Updated 11:59 pm.EST, Sun November 22, 2009

Ministries|Wed, Jun. 18 2008 08:55 AM EDT

Five Steps to Overcoming Ministry Obstacles

By Rick Warren|Christian Post Guest Columnist

Ever notice that when God is blessing your ministry the most, troubles follow? Your church is growing, but you desperately need a new building. New people are coming to Christ, but you now need to disciple them. You’re tackling some of the greatest evil giants of your community, and now they’re starting to tackle back.

Maybe you’re feeling like Joshua. As God was leading Israel into one of the greatest eras of its history – the conquest of the Promised Land – Joshua was chosen to lead the charge. Yet in the midst of this great time of success came one of the greatest challenges of his life. There were seven larger and stronger nations already there. If he was going to fulfill God’s call on his life, he’d have a big obstacle to overcome first.

That’s when God gave Joshua a five-point strategy for success that still works today.

Be clear in your direction.

In the first four verses of Joshua 1, God specifically outlines when and where Joshua is going. He knew exactly what God wanted him to do.

If you’re going to be a leader that God can use, you must first be clear in your direction. I talk to pastors all the time who say, “I really don’t know what I want in my ministry.” They tend to just drift along. They don’t know what they want for their church or family. When you ask them to tell you what their vision is for the church, they respond with something fuzzy and not specific.

We all need a goal, a dream. But those goals must be clear and specific. Nothing becomes dynamic until it becomes specific. And the more specific you are in your direction, the more you’ll find a magnetic pull that’ll take you along.

Every time I’ve presented Saddleback with a specific goal, the church has responded in a big way. In 2002 when I challenged the church to start 3,000 small groups, it was a nearly impossible goal. I was as specific as I could be, and the church responded. We started more small groups than we ever had before. Two years later I challenged the church to feed every homeless person in Orange County. That’s no small task. But Saddleback reached the goal once I made it specific. When you get specific, people get excited.

Be confident in your desires.

Once you know the direction that God wants you to take, you must have the confidence to move ahead. You can’t doubt what God’s called you to do. Doubt is the opposite of faith. The Bible says, “Whatever is not of faith is sin.”

Once you’ve set your goal the devil will get you to start questioning it. Is this really God’s will? What if I’m wrong? Do I really deserve this? Am I just being selfish or prideful?

Evidently this was a real problem for Joshua. He lacked confidence. He felt inadequate in his leadership. Sound familiar? I’ve identified with Joshua many times. God had to keep giving Joshua a pep talk. Four times in Joshua 1, God says, “Be determined and confident.”

Why? It isn’t the obstacles that keep you in the desert. It’s fear. Fear keeps you from being all that God wants you to be. It’s fear that keeps your church from growing how God wants it to grow. You must be confident in your desires.

Be committed to your decisions.

Once you’ve started, don’t look back. Joshua 1:9 says “Do not be discouraged for the Lord your God will be with you wherever you go.” God says stick with it. To be a success in life, you must outlast your critics. An oak tree is a little nut that refused to give its ground. Commitment is a key to accomplishment. If you don’t have commitment to your ministry, you’ll never finish anything.

What are you committed to? What are you willing to die for? Many people in your church are afraid to commit to anything. They begin one job and when it gets tough, they switch to something else.

When high achievers make a decision, they die by it. You can’t just jump across a canyon with several baby steps. You have to commit yourself to your goal. If you’re going to cross a canyon, you’ve got to go for it with gusto. It won’t work until you commit to making it work.

Be corrected by your defeats.

In chapter 1, verse 7, God tells Joshua, “Be strong and courageous. Be careful to obey all the law. Don’t turn from it to the right or to the left that you may be successful wherever you go.” He tells Joshua not to get sidetracked. When you have a failure, get back on track. Let God’s Word help you reorganize your ministry and your priorities. Mistakes are a part of life. You’re not perfect. The pencil eraser industry was built on your mistakes. If there weren’t such things as mistakes, we wouldn’t have any need for erasers.

The difference between successful and non-successful people is not that successful people don’t fail. They do. It’s just that successful people learn from their failures. Corrections after defeats are the key to the future. Thomas Edison once said, “Don’t call it a failure; call it an education.” At Saddleback, our staff is highly educated! We’ve done more things that didn’t work than did. We’re not afraid to admit it when we’ve made a mistake and to learn from it. The road to success is paved with failure. But we’ve learned from those failures.

Joshua did too. Remember the story of Ai, the little dinky town that the Israelites came upon after their great victory at Jericho. They’d just taken on the greatest, most fortified city in the land (Jericho) and God had given a tremendous victory. They were getting a little confident and cocky. Then they began to presume upon God’s grace. When they had to take the little city of Ai, Joshua said, “Go out with a small battalion of troops.” They went out and were absolutely wiped out. When the news came back to Joshua, he threw himself onto the ground and prayed. He asked God what happened.

God tells him to get up, dust himself off, and get the sin out of the camp. Don’t just pray – do something. They later discovered that Achan had stolen three things even though God had said not to take plunder. Because he hid those things, his sin was causing the entire camp to suffer.

But Joshua had to discover the problem and take appropriate action. He learned by his defeats.

Be conscious of God’s dependability.

God promises enormous benefits in his Word as we trust him and follow him. Joshua 1 is full of God’s promises. He specifically promises Joshua four things:

Power: In verse 5 God says, “No one will be able to stand up against you all the days of your life. As I was with Moses so I will be with you. I will never leave you or forsake you.” God tells Joshua to trust him and he’ll provide all of the power he could ever need.

