do you make time for the Lord individually and as a family?
  • How do you encourage and lead your wife spiritually?
  • Describe how you schedule your family’s week.
  • What do you help out with around the house?

Ask about vocation

  • How do you interact with non-believers at work?
  • What are ways you can make sure you have proper motivations for working?
  • How do you keep your heart free from the love of money at work?
  • What things do you do to stay involved with family life when you are away working 8+ hours a day?
  • How do you enjoy your work without becoming a “workaholic”?

These questions are just a taste of potential conversation starters. The point here is to first think about the areas of your life where you don’t know how to “act like a man.” Then go and ask other godly men how they answer that question. Most Christian men are happy to talk about their own victories, struggles, and defeats with manhood. Start the conversation.

It is hard for one man to sharpen another if neither man initiates a conversation with the other.

Observe godly men around you and reflect on what they do (and why)

Asking questions is the way to get direct answers on Christian manhood. But equally important are indirect answers: watch the men around you and see what you can learn. Now, in order to do this well, you cannot simply watch godly men at Sunday service. You must watch godly men in their home, find godly men who work where you work (or in a similar field), and put yourself in a variety of contexts with other Christian men.

To learn how other men worship, work, and lead their family, you need to actually observe them in each of these contexts. Watching them on Sunday is great, but how will you see how they respond when their kids misbehaves? When will you observe how they talk with unsaved co-workers? You will need to put yourself in the path of other men if you want to observe their life.

It goes both ways: you need, as a man, open your life up to other men to observe. If you only ever pop up on a Sunday and never actually involve yourself with other men from your Church during the week, you probably aren’t going to learn much from other Christian men. And they won’t have the chance to observe your life and learn from you.

As you spend time with other Christian men and their families, you need to do a couple things:

  1. Open your eyes. Don’t just “sit there”: observe what is going on around you. You can’t learn from what you don’t notice.
  2. Reflect on what you see. Ask “why” to try to think through why a Christian man is responding in a certain way.
  3. Be gracious and slow to judge. Try to understand why Christian man is acting a certain way but don’t jump to conclusions or assume the worst.
  4. At some point, maybe ask that Christian man why he responded in a certain way. This will help you check your own observations and give you an idea of the other man’s thought process.

The goal with all this is to observe what “acting like a man” looks like in the field. Not just in your head. What does it actually look like. How do Christian men actually behave in situations.

People live their theology. So observe how Christian brothers lead, live, and work. Then you will learn what they believe about Christian manhood.

A final point: be discerning. The goal is to imitate Christian brothers as they imitate Christ. No man is a perfect imitator of Christ. But through observing other men, you will learn how to wisely respond to situations in a Christlike, Christ-honoring way.

Conclusion

The best and most memorable manhood advice I ever received did not come from a book. It wasn’t the result of some extensive study. It was a conversation I had with my dad a week before my wedding. I asked him what it meant to be a Christian man and husband. He gave me a sentence I will never forget:

Being a husband means getting done what needs to be done.

My Dad, Travis Nesmith

It isn’t doing the right thing for a reward or recognition. It is taking responsibility. Figuring out what needs to be done and then acting. Of all the advice I have read on Christian manhood, it is this sentence from my Dad which I keep returning to the most.

I think that is how God meant it to be. Christian manhood is learned in the trenches, not in some ivory tower. You learn it from those who are acting like men around you. Fathers. Friends. Elders. Church members. Older men. Younger men.

Our culture may be confused about manhood and what it means. But look around at the men God has brought in your life. Learn from them and imitate them as they imitate Christ.

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Don’t Dismiss the Simple Answer

Don’t Dismiss the Simple Answer

During COVID, I read a number of business and professional development books for my work. Some were useless, some where somewhat helpful, and others were excellent. The quote I want to analyze today is from “Tools of Titans” by Timothy Ferriss. I don’t recommend Christians run out and buy this book. But it had a few helpful takeaways, one of which I want to present to you today on the subject of looking for the simple answer.

“Tools of Titans” is essentially a book of interviews. The author interviewed people from every type of industry to get their thoughts on life and work. In one chapter, a quote stuck out to me that I still continue to think about after I finished the book:

Be sure to look for simple solutions. If the answer isn’t simple, it’s probably not the right answer.

