Monday, May 9, 2011

The Redemptive Gifts of Prophecy and Serving


So, why are we taking all this time to unpack the redemptive gifts?  It is because I firmly believe that if you want to live strategically, you will see the highest level of transformation in that area when you lean heavily into your area of gifting.





We all have learned skills and areas that we have just become better at because we have done them over and over again.





If you know what your gift is, you are going to grow much faster than if you don’t.  It truly allows you to really live in that ‘sweet spot’ God has created you for.



Here is what one person has said in relation to a better understanding of their gifting



For me, when I walk in my gift, my spirit is at peace. This was hard lesson to learn since I used to value striving & personal effort. Now I am becoming more comfortable with walking in peace and valuing being just me. I still have personal effort, but now it is focused on finding ways to be excellent in who I am and expressing it in what I do well.



Prophecy is an impression that God may have something to say specifically to specific people at a specific time. It can be a word for an individual. It can be a word to a group of people, for a church, maybe even for a whole country. But it’s a word from God that’s for the here and now.   Adrian Warnock



1.      The design of a prophet.

     

      Let’s look at prophets in action in Acts 13:1-3

They work alongside other giftings.  In this passage, we see prophets and teachers working hand in hand in the commissioning of Paul and Barnabus.



Antioch is a very diverse city where the Christian message has just arrived.  People across all racial and ethnic lines were coming to faith in Jesus. We have Saul, a Jew, Barnabus, from Cyprus, Simeon from northern Africa, Lucius from Cyrene, which is most likely today modern Libya and Manaen who was straight out of Roman royalty, living with the family of Herod.  Under no other circumstances would you find these men together, but because of Jesus and the unity that He brings across unthinkable lines that would normally divide.

These five leaders get together and determine that two of these guys need to stop what they are presently doing and be sent out on a new kingdom assignment.



·         The prophet is designed to bring confirmation.


A prophet really can confirm what we sense God is already speaking into our lives.  It may come with a sense of making a judgment call, but remember they not only knows what’s right and wrong but it is  just their default.  They are the ones who go through the grocery store and evaluate whether the groceries are in the right place, whether the person at the checkout is doing a good job. There is this compulsion to pass judgment on anything and everything, and hopefully a more mature prophet keeps his mouth shut most of the time but through his mind he is saying “right, wrong, not good, should be better, change this.” The sense of evaluation is always there.






·         Prophets bring vision to the table.


If you were to break the giftings of the church into three groups: visionaries, implementers and maintainers, the prophet would be your visionary. There have a clear preferred future where they believe God is leading.



The prophet tends to be fiercely competitive.



The prophet also demonstrates full disclosure.


When he is selling a used car, unless he is really carnal, it is impossible for him to cover up the defects. He rather discloses them, telling every little defect, doing all he can to un-sell the car after it is sold because of that compulsion for honesty and integrity.  The prophet is very, very hard on himself.



·         Prophets call the church to their very purpose.



A good redemptive gift of prophet is someone who can build, not just one who can criticize. Any carnal, immature prophet can run around and say “this is broken, and that’s wrong, and this you shouldn’t do” and so on. That is very damaging to the church and very low level.  A good prophet is somebody who can embrace the problem and sense a calling to where we need to go.



You usually find the prophet working on the two extremes. They are drawn to minister to the leadership and those who are broken that want to be restored. There is a passion and desire to bring the principles to apply, to restore, to rebuild, to release the people of God into the fullness of their gifting.



It is the prophet who can look at that broken individual, look at that individual who no longer has hope, no longer has dignity, and to see in him the fingerprints of Almighty God. He can see the call of God on his life and speak life and restoration into him.



The prophet often is called out to walk deeply and profoundly in the area of personal disciplines.



I don’t think there is any higher example of this in scripture than the prophet Ezekiel. He was a prophet in exile. He was ministering in Babylon, having been carried there from Israel in captivity. He was ministering to one of the worst congregations around.



