For in the time of trouble he shall hide me in his pavilion: in the secret of his tabernacle shall he hide me; he shall set me up upon a rock. (Psalm 27:5)
I want us to
look at God contrary to what our generation accepts as true and necessary.
Many believe
that God is in the business of parading His servants. Like we behave in social
media, we think that God’s favorite servant is the one with most likes. We
think a good servant is the most prolific, active and visible. As such,
ministers spend most of their time looking for visibility forums, from churches
to corporate events, instead of building their spiritual stature.
Do you realize when
you read the Bible that God only exposes His generals when it is necessary? Do
you realize that the rest of the time they are hidden? Do you realize that God
shapes His servants in secret?
Why does He do
that?
The public realm
is a dangerous place to train. The best thing the public realm does is test the
training.
The army is
never trained on the battlefield.
Do you realize
that Moses was hidden in the wilderness for forty years before he was given the
assignment? And we are not even touching the other forty he was hidden in the
palace. And do you realize that most of the rest of the active time was spent
in God’s presence, be it on the mount or in the tabernacle?
But the clearest
indication of this is Elijah.
After
proclaiming the devastating drought, God hides His servant.
Why do I say
that?
He was sent to a
foreign city. It couldn’t have been an obscure village because he recognized
the name when God spoke. He was not going like Abraham (to a land I will show
you).
I am travelled
some and know that towns do not become famous beyond their borders by fluke.
Very few outside East Africa know Kenyan towns beyond Nairobi, Mombasa and
probably Malindi for tourists. Having ministered in a few foreign countries,
and travelled quite a bit in the process, I have the recollection of very few
towns outside the ones I ministered in.
Zarephath must
therefore have been a famous town, most likely a big one.
How does Elijah
stay there for about three years without anyone knowing he was there?
How was he able
to remain hidden even after raising the dead, let alone keeping a hopeless
family well nourished? And I doubt those were the only miracles he performed.
God hid him.
He hid him as He
hid David to train him with the sheep, or as He hid him when Saul wanted to
kill him.
God is not the
God of the limelight. Though He created the light, He does not need the light
to shine.
The most
precious minerals are hidden way below the surface.
Ministers do not
need publicity to thrive. They need the private place to be hardened enough for
the public sphere.
John the Baptist
was constrained to the desert until God’s right time. Then he was exposed for a
short time. And in that short time he was killed.
As the LORD thy God liveth, there is no nation or
kingdom, whither my lord hath not sent to seek thee: and when they said, He is
not there; he took an oath of the kingdom and nation, that they found thee not. (1Kings 18:10)
Do not for one
moment think that Ahab was looking for Elijah to reward him. He actually wanted
to kill him. That was the reason God hid him.
Isn’t it amazing
that John was hid for so long just to be killed shortly after his exposure?
Isn’t it amazing that Elijah was so powerful as a prophet, yet we only have
just short snippets of his ministry? And he only appeared when he was sent.
God hides His
servants. He is not in the business of parading them so that they can amass likes
on social media, or anywhere else for that matter.
My observation
is that the limelight is the cause of the fall and emasculation of most
ministers. The limelight attracts all eyes on you, even the eyes of your
enemies. Many times, wrong motives can be planted on you due to that publicity.
Now he does not
speak to us. He has become proud. He despises us.
These are some
statements you hear from the friends of those on the limelight. Yet for some
you will find that their hearts are still in the right place. It is the demands
of the limelight that make one unavailable. Yet many times what makes one
unavailable is the baggage (read company) one picks (or that picks him) because
of the limelight.
For a minister,
the limelight is taken as a taunt to the enemy of souls. He therefore will
release the most nefarious of his arsenal to bring you down.
You realize
Samson became a target to the Philistines when the spirit started moving in his
life. Then they were able to see his weakness with women, and he became toast.
It is as a king
that Saul sinned. David sinned at his peak.
God exposes his
army at the battlefield because He has prepared them in the secret place. And
He seeks to hide them after a battle.
Why is it that some
people even in the palace could not recognize Elijah (2 Kings 1)? How come the
noble woman perceived and not knew that Elisha was a man of God yet he was the
prophet to at least three kings? Why did the guy Jesus heal at the pool not
know who it was that healed him? Why did the captain not know who Paul was when
he rescued him at Jerusalem?
God does not
parade his minister. He gives him an assignment.
It is the
assignment that God parades.
So likewise ye, when ye shall have done all those
things which are commanded you, say, We are unprofitable servants: we have done
that which was our duty to do. (Luke 17:10)
But the
limelight exposes the servant and not the assignment, meaning that the glory
diverts from God to the servant. Yet God says this
For thou shalt worship no other god: for the LORD,
whose name is Jealous, is a jealous God: (Exodus
34:14)
God does not
share His glory with another, even if that another is His servant.
I am the LORD: that is my name: and my glory will I
not give to another, neither my praise to graven images. (Isaiah 42:8)
The reason He
hides His servants is to protect them from themselves and everything else that
exposing a servant attracts, from intense temptations to pride and entitlement.
The saddest part
is that nowadays we think the exposure of a minister to publicity is a great
plus to their ministry. How many churches treat it as an exceptional bonus when
they expose a gifted child to the masses? Yet the same child does not know
anything about life. Let me confess that I have fallen prey to that folly a
number of times and am grateful to God that He clipped those attempts at their
bud. It is as I look back that I agree that God did the best thing for me when
He hid me from the limelight or destroyed my limelight.
Many will tell
you the dangers popularity brought to them. The limelight is a very delicate
position to occupy. And it is even worse for the Christian minister because we
have an enemy who will take advantage of the limelight to arouse the base
cravings for his purpose.