Tools of Titans, Tim Ferriss

What the quote means

Complicated does not mean better

I am an over-thinker. When I have a problem, I want to go through every possible cause and effect and analyze each detail of the problem and potential solutions. This quote was a helpful reminder that I should look for the simple answer to my problem rather than something convoluted and complex.

This quote is essentially a re-statement of “Occam’s razor” which, in the scientific community where I work, means you generally choose the simplest explanation for a phenomena. Now, that does not mean the world is not complex or that sometimes a more complicated solution is necessary. It simply means a simple answer is normally easier to understand and test. This is because the simpler a solution is, the less assumptions you generally have to make.

The point here is in a complicated, dynamic world, a simple answer should generally be preferred over a complicated answer. As an over-arching principle, I think this is helpful even if sometimes you need to embrace complexity in certain situations.

Don’t make things complex for their own sake. Simplicity makes things clearer.

Why it is important

Seeking the simple answer can bring clarity to your life

More than ever, you and I live in a world of decisions. When you go to the grocery store, there is not one brand of cereal; there are 10 brands to choose from. You are told from a young age to live your dreams and be true to yourself, yet half the time you aren’t even sure what you want or what you want to do with your life. In an era of maddening choice, the simple answer can bring clarity.

And Scripture is full of simple answers. The Bible is complex, yes, incredibly detailed and profound. However, a lot of “life’s big problems” are given surprisingly simple answers in Scripture. Here are a few examples:

  • How can a person be saved? “If you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.” Simple belief in Jesus changes a soul’s eternal destiny.
  • What does the Lord require of me? “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the great and first commandment. And a second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself. On these two commandments depend all the Law and the Prophets.” Simply loving the Lord and loving others are the two main principles revealed in the whole Old Testament.
  • How do I deal with all the fear and anxiety I struggle with? “Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God.” The simple antidote to anxiety is prayer and thankfulness to the Lord.

And those are just a few off the top of my head. Scripture answers some of life’s tough problems and choices with a “simple answer.” Notice, simple does not mean easy to live out or easy to believe as true. But there is a refreshing clarity with which Scripture speaks on these issues. Just look at the book of Proverbs: in single sentences God communicates life principles to live by. They are simple, memorable, and proven throughout history.

Takeaways

1. When Scripture gives a simple answer, prefer it over the wisdom of the world

Scripture is often mocked by unbelievers in light of the complexity of the world. How can you believe repentance and faith in Jesus can make a difference in this world full of suffering? How can the gospel be the answer to all of humanity’s many complicated and multi-faceted problems? Why do Christians constantly give the answer “trust and wait on the Lord” to so many life circumstances?

People often resist the simple answers of Scripture because they are humbling. Most people (including myself) love being the “problem solver.” The person who through their great intellect and will makes the world a better place. But the Bible offers a humbling and pride-crushing worldview: humans are so completely in love with their own sin and rebellion that it took God Himself stepping into time and dying in order to save us. God brings salvation. Salvation is of the Lord. Not of man.

The answer the gospel gives to humanity’s problem is “look to Christ and live.” It isn’t try harder, be better, or work your way into a better future. The wisdom of the world would have you spend your whole life on these things. Thankfully, when Scripture speaks about life in this world, it speaks with a simple clarity that runs to one person: Jesus. He is the answer. So, when asked to make the choice between the different convoluted and contradictory solutions the world give to the problem, run instead to the simple clarity of Scripture.

2. Giving simple answers to other Christian’s problems might be the best thing for them.

In the “Tools of Titans” section this quote is taken from, there is a helpful example of the simple answer being the right one. How do you stay healthy and fit? As a kid, your probably got an answer like “eat your green vegetables.” A simple answer. Maybe as you grow up, instead of accepting this answer, you try out half a dozen diets and eating fads. Then it hits you: the simple answer your mom gave you as a kid was probably the right one all along (or at least a good summary of all the different diets).

Now, how do you apply this principle to your interactions with other Christians? After listening to another believer’s problem or struggle, take them back to the simple commands and promises of Scripture. The Bible has actual answers to our difficulties. And in God’s wisdom, these answers are generally direct and easy to understand. In our flesh, however, we often resist the answers God gives or question if God’s answer is the best one to give.

