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Home/Biblical and Theological/God’s Metrics

God’s Metrics

The fruitfulness of a Gospel ministry is never observed in total in the here and now.

Written by Nick Batzig | Monday, April 23, 2018

A truly biblical ministry will often grow at a much slower rate, but it will last into all of eternity. It’s easy for those laboring faithfully to become discouraged when they look over at other churches and see how much more quickly they seem to have grown. It is much more difficult for them to remember that everything is merely scaffolding; and, one day God will reveal what sort of materials were used in the building. The fruit of a faithful ministry will last into eternity, the seeming fruit of an unfaithful ministry will disintegrate in due time.

 

God’s metrics are not our metrics. The way in which we seek to measure fruitfulness and faithfulness is often quite skewed. No one understood the issue of faithfulness and fruitfulness so well as the great Apostle Paul. In 1 Corinthians 3, he first explained the nature of a fruitful Gospel ministry by drawing off of the farming metaphor:

“I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the increase. So then neither he who plants is anything, nor he who waters, but God who gives the increase. Now he who plants and he who waters are one, and each one will receive his own reward according to his own labor” (1 Cor. 3:6-8).  

The fruitfulness of a Gospel ministry is never observed in total in the here and now. The one who waters the seed of God’s word in men and women’s lives may see the increase, while the one who sowed the seed may not. The one who planted and the one who watered may never see the increase, but a future generation may see it. God may chose to delay fruit until some later period in an individual’s life. The fruit may appear on a deathbed–rare though deathbed conversions may be–when those things that faithful ministers taught and proclaimed come rushing into an individual’s mind and heart by the working of the Spirit in their last moments of life. The increase is entirely the work of God and entirely dependent on God’s timing.

While the fruit may not always be evident in the here and now, Paul insisted that there is a day coming when “each one will receive his own reward according to his own labor.” What ought a faithful ministry look like? Paul moved on to the illustration of a builder to capture this point:

“As a wise master builder I have laid the foundation, and another builds on it. But let each one take heed how he builds on it. For no other foundation can anyone lay than that which is laid, which is Jesus Christ. Now if anyone 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 through fire” (1 Cor. 3:10-15). 

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Related Posts:

  • Fruit After Faithfulness
  • The Fruit of the Spirit: Faithfulness
  • What Does It Mean to Bear Fruit?
  • Accomplishing More, Slower
  • The Cost of Faithful Ministry

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