The pastor wasted some time today. The problem is…

You do not know the way of the wind….  You do not know the works of God who makes everything….  You do not know which will prosper…. (Ecclesiastes 11:5-6).

In a typical day, the pastor does a hundred things, some of which are eternal and some not.  Some are gold, silver, and precious stones, while others are wood, hay, and stubble (a reference to I Corinthians 3:12).

Some things he did were eternal; some were anything but that.  And that’s the problem: How to tell which is which.

In the moment, it’s almost impossible.

We walk by faith, not by sight (2 Corinthians 5:7).

Today in the hospital, the pastor visited with three patients and talked to strangers in the hospital lobby, to nurses in the hallway, and to people he met along the way.  Back in the office he studied for his sermons, dealt with administrative issues, reprimanded the church custodian for doing a poor job of cleaning bathrooms, and returned six phone calls. He wrote something for the church website, accepted an invitation to speak at a civic luncheon, and had lunch with his wife.  A neighboring pastor ran by for a few minutes to confer about a project they’re working on for the association, he answered someone’s on-line query about tithing, and he took a walk around the block.  He leaves the Bible open on the table in his back office and stops by for a few minutes from time to time to read the text of next Sunday’s message or to look something up.  He prays there and often, throughout the day.

When his head hits the pillow at night, he has a hard time remembering what he did or knowing what was accomplished.

How much of what he did was eternal and how much was just so much busy-work?  It’s impossible to tell.

This is the life of anyone called to pastoral service.  He or she lives a normal life–family, health consideration, home, co-workers, etc.–but with eternal dimensions.  The pastor’s words can literally stand people on their feet (Job 4:4), can turn someone to righteousness, and can cause “one of these little ones who believe in (Jesus)” to stumble (Matthew 18:6).

Pray for your minister.

Two scriptural realities the kingdom worker will always live with….

In the morning sow your seed, and in the evening do not withhold your hand; for you do not know which will prosper, either this or that, or whether both alike will be good (Ecclesiastes 11:6).

–Do your job, pastor, and leave the results to the Father.  You do not know which seed will fall on the wayside, on stony ground, or in the briars (a reference to Matthew 13:1-9).

–You are not the judge of your own work.  Teach that class, preach that sermon, counsel that troubled one, write that article, study that text, pray that prayer.  Encourage the elderly in the nursing home, and comfort the broken-hearted at the funeral home.  Lead the congregation, teach your leadership, and minister to your family.

–The time will come when all books are opened and every secret revealed.

At the end, God alone knows what was your best work, your golden gift.  You will see when you stand before Him, and in most cases not until then.

So, be faithful, weary pilgrim.

Now, if any man builds on this foundation with gold, silver, precious stones, wood, hay, straw, each one’s work will become clear; for the day will declare it, because it will be revealed by fire; and the fire will test each one’s work, of what sort it is.  If anyone’s work which he has built on it endures, he will receive a reward.  If anyone’s work is burned, he will suffer loss; but he himself will be saved, yet so as by fire.  (I Corinthians 3:12-15).

According to this scripture, our labors for Christ fall into two groups: gold, silver, precious stones, which are lasting, glorious, and lovely; and wood, hay, and straw, representing inferior materials, service with no lasting value.  Nothing done is evil, but it’s only that some of it is wasted and unworthy.

The problem is knowing which is which.

Someone asks about those who belong to a religious cult–an off-brand of the Christian faith, if you will–where they were taught faulty doctrine and spent their lives spreading untruth.  Are they saved or not?  My answer is a) God alone knows and b) it’s possible that some are, but all their misguided labors will probably fall under the heading of wood, hay, and straw, to be burned up in the judgment fires.  The passage insists that they themselves will be saved–because God’s salvation, once given is never retracted–“yet so as by fire.” Which I take to mean, “by the skin of their teeth.”  Just barely. (See I Peter 4:18 “If the righteous one is scarcely saved, where will the ungodly and the sinner appear?” evidently quoting Proverbs 11:31, though not precisely.)

Therefore, let the servant of God pray at all times…

“Lord, let my service be acceptable to Thee–in everything I do, may it be as unto the Lord.”  (Colossians 3:17,23)

Let us not waste time or energy dissecting every deed and every word, trying to decide which was pleasing to the Father.  He will sort it all out.

The great Warren Wiersbe counseled pastors not to do autopsies on all they do in a day.  Do it for the Lord and leave it with Him.

Let us stay in the Word, on our knees, and with the redeemed.

May we never sit in judgement on ourselves nor one another.  “It is the Lord Christ whom (we) serve.” (Colossians 3:24).

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