  • If someone shares with you their struggle with anxiety, isn’t it trite to say “be anxious for nothing?”
  • When someone is struggling with not having a spouse, is it helpful to remind them “godliness with contentment is great gain?”
  • Love your enemies? Aspire to live a simple and godly life? Pursue holiness? How can all these be the answers to our complicated life circumstances?

The problem is not with the simple commands and promises of Scripture. It is our own sinfulness and lack of faith which makes them seem insufficient.

God has given His people everything they need for life and godliness. That is a simple truth from 2 Peter. The question is, like all of Scripture, do you actually believe and trust the simple truths God has given you in His word? And if you trust them at a personal level, will you share those truths with other believers? Don’t be ashamed to give simple answers to other people’s struggles if those answers are from Scripture. Of course, you should be thoughtful and careful and loving in how you communicate Biblical truths. But if the answer God gives really is simple, don’t over-complicate things.

3. “What does God want me to do with my life?” probably has a simple answer.

The Christian University I attended for college often communicated to it’s students something like “go out, do big things for Jesus, and change the world.” It sounds good and inspiring, but the first question which comes to mind is “how?” No answer was given, and if students came up with their own answer, it often involved either making a lot of money, getting some level of fame, or dropping everything and going overseas for missions.

There are certain seasons of life, like post-college, where the question of “what should I do with my life?” becomes a constant one in your mind. And for good reason: no Christian should want to waste their life or make bad use of the time God has given them. But here is the reality: you don’t need some complicated plan to glorify God with your life. The simple answer to “what does God want me to do with my life?” is day-by-day faithfulness. You can become frozen trying to decide what you want to do until you accept the simple answer Scripture gives: “whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God.”

A lot of your problems in life come from not accepting, trusting, and living out the simple truths, promises, and commands of Scripture.

God’s word speaks clearly in our complicated world. It brings a singleness of purpose which nothing else in the world can give. If the simple answer is the right answer, seek those simple answers from Scripture. Don’t dismiss them. Your own convoluted understanding of life and events will probably end up leading you astray. God’s word, on the other hand, is a “lamp unto your feet, and a light unto your path.”

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3 Expectations for Interacting with Others

3 Expectations for Interacting with Others

Interacting with other people can be difficult. This is true whether at work, at home, or at Church. In fact, sometimes Church interactions can seem the most difficult. Even for the most extroverted extroverts, holding a deep, honest conversation after a Sunday Sermon can prove hard or impossible. However, for a Christian, interacting with fellow Church members isn’t optional:

addressing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody to the Lord with your heart

Ephesians 5:19 ESV, emphasis added

If part of our commitment as Church members is interacting with each other and holding meaningful conversations, there is always a need to improve. Improve in our motivation for talking with others and improving our expectations for those conversations. In this post, I want to propose 3 expectations that I have found helpful to hold in my head when interacting with others, particularly fellow Church members.

Expectation 1: Most everyone is at least a little lonely

Everyone craves connection to some extent

“Loneliness” is not just reserved for the husband who lost his wife, the couple who miscarried, or the single who can’t seem to find the right person to marry. Certainly clear, objective, intense loneliness exists everywhere, including the Church. However, I think beneath the calm and collected demeanor most people (including myself) want to project, there is a bit of loneliness in each of us.

This “loneliness” I might also call “the unmet desire for deep, meaningful friendship with others and to be truly known.” It is the man who loves his family and serves the Church, but just wants a good male friend to spend time with every so often. Or it could be the mother with five kids who is worried because she doesn’t feel connected to any of the other young families at Church. Perhaps it is an elder or deacon who feels they must always “have all the answers” and therefore can’t truly open up with any of their congregants.

This “loneliness” is subtle. Beneath the surface. I know of very few people who would share this type of loneliness as a prayer request or openly in a group. But it exists behind the “how was your week?” “It was good” type interactions that can often characterize post-sermon conversations. I could add to this that publication after publication in news and secular studies have argued the way humans are using technology is making us feel more isolated. It seems safe, therefore, to expect subtle loneliness to exist in the lives of those around you.