The Israelites were in absolute denial. Denial is something else that drives the prophet nuts. They were saying “this is not God’s judgment; we don’t deserve God’s judgment. We will be back in our land shortly; this is just a blip on the screen.” Day after day Ezekiel got in front of those obstinate people saying, “It is God’s judgment, and it will last, and Jerusalem will be destroyed and you are in denial.” They said, “no we’re not,” and he said “yes you are.”

Not only was he in captivity and had a wretched audience, there was also apparently poverty and hardship in his ministry. God had him lie on one side for 300 days, then lay on the other side. All of these symbolic things he had to act out—eat food that was cooked over a polluted fire. Many things he lived out in his own flesh, his own pain. Then, finally, God came to him and said, “you only have one thing that is really important to you and that’s your wife, you love her dearly, she’s the apple of your eye, she’s going to die tomorrow and you’re not going to miss a beat. You’re going to preach your morning sermon and your evening sermon and you’re not going to mourn or be part of her funeral.” As prices go, that’s an awfully high price. He paid it.



There are times, seasons in the prophet’s life when God is silent and it is not because of their sin, it’s because of God’s plan for their life, trying to develop a deeper, richer root system.



The Word of the Prophet



The manifest gift of moving in the prophetic is not just limited to one who has the design of prophet.  A teacher, a servant and an encourager can give a prophetic word, but it will come more strongly to the person who has been designed by God in this way.  As Romans 12:6 tells us that if you are marinating in the gifting, then use it in proportion to your faith.



Bill Hybels in his recent book, ‘The Power of A Whisper’ talks about filters  that we need to exercise for knowing when it is truly God that is speaking to you through your own impressions or from another person of faith.



1.      Is the prompting truly from God? 

Is it consistent with His character?

 Is it aligned with His attributes?

2.      Is it Scriptural?  He will never contradict His written revelation

3.      Is it wise? 

Wisdom will often tell us to not make decisions in haste and lose the way. Proverbs 19:2



4.     Is in tune with your own character?

5.       What  do the people you most trust think about it?



The benefits of prophecy!

1 Corinthians 14:1-3



We are called to eagerly desire this gift and there are two purposes given here:

·         To encourage – to come alongside, here is that word, ‘paraklete’ coming out again, to comfort, appeal, to earnestly request or entreat someone, to offer assistance.



·         To strengthen – the word of the prophet as seen here in the NT is designed to give hope, give life and yes while correction is understood here, it is a good course correction.  It doesn’t bring with it condemnation.

The prophetic understanding can come as a word of knowledge, a word of wisdom, a verse specific to a situation.  It can even come in the form of a dream or a vision as we see in Scripture.  It is truly given from the Holy Spirit and it is not 'forthtelling' in a predictive sort of manner.  It can certainly come in the form of warning but in many ways its design is to bring hope and a real sense of God's leading in another person's life.





   Again, it doesn't go against the written revelation of God and it should ultimately bring glory to God not to the person.  It should not be confusing, it should bring freedom and minister to our inner being.





Adrian Warnock  shares on the prophetic by making these very clear points:



·         Prophecy is not infallible – we know in part, we prophecy in part.  1 Corinthians 13



·         Prophecy is not equivalent to Scripture – take for example Jonah – his prophecy never came to pass.  Philip’s daughters prophesied in Acts 21 and yet their prophecies are not recorded for us.



·         Prophecy is not authoritative – Also, in Acts 21, there was a group of believers led by the Spirit who told Paul not to go Jerusalem.  Yet Paul weighs what they say and determines that he wasn’t locked in by it and no, it wasn’t go to define his life.



Dangers to avoid on the whole area of prophecy...Adrian Warnock defines them this way -



Hatch prophecies – God is going to give you a baby

Match prophecies – God told me you are the one for me

Dispatch prophecies – ones that deal with life and death situations, terminal illness etc…



1 Thessalonians 5:19-21



I would encourage you, if you do have a prophetic word for someone, have a witness present to confirm or correct what is being said, and to relieve any pressure that the person might feel. It’s very wise to say things like, “Well, I need you to weight this.” “Please check this with your pastor.” “Does this make any sense to you?” Sometimes people deliver a prophetic word and they say, “Does that make any sense?”  "Does this resonate with what God is working on in your life?'





