Author: Ajith Fernando
Date: 29.09.2010
Location: Colombo | Sri Lanka
Category: Social Justice
I felt humbled as I returned from teaching pastors in the deep south of Sri Lanka. In these pastors’ experience, it often takes ten to fifteen years pioneering in unreached areas before they see significant fruit and reduced hostility. Many give up after a few years. But those who persevere bear much eternal fruit.
When I return from ministry in the West my feelings are very different. I have been able to ’use my gifts’; I am hit by frustration when I return to being a leader in our less efficient culture.
As a leader I am the bond-slave of the people I lead (2 Corinthians 4:5). My schedule is influenced more by their needs than mine. Vocational fulfilment in the kingdom of God is quite different to that in society. Jesus said, ’My food is to do the will of him who sent me and to accomplish his work’ (John 4:34). If we are doing God’s will we are fulfilled. But for Jesus, and for us, that includes a cross. The cross must be an essential element in our definition of vocational fulfilment.
Young Christian workers who return to Sri Lanka after studying in the West struggle with this. They cannot use their qualifications fully because we cannot afford pure specialists. Some leave the country after a few years. Some start their own organizations so that they can fulfil their ’vision.’ Others pay the price of identifying with our people and ultimately have a deep impact on the nation.
I try to tell them that their frustration could be the means of developing penetrative insight. John Calvin and Martin Luther had so many responsibilities, that they could only use their gifts through tiredness: yet the fruit of their labours still blesses the church.
Frustration
Paul gave an important place to the need to endure frustration patiently, groaning with creation as we await its redemption (Romans 8:18-25). Not including this in our understanding of vocational fulfilment today leads to a shallow church, failing to challenge the world’s standards of success and fulfilment.
The contemporary emphasis on efficiency and measurable results makes frustration even harder to endure. Industrial and technological development in the West mean that things once considered luxuries are now thought of as necessities and rights, even by Christians. In this environment the Christian’s idea of commitment has taken a heavy battering.
We call our churches and Christian organizations families, but families are very inefficient organizations, stopping everything to meet a member’s need. We are often not willing to extend this commitment to Christian body life.
Commitment
The biblical model of community life is Jesus’ command to love one another as he loved us—that is, for members to die for other members (John 15:12-13). The model of Christian leadership is that of the Good Shepherd dying for the sheep (John 10:11-15). We don’t discard people when they have problems and cannot do their job properly. We serve them and help them to come out of their problems. We don’t tell people to find another place of service when they rebel against us. We labour with them until we come to agreement either to agree or to disagree.
When people leave a church because they did not fit into the program, we communicate a deadly message: that our commitment is to the work one does and not to the person in Christ. The sad result of this is that Christians do not have the security of belonging to a community that will stay by them no matter what happens to them. They become shallow individuals moving from group to group. Churches can fulfil programs and grow numerically in this way, but they don’t nurture biblical Christians who understand the implications of belonging to the body of Christ.
Sticking with people is frustrating because it is i
nefficient. Why should we waste hours listening to an angry or hurt friend when there are professional counsellors who can do it? Ideally the counsellor helps to diagnose and treat difficult cases, and friends give the time that is needed to bring healing through acceptance, comfort and friendship. Hurt and angry people to whom we are committed will hurt us too as we try to help them. Others who are hurt by them could get angry with us because we are committed to them. But we endure that pain because Christ called us to die for our friends.
Several people have sympathized with me, that it must be hard and frustrating to serve in a country wracked by war and hostile to evangelism. Indeed we have suffered because of this. A few months ago one of our staff workers was brutally assaulted to death. But I think the biggest pain I have experienced, I have received from Youth for Christ, the organization for which I have worked 34 years. I can also say that next to Jesus and my family, Youth for Christ has been the greatest source of joy in my life. Wherever you live, you will suffer pain if you are committed to people. This is suffering that can be avoided by stopping the relationship or moving to something more ’fulfilling.’ But then what do we lose?
Some years ago I was preparing a message on commitment while I was travelling in the West. Within a few days three people told me how they or someone close to them had left a group or a person because of problems they were having: an unhappy marriage, a church, an organization. Each described it as a merciful release from suffering. But I could not help asking myself whether, in each of these cases, the Christian thing to do was to stay and suffer.
