Showing posts with label Matt Chandler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Matt Chandler. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Pride Popper

As I’m fond of doing, I was listening to Matt Chandler’s sermon yesterday morning before work.  He’s started a series out of Habakkuk, and I’ve been so looking forward to it.  
So, while not what the sermon was about, Chandler said something during his sermon that really struck me.  He was talking about King Josiah.  King Josiah, King of Judah, led a revival in Judah the likes of which had never been seen.  He restored worship in the temple, and hunted down idolatry throughout Judah.  Then, mysteriously, he went out to battle against Pharaoh  Necho, and was killed in battle.  You can read this story in 2 Kings Chapter 23.
Chandler’s point was this:  When you read Josiah’s story, it should strike you that his death and burial took one verse.  In the next verse, the story continues with King Jehoahaz.  
Literally, Josiah died in one verse, and then the story went on.  This was the great revivalist of Judah, the man who restored worship to the temple and was instrumental in turning the people’s hearts back to God.  
And with that much fanfare, his story ended.  but God’s story went on.  
While Josiah might live eternally in scripture and in history, it’s very probable that we won’t.  Many of God’s people who have done tremendous work haven’t, and there’s no reason for us to believe that we will either.
So many young people I know believe that leadership and godly work are going to somehow secure them a place in history.  They want to make a mark, and are using leadership and works to make that mark.  Rather than wanted to be servants, they want leadership to serve them.  I wish this kind of pride didn’t exist in us, but it does.  
Josiah’s story is a good reminder that even the godliest men and women die, are buried, and then the story goes on.  So it will be with us.  At best, we have very small parts in God’s very large story.  Whenever we can remind ourselves of that, I think we should.  It gives us proper perspective.
Training Tomorrow’s Leaders Today,
Matt  

Friday, May 21, 2010

Educated Above Our Obedience

One of my favorite preachers is Matt Chandler, and one of my favorite sayings of his is that we are “educated above our level of obedience.”


Let me ask you a question. When it comes to your leadership students, how are you measuring forward progress? Are you looking at how much information they can regurgitate? Are you looking at how into their spiritual disciplines they are?

Many of us fall into the trap of believing that the more education our students get the better off they are spiritually. Nothing could be further from the truth. In today’s culture, our students are absolutely inundated with information. They can check out any book on any Christian topic that their brains could ever conceive of; and they can do it all with the click of a couple of buttons. This blog is a testament to how much education anyone can have access to in today’s world.

Education does not necessarily translate into life change though, as many of you are well aware. For our responsibilities to be filled, we need to provide students with the opportunity to put the lessons we teach into action, and encourage them to continue to behave in a manner that is in keeping with Christ’s Character and Leadership.

I think of Ephesians 5 as Paul is exhorting the Ephesian Church to behave in a manner worthy of God. It isn’t just a matter of hearing the truth, or learning the truth. It’s a matter of doing the truth. Be a “doer of the word, and not a hearer only,” as James says.

If you are measuring the success of your leadership development ministry in terms of ideas imparted, then please reconsider. If you aren’t giving your students the opportunity to put their knowledge and conviction to action, then please reconsider.

Our success in training young leaders is contingent not on how they turn out, but on what and how we taught them. In other words, while we may not be responsible for them, we are certainly responsible to them. Help them to be as obedient as they are educated.

Training Tomorrow’s Leaders Today,

Matt