One Thing We Shouldn't Expect Our Pastors and Leaders to Do for Us

 Pixabay

Pastors are often the run-to persons in any given church. Many congregants come to their homes, knock on their office doors, and send them messages asking for help in various ways: be it prayer, counsel, a word of wisdom, or insight.

Still, with the many things that pastors do for their flock, there's one thing church members shouldn't expect them to do for them.

They shouldn't expect the pastor to develop their relationship with God for them.

An Impossible Request

As I go around various places to share the love of God to people, there are occasions when somebody will just come and tell you, "please pray to God for me."

Whether you go to schools, local communities, business places, and church facilities, there are people who would suddenly pop up asking you to pray for them.

Of course, we are tasked with praying for each other. But one thing that every Christian should understand is that while a minister, pastor, or brother in the Lord can pray for another, one's relationship with God can only grow via a personal connection. In other words, it's impossible to rely on somebody's prayers or help to make your relationship with God flourish.

Truth is, when it comes to our relationship with God, it's every man for himself.

'But I Don't Know How to Get Close To God!'

I've heard some people approach a pastor for prayer, saying, "You got God's favour on you, so I'm asking you to pray for me."

While pastors will gladly pray for their flock, that idea's just plain wrong.

Every Christian who's a genuine Christian and saved by the atoning sacrifice of Christ on the cross and has been given the Holy Spirit as a guarantee of their adoption has God's favour on them. It's not about how many hours you clocked in the church, nor about the number of disciples you have, nor about the number of ministry teams you volunteered yourself into.

It's simply based on the truth that if you're in Christ, you're God's child (see Ephesians 1:5). And if you're God's child, you have the same Holy Spirit that God has deposited in each and every true believer (see Romans 8:15; Galatians 4:16; Romans 8:11).

There's no one that's more "favoured," more "anointed," and has a "greater destiny" than another – but there are those who are more obedient to Him, and that's what matters.

Obeying God is Loving God

Friends, how your relationship with God grows actually depends on you. I've seen people go to big churches without growing in obedience to the Lord. Yet I've seen people who seem silent in church but have grown in their character and can easily say "no" to sin in obedience to God.

It's not about who your pastor or small group leader is. It's about your personal relationship with and personal obedience to God.

Ask yourself: Have I invested my own life in building a strong relationship with God through prayer, walking in the Spirit, and obeying the Word of God?

News
Joining the dots
Joining the dots

Jewish academic and Hebrew scholar Irene Lancaster reflects on lessons from Abraham and the significance of something as small as a dot. 

Christians join calls to scrap two-child benefit limit
Christians join calls to scrap two-child benefit limit

A coalition of 101 organisations, including Christians, has called on the government to abolish the two-child limit on benefits in full, warning that “half-measures” will fail to lift families out of poverty.

Christian charity urges churches to reach out to homeless women
Christian charity urges churches to reach out to homeless women

A Christian homelessness charity has warned that thousands of women experiencing homelessness are being overlooked in official government figures.

Christian groups welcome government moves to criminalise porn depicting strangulation
Christian groups welcome government moves to criminalise porn depicting strangulation

The government has announced new laws that will criminalise the possession and publication of pornographic material depicting strangulation or suffocation, following mounting concerns that such images are helping to normalise violence in sexual behaviour.