Drivenness or Servanthood
I write to my prayer supporters, sometimes about my need to overcome tiredness. Many respond saying they are praying that God would strengthen me and guide me in my scheduling. However, there are differences in the way friends from East and West respond. I get the impression that many in the West think when one is tired from overwork, that is evidence of disobedience to God. My contention is, that it is wrong if one gets sick through drivenness and insecurity. But we may have to pay the price of tiredness when we, like Paul, are servants of people.
The New Testament is clear that those who work for Christ will suffer because of their work. Tiredness, stress and strain aren’t excluded. Paul often spoke about the physical hardships his ministry brought him. This included emotional strain (Galatians 4:19; 2 Corinthians 11:28), anger (2 Corinthians 11:29), sleepless nights, hunger (2 Corinthians 6:5), affliction, perplexity (2 Corinthians 4:8) and working to the point of weariness (Colossians 1:29). Radically counter-cultural in today’s ’body culture’ society, he said: ’Though our outer self is wasting away, our inner self is being renewed day by day’ (2 Corinthians 4:16); and ’For we who live are always being given over to death for Jesus’ sake, so that the life of Jesus also may be manifested in our mortal flesh. So death is at work in us, but life in you’ (2 Corinthians 4:11-12). I fear that many Christians analyse these texts without seriously asking how they should apply in their lives today.
The West, having struggled with the tyrannical rule of time, has a lot to teach the East about the need for rest. The East can teach the West about embracing physical problems that come because of commitment to people. Suffering is an inevitable step along the path to fruitfulness and fulfilment. As the cross is a basic aspect of discipleship, the Church must train Christian leaders to expect pain and hardship. When this perspective enters our minds, then pain will not touch our joy and contentment in Christ. I found eighteen different places in the New Testament where suffering and joy appear together. In fact, often suffering is a cause for joy (Romans 5:3-5; Colossians 1:24; James 1:2-3).
The Glory of the Gospel
In a world whose idols are physical health, appearance and convenience, God may be calling Christians to demonstrate the glory of the gospel by being joyfully contented while enduring pain and hardship. People pursuing unsatisfying things may be astonished when they see Christians who are joyful and content after depriving themselves of these, for the sake of the gospel.
I have a great fear for the Church. The West is fast becoming an unreached region. The Bible and history show that suffering is an essential ingredient in reaching unreached people. As the Church in the West has lost a theology of suffering, will it be ineffective in its evangelism? God’s servants in the church in the East are suffering because the church is growing. The West influences the East with significant funding and education. Could Westerners influence Eastern Christians to abandon the cross by giving the impression that there is something wrong with such suffering? Christians throughout the world need a firm theology of suffering if they are to be healthy and fruit-bearing.
Ajith Fernando has been National Director of Youth for Christ in Sri Lanka since 1976. With his wife Nelun, he also serves in a church in Colombo consisting mainly of poor, urban first generation Christians. He is the author of The Call to Joy and Pain (Crossway / IVP UK) and An Authentic Servant (Didasko Files).
Copyright © 2010 Christianity Today / The Lausanne Movement
Keywords: Christianity Today, suffering, leadership, service, Sri Lanka, endurance, success, shallowness, efficiency, frustration, commitment, love, learning, contentment, East and West
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Conversation Post Comment
United States
We must understand that as God told Moses, the battle is not his its the Lords. we must understand that when God is Lord in our lives, we are no longer of our own. As we embrace the struggles and hardships in ministry, we are to be like that ford truck comercial "we are built to take some things. We know that God is in control, as we are suffering to do Gods will, when obsticals come our way. Moses was also told to stand still and wait on the salvation of the Lord. This is encouraging us God is moving in and on our behalf, standing means we continue to work and do, howevwer Gods salvation, his deliverence is on the way. This is how we endure suffereing in the mist of serving.
18.07.2011
Ireland
Thank you brother Ajith for your messages.
I was blessed by your teaching recently in N. Ireland.
May God bless you all in Cape Town as you seek His face.
