Sunday, May 29, 2016

Prerequisite for ministry

My mother just moved into our home 3 weeks ago.  In fact, I haven’t written much since March because I’ve been helping my husband paint.  He’s been building a second story onto our home and I finally had a job I could help with . . . so how could I pass up the opportunity?

But back to my mother.  8 years ago, when my husband and I moved back to my home town, the Lord laid my mother on our hearts.  We bought a home that she could move into, should we add the needed extra space.  She plays the piano, and has a lot of stuff.  Now she happily lives with us and has quite a lot of room in which to enjoy her independence.

If my mother would have moved in when we originally bought our home, she would have had more independence to enjoy.  8 years ago she drove, walked, and did everything for herself.  Now she has no balance, uses a walker, and even with people in the same room, falls over.  She cracked 3 ribs on the second day she after she moved in.

Are you thinking “what a nightmare”?  Many would not think this to be God’s calling for anyone.  Yet the Lord cares deeply for the elderly, and wants very much for us to care for our parents. Though Jesus asks us to forsake our families, from the cross He asked John to care for his mother as if she were John’s own.

“When Jesus saw his mother there, and the disciple whom He loved standing nearby, He said to His mother, ‘Dear woman, here is your son,’ and to the disciple, ‘Here is your mother.’ From that time on, this disciple took her into his home.” (Jn 19:26-27).

Jesus meant for us to place service to God in its rightful place, not being hindered by tradition or obligations.  But He did not say to turn our backs on our parents when they need us.  Yet some think they should bury their old parents’ needs in order to serve the Lord.

Old women seem to be the bane of churches, in some people’s eyes.  Perhaps they seem too needy.  In the New Testament, some of the believers neglected the widows, not even giving them their food.  If the Apostles had thought these widows to be too needy, would they have begun a ministry towards them?  The 12 not only began a ministry for the distribution of food to widows, but set the standard of ministers high.  The 7 men chosen for this ministry needed to be “full of the Spirit and Wisdom.” (Acts 6:4).  The Apostles even laid hands on them.  I think this was a ministry that was important to the leaders of the Church.

We can follow 2 of the 7 men chosen to minister to widows in Acts; Stephen and Phillip.  Lest we think that tending to widows or old people is a dead-end street as far as ministry goes, when reading about these 2 men we see that perhaps their care of the elderly was God’s prerequisite for their ministry.  Stephen was a mighty speaker of the Gospel of Christ, and the Church’s 1st martyr (see Acts 6 & 7).  Philip preached, did miracles, cast out demons and healed the sick.  He obeyed an angel and had a divine appointment with an Ethiopian eunuch on the road, and was later translated to preach in another area (Acts 8).  Pretty exciting and powerful ministries for those who had been entrusted with the welfare of widows.


God will not forsake His calling on you if you take care of your parents when they need you.  In fact, your love and obedience are the prerequisite to the fulfillment of your destiny in the Kingdom.  In a time when many leaders in ministry charge money to train Christians in prophecy, healing, and the working of miracles, let me say that I believe they have missed the truth contained in the Bible.  Caring for people shows the Lord we are able to be responsible for the Kingdom works, and caring for the most needy brings His blessings on our ministry.  Amen.

No comments: