[forthright] Counting Widgets

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From: Forthright Magazine <forthright@...>
Date: Thu, 23 Mar 2006 16:54:10 -0600
Forthright Magazine
http://www.forthright.net
Straight to the Cross


COLUMN: Fidelity

Counting Widgets
by Mike Benson

It's difficult not to get discouraged at times
about teaching a Bible class, isn't it ...?
Teaching is one of those spiritual tasks that
rarely provides tangible results.

Years ago I had a close friend in Georgia who was
a carpenter by trade. On occasion, when the two of
us went out driving together, he would slow his
truck down, point to some nice two-story house
over in an open field and say, "I built that." He
wasn't trying to brag on himself -- that wasn't
his nature; he was simply proud of what he had
done and wanted to share that with me because I
was his friend. I never said it, but I couldn't
help but feel a certain sense of envy during those
tours around Bartow County. After three or four
months of labor, my friend could back away and
identify what he had accomplished.

Like carpentry, other endeavors produce similar
quantifiable results. Those who teach in a secular
environment can give quizzes and tests to gauge
the progress of their pupils. People who commit
themselves to a fitness program are eventually
able to see measurable changes in their body and
weight. But not so with those of us who are Bible
class teachers -- we don't have an apparatus to
mark the growth of those entrusted to our care and
tutelage.

I appreciate one author's observations in this
realm. He notes:

We usually try to measure success based on the
wrong things. Normally, our natural tendency is to
measure our effectiveness on things that we can
count or see. We delight in trying to count church
membership, converts, or the number of contacts we
are able to accumulate. We want to be able to see
how many people are now coming to the church as a
result of our [efforts]. But, "God sees not as man
sees, for man looks at the outward appearance, but
the Lord looks at the heart" (1 Corinthians 16:7).
We have our focus on the external things rather
than on the internal things ... That is what I
refer to as the widget mentality. Typically in
business we measure our output by the number of
widgets that we are able to produce. We put raw
materials into a big machine, and out the other
side come widgets. We are able to count the
widgets and therefore we are able to measure our
effectiveness. But that does not always work in
the spiritual realm (Cecil 106).

Those of us who teach a Bible class rarely, if
ever, are granted the opportunity to see the
actual fruits of our labor. We can't follow our
students at home, in school, or on the job and put
a yardstick to their maturation in the faith. If a
youngster resolves to be more obedient, to
cooperate with his or her parents or to have a
better disposition, we may not be able to witness
this evolution in character. If a teenager decides
not to cheat on an algebra exam because of a
lesson we taught on honesty, we may never know
[this side of eternity] of the silent victory that
was won on the battlefield of temptation. If a
husband and wife determine to work harder on their
relationship because of a study we delivered on
God's will for marriage, we may never be made
privy to the wondrous transformations taking place
in their hearts and house. Growth (2 Peter 2:2;
3:18), from our vantage point, is slow and
imperceptible.

I've come to the realization that Bible teaching
is, by its very nature, a long-term investment (1
Corinthians 3:9). It's not just what the kids in
our class did or didn't do last week, but where
they will be twenty years from now. And, it's not
just where they will be twenty years from now, but
where they will be in eternity, and who they in
turn will have influenced for the Lord (2 Timothy
2:2) before the Last Day.

God's Word produces results. We have that
guarantee. "For as the rain comes down, and the
snow from heaven, and do not return there, but
water the earth, and make it bring forth and bud,
that it may give seed to the sower and bread to
the eater, so shall My word be that goes forth
from My mouth; it shall not return to Me void, but
it shall accomplish what I please, and it shall
prosper in the thing for which I sent it" (Isaiah
55:10,11 NKJV). Perhaps those of us who teach a
Bible class should focus less on counting widgets
and concentrate more on planting seed (Luke 8:11).
__________
Cecil, Douglas M., "Being Fruitful," The 7
Principles of an Evangelistic Life. Chicago:
Moody, 2003.

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