Prophet’s Battlefield



The greatest battle for the prophet is not to forgive others; it is to forgive himself when he has sinned deeply. There is a tendency for the prophet to drive himself, for the prophet to flog himself and make everyone around him miserable as well, as the prophet is trying in some way to “pay back” the Lord for the harm he has caused the kingdom of God.



At Grace, if you have a prophetic word to share for the whole church, the kernel of that word needs to be shared with one of our pastors.  As pastors, we have been given the authority as shepherds in this place to feed the flock, protect the flock and are called to bring discernment. 





We are called to test the spirits ( 1 John 4:1)



John Piper shares on prophecy in terms of its edification.



Why is it that a gift that is Spirit-prompted and Spirit-sustained and rooted in an infallible revelation (the Bible) is nevertheless fallible, mixed with imperfection, and only has secondary, derivative authority? The answer is this: A teacher’s perception of biblical truth is fallible; his analysis of biblical truth is fallible; his explanation of biblical truth is fallible. There is no guarantee that the link between an infallible Bible and the church will be an infallible link. The gift of teaching does not guarantee infallible teaching. And yet, even though the gift of teaching is fallible and even though it lacks intrinsic, divine authority, we know it is of immense value to the church. We are all edified and built up by gifted teachers. God is in it. He does use it. It is a spiritual gift.


Now compare this to the gift of prophecy. It is prompted by the Spirit and sustained by the Spirit and based on a revelation from God. God reveals something to the mind of the prophet (in some way beyond ordinary sense perception), and since God never makes a mistake, we know that his revelation is true. It has no error in it. But the gift of prophecy does not guarantee the infallible transmission of that revelation. The prophet may perceive the revelation imperfectly, he may understand it imperfectly, and he may deliver it imperfectly. That’s why Paul says we see in a mirror dimly (1 Corinthians 13:12). The gift of prophecy results in fallible prophecy just like the gift of teaching results in fallible teaching. So I would ask, “If teaching can be good for the edification of the church, could not prophecy be good for edifying as well, just as Paul says it is (1 Corinthians 14:3, 12, 26)—even though both of them are fallible, mixed with human imperfection, and in need of testing?



The New Testament prophecy is greater in the sense that it is built upon the New Testament foundation, a living, breathing relationship with God through the blood of His Son, Jesus, and the INDWELLING power of the Holy Spirit.  The Spirit of God can also lead us to a real sense of confirmation in our lives of what has been shared with us.



Eileen Fisher in ‘Embracing The Prophetic’ speaks in very strong terms of the discernment that is needed for those who have this gifting.  God may give you a word for someone but it is only meant for you to pray about it and then other times it is meant to be shared.



 http://www.desiringgod.org/resource-library/sermons/when-will-prophecy-cease

  - John Piper teaching on the validity of prophecy for today.



I have also been blessed by A.W. Tozer and his thoughts on why the prophetic is needed in our churches.



http://endtimespropheticwords.wordpress.com/2008/04/03/the-gift-of-prophetic-insight-by-aw-tozer/





















The Design of the Servant



It doesn’t come with a great deal of honour in a culture like our’s, but in the eyes of God, the gift of servant is an incredibly significant one.





Servants in Scripture



Stephen was one of the seven servants chosen to serve the church in Acts 6 .  In Acts 9, we see another servant, Ananias, was chosen by God in a vision to minister to Saul in Damascus.



More than meeting the physical needs—the food, the comfort—the deeper desire of the servant is to provide cleansing and allowing the person’s life to operate the way God designed. So when we call on the name of Jehovah-Rapha, the Lord who heals, it is in the context of obedience, in the context of being able to avoid something that is about to happen. This ties into call to  obedience, which seems to come easier to the servant than anyone else.

If faith is the exercise for the prophet, obedience is the calling for the servant.  He is the one to quickly identify and meets needs.



