I had anticipated this moment with an emotional mixture of intimidation
and challenge. The intimidation was generated by the fact that I was
standing before a large group of my fellow pastors and I was to deliver
the annual address of our Pastors' Conference. The element of challenge
found its focus in the question, "How can I outflank their professional
communication skills and their ability to anticipate what they think I'm
about to say? How can I arrest their attention long enough to make my
point?"
I decided to take a risk and begin with a confession that would need
more than a little explanation!
"I begin tonight with a very difficult confession before you, my fellow
Pastors. There is no simple or easy way to say this; so I will just say
it: I have been guilty of having an affair".
The tension level took a quantum leap upward! Some of those sitting in
front of me were my peers. I had trained with these men for Ministry. I
noted some looks of stunned disbelief. Others showed their disbelief in
smiles that indicated that they knew I had to have an angle here of some
kind!
In one sense, I can think of no better place to make such a confession
than in the presence of other Pastors because most of you will have long
since recognised your own vulnerability. In another sense, I can think
of no worse place to acknowledge my failure because the judgment of my
peers has the potential to be the worst kind of condemnation.
I can almost hear your ask the question, "How can one who is supposedly
committed to the Lord Jesus and to his own wife ever allow another
relationship to develop to the point where those two holy relationships
are endangered?"
As best I can determine, it began with a flaw or weakness in my own
character that was (and is) wide open to exploitation. Like many of you,
I have a need to be needed and to be affirmed - sometimes I think that
need is above and beyond what might be considered healthy. I further
acknowledge that I am at my most vulnerable when there is an absence of
encouragement and affirmation in my emotional diet".
My explanation was not doing very much to lessen the tension level.
My mistress was very subtle. She knew my emotional need for praise and
affirmation in my life and she was quick to meet that need. Time and
again she was ready to speak warmly of my qualities as a person and my
endeavours as a Pastor. In return, she seemed to require so little -
initially, at least. She repeatedly assured me that our developing
relationship need not negatively effect my relationship with Bev, my
wife, or with the Lord. At first she had told me she would be satisfied
if I only offered her the time that was left after my prior relational
responsibilities. It seemed that I could have my cake and eat it, too!
It all seemed so legitimate...so rational...so inviting.....so
fulfilling....just too good to be true!
But as time passed, this seemingly free liaison became increasingly
demanding. I began to realise that I was becoming both enmeshed and
addicted to the relationship.
My mistress was demanding more and more of my time. She began to
begrudge the time I gave to Bev and my family. She also began to make
demands on the time I had initially reserved for the Lord".
I became aware that a number of my listeners were becoming restless in
their chairs while others sat like statues as though any movement might
betray an inner response. of guilt. I was beginning to wonder if my
approach was a bad choice. Too late now. I continued:
As I tried to meet those demands, the intensity of my guilt began to
increase. My priority commitments to my Lord and my wife came under
enormous pressure. I found myself making excuses for the decreasing
amount of time I was spending with Bev. I kept telling her that my lack
of time with her and the family was part of the sacrifice we had to make
for the sake of the Lord's work. I seemed to be forever asking
forgiveness from God because of what I was allowing to happen in my
relationship with Him.
Another complicating and destructive factor in all this mess was that my
mistress was now claiming that she, too, had needs that only I could
meet. I found myself in the terrible situation of becoming indispensable
to her and that just added to the feelings of fragmentation. The whole
dynamic had become like a spiritual "Fatal Attraction". It sounds stupid
even as I say it but, as demanding as she became, even that price was
worth paying when I lost sight of where my needs were supposed to be met
and tried to meet them with her. The paradox is that I have both warmly
welcomed her and deeply resented her. I have sought consolation with her
and yet I have despised the cost of that comfort".
I began to note some further changes in the facial expressions of my
listeners. Some, at least, were beginning to suspect that this was not
what it first appeared to be! Some mental gears were beginning to turn
in another direction as they tried to pre-empt just where I was going
with this 'confession'? It seems that even pastors don't want to be the
last to get it!
"I began by confessing to you that I had a mistress. I deliberately made
that statement in the past tense. I did so partly as a statement of fact
and partly as a statement of hope. It is a statement of fact inasmuch
as, at this point of time, I do not have a mistress. That destructive
relationship is now broken and is part of my history. I have owned it
and I have been forgiven.
It is a statement of hope inasmuch as I fully realise that I am capable
of re-commencing that liaison at any time; particularly during those
periods of emotional weakness when others seem insensitive to my needs.
