Six Habits to Help You Hold On in Tough Times
I’ve served in ministry for more than half a century, and
I’ve walked with the Lord for over 60 years. I’ve lived through seasons of
great joy and great struggle.
I have no doubt that you, too, will experience tough
times as you remain faithful in ministry. Unfortunately, you can count on
it.
Ministry isn’t a 50-yard sprint; it is a marathon. I want
you to finish the race God has placed before you. Your faithfulness matters—to
your family, to your church, and to God.
Paul wrote this reminder in Colossians 2:6: “You
have accepted Christ Jesus as your Lord. Now keep on following him” (CEV).
I want to empower you—no matter what ministry you’re
in—to keep on. Anyone can thrive in ministry for six months or even five years.
But I’m praying you’ll stay faithful for a lifetime!
Over the years, six habits have helped me to keep going
even when life was difficult. When you’re physically, emotionally, mentally,
and spiritually down, these habits will give you the strength you need to
thrive. They aren’t things I pulled from some book; I pulled them from my own
life and ministry.
1. Keep
my life clean.
I’ve read hundreds of Christian biographies about men and
women God has used over the centuries. And I’ve noticed something: Refinement
precedes a new assignment. Before God begins to use someone in a new and
greater way, God cleans their life.
Paul showed us this when he wrote to Timothy, “All
who make themselves clean from evil will be used for special purposes. They
will be made holy, useful to the Master, ready to do any good work” (2
Timothy 2:21 NCV). God isn’t looking for talented people to use for his work;
he’s looking for people who desire to live clean lives, free from sin.
2. Keep
my eyes open.
It’s easy to get tunnel vision and become self-focused
when you’re experiencing a tough time. It’s natural in those times to think
about your own problems. But Psalm 105:4 says, “Keep your eyes open for
God, watch for his works; be alert for signs of his presence” (The
Message).
The most misunderstood word in ministry is vision.
I hear people regularly say how important it is to be a visionary. Vision isn’t
about seeing the future. The last two years have taught us that no one can
predict the future. Vision is seeing God at work in your present situation and
staying in step with him.
3. Keep
my heart grateful.
Doctors say the healthiest emotion is gratitude. God uses
grateful people. God does not use or bless ungrateful people. The Bible
encourages us to, “Through thick and thin, keep your hearts at
attention, in adoration before Christ” (1 Peter 3:15 The Message).
What I’ve learned is people burn out in ministry because
they’ve let grumbling replace gratitude. You’ll find plenty of issues to
grumble about in ministry. We live in a broken world. You work with broken
people, so you can’t expect everything to always go right. Ministry is messy.
That’s why gratefulness is the key to longevity in ministry.
4. Keep
my purpose firm.
To prepare for difficult days, memorize this verse: “You,
Lord, give perfect peace to those who keep their purpose firm and put their
trust in you” (Isaiah 26:3 GNT).
Whenever you’re confused or in doubt about anything in
your life, always return to the five purposes found in the Great Commandment
and the Great Commission: to know and love God, to belong to his family, to
grow in Christ, to serve Christ, and to share Christ. That’s the elemental
chart of the Christian life. When you’re in doubt and confused, always return
to God’s purposes.
5. Keep
my focus on God’s Word.
When times are tough, you can’t depend upon the news or
your social media feed. You must hold on to God’s Word no matter what. Why?
Hebrews 6:18 tells us: “These two things cannot change: God cannot lie
when he makes a promise, and he cannot lie when he makes an oath. These things
encourage us who came to God for safety. They give us strength to hold on to
the hope we have been given” (NCV).
You can depend upon God’s Word in difficult times because
it’s always true. You never have to wonder whether you will find safety in the
Bible.
6. Keep
my mind on Jesus.
Psychologists talk about two kinds of motivation—internal
and external. We are motivated externally when we do something because of the
promised reward or the fear of punishment. We are motivated internally when we
do something because it makes us feel fulfilled, expresses our gifts, makes
people like us, or gives us some other kind of positive feeling.
But there’s a higher motivation. The impact our
ministries are having on eternity is a far stronger motivation than either
external or internal. That’s why Hebrews 12:1-2 tells us to “run with
endurance the race God has set before us . . . by keeping our eyes on Jesus,
the champion who initiates and perfects our faith” (NLT).
Jesus could put up with anything because he always kept
his eyes on eternity. That’s why he could endure the cross. Keeping your mind
on eternity will also help you endure the trials of ministry.
Pastor, you may feel like quitting right now. Don’t do it.
Tough times never last. Just remember, “Our light and momentary
troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all” (2
Corinthians 4:17 NIV).
By Rick Warren First posted HERE
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