Dear Salvation Army, are we fooling ourselves?
Are we seeing one thing within our ivory towers while the reality looks quite different?
Please don’t take offense.
I mean no disrespect.
I just wonder if there are times that we are disconnected from how things truly are as opposed to how we perceive them to be.
It’s like the notion of missing the mark of evangelism & missions…It is like aiming for the lost with a harpoon when what you needed was a loving hug and a warm cup of coffee. Or perhaps, there is this grandiose idea of what success will look like (we envision a mega church with people all neatly lined up trying to get in) when in reality it is meeting with that single mother and ensuring she has enough to feed her family and she takes the leap of coming to church on a Sunday morning.
Do we miss the mark because our notion of successful mission has been aligned with a faulty or unrealistic sense of who we are serving and what they need? It can become that illustration of insanity, ever endeavoring to do the same thing over and over again, only to realize that it hasn’t worked in thirty years.
Perhaps we need to wake up.
I fear we have become too insulated in our own fishbowls, be it the corps, divisional headquarters, territorial headquarters or beyond. We cannot sit in our offices and expect the people to come to us. Yes, our branding is recognizable, but that doesn’t mean that we become lazy in our planning and in the reaching for the lost, hurting and oppressed. We cannot afford to sit in our fishbowls. We cannot become complacent, overly busy with interior paperwork, when outside in our communities families and individuals need to see the hope that the Holy Spirit is prodding us to give because we serve more than just an Army, we serve the Lord first and foremost.
Dear Salvation Army,
I am fearful that we have lost our way, because of mission drift.
I am fearful that leaders from every rank have forgotten what it means to have a heart to God and a hand to man. This is a broad brushstroke, not aimed at offending, but perhaps prodding those who need it. There are many, many saints in our Army. I wish to recognize that as fact, may we ever endeavor to emulate their great faith!
Lastly, we cannot program our army to death.
We cannot course correct without first dispelling the faulty realities that have gotten us to this point.
Questions to Ponder:
What fishbowls do we need to get out of today?
Do we truly know the communities and people that we have been commissioned to minister to?
Have we prayed about our mission and vision for the lost in our areas of influence? (Not all of these places will look the same, or require the same kinds of ministry tools to reach the lost and disciple the faithful).
How can we (I) encourage 1 person today (maybe more, but start with just one)?
Can we pray that God would reveal to us the hindrances and hang ups in our lives right now that prevent us from having a greater impact on the Kingdom in His name?
As I sit here and write this, I admittedly have first considered the fishbowls that I have placed myself in. No, this has nothing to do with appointments or rank, but as a follower of Christ there are walls that I have constructed that have not been ordained by Him. Constructs that insulate my selfish heart and profit nothing for the Kingdom of Heaven. Perhaps you can relate, dear Soldier. I believe that if we do not first dispel these walls and climb out of our fishbowls, so too will our impact for the Kingdom be limited.
Can we identify these fishbowls?
Are we prepared to climb out of them?
Something more for our Army to ponder today.
To God be the glory!
Scott…a very god and important reminder of mission purpose. Loved the challenge…thought the metaphor of “fishbowl” didn’t quite fit for me; perhaps corps building or, as we used to call them, “halls” might have been more apt. Then again “appointment, position or office” could have been an alternative. I understand why you used the term “fishbowl”…overall a very important word for the church at large.
Dad
Scott,
I have to tell you that your thoughts are always insightful. There are many days that I find myself in my own “fishbowl” just happily swimming around and not concerned about the needs of others around me. You challenged my heart today. I will endeavor today to not only climb out of my own “fishbowl” but shatter it so that I don’t get the desire to climb back in. I have thought for a long time that TSA has needed to take a lesson from the past and go for souls and go for the worst. The Army has been placed in a position that allows them many opportunities that most other churches don’t have. They have shelters, meal programs, eviction diversion programs (just to name a few) with people in need of Jesus. As believers, we cannot just be satisfied with providing them with basic needs, however, offer them something more, perhaps the best gift that we have to offer to an individual – Jesus. Now is the time for us to return to our first love and work at the mission that God has appointed us to, reach out to a lost and dying world. Just some thoughts
Amen! Well said Henry!