Servants have few, if any, enemies and part of it is their willingness and desire to extend honor to others. In fact, they go so far as to make excuses for others. The nature of a servant is to come through for those that they are serving when they fall short.  So, the thought behind making excuses is that they want the person that they are serving to be seen in the best possible light.    The thought behind this comes from the teaching in 1 Peter 4:8-10 where the gifting of serving comes with a loving attitude that overlooks a person’s faults.



8 Above all, love each other deeply, because love covers over a multitude of sins.9 Offer hospitality to one another without grumbling. 10 Each of you should use whatever gift you have received to serve others, as faithful stewards of God’s grace in its various forms. 11



 A fierce anger


Servants can have fierce anger that only manifests once in a great while and almost invariable it is a loyalty issue. They’re not angry because someone has done something to them, they’re angry because someone has done something to one of their friends, most especially a family member. The loyalty to family is huge.



Tend to save stuff


Servants tend to save stuff, but not in a particularly organized manner. They don’t always find what they’ve saved, but they like to save.

A strong work ethic



The servant works very hard. Their downfall is that unless they understand how to help, how to serve, they become enablers. In many Christian organizations you have leadership that is immature or carnal or unskilled administratively and they tend to find servants and, under the guise of calling for loyalty and good character, they expect the servant to continually clean up their messes. A wise servant learns how to empower, not enable.



Purity of motives



There is a purity of motive that is un-touched by any other gift. They are straight forward, they are honest, and they can be trusted. That is why so many leaders end up with a servant around them. There is an integrity, a simplicity, an honesty and a truthfulness about the servant.



The Ministry of the Servant



God gives servants authority.



1. To care for, minister to, and pray for leaders. They are drawn to leaders. They don’t want to be leaders but they desire to be next to the leader to do the things that will release the leader into his own full capabilities. The prayers of the servant for a leader seem to carry more weight than anybody else’s prayers.


2.  Restore family.


They have a passion and an authority in prayer to bring an entire family to a place of restoration. It seems that God places more servants in dysfunctional families than in healthy families. They, out of all the gifts, have the anointing and tenacity to be able to bring restoration to the family.



3.  A tenacity to reach those that are difficult to reach.  Acts 9  Ananias



4. To minister to the broken


Time and time again God positions servants to believe in someone no one else believes in. A servant can come alongside someone who is a dangerous, wounded, hurting person and to experience rejection and rebuff time and time again from them for years at a time, and yet finally have breakthrough. A servant can penetrate, be there in that window of opportunity, to be able to speak the truth that liberates and cleanses in that person’s life.

God knew Ananias would simply obey and that he would have the grace to love the one most difficult to love.  So He sent him to Saul, who no one else would go to, in order to minister the liberating, cleansing truth to him.



Servant’s Battlefield



The battle for the servant is the feeling of going unnoticed.  So many servants have bought into a victim mentality because people have put that on them. And so for the servant to be able to shake off victimization, to shake off the opinions of other people, to shake off the perception that they are supposed to be used is hard work!  They need to root themselves in the realization that God sees them and He will honour them.



The Takeaway



To the degree that the servant and prophet can hear this word and step up to their God given identity, to see themselves as God sees them, transcend the indignity of the cross and walk in authority based on the word of God, to that degree they are life givers on an immense scale, they will experience that incredible fulfillment.



Talk about status, it was Jesus who emptied Himself and took upon Himself the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness and being found in appearance as a man, he humbled himself and became obedient to death-even death on a cross.  Philippians 2:7-9

IN the past God spoke to our forefathers through the prophets at many times and in various ways, but in these last days he has spoken to us by His Son.  Jesus is our great prophet who still speaks today.

 

Listen for His voice.  Hebrews 1




John 10:16  They too will listen to my voice!  Listen to Jesus’ voice calling you today!  He is the good Shepherd who laid down His life for His sheep.





My thanks to Arthur Birk for many of the insights gained here.

