Monday, January 07, 2008

Elusive Excellence

Thanks to Skye Jethani for pointing the way to an article on the perils of pursuing perfection in ministry by Daniel Schantz entitled, Recovering from Excellence. Schantz writes,

To aim for excellence seems like a good thing, but it harbors some subtle dangers...The term excellence is often spoken by church leaders in condescending tones, as if to say, “Others may be content with being average slobs, but not us. We must have only the best.” This can be a slap in the face to members who don’t have the capacity or means to be excellent—the “good,” the “fair,” the “poor.” Can only good-looking, gifted singers serve on the worship team? Must church buildings resemble palaces in order to be useful? Do all preachers have to be Madison Avenue models, professional comedians, celebrities, best-selling authors, and able to speak five languages? The gospel was targeted to the poor, not just to the exceptional.

His words brought to mind a conversation I had once with a friend who pastors a congregation in the same area as one of America's most famous churches, one that I happen to admire, by the way. He recounted how a person with significant musical talent had begun attending the church he serves after having been told by the leadership at the other congregation that they would never be allowed to participate in its music ministry. The reason given? Their minor physical deformity did not fit the image they needed to project from their platform in order to appeal to seekers. Somehow that doesn't sound much like Jesus to me. What do you think?

1 comments:

Anonymous said...

Honest,motivated, dedicated and surrendered talents and ability to the Lord will always find a place in ministry, from leaders who are looking for solid, stable leadership rather than professional performers. The church is not Hollywood, and Hollywood is not the church, but we get them confused a lot of the time. Bigger, newer, flashier and sharper don't always equal success. Everyone should strive for excellence, however there will always be average people around and average people who are happy to be average. But I think God is impressed when average people want to be excellent and strive to be, look at the future King David, the shepherd boy was overlooked by the prophet of God, but in reality was chosen by God to lead the wayward kingdom of Israel. And besides in reality, it is the Spirit of God who draws men to Him, and it is the continuing spirit of God that rest on a man and in a ministy that continues to draw and work upon the work He has ordered. Maybe with David, could it have been because he communed with God while herding sheep, honed his talents in obscurity and aloneness. And then in just a moment,God annointed his life and everything changed. There was no glory in herding sheep, but David was faithful in an insignifant thing (in the eyes of the world)he herded sheep with excellence and it was that commitment that propelled him into the path that God choose long ago.