It matters if you make an effort or not

What is the takeaway? Expect when you look up after the last Sunday hymn has ended that the people around you need and want meaningful friendship and connection. Hold in you mind that, despite their best efforts, no one in the pew around you has attained perfection yet. This perspective does 3 things:

  • It makes you more willing to go up and talk with someone. If someone is lonely around you, your instinct as a Christian should be to help bear that burden. This applies to subtle loneliness as much as it does the more drastic type of loneliness. Don’t ask yourself “should I go talk to this person?” Ask instead “I wonder what this person is going through this past week? Let me go ask.”
  • It encourages you to keep the conversation going. Most people aren’t going to wear a “I am lonely” shirt. But if you expect they have a subtle, underlying loneliness, you are more likely to keep pursuing interactions and conversations with them, even when it is difficult.
  • You see your own need for interacting with others. Don’t fool yourself into thinking you are never lonely to some degree. Christians were made to live in dynamic fellowship with other Christians. You going to talk with a Church member after service will likely benefit you as much as it will the other person.

Like all of these expectations, they might not always be true in every specific conversation. Some people really might have a week where they are not lonely at all. But as a general principle, assume those around you need connection. The only way to help is to start trying to connect.

Expectation 2: Every human being is inherently complex

Good and bad, easy and difficult

No one’s week is a one-dimensional, simple, straightforward movement from one joy to the next. We all live in a fallen world with tensions between easy and hard, good and bad. Even if you have had a generally good week, there were almost certainly difficult experiences you went through. And the inverse also applies: if you had a miserable week, there was almost certainly some good that came out of it.

What is the point? No one’s week was simply “good”. When interacting with others at Church, assume whoever you are talking with is not a simple person living a simple life. There is depth and complexity to every single person who is made in the image of God. Even the person you think is the most “dull” or “uninteresting” at your Church has lived through a whole world of complex experiences this past week.

Get to know other people’s complexities

In both personality and experience, every person you interact with is complex and dynamic. A few implications follow:

  • Do not take the “my week was good” answer at face value. There is more that the other person is not sharing, guaranteed. To get past the “off the shelf” answers, you need to recognize when someone is oversimplifying their experience. If you get a “my week was good,” follow it up immediately with “what things did the Lord teach you this week?” or “was there anything that was difficult for you during this good week?”
  • It might take time, but truly knowing someone is always worth it. Every single interaction with a believer is a conversation with someone who is created in the image of God, redeemed by the blood of Jesus Christ, and is currently in a relationship with the living God. If you let that thought really sink in, there is no reason to ever write another Christian off or categorize them as “boring”. It might take time, but getting to know a fellow Christian is always worth it.
  • Set an example of wise openness in your conversations. By “wise” I mean you don’t dump every single experience of your past week on the other person right off the bat. Just because you had a complex week does not mean every single detail must be shared immediately. But it does mean you set the example of sharing the good with the bad, the easy with the difficult.

Expect that beneath every “my week was good” is a human being who lived a whole week with complex emotions, reactions, and experiences. This helps you see the dignity of those around you and to not oversimplify other people to the point that you think “I understand them. They can’t have done anything interesting.”

Expectation 3: You will have to take the initiative

Start the conversation. Continue the conversation.

So you expect people around you to be at least a little lonely and to be complex, interesting human beings. What now? Understanding both of the previous expectations will get you nowhere without this last one. You, not the other person, will have to start the conversation and keep it going. Who doesn’t love it when someone comes up and starts talking with them? Most everyone appreciates someone who has good social skills, who asks good questions, and can hold a conversation.

Stop assuming that person has to be someone else. Take the responsibility to initiate and continue conversations with people around you. Create the environment where that other person can open up and knows you actually care about them as a person. If you come into Church expecting a line out the door of people who want to talk to you, you have the opposite perspective you need to have.

Come into Church on a Sunday thinking “how many people can I have meaningful, encouraging conversations with this morning?”

Pursue the people around you. A great way to serve other believers practically is to simply take the responsibility to talk with them. Does it get any more practical than this? Beneath every face in your service is someone who wants to be known. Bless such a person by actually trying to get to know them. Sure there might be some awkwardness in initiating a conversation with someone you hardly know. But remember expectation 2: each person is made in God’s image and is worth you trying to initiate a conversation with them.

Small talk to deep talk

I read part of a book last year called “The Fine Art of Small Talk” by Debra Fine. The title interested me because “small talk” often gets a bad rap, especially in Christian circles. “I just want to go deep” or “I don’t want to talk about the weather” are phrases that come to mind. And rightfully so: we were made for deeper connection than small talk can bring.