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

An Introduction To The Redemptive Gifts


Romans 12:3-8



There are three main passages that deal with gifting.  1 Corinthians 12 has been described as ‘spiritual or manifestation gifts’ as they relate to words of knowledge, words of wisdom,  discernment of spirits, prophecy, tongues, interpretation of tongues, gifts of healing, faith and miracles.  Ephesians 4 has been described as ‘ministry gifts’ as they relate a sense of calling in the area of apostle, prophet, evangelist, pastor and teacher.



The series that we are beginning today is on what has been described as ‘the redemptive gifts’ in Romans 12:6-8.  It is my firm belief that we all have a primary gift that shapes us as a child of God.  It is my heart’s desire that we better understand the way that God has designed and redeemed us and not just us, but our fellow believers in the body of Christ to grow in unity and diversity.  The focus in this series is more about how we are designed, why we react and respond the way that we do.





 “Don’t frustrate, appreciate!!” is what I tell my kids often in our home. Wisdom, understanding and discernment go a long way in the body of Christ.  We are going to learn what makes us weak and what makes us strong when it comes to interpersonal relationships within a body of believers.  I also want to unpack the ‘redemptive gifts’ in helping us move from a point of frustration to appreciation of others.  Today is just an introduction and often, our greatest hindrance to harmony is our lack of recognition of how God has hard wired each one of us to respond to Him.  Time and time again the greatest downfall in churches is being centered around uniformity instead of being distinct and seeing how beautiful diversity can be in making us a ‘whole church’!



More recent studies on the giftings in the Bible have brought clarity to our understanding of them.  I also want to parallel what I see as the spiritual instincts that go along with our redemptive gits.  Our spiritual instincts are basically the way that we send and receive ‘signals’ to God that we use when we are engaged in spiritual activity.  Gary Thomas has done great work in this area so a lot of this comes from his studies as well.



Let’s dive in!



The  Redemptive Gift of Prophecy



The word prophet literally means to ‘tell forth’.  It is one who not only perceives, but proclaims as well.



A person with  this gifting can assimilate new truth very quickly.  They can accurately identify the good and hate the evil. They are able to see everything as black or white with no gray. They are eager to see their own blind spots and are quick to pick up on others as well which can lead to heavy introspection.  They desire above all else to see God’s plan worked out in all situations.  Their downside is that they are usually very hard on themselves and forget to celebrate the progress that is being made along the way. They can also struggle in the area of their sense of confidence.

         

A prophet type personality will get tired very quickly with being in maintenance mode.  Their principle is design and they often bring to light what others fail to see.  They have a strong role in bringing a sense of God’s light and revelation to the lives of others.



John the Baptist, a clear example of this, was a man who preaching repentance of sins, and courageous to challenge even the King as necessary.  His main fervor was to prepare the way for the Messiah, helping people to understand its imminence.



A person today with this bent who visits someone in the hospital may looks like this.  They will come to the person’s bed and with compassion and yet with a sense of firmness, proceed to quote scriptures of truth regarding healing.  “You should not be here, this is not right!”   They might ask the person about their blind spots and really challenge them to faith.



A prophet does not struggle with faith.



The CONTEMPLATIVE instinct



This person love to meet God in the quiet of their inner life.  The key word for them is listening and they love to meditate and listen to the whispers of God who meets people in solitude..His still small voice.  They wish that worship would be more quiet than noise and they appreciate the importance of the spiritual disciplines like fasting, meditation and prayer.  They wish that others would understand this and often are guilty and critical of others when they don’t join them right away.  ‘Where is everybody?’ they ask and this is probably the greatest weakness of our Western culture,  we don’t like silence.  Prayer for them is a two way conversation and often it is more listening than speaking.  The worst insult to them is ‘you talk too much and never listen’.  The warning to this person is the danger of withdrawing so much that they do not become useful in their community.



The Redemptive Gift of Servant



The word servant in the Greek means diakonia where we get our word deacon from, addressing physical needs



This person easily recognizes practical needs and is quick to meet them, especially enjoying hands on projects, jobs and functions. They are usually more interested in meeting the needs of another rather than long range goals, and may become pushy or interfering in eagerness to help.  They also have a strong need to feel appreciated and yet they have an inability to accept praise.  They have a hard time saying no and can also display a victim spirit as seen in the life of Martha, sister of Mary and Lazarus.



