I was surprised by how much I liked rock-climbing. In graduate school, a classmate took me to a 30-foot boulder at the edge of Pullman. With practice I got better and better. I learned the grace of holding on to the rock just hard enough not to peel off but not hard enough to exhaust myself. Arriving at the top was exhilarating.
School was the opposite in every way. One class was followed by another, one degree by another. All my goals were long-term and somewhat vague. What would I actually do with degrees in English? In contrast, climbing a rock was wonderfully concrete. Getting to the top was a quick and definite achievement—even though no one was there to applaud my 30 ft ascent.
Even Christians are attracted to obedience that results in quick and concrete achievement. This is true even if we are free of selfish ambition. I wish serving God was more like rock-climbing and less like sowing seed. Broadcast sowing, as described in Matthew 13, is hit and miss. Where the seed lands is a matter of chance or the wind. Some lands on hard ground, some on rocky soil, some in the weeds, and some in good soil. And then there is the wait and the possibility someone else will harvest what you planted (see John 4:37). Only time will tell.
Turns out, I don’t have much appetite for eternity. For instance, this last year I have done no teaching or preaching. Even though both of these bear fruit slowly, compared to my life of prayer and care-giving, these are more like rock-climbing. I must confess, I am only beginning to develop an appetite for work that bears fruit only in eternity. All those who pour out their lives, sometimes for decades, caring for a handicapped child or a parent with dementia will only be rewarded when they see Jesus face to face. I wish I were okay with this.
My efforts to start a home group here in Gardner failed. Most people at the church I attend do not know me and I think few of them live in this area. (If I attended the church longer, I would worry that the lack of interest was because they did know me.) I asked the Lord why I was bothered so much by the small group failing. The answer formed in my heart and mind was, “You don’t take eternal reward seriously, you want fruit you can eat this side of eternity.”
I don’t think God wants us to stop enjoying rock-climbing, doing things that bring a concrete and measurable results. Preachers can enjoy people being blessed or even saved through their preaching. Teachers can delight in the “Aha!” moment when a student understands something. Both can enjoy those rare moments when years later someone shares how much their ministry or teaching helped them.
But the ministries of prayer and caregiving, when done with joy and presented to Lord with love, bear a rare and different fruit. Because no one sees or knows, this beautiful fruit is unblemished by personal ambition or a need for validation. The sweetness of the fruit is the love and pleasure we see in the eyes of Jesus. It is the joy of loving someone with Jesus as you serve and pray.
I want to follow Jesus to the Samaritan woman at the well. His disciples had gone into the town Sychar to buy food and left Jesus alone at the edge of town. When the disciples return, they are amazed that Jesus, a Jewish rabbi, was talking to a Samaritan woman. In fact, this conversation is one of the longest one-on-one exchanges recorded in the gospels. The ministry of Jesus had already gone viral, and he was drawing bigger crowds than John the Baptist had (John 4:1). Yet, here he was revealing himself as Messiah and offering eternal life to a lone Samaritan woman of dubious reputation.
Jesus’ disciples offer him some of the food, but he says he has food they don’t know about. They are puzzled so he explains, “My food is to do the will of him who sent me and bring it completion.” Like the disciples, I am only beginning to understand what it means to live and serve only with an eye on eternity and what is valued by God. The Father’s delight is the eternal food that feeds our hungry soul.