I know that she is always there ready to meet that need.
And now, as part of my confession, I have determined to complete my
confessional atonement before you by actually naming my mistress to
you".
The tension that had started to ease with some was quickly restored with
this last remark! In fact, I was to find out later that two or three had
determined by this time to get out of their seats and leave the room.
I name her in your presence because, as I have listened to fellow
pastors talk over the years, I believe some of you also know her and you
may want to join me in my confession and atonement.
Her name is 'MINISTRY'.
The tension level, which had varied quite noticeably to this point, now
relaxed even more noticeably!
Ah, yes! I can see from the looks on some faces that there are those of
you who are acquainted with her. That being the case, perhaps you might
like to journey with me a little further as I try to explain the process
of recovery and restoration to my wife and to my God that has happened
for me.
Before I ask you to walk further with me in this expose, I need first to
make another confession and, perhaps, an apology.
I recognise that, in using the analogy of an affair to make a point, I
have run the very serious risk of piercing the hearts of those who may
be struggling with a more literal affair or relationship than what I
have described. If I have unwittingly and unhelpfully wounded you, I do
ask for your forgiveness and understanding. On the other hand, if my
analogy has pierced your heart with conviction, I do not apologise for
that.
The reason I have been prepared to take the risk in describing the
dynamics of this unhealthy relationship with "ministry" in terms of an
affair is that I really believe that "ministry" can become a destructive
"affair of the heart" that has the capacity to estrange us from our
families. I, for one, have felt times of enormous pressure and conflict
of interest as I have sought to be both a loving husband and a faithful
Pastor. In retrospect, I can see that those pressures have been largely
of my own making and have emerged in my life because of my failure to
understand the true relationship that I was to have with "ministry".
Let me explain first how the Lord Jesus moved to expose and correct what
had become an idol in my life. Even now it sounds strange to refer to
"ministry" as an idol. But if an idol is something to which one devotes
the major portion of one's time, energy and effort....if an idol is that
for which I am willing to sacrifice just about everything in my
life...if an idol is anything that comes between me and my God and
competes for that devotion, loyalty and commitment that ought to belong
only to Him.....then "Ministry " had become such an idol.....such a
mistress.
As I think back now, one of the factors that led to the emergence of
this form of idolatry was the confusion that developed when I lost sight
of the fact that God had called me to Himself before ever he called me
to "the ministry".
I have been challenged again by the call of the early disciples recorded
in Mark 3 where the purpose for which Jesus called His disciples was
"...that they might be with Him and that He might send them out to
preach..."
That sequence has now become so important to me. God has called us first
of all to Himself. He first says, "Come to me....." before He says, "Go
into all the world...." All ministry must flow out of that reality. Of
course, if you had asked me at any point in my 30 years of pastoral
ministry if I believed that, I would have answered with a prompt "Yes!"
But that answer would have come from my head, not my heart. The truth
is that there is a lot that I affirm with my head which, if my actions
are any indication, I do not really believe in my heart.
There is a key passage in Luke 10 that has helped me regain a
perspective that my former mistress took from me. When the seventy-two
disciples returned from their ministry assignment, they were ecstatic
that even the demons were subject to the authority that Christ had given
them. They had experienced a good time with "ministry"!! I hear in
their words feelings of fulfilment, excitement and anticipation for what
the future might hold by way of further ministry.
However, Jesus firmly added a corrective to their understandable
enthusiasm. He said to them: "I have given you authority to overcome all
the power of the enemy. However, do not rejoice that the spirits submit
to you, but rejoice that your names are written in heaven". (Luke 10:20)
Jesus was identifying for them - and for us - the only source and basis
of joy and rejoicing and it was not be in the "ministry". Sure, we may
be grateful for those times of blessing that result from what we do for
Him but the only appropriate, unchanging and dependable source of joy is
in our relationship with Jesus....the fact that our names are written
down in heaven and we are secure in that fact!
Like some of you, I have often made the mistake of finding my joy
elsewhere... especially with "ministry" ....and she has a way of
becoming a mistress....an idol. Too often my perspective and mood swings
are directly effected by "ministry"! My source of joy becomes confused
and I find myself on an emotional roller-coaster.
I have also discovered that it is so easy, as a pastor, to develop a
"professional" relationship with Jesus. In that kind of relationship, He
is the "employer" and I am the "employee".