When the servant gifted person enters the hospital room, they immediately start to fluff the pillows, tidy things up a bit, and ask, “Is there anything that I can do for you?”  Their intent is to assist in this critical time of need.  They will take a piece of paper out; ask for things that they can do at the ailing person’s home for them.  They thrive on the fact there is clear need.  They also can tend to be very competitive and unless they learn how to serve in a healthy way, they can become enablers.  They must learn to empower others.



A servant has no struggle with obedience.



A kingdom instinct



This person cannot seem to catch their spiritual stride unless they are labouring in the fields of ministry.  These people are the doers of the Word.  They will regularly attend worship services, read their Bible and pray, yes, they do all these things. However, they will also tell you that they feel closest to God, most dialled in, joyful in Christ when they are ministering to others.  They truly feel God when they are being used as a channel to accomplish His purposes.  The danger here can be their own sense of self sacrifice to the point of neglecting their family as well.  They also can be seen by others as pushy and frustrated with the lack of response of others.   The desire in them to minister to the physical needs of others may seem as a lack of interest in spiritual things.  Remember when someone is on the serving pathway, they will look at you as one of my former youth said to me, “I have never felt closer to Jesus’ as he was handing out hot chocolate to homeless people on Vancouver’s east end.



The Redemptive Gift of Teaching



The word teacher comes from didasko and is the person who a strong ability to explain truth to others.



The person with this quality doesn’t just accept teaching at face value, but will painstakingly work through the process to bring greater understanding.  They want truth in a logical, systematic manner and enjoy word studies and reading.  They are concerned that truth be established in every situation.  They have strong convictions of facts, and can tend to neglect the practical application.  They are self-disciplined, and usually only has a close circle of friends. They can lean towards being dogmatic in their beliefs and come across as legalistic.  They aren’t too keen on incarnational truth or intuitive impulses as much as seeking the evidence from Scriptures.



 Biblical examples of this trait are Aquilla and Priscilla who taught the great scholar Apollos (Acts 18:1-4; 24-26) a more full understanding of the gospel of Jesus, and Thomas (John 20:24-28) who needed empirical data to believe that it truly was Jesus standing in front of him – he must touch His side.



When the teacher-natured person visits the ill person in the hospital, they walk up to the bed and begin to ask questions like: “What did the doctor say was wrong?  Did you get a second opinion on the diagnosis?”  What they desire is information, so that they can add their assessment.  They love good conversation, and find it all fascinating.



The STUDENT instinct



This person is the deep thinker and the key word for them is truth.  They are the ones who ask the question, but why and prove it from Scripture.  Their greatest quest is truth and they want to see it on paper!  To them beauty is a carefully crafted document that states beliefs, doctrines, you name it.  They see great theology coming from the study of creeds and doctrines.  They feel that those who have their theology most correct are the closest to God.  They would love to be in endless Bible studies and prayer to them is an expression of correct theology.  They are easily given to analyzing worship songs to make sure they are saying the ‘right things’ about God.  The worst insult to them would be to hear, ‘that’s heresy!’ The warning to them is the danger of becoming arrogant and unloving and being more concerned with being right than giving honor to others.



The Redemptive Gift of Encouragement (Exhortation)



The word exhortation comes from the word parakaleo, one who comes alongside, who comes near,  the name is also used of the Holy Spirit



This person loves to encourage others to live victoriously.  They look for a visible response when they are speaking, teaching or preaching to others.  They far prefer to apply truth rather than research it.  For them, truth is God’s source of true encouragement, and we must get it into the hands of everyone.  They are very quick to accept other people as they are without judging them.  They want to clear up problems with others quickly.  They often interrupt others in an eagerness to give opinions or advice.  They tend to be “cut and dried” in prescribing steps of action.



