Return to School, Return to Missions
August 2016
The fall semester has begun. And let's be honest: we're creatures of habit. Where our spirit desires to practice spiritual disciplines and start healthy habits, it's far too easy to spend the first couple weeks coasting, spending far too much time catching up with your friends (or if you're grade-conscious like I was...far too much time organizing your calendar/schedule/syllabi, etc.) and not the time necessary with the Lord. If you desire to grow not only in your relationship with God this semester, but to also keep your heart stirred to the call of disciple-making among the nations, then let me propose a few things to consider.
Learning with the nations in mind starts by being a disciple of Jesus Christ.
Following Jesus means being transformed by His Spirit to walk as He walked. This takes time with him. Time with the Lord = life. And just as certainly, time absent from his presence = death. You will notice the difference in your inner being from the days and weeks intentionally seeking him versus the days or weeks running on your own effort. Choose life...spend more time with Jesus. Open his Word and ask him to teach you and give you a "hunger and thirst for righteousness" (Matthew 5). Talk to him…ask him to help you pursue now the very kind of God-honoring disciple-making life that you want to have while laboring among the least reached one day. Following Jesus means all your homework—your class time, projects, and papers—should be done as worship, as faithful service to your "Audience of One," Jesus (Thank you, Os Guinness). You don't go through school just for the grade or to get by and survive it all, but to honor the One who made you, saved you, transforms and sustains you, praying the whole time that he uses your education, your future college degree, to fuel service wherever he chooses. Let’s add another one. Learning with the nations in mind, working out your discipleship of Christ means margins. It would seem a completely radical idea for most but yes, you—especially you college students—create margin in your life! If the answer to every "Hey, how are you doing?" is "Busy," then it's possible that your conscious awareness of God's presence to sustain you is minimal and a biblical practice of six work days to every one rest day in the gift of Sabbath is absent. A consistent pattern of busyness is culturally praised but it's not biblical. Running ragged without rest does not move you toward holiness, it actually makes you vulnerable of Satan's schemes. Find a mentor who will give you wise counsel and not just let you complain. Have this mentor ask you what God's teaching you, what you're reading in the Word, and ask them to pray and talk through obstacles that come as you seek to faithfully follow Jesus. Choose someone whose faith inspires you to grow and who won't lean on their own advice and experience alone but point you to the holiness of God and grace found through his Holy Son, Christ. May this mentor constantly guide to you back to the truth of His Word. So…a review. Being a disciple of Jesus Christ while in school means:- Time with the Lord
- All my "doing" is done as worship
- Practicing dependence on God through Sabbath, having margins
- Finding a mentor