Listen to the average sermon in the average
church building on a Sunday, and it’s almost inevitable that you’ll come away
believing that the most important thing about your relationship to God is your
spiritual service. Service is the battle cry of legalistic religion. Many
people believe it’s the very reason why they were brought to faith in Jesus
Christ. The motto “saved to serve” has found a nesting place in too many places
in the modern church world.
This erroneous idea is shared among all
religions, even among the most primitive pagans. People who practiced ancient
pagan religions often went to great lengths to appease their gods. After all,
angry gods might do really bad things. Their focus was all about placating
their gods by giving them sacrifices. To keep people in line, people told
stories about the gods getting angry and hurling bolts of divine judgment on
those who dared to neglect doing what was expected. Angry gods might hit you
with a plague, earthquake, or famine if you’re not careful.
This is the pathetic reality: In the modern
days, with a complete Bible telling us the truth of the matter, there are many
who still hold that pagan viewpoint. They really think that if they don’t live
up to the demands they imagine that God places on them, something terrible may
happen to them. As a result, their lot in life becomes trying to stay on God’s
good side by doing what He expects.
Some would argue, “I don’t serve God
because I’m afraid of Him. I do it because it’s my responsibility toward Him.”
That view is related to the same fear motivation I’ve described. To think that
God is interested in what we do for Him is bizarre in light of what the Bible
actually teaches.
There is a fundamental error embedded in
this kind of thinking. It’s the idea that God needs anything you or I have to
give. We’re talking about an Almighty God here! What could He possibly need us
to do?
Just like today, Christian history is full
of stories of believers who desperately worked to serve God. There’s no
doubting their sincerity or effort. But there is a serious problem with
someone’s conception of God when He is seen as an employer or master whose
interest in us is based on what we have to offer to the relationship.
The Truth Is So Much Better!
Your greatest responsibility has nothing to
do with serving God. In fact, when Paul addressed the pagans on Mars Hill,
here’s what he had to say about the notion that our God needs something from
us.
The God who made the world and all things
in it, since He is Lord of heaven and earth, does not dwell in temples made
with hands; nor is He served by human hands, as though He needed anything,
since He Himself gives to all people, life and breath and all things (Acts
17:24-25).
God is a Giver. He is utterly
self-sufficient, the only Being who truly needs nothing. He doesn’t need man to
do things for Him. One time He explained it like this: “If I were hungry I
would not tell you, for the world is Mine, and all it contains” (Psalm 50:12).
That statement almost sounds like a sort of divine humor. Imagine God saying,
“If I wanted something to eat, I wouldn’t bother mentioning it to you because
you couldn’t do a single thing about it!”
Clarify Your Thinking.
This reality is a bad news/good news
proposition. The bad news is that God doesn’t need you. Sorry, but there’s
nothing you have that He needs. What could we possibly think God needs us to do
to serve Him? He’s the One who spoke the world into existence. If we think God
needs us, we either greatly overestimate our own value and contribution or else
greatly underestimate His ability to do what needs to be done.
I said it’s a bad news/good news
proposition. Here’s the good news: God wants you! He isn’t looking for a maid,
but He does want a bride— and that means you.
Does service not fit into the picture at
all? Of course it does, but we serve from an overflow of the love we have for
Him. Love makes us want to do the things that honor Him.
It isn’t a drudgery or duty to serve our
God. It’s all about love. His love for us moves us to love Him right back, and
that shared love becomes the catalyst for our service. “We love, because He
first loved us” (1 John 4:19), says the Bible. So the greatest thing isn’t
serving God. It’s knowing how much He loves us. When we know that, we will
discover a passion to serve Him rising up within us. It’s a passion that comes
from our love for Him. When you are serving God as an overflow of His love
poured out in your heart, serving becomes the exact opposite of a job. It is a
joy!
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