By contrast, I was challenged by the basis of Jesus' joy identified in
the same passage: "At that time, Jesus, full of joy through the Holy
Spirit said, "I praise you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth...Yes,
Father, for this was your good pleasure". (Luke 10:21). Here is the
heartbeat of Jesus in terms of His relationship with His Father. His
source of joy was in the other two members of the Godhead - the Father
and the Holy Spirit.
Maybe that is why we never see Jesus centred upon the results of His
ministry as though that was the beginning and end of everything. He
never allowed "ministry" to become His mistress. He knew how to say "No"
without feeling guilty. He knew how and when to serve and how and when
to retreat...even in the midst of the demands and expectations of those
about Him. Luke records these simple but telling words in chapter 5:16:
"The news about Him spread all the more so that crowds of people came to
hear him and be healed of their sicknesses. But Jesus often withdrew to
lonely places and prayed".
Prayer retreats in the midst of human need! What kind of Pastor is this?
I hear echoes of that same demanding insistence in the words of the
disciples when Jesus had gone out early in the morning to pray. In Mark
1:37, we are told that they came to him and said, "Everyone is looking
for you!" Roughly translated that seems to me to mean, "You are
indispensable! They can't do without you! Prayer is nice in its right
place but you don't have time for that luxury right now! We are
surrounded by need!"
Jesus response is both startling and instructive: "Let us go somewhere
else - to the nearby villages - so I can preach there also. That is why
I have come".(Mark 1:38)
What kind of Pastor indeed! The answer is simple and disturbing. Jesus
was a Shepherd/Pastor who knew what His Father wanted Him to do and He
did it - nothing more, nothing less and nothing else. He was the kind of
Pastor who, at the end of His earthly ministry could say, "I have
completed the work that you gave me to do"! (John 17:4). He fulfilled
God's agenda for Him, not the expectations of countless other people. He
was the kind of Pastor who found his joy in His relationship with God;
not in what He did for God!
While I am grateful for what God does through "ministry", I am nowhere
called to rejoice in the ministry or to rejoice in who I am or what I am
doing. I am to be with Jesus and to rejoice in Him and in the
relationship He has established with me as expressed in the fact that my
name is written in heaven.
Part of my restoration process has been to set aside every Wednesday
afternoon for a personal retreat time when I go away from my office and
my home and I spend time with Jesus - not Jesus, my employer but Jesus,
the lover of my soul. That's our time. I try not to talk "business" with
Him in that setting. ....if you understand what I mean.
Knowing my own initial response to God's call for that time to be set
aside, I am fairly certain that there are those of you who are now
assuring yourselves that there is no way you can afford to be so
extravagant with your use of time. In your priorities, such time
allocation, while perhaps desirable, is not possible. You are busy
telling yourself that the demands on your time are such that they
exclude any possibility of 3 or 4 hours spent with the Lord each week.
Brothers and sisters, those words are being seductively whispered in
your heart by the mistress....."ministry". I know because she has
seduced me time and again with the same rationale. There is so much to
be done, isn't there?
All that brings me to another biblical address that I have often had to
visit. It is again in Luke 10. This time it is the domestic scene
recorded in vs. 38-42.
The Lord has repeatedly drawn my attention to the difference between
Martha and Mary.......Martha, the activist, and Mary, the listener. The
question with which God has often challenged me is, "Who most clearly
reflects your priorities - Martha or Mary?"
The answer is usually Martha. Now, you and I are hardly in a position to
question her heart and her motives. They may well have been of the
highest calibre. But what we are told is what was happening to her on
the inside as she gave herself to 'ministry'. The three words used of
her emotional condition are "distracted", "worried" and "upset".
Please don't get me wrong here. Someone had to prepare the meal. Someone
had to be out in the kitchen. But the challenge to me is what was
happening to Martha in terms of her attitude. Did you pick up on the
resentment that was fermenting towards her sister? The water on the
stove wasn't the only thing boiling out in the kitchen that day! "Lord,
don't you care that my sister has left me to do the work by myself? Tell
her to help me!" (Luke 10:40)
She was becoming resentful towards her sister and dictatorial towards
her Lord! She presumed to direct Jesus as to what He should do to get
her immobile sister mobile!! How often I have done that over the years!
Jesus was again gracious but firm in His evaluation of the condition of
Martha's heart.
He corrected Martha and commended Mary. Martha was committed to the
urgent whereas Mary was committed to the important. Martha opened her
home whereas Mary opened her heart. Martha gave her service whereas Mary
gave herself.
