There’s an old
saying:
Give a man
a fish, and you feed him for a day. Teach him to fish, and you feed him for a
lifetime.
That’s actually a
good saying. Roughly translated, it means, “It’s better to teach people how to
overcome their trials than to simply meet their immediate needs.” The Book
talks about “equipping the saints for works of ministry,” being the primary
work of church leaders, not ministering to the saints’ needs.
(A smart aleck has
pointed out that if you only teach him to fish, he may starve to death before
he gets good enough at fishing to feed himself: I applaud the desire to not
ignore the short-term need, but let’s not get off-track here.)
May I speak bluntly?
This is a problem with the way we do church in the western world. We feed
people regularly, and we put comparatively little effort into teaching people
to feed themselves; we minister to people by teaching them, comforting them, counseling
them, involving them in programs, but seldom requiring that they stand under
their own strength, or fight their own battles for themselves. By default, we
are teaching them to depend on us for their daily fish, for their daily bread.
There are two
errors in this: those who keep handing out fish every time they’re together with
other believers, and those who keep accepting and eating those fish, every time
they’re together. Both are in error.
This has been
pointed out about the Sunday Morning congregations: since these are very often
led by pastors and teachers, whose gift it is to pastor and to teach, very much
of those gatherings are about being pastored and being taught.
(In deference to
the aforementioned smart aleck: there are some circumstances where young or
wounded believers cannot take care of their own needs or feed themselves. Let’s
acknowledge that they exist, and not get off track: those people are few and
far between in a healthy community.)
But this is the 21st
Century! This is the age of Social Media! Indeed. And since the weakness is in
people, when people migrate from the Sunday gathering to the online gathering
(including blogs, including Facebook), they bring their weakness with them.
It is just as easy
on Facebook as it is in the hard pew on Sunday morning, to sit still and let
others feed us day after day, week after week, year after year. “Another fish,
please!” It's just as easy to always be the one asking for prayer, always be the one who needs the encouragement of the worship or the sermon or the other people's posts to keep me going until next week.
And frankly, it’s
just as easy on Facebook as it is in the pulpit on Sunday morning, to keep
feeding the folks around us, to keep digesting the Word, to keep listening to
the Spirit, and keep spoon-feeding it to the folks nearby. “Here ya go. Put
that fishing pole down, and have another fish!”
Now, neither in the
Sunday church, nor on social media, is it safe to assume that everyone who
consumes is incapable of feeding themselves. And neither in Sunday church, nor
in social media, is it safe to assume that everyone who teaches, everyone who
encourages, everyone who runs a program, is only handing out fish, rather than
teaching the hungry man to fish.
Part of this
malfunction is the tendency for human beings to follow other human beings. As
we make disciples, it’s imperative that we teach people to follow Jesus, not to
follow ourselves. And of course, it’s critical that we follow Jesus, not human
leaders, as we grow.
A brief side note:
this was God’s plan all the time. Exodus 19:5 was just before the covenant on
Sinai, where God proposed this covenant first: “Now therefore, if ye
will obey my voice indeed, and keep my covenant (stay in relationship with me),
then ye shall be a peculiar treasure unto me above all people.” It’s been his plan from the beginning that
we follow his voice, that we honor our covenant relationship with him, NOT that
we follow laws and priests, which were only instituted because God’s people
rejected this covenant (in Exodus 20:19) and asked for a priesthood.
For me, the real
issue is this: how am I doing? How am I doing at feeding myself? How am I doing
at being an equipper of saints, rather than a distributor of fish?
I invite you, dear
reader, to take a few minutes to do a bit of self evaluation: How are you doing
at feeding yourself? How are you doing at making disciples and equipping
saints?
1 comment:
May i just say: I heartily agree !!
Jesus taught his disciples for 3 years then said Go and DO.
We are " encouraged" to sit and be spoon fed week after week ad infinitum,and not encouraged to grow up and start behaving like the spiritually mature believers we are. I am not " allowed" to function in my gifting at church- but God is gracious and he has given me a high school to work in which is a wonderful mission field where I can function in the gift God chose to give me, as much as I like. Your post gets a loud resonating AMEN from me :)
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