Have
you ever noticed who does the booing at a ball game? It's not the
players on the field. They make their own mistakes and they are not
inclined to boo their fellow player when he makes his. They are pulling
for one another, encouraging, helpful. They play as a team, win or lose
as a team. It is the spectators who boo. So it is in every walk of life:
it is the spectators who, as a rule, do the criticizing, not the
participants.
Unfortunately, in every congregation, there are the spectators and the
participants. The spectators never teach a Bible class, preach, lead
singing, or preside at the table; they really don't get that much
involved in the worship itself. But more often than not, they are the
very ones who are found criticizing the preacher or song leader or Bible
class teacher. They are the ones who are so embarrassed and incensed
when someone inadvertently commits an "error" in his efforts to lead the
group. They come wanting to hear something that is interesting and that
will make the time fly by. If they hear it, they "cheer"; if not, they
"boo."
Not so
with the true participants, those who are really involved in the Lord's
work. They are the ones "cheering on" that "rookie" who is preaching his
first sermon or leading his first song. When a brother attempts to teach
his first Bible class, they are looking for ways to be helpful. They are
sympathetic; they rejoice in the success of others; they mourn over the
sorrows of others; they feel for the one who has failed, make allowances
for him, encourage him to try again, and assure him that he will do
better next time. They rejoice especially in the development of the
young men and women in the Lord's work. They are just as nervous and
excited when the young people make their first attempt at presiding at
the table or teaching a class as they would be if it were their own
children.
How
many preachers have decided to move because of the booing spectators,
right at the time when the participants were enjoying their greatest
spiritual growth? How many elders have planned the work around the
demands of the spectators rather than the needs of the participants?
Spectators need to become participants and find out what it's like out
there "on the field." Participants need to keep on doing their best,
ignoring the "boos" while looking to their all-seeing and understanding
"Manager" for approval. All need to be preparing for judgment, where it
will be the "doers of the word," not the critics, who will be saved.
"Finally, all of you be of one mind, having compassion for one another;
love as brothers, be tenderhearted, be courteous"
(I Peter 3:8).
Christians, like ball players, make a sad mistake when they listen too
closely to the "boo-birds."
Other Articles by Gary Henry
If We Believed What They Believed
Seven Faces of Failure
The Problem With Creeds
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