However, one of the impactful ideas in the book that I appreciate is sometimes you have to start with small talk to get to deep talk. I personally have only a handful of really close friends with which I can immediately go deep. You might have one yourself: the type of person 30 seconds after you call them on the phone you are sharing what the Lord is doing or sins you are fighting or Bible passages that have become precious to you.

That is the exception rather than the rule. If you expect every single conversation you have to immediately and without delay to go to your deepest spiritual reflections, you are setting yourself up for disappointment. A more realistic goal is to start with more “mundane” things and then gradually ask questions to guide the conversation to the deeper things. If you are patient and take the initiative to keep a conversation going, there is no reason why it shouldn’t eventually get to deeper discussion.

But it takes time. And patience. Practice too. I recommend you pick up a copy of “The Fine Art of Small Talk” or a similar book just to start thinking about how to better initiate conversations and engage others. As I said before, don’t expect other people to take that responsibility for you. Become the type of Christian who lovingly pursues connection with those around them. But also become a Christian who is patient in that pursuit and is not afraid to talk about the weather because they know even the weather can become an avenue to talk about the Lord and His goodness.

Interacting with others is tough…but worth it

Interacting with others is a topic which cannot be exhausted in one post. But I think the three expectations that most everyone is lonely, everyone is complex, and you have to take the initiative to get to know them can help you become more effective in your conversations. Interacting with those around you is a command of Scripture, yes, but also a precious privilege for a Christian. You never know: interacting with a person around you might start a friendship, provide an encouragement, or bless your own soul.

It isn’t easy. But it is always worth it. Pray that the Lord would increase your own love so that you truly can “love your neighbor as yourself.” Then show that love in your conversations with others.

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Cultivating an Others-centered Mindset

Cultivating an Others-centered Mindset

I don’t think I need to argue that human beings are naturally self-centered. It isn’t for nothing that the Bible says to “love your neighbor as yourself” and “in humility consider others more important than yourself”. Our natural bent is to self-love and preoccupation with our own needs. So how do you cultivate an others-centered mindset?

It is not easy. But this past week I read an excellent little book that has a chapter which speaks to this issue. The book is called “The Hidden Art of Homemaking” by Edith Schaeffer. Don’t let the title fool you: the book is a marvelous study of how everyday activities can become God-honoring, creative expressions for the Christian. It addresses both men and women and I highly recommend you read it. One of the latter chapters contains an excellent quote which I want to look at today:

We produce the environment other people have to live in.

Edith Schaeffer

What the quote means

Your behavior has a definite effect on others

What I love about this quote is it awakens a new awareness: your behavior directly affects other people. Your behavior makes part of the world other people have to live in. The main point of this chapter in “The Hidden Art of Homemaking” is you can positively and creativity add good to another person’s life. How you act, your attitude, what you value all create an environment other people have to live in.

Put another way, nothing you do is “neutral”. Everything you do, everything you are, affects the people you come in contact with. If you are always sad or dour or depressed, it isn’t just “your problem”. Edith Schaeffer gives the example in the book of a coworker who is always complaining. After talking with such a person, do you ever feel motivated in your own work?

On the other hand, if you interact with a joyful person, a motivated person you yourself often start to feel motivated and more joyful. You daily, moment by moment create a little “world” by your behavior, character, and values which other people enter and interact with you in. Your life has an active role in the lives of other people.

Why it is important

An others-centered mindset means noticing how your behavior affects other people

If you are aware that your personal behavior creates an environment for other people to live in, it becomes easier to become others-centered. The awareness that you are moment by moment having an impact on other people’s lives (whether you like it or not) causes you to start asking the question “What kind of environment am I creating for this other person right now?

As Christians, the type of environment you should want to create is clear: a Christ-centered, God-glorifying, holy and beautiful environment. It can become very easy to not even think about how your life affects other people. But once your mind grabs on to the idea that you are continuously creating the environment other people live in, you can start actively and intentionally shaping that environment.

An “others-centered mindset” starts with realizing other people exist around you and that your behavior impacts them.

Personally, this quote from “The Hidden Art of Homemaking” has made me more aware of people around me. Rather than just thinking of myself and how I feel in every single social interaction, I start asking myself “Am I creating a Christ-centered environment for this person? How can I better this person’s life in a small way with this interaction?”

