-
Don't You Get Weary, Children Series
Contributed by Joseph Smith on Aug 5, 2002 (message contributor)
Summary: There are many thankless tasks we have to perform, of which, to some, church participation may be one. But God teaches us that if we do something out of love, it is not burdensome, and the Cross and Empty Tomb teach us that it is not futile.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- Next
There sure are a lot of thankless tasks to be done. There
certainly are a great many things that are immensely
frustrating, because they just won’t stay done. Do you know
what I mean? The kinds of jobs that you do and almost
immediately you have to do them again? These are
thankless tasks.
Weeding a garden, for example. I spent a good-sized chunk
of my alleged vacation pulling up unwanted plants. Frankly, I
thought that we were doing well to have anything green
growing, but she who is the mistress of the plantation said,
“No, the weeds will have to go.” And so up they came. Yes
ma’am, yes ma’am, three recycling bags full. I went out the
next morning to admire the results of my labors, and what did
I see? More weeds! Saucy little creatures, poking their
impertinent heads up through the mulch. Weeding is a
thankless task. Gardens will not stay weed-free.
Or feeding the household. That, ladies, is a thankless task,
isn’t it? Because he whose hunger pangs you satisfied last
night wants to know tonight, “What’s for dinner?”. And those
children for whom you labored over a carefully balanced diet,
properly prepared and proudly presented, scarfed it all down
in mere seconds and showed up at the snack table an hour
later! A thankless task, feeding the hungry. Even Jesus
found out after He had fed the five thousand that they came
back the next day for more! “How about another miracle
today?” You know the feeling.
Weeding the garden, feeding the household, or preaching to
the congregation. Did you know that what I am doing now is
another thankless task? Because the stuff that is presented
seems to go into the ether and evaporate, and you don’t
know whether it has accomplished anything at all. You know
the story about the new pastor who arrived at the church,
and gave his first sermon, which everyone applauded? The
next Sunday they all came back, and he gave exactly the
same sermon. They were a bit puzzled, but decided maybe
their new pastor had a case of the jitters, and they would wait
and see about the third Sunday. Came the third Sunday,
and there it was, once again, identically the same sermon as
the first two Sundays. So a delegation of deacons went to
his door and asked what was going on. The pastor’s reply
was perfectly clear and altogether logical. Said he, “When
you actually do the things I spoke about in the first sermon,
then I will get on to something more!”
I know the feeling. Sixteen years ago today I stood in this
pulpit as pastor for the first time. I spoke at some length
about what the Bible calls “speaking the truth in love.” I said
that we must learn how to deal with one another’s failings
with respect and love, and that we must not think that
suppressing what we feel is really a loving act. “Speaking
the truth in love.” Sixteen years later, I wonder whether we
have learned anything at all. Either we tell everything we
know about one another and do it in self-righteous criticism;
or else we say nothing constructive in the name of being
loving. I just have to wonder sometimes if it has meant
anything, these words tossed out into the wind. If you want
the statistics, today’s is the 666th sermon I have preached
here – and since 666 is the number of the beast in the Book
of Revelation, maybe that tells you something. But today
there is a part of me that wants, on this sixteenth
anniversary, to sing, with apologies to Tennessee Ernie
Ford, “You preach sixteen years, and what do you get?
Another day older and deeper in words. Saint Peter, don’t
you call me ‘cause I can’t go; I owe my soul to the church
routine ”!
Thankless tasks. Never-ending jobs that won’t stay done. I
have mine, you have yours. How do you feel when you think
about all that? Tired? Frustrated? I think the word is
“weary”. That’s a few steps deeper than tired: weary. You
load sixteen tons .. you preach sixteen years .. you feed
sixteen mouths .. you pray sixteen prayers .. you try sixteen
admonitions .. and what do you get? Weary.
So what’s the use? Why keep on trying? If all we do does
not appear to shape anyone, how can we hope to impact the
world outside? If we do not see lasting results from our
efforts in our homes and in our church, how can we expect to
conquer the burgeoning evil in the world?
Some people stay with the church out of superstition. They
just want a one-way ticket to heaven and figure that if they
keep showing up at the Lord’s house, the Lord will know who