In the church God has
appointed... those with gifts of administration... 1 Corinthians 12:28
Everything should be
done in a fitting and orderly way. 1 Corinthians 14:40
The dots in the first
quotation indicate that I have left parts out - quite important parts in fact.
I’ve done so because I think that often in church life we don’t value highly
enough the faithful people who simply “keep the show on the road”, so to speak.
I’m talking about the organisers, the administrators, the number-crunchers, the
rota-arrangers, the practical sleeves-rolled-up people.
When Paul speaks about
people “with gifts of administration”, that’s not the only possible, or even
the best, translation. The word he uses conjures up the idea of a helmsman, the
person who guides the ship with their hand on the tiller. But I personally like
the translation we have, because it draws attention to that army of people
without whom the church simply couldn’t function. Another translation speaks of
“organisational gifts”.
Why is this on my mind? Because
in my own Bible reading at the moment I’m working my way through Leviticus and
Numbers. If you have ever done this, and you are anything like me, there are
times when you find yourself thinking “Why on earth did God see fit to preserve
all these obscure details in his word?”
Numbers 1, for example, has
a string of short paragraphs, each about one of the tribes of Israel, which are
virtually identical. They all have just under fifty words, and the only
differences are, first, the name of the particular tribe being spoken about,
and, second, the number it contained of “men twenty years old or more who were
able to serve in the army”.
And you think, Why? Why do I
today need to know about all this?
In chapter 2 we learn about
the precise arrangement, when camped, of the tribes around the “tent of meeting”
(that was where the ark of the covenant was kept, and was the nearest
equivalent the Israelites had to a shrine or temple at that time). We learn too
the precise order in which the tribes set off on the march.
In chapter 3 we learn about
the work of the Levites, the men who did the donkey-work, the heavy lifting,
when Israel was on the march, and who generally were responsible for looking
after the enormous amount of “stuff” that needed to be carried around while
Israel was in the wilderness.
Yes, not only the altars and
the ark, the sacred table and the lamp-stand, but also the poles and posts, the
curtains and other hangings, the ropes and tent-pegs - all these items and a
whole lot more needed to be taken care of. And chapter 3 tells us exactly who
did what. Everyone knew what their particular responsibility was.
So again: Why? Why all this
detail?
One reason, I think, is to
give us a flavour, a feel, of what the camp of the Israelites must have been
like in those exciting early days. Even the strange names and the precise
numbers stir our imaginations (if we let them), and we can somehow “see” in our
minds this vision of God’s holy pilgrim people on the move. Orderly,
disciplined, controlled.
Well, it’s a long leap from
Israel in the wilderness to the church in first-century Corinth; an even longer
leap from there to us today. But certain things don’t change, and the need for order
and discipline is among them. And that is why “those with gifts of
administration” are so important. In the church of Christ, even in these very
relaxed and informal days in which we live, things should be done “in a fitting
and orderly way”, as Paul puts it in chapter 14.
So here’s a suggestion. When
you go to church next Sunday, by all means say thank you to those who lead and
read and pray and preach. Don’t forget to say thank you too to those who teach
the children and look after the babies. Not to mention those who set things up at
the start, those who make the coffee, and those who do the washing up.
But why not also go up to
the secretary, or the treasurer, or the administrator - whatever name you call
these background people by - and give them a great big sloppy kiss on the
cheek. They too are exercising “gifts of the Spirit”.
They might get quite a
surprise...
Thank you, Lord
Jesus, that in your church there is a place for everyone, and everyone has
their place. Help me to find my particular place, and to fulfil to the best of
my ability the work you wish me to do, so that your church operates in an
orderly and efficient way. Amen.
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