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Subject: Sand Dollar: The Danger of Listening to the Wrong People - March08, 2004



 Good Morning, Doves
  Monday, March 8, 2004
  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 

    THE DANGER OF LISTENING TO THE WRONG PEOPLE


  While the speaker at a Wisconsin church Bible conference, I met a
  discouraged visiting minister who said he had just resigned as pastor of a
  church he had served for eleven years.  During his time as pastor, the
  church had grown from only a few families to a sizeable congregation.  He
  had enjoyed his work there until one of the members began to criticize him;
  then he had allowed this grumbler to drive him to despair.  Finally, tired
  of the attacks of his critic, he had quit.
 
  Hearing the former pastor's heartbreaking story reminded me of a paragraph
  in the book, "The Tongue---Angel or Demon?" that has been played out again
  and again in too many churches: "Contentious tongues have hindered the work
  of God a thousand times over.  Critical tongues have broken the hearts and
  health of many pastors." Here before me was living proof of author George
  Sweeting's accurate observation.
 
  But ministers aren't the only targets of cruel critics.  Sadly, fault-
  finders exist everywhere.   And they're always engaged in their favorite
  pastime: cutting down all who don't live up their exaggerated expectations.
  Oliver Wendell Holmes said, "The human race is divided into two classes -
  those who go ahead and do something and those who sit still and inquire why
  it wasn't done another way."
 
  When we find ourselves unable to please our critics, we are in good company.
  Some grumbled when our Lord healed sick people on the Sabbath, others
  complained because they felt He spent too much time with sinners.  Judas
  was upset when He allowed a woman to anoint His head with an expensive
  ointment, saying it should have been sold and the money given to the poor.
  Judas didn't care about the poor, but linking his protest to the needy made
  him look good.  Those who focus on faults are always looking for ways to
  justify their caustic comments that injure innocent people.
 
  Peter said we are most like our Lord when we take unjust criticism
  patiently (1 Peter 2: 20-21), but that's a tall order. Few aspire to follow
  the steps that led to the cross.
 
  Opportunities to demonstrate the reality of our faith when under fire
  abound because there is never a shortage of critics.  These negative
  nuisances are everywhere, continually searching for something wrong with
  those who are doing their best to serve the Lord. They are always the first
  to hear of anything wrong and feel it their duty to spread the word. For
  centuries, their cruel tongues have kept ministers on the move,
  contributing to what a major news magazine once called "the game of musical
  pulpits."
 
  Are you a victim of critics in your church or community?
 
  Lovingly tune them out. Even the moon couldn't keep shining if it paid
  attention to barking dogs.
 
  The discouraged Wisconsin pastor found help in
  realizing he had been listening to the wrong people. Many in his church had
  appreciated his ministry and been helped by it but he hadn't heard their
  compliments because he was so preoccupied with the cutting words of one who
  chose to focus on his faults.  Listening to faithful people would have kept
  him from being discouraged and enabled him to continue his important work.
  He decided it was time to make a new commitment to his Lord and return to
  focusing on loving God and serving people as he had done before being
  devastated by criticism.
 
  Let's stop listening to the wrong people.
 
  Those who love, support and encourage us deserve our attention.  They are
  gifts from God to enable us to live in the sunshine no matter what our
  critics say.

(c) 2003 Roger Campbell

  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  May your day be richly blessed.

  Go and spread 'good will and peace', as does the dove in the legend of the
  Sand Dollar.
   
  Bob Johnston
  Publisher, Sand Dollar  
  Minneapolis, Minnesota USA
 
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