Takeaways

1. Remind yourself that you are commanded to love others as yourself

It is not enough to simply realize your life affects others. You must also remember Scripture’s commands with regards to how you treat others:

  • Love your enemies.
  • Outdo one another in showing honor.
  • Forgive as you have been forgiven.

Cultivating an others-centered mindset does not just stop with creating a “positive environment” in interacting with others. There is nothing overtly Christian about a “positive environment.” Your interactions with others must be in obedience to Scripture’s commands in order to truly have a “positive” effect on those around you.

Don’t settle for “positive interactions.” Pursue loving, Christ-centered, God-exalting interactions.

And I don’t think it is a stretch to add that loving, Christ-centered, God-exalting interactions often include explicit discussion and sharing of Scripture.

2. Take a thoughtful and active role in your interactions with others

I am more and more convinced that having an others-centered mindset means taking the initiative when interacting with other people. You pursue the other person. You start the conversation. When there is a lull, you keep the conversation going. You ask insightful questions to get to the heart whatever issue you are discussing.

If it is true that you and I create the environment other people live in, then we probably should become more thoughtful when we interact with others. Personally, I have thought more about how my daily behaviors (even in the little things) affect my wife. How are my actions creating a Christ-honoring environment for her? Am I acting in a way that is making it easier for her to live in obedience to Christ or harder?

And once you do that reflection, you can actively pursue an environment you desire. In the case of my wife, it might mean asking her spiritually-focused questions. Or it might mean giving up my own desires to serve her around the house. An others-centered mindset takes responsibility for the part you play in the lives of others. I would argue this mindset starts and primarily plays out in the home: how you interact with your spouse and children.

3. Realize every interaction is a God-given opportunity

Probably my favorite takeaway from this Edith Schaeffer quote is the exalted perspective it gives to the mundane. You interact with dozens of people daily. Oftentimes, they are not “important” people like Presidents or world leaders. They are also often not “important” interactions. It might be a few minutes here, a conversation there, or a chat over a meal.

But once you realize you are creating the environment other people live in, even little interactions become opportunities. You stop going from one thing to the next aimlessly. Every single time you cross paths with another human being, God is giving you an opportunity. The question is will you take advantage of the opportunity or not? If you truly believe that God is absolutely sovereign, there are no accidental interactions.

So have thoughtful and prayerful interactions with others. Don’t let opportunities pass you by. Every day you contribute to the life, environment, and world of other people. Choose, in obedience to Scripture, to make that world more holy and God-glorifying through your actions, values, and words.

I highly recommend you purchase and read “The Hidden Art of Homemaking.” Click here to read about other books I recommend. Be sure to follow The Average Churchman on Instagram to get more weekly content and subscribe below so you don’t miss out on future posts.

You Might Need a Second Quiet Time

You Might Need a Second Quiet Time

Got Questions” defines a “quiet time” as when a believer goes to “comfortable and rather secluded place in (usually) his own home, where he can draw close to God with no distractions.” Put another way, “A quiet time is a set-aside part of each day for a meeting between a believer and God. It consists of reading a part of the Bible of the believer’s own choosing, and praying.” And I firmly believe most Christians need a second quiet time. Or a third. Or as many as needed.

Certainly one quiet time is better than none. I personally wake up before work to get undistracted time with the Lord. However, as I have continued in my working life, I have become more and more convinced that merely having a morning quiet time is not enough. I find myself longing for a second quiet time in the middle of the day or even another one in the evening. And I think there are some good reasons for this.

A helpful metaphor: coffee

I love coffee. Aero press, V60, espresso, you name it. Every morning I start with making myself a delicious cup to both enjoy and energize me for the day ahead. Now, this enjoyment and energy carries me through the morning and into the afternoon. But something happens after about 1:00 in the afternoon:

The effect of the coffee wears off.

I feel tired again. And if continue the day without making myself another cup, I won’t perform as well at my job. One cup is important and essential in the morning. But to truly get through my day effectively, I might need a second cup. Sometimes, when sleep is lacking and the day is particularly grueling, I might even make a third cup.

I think this is a helpful metaphor for thinking about Bible study and prayer throughout the day.

You might have an amazing morning quiet time with the Lord. But oftentimes, the burdens and distractions of the day cause the sweet effect of communion with the Lord to diminish. The answer: a second quiet time.

If I recognize the importance of multiple cups of coffee to get me through a day physically, how much more do I need multiple times with the Lord to get me through the day spiritually?