Let me give a
small example of something that has happened to me a number of times.
As you already
know I give the books I write at no cost where God leads or opens doors. The
one I have reprinted many times is the discipleship book ‘Fruit that Lasts’. It
therefore goes without say that I do not know the places and people most of the
books go to.
One day I met a
person who almost fell to the ground exclaiming,
‘My prayers have
been answered. How I have been praying to see you!’
They had been
using the discipleship book and as he told me the study had completely
transformed the group. Yet they had never seen me. That was the reason for that
prayer. He had been praying to see me to thank me for the books.
How would you
feel?
It is very easy
to see yourself beyond the assignment and the Lord of the same. And pride comes
very naturally in such instances. Of course the limelight makes people think of
you as more than a person, superhuman (or super anointed for those with
spiritual jargon) if I may say it.
But that is the
smaller problem. The real one is that you start believing because of the way
they treat you. You therefore slowly start treating yourself and others with
that attitude.
As an example,
how many worship leaders (musicians is the right word) sit through a sermon?
Don’t they move out after they sing only to come back just before the
invitation song. Why? They do not think they need a sermon. Their life has too
much anointing to defile it with dull sermons. And to date I still wonder how
someone can play instruments when praying and still be part of the prayer.
I was a singer
and instrumentalist for a long time and so am able to see beyond what most can’t.
One thing that
kept my feet on the ground was the fact that I never loosened my grip on daily
and substantial reading of the Bible. Another thing is that I was a celeb in
small and far off lands. Of course I believe that God intentionally hid me.
Imagine a singer who can play several instruments and preach and teach as well!
God hid me. As an example, God always moved me when a church I was serving in
started making plans to ordain me into one or the other position. And He still
hides me.
A minister is
most effective when he is performing his assignment, be it in the desert or the
palace, whether he is serving crowds or the small abandoned children at the
dumpsite.
People’s eyes do
not determine your effectiveness. God does. And He is the only one who holds
the key to the perfect reward. Remember this?
His lord said unto him, Well done, good and faithful
servant; thou hast been faithful over a few things, I will make thee ruler over
many things: enter thou into the joy of thy lord.
(Matthew 25:23)
The faithful
servant does what he is commanded. He does not play to the gallery. Like in the
parable, it was not the quantity of the returns that determined their
commendation of judgment; it was doing what they had been asked to do.
Yet the
limelight moves the goalposts to what the crowds (and a church could very
easily become a crowd) demand or desire. I believe the limelight is the reason
this verse is in the Bible.
For the time will come when they will not endure sound
doctrine; but after their own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers,
having itching ears; (2Timothy 4:3)
We must have our
spirits hardened in the secret place to resist the pressure the crowds (even if
it is the FB or church crowd) places on our doctrine. And we must allow
ourselves to be hidden.
We must resist
the urge to pursue publicity.
We must not
advertise ministry. In fact advertising ministry converts it to a business.
Jesus said that it is our fruit that will push the ministry forward.
Many pastors
must have their faces and names wherever the church’s signboard is. In fact
they make the name and picture more prominent than the name of the church. Then
they will wonder why the devil is on their case all the time. You advertised
your presence even before you went to the battlefield. You will never
experience rest.
You write a book
targeting the enemy of souls. Then you advertise it heavily. Then you wonder
why everything is falling apart. Yet you announced to the devil what you will
do to him if the book sells.
Maybe you sing a
song that raises God’s profile in worship or instruction. Then you publicize it
on all the media outlets. Then you wonder why everybody starts harassing you.
When I worked
with a media house, the only one then, many Christian singers brought their
tapes (it was before CDs) to be played on air. Surprising as it seems, they had
to bribe the continuity announcers and producers to have their ‘Christian’
songs played. Many had to sleep with those same people to have their ‘worship’
played on air.
To date, many
producers require a pound of flesh from worshippers who must penetrate the
ceiling to make their music popular.
Why should the
god of this world, who also is the ruling spirit of the media, allow unfettered
access to his kingdom for those opposed to and working contrary to it? That is
why you must pay using his currency. Sadly that currency is sin. And that is
what any minister who must use his effort to get to the limelight must use. And
the primary reason is because God is not interested in you being on the
limelight unless He places you there for war.
Do you realize
that most popular choirs (worship teams in today’s language) start falling
apart when they hit through the ceiling into great popularity. And many times
what brings them down is sexual immorality. Perfect harmony arouses the desire
for human appreciation. Once it is given a chance, the rest is downhill as the
flesh thrives.
And it is not
any different with solo singers. I have written elsewhere that very spiritual
songs and lifestyle expose a singer to the people. Then fame takes over, making
later songs spiritual trash as they will be appreciated anyway. Their purity of
life later becomes irrelevant to their performance.
What is the
advantage of allowing God to hide you after any battle?
The first is
freedom. You are content with the audience of One, who is the Lord and King of
your life. There is no expectation from the masses.
Like Elijah and
John the Baptist, you could dress in rags and it wouldn’t matter as your Lord
is fine with it. Like Isaiah you could walk naked for three years and not run
mad because you are playing to your audience of One. Like Jonah you could
preach stinking like fish and looking like you were from being cooked with fish
oil because you have reconciled with your Lord. Like Paul you can sing in
prison while bound to the stocks because you know God is never caught by
surprise. And like Noah you are able to build that humongous box to protect you
from a flood even when you do not even know, let alone can conceptualize what
rain is.
But being hidden
requires you to be able to hear clearly what your Lord orders. Only then will
you know when to get to the battlefield and when to retreat to the hiding
place.
Application
question; do you know what God requires of you NOW?
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