What wholeness looks like
Don't confuse wholeness with perfection. My functional definition of wholeness is simply "giving more than you take."
A person who is emotionally broken tends to see others only for the support they can provide. The greater the brokenness, the less a person contributes to the relationship and the more they demand. Emotional wholeness is seen in what you can contribute to others. The spiritually whole consider others more important than themselves.
The first step on the pathway to wholeness is to develop gratitude.
Selfishness and greed pull at all of us, but they find justification in our pain. For broken people, this first step is counterintuitive. Our natural inclination is to attempt continuously to meet the needs of hurting people. Normally this is a good thing—Christian faith means compassion. The danger comes when we find ourselves reinforcing an ungrateful spirit.
Spending nearly ten years working among the urban poor, I faced unending crises and expectations. I felt obligated to meet needs on demand.
While we did a great deal to serve people, it became clear we were not helping them get better. The same people would return with the same issues again and again.
I will never forget the insight a homeless man gave me one day. He approached our car asking for money or food. Kim offered him my lunch, consisting of a sandwich and chips. Without hesitation, he looked into our car, pointed to my soup, and demanded that also. Not one ounce of gratitude. I gave him my sandwich, but I kept the soup.
He helped me see the relationship between gratitude and wholeness. Jesus explains to Simon the Pharisee that where there is more forgiveness, there is more love. This is the work of gratitude. Gratitude expands both our capacity to love and to experience love.
Helping someone grow in gratitude is relational art, requiring firm but gentle strokes of the brush. This is not a work for those who prefer hammers and nails. If a person is a believer, a good place to begin is the cross. Considering his sacrifice for us, how much more does Jesus need to do for us to be eternally grateful? Discipling begins with the fact that what we deserve is nothing.
Every year we have interns come out to work with us. For several weeks every assignment feels thankless and beneath them. They are often educated, bright, and used to being lavished with public praise. But here, no public ministry is made available to them. Then we begin to promote the ones who respond with continued gratitude, not those of superior talent.
About mid-summer we usually have a crisis! When a person is ungrateful as a pattern, we tell them to focus on three areas.
- Listen to your life stories and note how many negative memories you have. Find something in your history to thank God for.
- Even when life is tough, there is something of beauty to see if you look hard enough. Don't let pessimism create pervasive despair. Thank God for the flowers, the sunrise, the air you breathe, or something.
- Sacrifice for and serve someone more needy than you are. I know when my little girl Mariah wept over the poverty in Indonesia she had an entirely different perspective of how rich we were.
Brokenness can be the result of many things—abuse, neglect, abandonment, trauma, or sin. We could be either victim or victimizer. Most often we have a dual role. Hurt people hurt people.
When brokenness is the result of being victimized, it makes the road to recovery more difficult. Why? Bitterness. Bitterness that has good cause is difficult to release. Yet bitterness is a guarantee for depression and despair. Bitterness forces you to live in the past. Hope requires you to focus on the future. Only forgiveness sets you free.
Forgiveness is the response of a heart that knows gratitude. Bitterness breeds ungratefulness. Gratitude is the key to healing and wholeness.
Grateful people are thankful for what they have and demand little of others. They see the glass half full and are thankful for what they're given, since they expected nothing. A person who is ungrateful wonders who drank their other half.
All of us struggle with selfishness, but brokenness justifies it. Whatever is received is expected; it is never enough. An ungrateful person cannot be made grateful by meeting their demands. Until a person is willing to appreciate life, serve others, and even sacrifice something of themselves, they will never find the healing they long for.
Integrity comes via humility
After we see hints of a grateful spirit, the next step toward integrity is humility.
Humility is an elusive trait. How do we know we are humble? Doesn't that observation immediately make us proud? How do we walk in humility?
Note that God calls us not to pray for humility but commands us to humble ourselves. When we leave it to him, it's called humiliation. Jesus humbled himself and became a servant. I think it's this simple: humility looks just like servanthood.
