August 28 – Faithful
servant
Matthew 24:45a – "Who
then is the faithful and wise servant.....?"
Matthew
25: 21 – "His master replied, ‘Well done, good and faithful
servant! You have been faithful with a few things; I will put you in
charge of many things. Come and share your master’s happiness!’"
I recently heard a
preacher speak of his time pastoring a small church in western North
Dakota. I don't know the details of why he and his wife went to that
location, nor under what circumstances. The church fellowship had
about 80 people total, consisting of families of ranchers and
farmers. Western North Dakota is quite the rural area. The man
stated that after 8 years of work there, went he went elsewhere to
work, that the congregation was down to 60 people. Of most of the
twenty people that they had lost, the man had performed their
funerals. In the eyes of some, his eight years might have been considered
a failure. However, the man was sure that God had led him to that
locale, and was leading him elsewhere after those eight years. He
believed that he had been faithful in the task that he had been
called to.
I am beginning to learn
that the parables of Jesus are not necessarily analogies of actual
physical events that are yet to take place. An analogy is basically
a description of one concept in order to make another concept clearer
– a parallel thought process, whose subject details can be compared
with each other. On the other hand, some of the parables (such as
those in the scriptures above) are more like allegories – a
representation of an abstract or spiritual meaning through concrete
or material terms.
Both scriptures mentioned
above come from the discourse of Jesus, regarding the return of Jesus
to the earth, and some semblance of eternal judgment, if those two
happen or not to be closely tied together by a short time span. These
two parables, along with the first one in Matthew 25, share the theme
that the "master" has taken a long journey, and is tarrying
longer than expected. He must have a lot of work to do before he can
come home and enjoy the ultimate party/feast/wedding. Since he has
much business to undertake elsewhere, he puts his servants to work
right here in the middle of their everyday lives. There is work to
be done on his property, and with his resources. He expects his
servants to work, and to not be lazy.
The problem is that the
master is taking longer than expected to return. We thought that the
party was going to be soon. We thought that the work would be over
quickly. Since it is not, we get bored, tired, distracted, lazy,
weary. However, the servants who were faithful in continuing the
work, were the ones who were commended and finally received entrance
to the party. Those servants may not have felt joyful in their
day-to-day work, especially if their work did not have a clear goal
in sight, or if the tasks were the same menial drudgery every day.
Galatians 6:9 states,
"Let us not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time,
we will reap a harvest if we do not give up." The key is being
a faithful worker in whatever field God has placed us in. God will
handle the harvest. We servants do not need to be concerned with the
fruitfulness of our tasks, but only with the faithfulness of doing
them. Psalm1 also gives us a picture of this. The man who goes
about his business in a righteous manner (read: living his everyday
life faithfully) will be like a tree planted next to a river, who
can't help but produce fruit. The man does the work; the fruit
happens. He has no "direct" control over the fruit. There
is a cause and effect, but the effect is produced by God, caused by
our faithfulness.
It is so encouraging to
me, that I can leave the results of my work, and my lifestyle, to
God. I don't have to see or understand his big picture; I only have
to be faithful in the small task he gives me. I only have to be
faithful in putting myself in a position that gives me opportunity to
grow. God is the one who causes the fruit. So when you think that
your life has been a failure, quit looking at the apparent lack of
fruitfulness, and keep on being faithful with the resources and
desires that God has given you. We all long to hear those words from
our Master – "Well done, good and faithful servant!"
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