I don't think it is coincidental that I hear in that inter-change an
echo of what God has often said to my heart. Have you not had times
when, in your genuine desire to serve the Lord, you have become
distracted by all the things that had to be done? You have become
worried and upset over the many things. You have become resentful
towards your brothers and sisters in Christ because they seem to have
been immobile when they should have been up and working. You have become
resentful and guilty about the time your wife and family seemed to
expect.
You have even presumed to complain to the Lord of the Church in such a
way as to suggest that, if He paid some attention to your plight, He
might just begin to do things the way you think they should be done.
When those dynamics begin to emerge, we can be sure that "ministry" has
successfully seduced us and become our mistress.
But what about that other prior relationship in all this...my
relationship with my wife, Bev? We have just celebrated our 35th
wedding anniversary. We have three great kids, two delightful
daughters-in-law, one great son-in-law and 4 wonderful grand-daughters!!
As I look back over the 31 years that I have been a Pastor, I can say
that my wife has been very understanding about many, many aspects of
what it means for me to be a pastor and her place as my wife.
She has been less than understanding about my mistress!!
I recall how, when we were in our sixth year of pastoral ministry back
in the early seventies, Bev first tried to speak to me about how
"ministry" was coming between us. I couldn't understand why she felt as
she did because, after all, we were doing the Lord's work! From time to
time she tried to explain how she felt and why but it was to no avail. I
was blind to the fact that the dynamics of the "eternal triangle" were
appearing in our relationship. Only it was not another woman. But it was
a mistress, sure enough.
Bev was teaching school at the time and, because I had relatively little
time for her, she began to apply herself in her work to the point where,
on one day of rare enlightenment for me, I found myself thinking that
she seemed to care more for her work than she did for me!
And suddenly my eyes were opened! Within 24 hours of that revelation, I
was down at the travel agent trying to organise a holiday just for the
two of us. It proved to be a smart move! We had a great time away
together and a new start in our relationship when we came home.
You would think that I would have learned from that experience, wouldn't
you? The truth is that my mistress was waiting to seduce me as soon as
we came back. I have had to learn that the commitment of giving my wife
the priority she deserves as my God-given partner in life is never
static. It is always dynamic in the sense that it is a daily choice.
Over the past 25 years since that first realisation, I have sought to
give to Bev the time commitment she deserves as my wife but it has been
with varying degrees of success and failure.
>From time to time, she has suggested that I should take time out from
pastoral ministry so that we could have extended time as a family
without those unique demands and expectations that constitute pastoral
ministry. The very idea was anathema! Didn't she realise I was
needed...even indispensable?!
Somehow I had become so involved again with my mistress that to even
think of extended leave was tantamount to a betrayal of some kind! I
look back now and I can see that what Bev was suggesting, in effect, was
a sabbatical....a God-ordained principle.....a period of refreshment and
renewal of our spiritual and emotional lives and our relationship
together.
It was still some time before I began realising something else that was
obvious to Bev long before it dawned on me. I was loosing my cutting
edge. The vision of the Lord and a right understanding of my
relationship to ministry had again become fuzzy. I was getting tired in
the ministry....not physically tired but emotionally and spiritually
weary. Although I took holidays and long service leave, the benefits
seemed very short-lived.
It was towards the end of the 1980's that these realisations began to
dawn and I can recall sharing with the Church Leadership what Bev had
been saying for quite some time: namely, a growing sense that I was
finding little fulfilment and a lot of tiredness and that I needed to
take extended leave. So clearly did the Lord seem to say, "Come with me
by yourselves to a quiet place and get some rest". (Mark 6:31)
We resigned from that Church at the end of 1989 and we spent the next
14 months obeying and enjoying the biblical principle of the Sabbath.
The level of renewal and refreshment that came to us is beyond my
ability to describe and we both returned ready to embrace the Lord's
call to service in a new and enthusiastic way.
We went to a new Church at the beginning of 1991 And guess what? The
mistress called "Ministry" had moved to the new Church!! But there is
now some understanding of how she operates and the way she seduces.
I feel free of her at the moment but I know that I need to daily monitor
her attempts to seduce me and my response to her. I have come to accept
that I will live with this tension for the rest of my pastoral life. It
will involve daily choices for me. Somehow, I feel at peace about
that prospect now that the "enemy" has been identified and her tactics
are out in the open. I am also encouraged by the fact that the antidote
to her poison has also been identified - a daily yielding of my life to
my Lord and to my wife.
Bathurst Baptist Church,
P.O. Box 182, BATHURST. N.S.W. 2795
AUSTRALIA
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