Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Drop Anchor and Fish

When you speak to a person about their ministry and their conversation is punctuated with quotes and references from people who are not in your city, not ministering in your context, not at your church and among your people, and most importantly, not you, then you know you have a problem.

While principles of ministry are useful, ministry is done in context. And at the end of the day, a pastor has to prayerfully decide what ministry will look like for them and then drop anchor and fish. Otherwise, valuable time will be lost puttering all over the lake looking for the best place to fish. And the truth is God blesses faithfulness and commitment more than he blesses the latest strategy.

I've always said that a quality in successful ministry is “sticktoitiveness.” Obviously, there’s a squiggly red line under that word in your editor, but I think you get the meaning. Choose the best ministry paradigm given the context you are in and then stick to it. Success is built over time, not overnight.

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