Ministry idolatry is becoming increasingly widespread, reaching
epidemic proportions. It is showcased at network and denominational
gatherings, where the focus and conversation is often not about Jesus,
but about us and what we are accomplishing and achieving. Leaders
discuss the latest poster children for ministry success and their
methods so we can all emulate them, buy their books, and attend their
“how we did it” seminars and conferences.
“Idolatry creep” sneaks up on you because you can easily and quickly
justify it by saying that everything you do is for the Lord, believing
your motives are pure. We recognize this in businessmen who work obscene
hours while insisting they do it all to benefit the family, when in
reality it’s all about them.
Leaders must guard against ministry becoming a mistress. A mistress
is someone who takes the place that only your wife should occupy.
Ministry must never take the place of Jesus himself in your heart and in
your values. As 1 John 5:21
says, “Little children, keep yourselves from idols.” The New Living
Translation says, “Dear children, keep away from anything that might
take God’s place in your hearts.” Our hearts are idol factories, and
ministry, for many leaders, is the king of idols.
Why Do You Want to Lead?
We can start to rely on ministry instead of Jesus to meet deep needs
in our own lives. I am convinced that many people move into leadership
roles because of people needing them or because being in control
satisfies something missing in their own sense of value or worth. I
remember John Maxwell once saying, “If you need people you can lead
people.” One leader told me that the motivation for “his call” to
ministry was the opportunity to resolve the problem of his own
insecurities and feel better about himself. The devil is out to snare
Christian leaders, rendering them “ineffective or unfruitful” (2 Pet.1:8),
and if he can’t achieve his purposes through obvious sin, he will
achieve it by taking something that is admirable and good and turning it
on its ear to cause us to stumble. Continue at Dave Kraft
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