Eric Bryant is our pastor to students. Even though he had a degree from Baylor, a master's degree from seminary, and church planting experience in cutting-edge Seattle, when he moved to L.A., he came to Mosaic to learn and to serve.
He got a job at a car rental place and began volunteering as a security guard on Sunday morning. I kept seeing this young man serving. He was always there in the lot or street helping people find parking. One day I asked him why he was there so early.
"It's a great way to meet people!" he said, and told me how much he appreciated serving on the security team.
A short time later, I asked Eric to become our youth pastor. I told him and his wife, Debbie, "I'm a sucker for servanthood."
You can trust the heart of a person who isn't too good for any job.
Again, integrity does not mean perfection, but it is absolutely tangible. Can this person be trusted? Can you entrust other people to this person? Will their leadership lead others closer to Christ?
Perhaps the ultimate statement of trust is entrusting your child to someone.
In ministry, the greatest enemies of integrity are usually selfish ambition and pride. It is not enough to be gifted to lead—you must have the moral compass to take people in the right direction.
The difficulty with integrity is that up front it can be so easily misdiagnosed. It can be confused with talent, savvy, attractiveness, or knowledge. We are well skilled at pretension and deception. We work harder at making the outside look good while leaving the inside untouched. All too often we do not discover the true nature of a person until after we have placed them in a position of power and influence.
We don't have attitude problems; we have pride problems. Humility is the only cure. It is the also the most significant qualifier for spiritual leadership.
Jesus humbled himself and gave his life on our behalf. Only those who humbly follow Christ should be trusted to lead. Integrity is seen most often by the willingness to humbly serve.
Like Michael and Sarah, Robbie and Missy remind me of God's power to make us whole. Gifted and talented, they could serve as poster children for human potential. Yet, especially for Robbie, a pain-filled childhood and rebellious adolescence left him emotionally broken. Coming on staff prematurely, he had to work out much of his struggles while in the heat of vocational ministry.
I was the brand new senior pastor and he was the home-grown youth pastor. Our first year was tense. Here was a young man who had at one time flipped his car out of control on the highway in an attempt to end his life. Every Christmas he would struggle with depression. From his youth Robbie's heart had been filled with violence and anger. The product of divorce, he hardened his heart to survive, and now he needed that heart tender to serve others effectively. He saw anyone who worked for "the institution" as the enemy, and that included me.
At times I wondered if the past would haunt him forever. It took a lot of prayer and patience to earn his trust and respect, but over time, in community, we saw him shift from building his future through power and intellect to humility and gratitude.
We probably fought every week for two years, and I can't tell you how many times I wanted to dismiss him just for irritating me. Yet today he is one of my greatest friends and there are few people I trust as much.
I don't know anyone who works so hard to serve others. No matter how many times he makes a mistake, he is always there seeking forgiveness and making things right. He and Missy are the kind of models I hope my children emulate. Now, six years later, Robbie is the lead pastor for one of our most promising church plants.
There are many like Robbie and Missy at Mosaic. Our leadership is made up of broken people who have become whole disciples.
Including me.
Erwin R. McManus is pastor of Mosaic
716 S. Brady
Los Angeles CA 90022
www.mosaic.org
At a Glance
The Discipling Cycle
Whether a person starts from brokenness or not, the steps of a disciple follow a well-marked path.
1. Gratitude. Everyone has to start out with the elemental Christian trait—thankfulness. It's not a natural tendency, but the ability to receive grace begins with the ability to be grateful for undeserved gifts, even amid painful circumstances.
2. Humility. When a person gratefully receives what he hasn't earned, it's humbling and leads to acts of service.
3. Wholeness, which can be defined as "giving to others more than you take." And wholeness demonstrated over time is �?/P>
4. Integrity. And when a person has demonstrated integrity, they're ready for �?/P>
5. Leadership. In fact, they are probably already taking responsibility for guiding others. Now they're ready for that leadership to be recognized.
Copyright © 2000 by the author or Christianity Today International/Leadership journal.
Click here for reprint information on Leadership.Spring 2000, Vol. XXI, No. 2, Page 48