Here’s a link to my blog page where I saved some of your previous messages:
http://seasoulfood.blogspot.com/2010/08/confident-in-christ-messages-by-ajith.html
18.10.2010
Ireland
@ seasoulfood:
Messages by Ajith Fernando and others on the Uniqueness of Christ here on my blog page for you:
http://seasoulfood.blogspot.com/2010/08/confident-in-christ-messages-by-ajith.html
18.10.2010
Canada
Excellent article - I think, all too often, we forget about the offense of the cross. You can’t be on the front lines without taking a few bullets now and again. And if the bullets stop flying, you’re probably no longer in the thick of the action. And if you serve the only true and living God, where else would you want to be? Satan will stop attacking when he no longer perceives you as a threat. Just don’t, ever, try to do this on your own steam. Let it be through Christ who strengthens us. In all these things we are more than conquerors.
02.10.2010
Senegal
Thank you very much both Ajith Fernando and Thomas Schirrmacher. You both bring out the importance to trust God and follow Him only and not our own ideas. Even culture in the West or East need to be reshaped by a Biblical worldview and its values.
One question I am often challenged by is: Who is the master and who is the servant? Who then determines my use of time and resources? The answer to the first should make the second clear and lead me to more consciousness of what God wants from me at any given time and context. I have to trust HIM when I have abundance and when I am in need. there is no way around it.
In missions we want to help people get connected with God through Jesus and not (just) help them to have a better life now (granted we want to help holistically of course). We want people to grow into maturity to trust the Creator no matter what... It is only when people have this love relationship with Jesus that these other things around them don’t matter any more. Then following Jesus at any cost will be done and neither threats nor seduction will bring them to fall.
I realize we need constantly to guard ourselves against these attacks and daily recommit ourselves to our Lord and Saviour. Blessings, Stefan
29.09.2010
Argentina
Muchas gracias Fernando por tu presentación y es muy desafiante. Leyendo especialmente tus dos primeras páginas de la presentación observo que es un tema complejo, como una gran abanico con muchos colores, variantes, problemáticas diversas, muchas posibilidades donde se hace difícil dar una respuesta general o única. Quizás es para observar y ayudar en cada caso particular. Recuerdo el episodio del templo y la higuera en Marcos 11. La respuesta de Jesús es Tengan fe en Dios. Les dice: “Les aseguro que si alguno le dice a este monte: “Quítate de ahí y tírate al mar”, creyendo, sin abrigar la menor duda de lo que dice sucederá, lo obtendrá. Por eso les digo: Crean que ya han recibido todo lo que estén pidiendo en oración y lo obtendrán”. Un desafío que significa quitar grandes dificultades. Implicaba que desaparezca un sistema de valores que no da libertad al hombre. Lamentablemente muchas veces los problemas se centran en la esterilidad de la higuera, la falta de fruto, la estructura excluyente del templo o institución. El antídoto será la Fe, pedir por medio de la oración, apelar a su poder que incluye el amor a los enemigos y perdonar a otros. Hay una invitación a la oración para que se quiten los grandes obstáculos. Paralelamente debemos recordar las palabras finales del Señor Jesús que forma parte de su condición para tener respuesta a las oraciones: “Y cuando estén orando, si tienen algo contra alguien, perdónenlo, para que también su Padre que está en el cielo les perdone a ustedes sus pecados” Mr. 11:25. Ver también: · Superando Obstáculos , · ¿Entienden lo que he hecho con ustedes? , · ¿Cuál es tu verdadera necesidad? , · ¿Recibir o Excluir...? , · El Modelo del Niño , · ¿Y todavía no entienden? , Iberoamerican Church and the Missions Movement , · ¿Los pobres para el templo o el templo para...?
Muchas gracias por la reflexión final, las preguntas que nos ayudan a repensar la tarea, por la perspectiva del sufrimiento que nos enriquece, la cruz, el compromiso, el servicio sacrificial, el balance que necesitamos y ser cristianos incondicionales a Jesucristo centrados en hacer su voluntad. Muchas gracias por compartirnos tu corazón y enseñanza. Un fuerte abrazo.
29.09.2010
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