“It’s love with a hook. ‘If you do what we want, we reward you. If not, we punish you.’ It doesn’t turn out to be about love at all. We give our affection only to those who serve our interests and withhold it from those who do not.”
- John from “So you don’t want to go to church anymore.” – Wayne Jacobsen & Dave Coleman
Imagine an average looking man standing in the front of an average looking small hall. People come and shake his hand and pat him on the back. They smile as they do so, and they move along. As they come and go, one nods, smiles, shakes his hand, and wraps a rope around his wrist. Another comes and ties it in a knot, smiling and patting him on his back. The average looking man smiles and nods with only a small hint of concern on his face. Another comes with a chain and puts it on his ankle. As they come, you begin to notice that they are bound also. Some are roped to each other, some just dragging chains like Marley from “A Christmas Carol”. Slowly the man has these different hooks attached, and finally an old and wise looking fellow attaches a leash to one of the many different pieces hanging from this man. Now the average looking man seems surprised. In fact, he objects. Very calmly the white haired elderly man waves his hand gently with a gentle grin and motions for him to not worry about it. This is how it is supposed to be. This is how it always is. As he walks away from the front of the hall, he gives the leash a tug. It holds, he drops the end, and moves on. Soon lots of different people are tugging at the leash, this way and that way. Sometimes it pulls the average looking man. Sometimes it just goes taught and then slackens. He is now attached to another person, that person being attached to another. All cordial, patting each other on their backs. This is how it is, this is how it goes. It’s about spiritual authority. God is, after all, a God who distributes authority. Some people have it, some people don’t… you can’t have leaders without followers. So this is how it should be. This is the Church.
I imagine in the spiritual that the posturing and flexing that goes on in the Church looks more like a calf roping in a rodeo than an actual exercise of God given spiritual authority. In fact, no matter who claims the responsibility of leadership, God has made it clear how to discern those to whom God has given it. John 11:4, among other scriptures, describes God’s way of granting authority. It is demonstrated over and over in not only the life of Christ, but the life of His disciples. When the words of a human first matches their actions, and then, most importantly, creation itself bends to testify to that person’s mission. It is then hard to deny that they have authority. Authority that is more than words, fame, or fashion. It’s supernatural, and perhaps, God given, authority. Jesus demonstrated that this comes only when we do what God tells us to do. He also warned that many will come and demonstrate all these characteristics and not be from God.
I’ve got news for the self-help authors, leadership “trainers”, and any other new packages for a very old problem. You can market your wares however you’d like. You can position yourself at whatever table, in whatever spotlight, or whatever economic position available to you. You can know all the right people and be invited to Presidential palaces for tea. None of that will coerce heaven into accepting you, more less promoting you. Even the prayer of Jabez will turn up futile.
The fact of the matter is put most succinctly here:
“Whoever can be trusted with very little can also be trusted with much, and whoever is dishonest with very little will also be dishonest with much.” – John 16:10
It seems obvious, but perhaps worth saying, that the type of ambition that leads to the trustworthiness described above is not the type that leads one man to lasso another and march them around like livestock. In fact it is a type of ambition that would not likely find itself in the spotlight at all. At a crucial moment God is certainly able to promote David to King, but when Saul becomes King, or even David for that matter, their character is at terrible risk. God won’t likely do that disservice to more folks than necessary. The rest of them are what we in the states call “glory hounds”. They will have very little God given authority, but the habit of humans is that their very position will appear to be proof that God put them there. I’m afraid that is not only un-biblical (consider what Satan promised Jesus in the desert) but it is thoroughly fallacious. Lucifer had the same ambitions as many of these “glory hounds” and I’m afraid the Bible is clear, they will receive a similar reward.
So beware of “glory hounds”. If you look in the mirror and see one, repent and humble yourself. Jesus said that John the Baptist was the greatest prophet born. Let’s recite his words instead of Jabez’s. In John 3:30 he says: “He must become greater, I must become less”. Lord please become greater in and through the lives of everyone who reads this, and may we all become less to serve that purpose.
I understand the test.
That can be a great deception when we fail to discern the truly God ordained. In Matt 24:24 Jesus teaches us that the elect (true believers) are less prone to being deceived. That’s how I read “if possible.” In other places He points out that His sheep know His voice. So the signs are frankly a distraction and judging based on positive signs alone is unwise. However, when people fail in their proclamations that would be somewhat persuasive. In the OT (Jeremiah 28:9) prophets who were wrong were not to be accepted as from God. Deut. 18:22 also warns of this, and Israel would stone those who failed this test. In short, failing the test says a lot more than passing it.
I do agree with you Susan that there are surely folks who have not caved to the 1 Timothy 3:6 warning and become conceited. Somewhere.
I’ve seen much too many instances where the devil is blamed for someones failure to live up to their claims. God’s will trumps the devil’s power, so when elaborate excuses replace the previously promised actions it is much more likely that that person “spoke presumptuously” (Deut 18:22) rather than are under spiritual attack. Though the latter makes a good spin.
So far as “success” is concerned, it really doesn’t prove much. Fame and fortune could just as easily be “blessings from below” as proof positive. Jesus warned of the danger of discerning the work of the Holy Spirit wrongly, but He also warned of the sign and wonder wielding wicked. He seems to be hinting that poor discerning of spirits is a major indicator of a person’s own spiritual state. This is mainly for the man in the mirror, if we need to make excuses for our failures we probably should reexamine our motives. We may just be going the wrong way.
I think Jesus did leave us a hierarchical structure. The greatest is on the bottom, serving the others. Sometimes this is the janitor in the church, sometimes it is the leader. But oftentimes as you say the leader has his influence revoked by the very people who follow him and put him on a pedistal, following him instead of the God he follows. This can cause him to stumble. But if he continues to shift the focus to God, and relies on God to keep him humble, it can be done. Unfortunately, it’s all too rare in current society.
I think these are not true in all of church agree in some church.
that all seems to be pretty sure but what good does it do if evil people can have all of the same signs as good people.