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Are You Willing to Be a Maintenance Worker?

Are You Willing to Be a Maintenance Worker?

 

Near the end of the epistle to Titus, Paul writes, "And let our people also learn to maintain good works, to meet urgent needs, that they may not be unfruitful" (Titus 3:14). This verse teaches that Christianity involves maintenance work. Everyone enjoys a finished product, few like putting it together, and fewer enjoy repairing or maintaining it. In the same way, "maintaining good works" in the local church can be tedious business. Everyone enjoys a comfortable building, but who will help work on it? Everyone is concerned about the sick and hospitalized, but who will take the time to call, write, and visit them? Everyone likes hospitality and good fellowship, but who is willing to provide it?  The church must be filled with maintenance workers.

On the personal level, it is sad but true that some individual Christians just "fall away."  Jesus once taught, "They on the rock are they, which, when they hear, receive the word with joy; and these have no root, which for a while believe, and in time of temptation fall away" (Luke 8:13). In this verse, Jesus laments the failure of some believes to do that necessary, personal "maintenance work." Preventatively, He teaches that we must maintain our joy of God's Word. Nothing does this like reading and studying the Bible. Only those who are involved daily in this come to truly appreciate the precious value of its truth. Christ teaches that we must maintain our faith in God's Word. It is hard to believe, but Jesus says that individuals can cease to believe in Him. This is dangerous, as Peter teaches one is better off knowing Christ than rejecting Him (2 Pet. 2:20-21). Christ also teaches that we must maintain our strength by God's Word. Otherwise, temptation will pull us away from Him.

When Thomas O. Davis accepted the presidency of a civic club, he was not facetious when he prayed, "Now I get me up to work, I pray the Lord I may not shirk, and if I die before tonight, I pray my work will be all right." An old proverb goes, "God gives every bird its food, but he does not throw it into the nest." Too, God has given every man a Savior, but He will not just put salvation in our lap without our doing anything. In both the case of the bird and the man, there is work to be done to obtain and maintain what is needed. May all of us do good works eagerly ("be ready," Titus 3:1), thoroughly ("to every good work," Titus 3:1), blamelessly ("speak evil of no man," Titus 3:2), and gently (Titus 3:2). That's the way to excel in the maintenance business!                                                                          --Borrowed