Distracted minds that forget easily

I don’t know about you, but it always seems like I have a hundred things going on in my mind. What that practically means is I am a task-driven person. I complete a task. Then I move on to the next. This can be a helpful skill at work and at home, but it often makes me lose sight of the Lord even a few hours after my morning quiet time.

You and I live in a world full of distractions. Email. Social media. An endless list of things to do. And distracted minds tend to forget things. It could be responding to an email or an appointment you made with a friend. But for me, it can become easy to read the Word, have a good time of prayer with the Lord, and then to almost immediately switch into a different mindset when I get to work.

Rather than focusing my mind on the Lord, I immediately go to all the tasks I need to get done at work. As the day goes on, the spiritual encouragement I received from the Lord in the morning becomes further and further away. What is the answer? A second quiet time in the middle of the day can refocus your mind spiritually when you most need it.

Effect of a second quiet time

Work is my “war zone” so to speak. I am among both believers and unbelievers. The temptation to be motivated by wealth or fame or success comes to the forefront of my heart. Fear of man and their opinion of me threatens any boldness I might have to share Christ. It is in the middle of this context that a time with God and in His word refreshes me most deeply.

You don’t just need to start your day with the Lord. You need Him to sustain you wherever you go. Pausing at lunch or for a quick break in the middle of the day gives you that spiritual “boost” you need exactly when you need it. Just like that second cup of coffee allows me to continue to do my work effectively, a second focused time with the Lord can give you the encouragement you need to fight subtle temptations around you and keep your mind fixed on Jesus.

What does a second quiet time at work look like?

1. Pull out your Bible, read it, and think about it

I posted about this last week. Honestly, if you pause for 15 minutes in the middle of your work day, you can read a text for 5 minutes and then let it sit in your mind for the remaining 10. You will be amazed what effects come out of simply stopping at lunch to remind yourself of Jesus, the gospel, and God’s plan for the world. Don’t think a second quiet time needs to be an hour long. Just start with 15 minutes and see what God teaches you.

2. Pause and take 10 minutes (Or more or less) to pray

Sometimes, you won’t get a chance to read and meditate on a Scripture. But I bet during the course of a work day, you walk from one place to another. Why not use that walk to pray to the Lord? Thank Him for the day so far. Ask Him to strengthen you. Remind yourself of His rule over all your affairs. Ask specifically for Christ-honoring responses in the situations you find yourself in. Taking a walk is a great way to give your mind a rest from work, and to give yourself space to pray and re-center yourself on spiritual things.

3. Bring a good Christian book to work to read through

I have a couple books at my desk to pick up and read when I get a chance. Currently, I have one by Piper, one Church history book, a set of Puritan sermons, and a book on manhood. When I get a brief lull from work, I can normally read through a section or a chapter of these books in 15 minutes or so. Choose books that have small, consumable chapters and you have yourself a perfect, bite-sized bit of theology to keep you sustained. Give yourself as many avenues to get to spiritual things as possible. Good Christian books at your desk are great tools to give yourself a second time with the Lord in your workday.

4. Take a walk with another believer and talk about the Lord

I already mentioned walking and praying, but another very sweet and wonderful way to remind yourself of Christ in the middle of your day is to simply take a walk with another believer. I have written before about the amazing potential every interaction with a fellow Christian has. So why not schedule a time to meet up with a Christian in your office? Ask them how their quiet time went, what they are reading, what the Lord is teaching them. Share Scripture. Talk about a Sunday sermon. Simply talking with another Christian can get your mind back on “things above”.

Conclusion: take as many quiet times as you need

On long, tired days, I might have many cups of coffee to get me through. In a similar way, getting through the day spiritually almost certainly will take more than one quiet time. Jesus called Himself the bread of life, living water, the vine in which we abide. In other words, you and I need to stay connected with our savior. Daily. Hourly. Moment by moment.

I highly recommend scheduling a second time in the day to seek the Lord in Scripture and in prayer. If you are like me and brew a couple cups of coffee a day, take some time while drinking that afternoon coffee to read the Bible. Or pray. Read a good book. Find a believer to chat with. You and I need more time with the Lord, not less. I’ll let Paul close this post:

Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.

Romans 12:2 ESV

An easy way to keep your mind renewed and separate from the world at work is to set aside a second quiet time.

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