Protection: He tells Joshua that nothing can harm him. In verse 5 he says, “I will never leave you or forsake you.” He’ll be with him always and protect him.

Prosperity: God says in verse 8 “Don’t let the book of the law depart from your mouth. Meditate on it day and night. Be careful to obey everything written in it. Then you’ll be prosperous and successful.” Prosperity is being everything God wants you to be, having God’s blessing your life, and using the talents he has given you. God guarantees that you’ll have more than you need if you trust in him.

Presence: That’s the best promise of all. In Joshua 1:9 God says, “I will be with you wherever you go.” Many times I’ve felt lonely in ministry, but God always gives me a new sense of his presence when I trust him.

God wants you to have success in ministry. He may not define it the way you do, but he wants you to have his best. As a pastor or key leader in your church, he wants you to help lead people to tackle the great giants of your community. Follow these five principles and he’ll give you everything you need to succeed.

______________________________________________

Rick Warren is the founding pastor of Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, Calif., one of America's largest and best-known churches. In addition, Rick is author of the New York Times bestseller The Purpose-Driven Life and The Purpose-Driven Church, which was named one of the 100 Christian books that changed the 20th Century. He is also founder of Pastors.com, a global Internet community for ministers. Copyright 2005 Pastors.com, Inc. Used with permission. All rights reserved

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  • Thu Jun 19, 2008 11:31 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Dear CP readers.

    Some may have noticed that a large number of comments have disappeared from a number of articles. We would like everyone to know that we are currently in the process of launching our new site within this week and experienced a minor glitch. We apologize for the inconvenience and hope to be able to restore the comments to the site.

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  • Wed Jun 18, 2008 8:53 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    A link to this article has been posted on the website GoodNewsNow.com.

  • mike »
    Wed Jun 18, 2008 7:53 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    ministry obstacles mr warren? so you think that christianity & christians are perfect. NOBODY has to correct you? when christ rebuke the pharisees & the experts in the law, they were insulted & that your mentality. everybody SHOULD, MUST ABIDE BY YOUR RULES! that is why there are christians who are EXHAUSTED ABOUT your rigid, absolute religion that you don't even practice. OH WHAT A HYPOCRITE!!

  • Wed Jun 18, 2008 7:48 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Use whatever word you wish to describe how he teaches, this letter here, the one we are reading is in line with God's word. So at this point, use scripture to show the flaws of this letter. To simply throw man's words against it falls on deaf ears with me.

  • Wed Jun 18, 2008 7:43 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Smithdl you are welcome to your comments but they do not in any way address anything that was being discussed. Passionate yes, but they vacillate between personal conviction and factual statement while ignoring the fact that Rick Warren's primary method of communication is through pragmatic didactics.

  • Wed Jun 18, 2008 6:33 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    Sola, your assuming jeremiah never had convert. You also assuming he is saying to be successful you need converts. That is not what he said.

    Mike, from what I read he said you need to give it your all to jump across the canyon. Not sure what article you read, but I would recommend re-reading it.

    CP2008, meeting with them is not an abomination. If it is, Jesus is not the Christ. To assume what Rick Warren said during that meeting is wrong. Rick Warren has before and will I'm sure in the future speak out against homosexuality. Just because he is not on the corner of a street with a sign telling them there going to burn in hell doesn't mean Rick Warren doesn't know, or preach truth.




    Having spent a life dedicated to the word and Christ, I read this article and then read all the responses and I must say, I am sad. This was a GREAT! article on the truth of faith in God for the goals that HE(God) has set before our ministry through His word and how we trust in Him to complete those goals. We trust his word, and jump full steam across the canyon. TRUTH!






    The destroyer is the accusers of the brethren, brothers. Please don't play Satan.

  • mike »
    Wed Jun 18, 2008 3:31 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 2

    get a job rick warren! JUst give your 10%, & life will be easy & perfect! you want the people to adjust to your thinking!

  • Wed Jun 18, 2008 1:52 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 1

    Sola, I think you're right we appear to assume that numbers dictate success and success automatically indicates God's approval. I would add that biblical needs to be foundational to whatever we do in ministry but also God's timing needs to be a big part of the decision making process as well. In ministry one size does not fit all. Plus let's not forget Noah who preached 120 years and it appears could only persuade his immediate family to come on board.

  • Wed Jun 18, 2008 1:21 pm Agree: 3   Disagree: 2

    "At Saddleback, our staff is highly educated! We’ve done more things that didn’t work than did."

    If God is in something can it be a failure? While the idea of doing what works is nothing new I would challenge us to make a paradigm shift and do "what is biblical"

    When we do what is biblical people reject us - they get mad - they respond in opposition - is that failure because it didn't work? Or rather is that faithfulness that persists. Accolades from people is not our highest priority IMO, or even getting a thumbs up because they like what we are doing - doesn't the very nature of what we do offend, if we are a minister of the Gospel?

    " Prosperity: God says in verse 8 “Don’t let the book of the law depart from your mouth. Meditate on it day and night. Be careful to obey everything written in it. Then you’ll be prosperous and successful.” Prosperity is being everything God wants you to be, having God’s blessing your life, and using the talents he has given you. God guarantees that you’ll have more than you need if you trust in him."

    Prosperity I would argue is humbling yourself before God, repenting of sin, and being obedient. The key to success is obedience according to Joshua 1:8. Prosperity is not a big church (though that is not sinful necessarily) prosperity is not even lots of people following after you. Jesus had eleven committed disciples and many fair weather friends.

    "God wants you to have success in ministry." - Jeremiah never had a single convert

    Just wondering and willing to hear some counter arguments I just personally see a thin veneer of biblical terminology painted over pragmatism

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