.
Steps of
Faith: Sowing Seeds of Good News
..
by Mark Jordan
Back in 2007 when I was serving as director for
Koinonia, one of our Kairos evangelistic
outreaches for university students, I had an
opportunity to speak with a guy who was
beginning a period of missionary work with a
local church in London. He was 23 and eager to
begin his work with students.
Learning perseverance
We talked mostly of the need for perseverance in
this work. The need for pressing through
challenge and discouragement. We also chatted
some about the rewards of doing this kind of
evangelistic work. It got me thinking afterwards
about some of the lessons, blessings and
frustrations of doing university outreach work
in London.
One of the main reasons that at times I became
discouraged in this work is because I didn't see
the things happen that I wanted to see happen.
This would be discouraging in any line of work,
but in a spiritual work it should have quite a
different perspective on it. A perspective that
slowly becomes a way of living. Continually,
I've called to mind the fact that God is
sovereign. If I believe that he does have a plan
(and I do), then this brings tremendous freedom
in the knowledge that his purposes will be
worked out. This in turn helped me grow in
learning to rely on God working out his
purposes.
Seeing with God's perspective
Sometimes I've clearly seen God's purposes.
Sometimes I've seen when my purposes and the
Lord's don't quite match up. Sometimes I simply
don't understand the purposes of the Lord. I was
struck by the story of Uzzah in the Old
Testament, the man who touched the Ark of the
Covenant when the oxen carrying it stumbled and
was struck down by the Lord for his action. In
the story David cannot understand why this
happened. "And David was afraid of the LORD
that day; and he said, "How can the ark
of the LORD come to me?"(2 Samuel
6:9)
For David this incident did not make sense.
That's partly because he didn't see the full
picture; he couldn't understand or see what God
was about. In his limited sight it seemed such a
waste. That's because in this situation he
lacked spiritual vision to see what God was
doing. Over the last few years, I've grown in
understanding that life and service of the Lord
is fundamentally a spiritual work. Since we
cannot see and understand all the realities
going on around us by ourselves, we need firstly
to be spiritual people - who know the mind and
heart of God and who can see with eyes of faith.
Pressing close to God
Service in God's kingdom, whatever form it
takes, should always press us closer to God, and
help us to become more effective in pray and
fasting for God's will to be accomplished.
This in turn helps me to grow in detachment and
freedom to do what I think God really wants me
to do (rather than what I might think is the
best plan for success).
At the same time however, its natural to be
encouraged when we see people make steps towards
the Lord. Indeed being able to rejoice when I
get to be part of someone's spiritual journey
towards the Lord is important. I remember one
occasion when I was talking with a student who
became a Christian - in large part through our
work in Koinonia.
After I finished the conversation and recognized
how much this person had changed, I just sat
there and thanked God for bringing this person
to a new life of faith. What a privilege.
Taking small steps
If there was one phrase that could have been my
battle cry in evangelistic work it would have to
be "small steps". Hardly inspiring I know, but I
think it does show something of the progression
that individuals make towards the Lord and our
part in helping them make these small steps.
On another occasion I got to know a first-year
English student who came to our Koinonia
coffee stall at the beginning of the academic
year. Every week or so we would see one another,
each time being another small step in talking
about the Lord. He said to me one week that he
thought he really should try and go along to a
local church. I agreed. For him there was
something beginning to move as he started to
become open to re-exploring the Christian faith.
Small steps.
I started playing cards with a first-year
student I met at the university. For a while we
mostly talked about sports. He made a good
connection with Koinonia and got
to know other Christian students and staff
workers. By the second school-year term, he was
ready to talk more openly about faith and
Christianity and what it meant to have a
personal relationship with Jesus Christ. Another
small step of faith.
Another student I met that year came to one of
our social events in Koinonia. He enjoyed the
contact with Christians and continued to come to
some of our weekly meetings. He not only enjoyed
the social contact and discussions about faith,
but he also decided to start attending church
with some of the men. It's obvious to me that
God personally calls these individuals to
himself. And I also recognize that God chooses
to work through people, like myself even, to
help others grow in faith. What a
privilege to be a part of God's work of drawing
others to himself!
Our reward is in God and not in
results
One of the things that God revealed
to me early in my time in London was through a
passage in Isaiah. It was a call to "Strengthen
the weak hands, and make firm the feeble
knees." I think it really describes one of
the main things that we are about in Kairos
outreach to students. We're helping people who
may have some faith or no faith at all, to draw
closer to the Lord and to remain steady in their
faith in the face of difficulties and
temptation. London allures and calls. We help
students to choose for life -- the fullness of
life that can only be found in Jesus Christ.
It was a tremendous privilege for me to see the
Lord's hand in the lives of these young men as
they grew in faith. But I've had a deepening
realisation that in this work that cannot be my
reward. If my reward is only seeing the results
of God's action in people's lives, I will often
be disappointed because I won't always see or
recognize what God is doing. I often will not
get to see situations change, or see those that
I pray for and encourage respond to the Gospel.
Sow seeds widely
We sow seeds of faith widely. It is only God who
can bring faith alive in others. At the
beginning of my work in London someone said to
me that in this work my reward would have to be
in Christ alone. I accepted that as true, but
it's a truth that has gradually sunk deeper into
how I think and how I act.
It brought a certain freedom as I began to
appreciate it more and more. That was what I
said to the guy who was starting mission work in
London. "Let your one reward in this line of
work be in plumbing the depths of your
relationship with God. If you can do that, if
you can use this work to push you ever closer
towards the Lord, then you'll survive and maybe
even thrive at this stuff."
[Mark Jordan is the Mission
Training Director for Kairos
Europe
and the Middle East. He and his wife
Rachel have two children and live in
Belfast, Northern Ireland.] |