I would say in deep affection to my younger brethren in Christ who seek to serve their gracious Master in the ministry of the Word in Sunday school work, in street preaching, in tract distribution or in any other form of Christian labor, “See to it that your service is the outcome of communion with Christ.” Rivers of living water can flow only from those who go to Him and drink, and they must go continually. Be careful to allow nothing to cloud your enjoyment of divine love, and seek to realize for yourselves the exceeding preciousness of Christ, so that when you speak of Him it may be out of the fullness of a heart made abundantly happy. It is possible for the outward form of service to be sustained by the mere energy of nature, apart from communion with Christ, but then every element that makes the service acceptable to Him will be wanting. Your own souls will be enfeebled and become like withered grass.
I would further say, “Be on your guard against making service your one object.” They who do so seldom serve well. We have known earnest men and women who have fallen into this snare. They are never satisfied unless always on the move, and they think little of others who do not follow in their steps. Martha served much and found fault with one who seemed to serve less, yet Mary received the Lord’s commendation, and Martha missed it. A running to and fro with restless feet may be but the religious activity of the flesh, which fades away.
Cultivate Communion
Cultivate communion with God, be much in prayer, and spend time over the Word of God, that your own soul may be fed. How else shall you feed others? “It is written in the law of Moses, Thou shalt not muzzle the mouth of the ox that treadeth out the corn. Doth God take care for oxen? Or saith He it altogether for our sakes? For our sakes, no doubt, this is written” (1 Cor. 9:9-10). In thinking of others, and laboring for their good, God would have us feed for ourselves. If we do not, we shall soon starve our own souls, and spiritual strength will decline. We will be keepers of the vineyards of others while our own vineyards have not been kept.
You will find it a deadening habit to read the Word only to search out something for other people. Moreover, what you gather up and set before others will be mere religious information in which there will be no heavenly unction. It differs from the living ministry of the Holy Spirit, as chalk differs from cheese.
Be faithful also in little things; it may be that God will then entrust you with greater matters. I am a little afraid of those who neglect the duties of everyday life for what they think and call the work of the Lord. Do faithfully and well whatever comes to your hand. In a humble school, far removed from public observation, God often trains His servants for their higher mission. Moses was forty years in the back side of the desert, keeping the flocks of his father-in-law, before he was called to lead out the tribes of Israel from the house of bondage; David in the wilderness watching over the few sheep of Jesse was prepared for his conflict with Goliath in the valley of Elah. The years thus spent were not wasted years; the fruit of them was seen ever afterward.
Christian Truth, adapted