I got a little answer from the Lord today to a major question that’s been on my heart a while. He’s so faithful to get through to us with some new viewpoint or insight on what’s been a personal dilemma. For me, it’s been about how much I should be involved in what many could consider just worldly, secular politics.
Politics is the background I come from. I was planning for a political career before the Lord really “rang my bell” with a horrific near-death experience while I was in university that thrust me from atheism into being a startled believer. Months later I came to Christ and became after that a missionary abroad for close to 40 years.
I embraced the words of Jesus that He spoke to His disciples and took those to be His words to me. His cause became my cause, His solution to the problems of individuals and the world at large became what I’ve held to be the highest and best path for all mankind.
But for a couple of years, I’ve been deeply concerned about situations happening in my local community. I wrote about that in a recent article, “Checking your local school board”.
All the while though, there’s been this gnawing question on my heart, “Are you getting tripped off? Moving from your calling as a Christian missionary and disciple back into your former ways and mindsets?” It’s been a real question on my heart as I try to be certain that I’m following the Lord’s leading and not my own personal inclinations.
Today though, I feel I’ve had a breakthrough with this uncertainty. So often with these things, it’s just a simple thought that comes to you, a new viewpoint that you’d not had before that brings light and simplicity as well as clarity and relief. The Lord put this whole question about involvement with the local school crisis into a framework of what some have called “consider the poor”. This comes from the verse in Psalm 41:1 that says, “Blessed is he that considers the poor, the Lord will deliver him in the time of trouble.”
The whole Bible is full of this, as was the life of Jesus on earth. He said for us not only to love God but to love our neighbor. To explain, He told the story of “The Good Samaritan”. The Samaritan stopped on his way to help a man who’d been beaten by robbers. According to Jesus, several very religious priestly types had already passed by before but they’d done nothing for the beaten man. In other words, taking personal, physical action to alleviate the wrongs we are confronted with in this world is definitely what Jesus did Himself and what He taught in the gospels as well.
And this morning the Lord brought back to me a time when I was in my early 30’s, a missionary in Vienna, Austria with my wife and kids, trying to reach the nearby closed-to-the-gospel countries of Communist eastern Europe. We’d taken some clothes and food to a nearby camp for Romanian refugees who were in very meager circumstances. It was a way to get to know them, to try to help and to try to bring the gospel message to those folks.
But it created a stir among some of our missionary friends who thought we were going down a strange path, getting off into social work and humanitarianism, rather than really sticking to evangelism. Then, back then, someone shared some wise council with us on this subject. It went something like this, “Feed the poor and cloth the needy if it gives you an opportunity to share the truth and love of God with them. But don’t let feeding the poor become your main occupation. Continue to primarily follow the example of the Early Church in putting salvation and ministering the Word first.”
This was such a help at that time to clarify the place and priority of this kind of activity. And it was a very similar feeling I had in the Lord’s thoughts this morning. I came away with the feeling that the Lord approved of my concern for the situation in the schools near me. It doesn’t have to be a trip-off or a departure from Christian discipleship to be involved and active in that.
But at the same time, there’s the gentle guidance that it shouldn’t become my all in all. And I do approach it as an activity that the Lord is leading me to be involved with, rather than as a political activist of some political party.
And meanwhile I still have plenty of other things that the Lord has done in my life, such as the two web sites and the YouTube channel in many languages that I’ve been maintaining for the last few years.
It just helps to know that I’ve gotten a word from the Lord on this, some direction and guidance on how a measured approach to these present distresses in society around me are things that He approves my taking some time and involvement with.
Maybe it’s like what Jesus said, “These ought you to do, and not leave the other undone.” (Matthew 23:23) I feel freer to go forward with these things but to also keep it all in perspective within the overall plan of God in my life. I hope it’s ok to share this personal lesson and victory with you as we all individually keep looking to the Lord for His daily leading in our lives. God bless you!
God bless you Mark. Sounds a lot like the work and evangelisation we’ve done here in Mozambique
I agree with you Mark, %1,000! I too, in times past, have been called down & criticized for my involvement with proactive causes including serving as an advocate against sex & human trafficking here in Texas. Also working with a non profit pro life organization. There are others, but suffice it say, I’ll leave it at that. Those issues have been resolved & all is well now, thank the Lord.
Thanks Mark. This is a right-on message and was a blessing to hear. Knowing where the world is heading sometimes made me wonder “who am I?” and “What can I do to change things?” But with my future goal to work in mental healthcare, I know that unless the heart is changed it’s not possible to change the man. I have been through my share of mental illness and the therapy that comes with it. I have seen therapists who do not bring the Lord into it and the ones who did and the ones who did helped me find the changes in my life that I needed. I often thought to myself about those who did not include the Lord in therapy. “How do they think they can change a person’s mind without changing the heart and that can only be done genuinely with the Lord?” What you wrote gives us a lot of room to pursue God-given passions for helping others, “The Poor”, physically or mentally, but just having a Godly balance in it.
Well said Mark!
I love that old chorus, “Brighten the corner where you are…” It’s good to see you being active in the area that the Lord has lain upon your heart. God knows it’s desperately needed! You certainly came up with the right answer! Do it but put the Word first. I know you have done that for many years in ways most people don’t realize! Thank you for being active!!
Great answer from the Lord, and great interpretation — I believe we all have those questions, some time or another. Also knowing that even us being involved in some kind of social work, if He is not in it, it is in vain. Or if our motivations are not clean (and they can become twisted! ), it is all in vain. I have been asking myself the same….about false religions, creeping all around us, trying to divide “the elect|”. How much, Lord , should I try to open the eyes of those(even our brothers and sisters!) who don’t see that You are the way, the truth and the life?
But it is easy: seek first the kingdom….He will take care of the rest. ( A good quote from Nietzsche about getting involved in politics, or fighting evil in society, or false beliefs: “Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster. And if you gaze long enough into an abyss, the abyss will gaze back into you.”) Looking up to Him — He has all the answers! — Thank you, Mark!
Amen, thanks for your comment.