In these days of planned obsolescence it is difficult to find anything that is really well built. And despite company promises of quality customer service, really excellent service is also very rare. But we seek excellence. Jonathan Edwards wrote, “The inquiry of the soul is after that which is most excellent.” And Paul prays that the Philippians will be able to ‘approve what is excellent’. iServe Africa is committed to excellence. But what is excellence? Three pointers:
- It is not God, it is worship. In other words, excellence is not our destination, our ultimate goal, it is not an end in itself. If we seek excellence for its own sake then we are idolaters and our god will prove a bad master. We will tend either to pride or perfectionism. As we study, or serve, or prepare a sermon we are not to worship excellence, instead excellence should be an expression of our worship of the one true gracious God. We seek excellence not because that is our hearts desire but because we want to do everything we do with our whole heart for our Master and Saviour (Col. 3:23).
- It is not evangelism, it is love. Sometimes we can fall into thinking that if our church meetings and revival meetings have excellent music, amazing lighting and slick presentation then we will impress people into the kingdom. No. No-one was ever saved by excellent presentation. Evangelism (preaching the gospel of Christ crucified) is what saves (1 Cor. 1:21). At the most, excellent presentation removes barriers to accepting the gospel but it is not the gospel. We seek excellence because it is loving to answer emails promptly, it is loving to prepare well, it is loving to make people comfortable. In fact we can turn it around – not only is excellence loving, the most excellent way IS love (1 Cor. 12:31).
- It is not defined by the world, it is defined by Christ. We can learn a lot from the professionalism of the world about how to deliver excellent service but we must be careful that we do not let the world define excellence for us. It can become an elitist thing. The world would not consider John the Baptist an excellent preacher. Where is his smart suit? Where is his iPad? Where is his 10,000-seater air-conditioned auditorium? But excellence is defined by Jesus Christ – excellence incarnate. In Him, the apostle Paul and later Jonathan Edwards found the most perfect, ravishing, soul-satisfying excellence (Phil. 3:8). An excellence of perfect obedience, an excellence of wisdom, an excellence of love, an excellence of self-sacrificing service. So then excellent preaching is preaching the excellence of Christ and it is as we gaze on this excellence that we are transformed to be (kidogo) like him.
This is awesome and i know God demands excellence from us especially after He deposited His Spirit in us..Isa 11:2 “…The Spiritof the Lord will rest on him-the Spirit of wisdom and of understanding, the Spirit of counsel and of power, the Spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the Lord..” in reation to Col2:10.
Wow. I recently read an article in Churchleaders.com which has the same content but from a different perspective. It was all about “Are we idolizing missions instead of God” And the heartbeat was, where is God and our walk with Him? Are we drawing our identity by what we are doing in mission fields and forgetting this is all about God. When you tie them up with this blog, it comes to one thing, Christ and Him crucified should be our centre focus in all things. Like Paul tells the Corinthians, “I don’t preach myself but Christ Jesus”
May the Lord give us the strength to focus on Him.
Really good point James. It is such a subtle danger to idolize and draw our identity from ministry. It reminds me of Derek Tidball’s comment: “Some preachers gain their sense of identity through their work for the Lord, rather than from their relationship with the Lord of the work.” Maybe we’ll do a post on Tidball’s list of idols for the preacher…