Barnabas is a clear picture, since his name even means “encouragement”.  This he demonstrates by the show of his passion to stand by and under gird young John –Mark when he failed Paul and Barnabas in their first missionary journey.   He even allowed the Paul-Barnabas team to split up over his insistence upon encouraging Mark.  As a result, he took Mark down to Jerusalem and introduced him to Peter and some of the other leaders.  Over the years, his encouragement paid off.  Mark went on to write Peter’s account of the life of Jesus, and even Paul later specifically asked for Mark’s assistance.  Barnabas’ ministry of exhortation to Mark bore fruit.



When the exhorter visits the hospital patient, they begin by telling stories that might cheer the person up.  Everything that the patient says, reminds the exhorter of another story, and both laugh the time away.  The exhorter will come equipped with scripture and often messages from other people.  He has tendency to insist that the person feels better right away, not wants this problem to persist and let’s move on!



The EXERIENTIAL instinct.

This person wants to ‘feel’ the presence of God and to respond with the full range of emotion and physical expression.  The key word for this person is joy.  They love spontaneity, emotion and conversational prayer.  They would like to have very little leadership in worship and let God lead worship and everyone participate.  It is the most responsive instinct to the Holy Spirit and the energy that He gives.  This person is also best suited to cross cultural contexts.  They are big hearted and generous and very nice to be around.  Their prayer is praise and the worst insult they could hear is ‘This is boring.’  The warning for this person is possibly lacking in doctrinal grounding.



They can come across as being shallow and time alone with God in the major battlefield for the exhorter.



The Redemptive Gift of Giving



A person with this temperament freely gives of money, possessions, time, energy and love.  They love to give without other people knowing about it.  They want to feel they are a part of the ministry to which they are contributing, and see that the finances are being handled with wisdom and with good sense.  They have a very strong work ethic and are often successful.  Hospitality is one of their strong areas as well.  On a downside, they may try to control how contributions are being used and focus more on the They may upset family and friends with unpredictable patterns of giving.



We find a number of good examples of giving in Acts and one in particular is Lydia in Acts 16:14,15 as she persuaded Paul to stay with them in their home.







When the give visits the infirmed in the hospital, they always come bearing a gift to encourage.  It is usually something thoughtful, showing time has gone into its planning, presentation and timing of delivery.  They desire for the patient to be reminded in a tangible way that they are loved.



The AESTHETIC instinct

This person comes most alive when worship is done in an environment of beauty, order, tradition and and artistic integrity.  The key word for them is majesty.  They think that the way things look and how they sound are very, very important.  They really can appreciate architecture that is designed specifically for worship.  They love symbolism, color, art, poetry and great music.  They are most at ease when there is dignity and order in all that takes place.  They are uncomfortable with a lot of repetition or songs that might seem fluffy.  Their prayer is beautiful expressions of faith, the worst insult to them would be to say this is ugly and the warning for this instinct is to become rigid and inflexible.



The Redemptive Gift of Leadership



This temperament, or gift, is highly motivated to organize that for which he is responsible.  They can express ideas and organization in ways that are easily understood.  They prefer to be under authority, in order to have authority.   They love to work on long-range goals and projects – they are visionary with a broad perspective.  In time, they can develop callousness due to being the target for criticism.  They tend to drive themselves that can easily lead to neglect of personal and family needs.



            Biblical examples of this gift in people are Joseph (Genesis 30-40); Nehemiah (Nehemiah 1-7); and King David (1 Samuel 16-31).  We see David early in his life caring for his father’s sheep, protecting them well.  When opportunity came for him to see another predator attacking God’s sheep, Israel, in the form of Goliath, he naturally moved to protect and deal with the giant.  He organized the outcasts together into an army, and eventually, he organized a nation, both militarily and in worship.



            When the leader trait visits the hospital, they take out a pad of paper and proceed to inquire of what may need done at the patient’s home and family life.  They will say, “I will get some people to take over your responsibilities while you are here in the hospital.”  They will check on the insurance of the patient, the doctor’s advice, and how all the pieces must fit together in the next weeks of the person’s life. By the time the leader leaves, there is a clear plan for the next season of the patient’s life.



 The RELATIONAL instinct



Finally, this person feels that God is most present when people experience bonding together for fellowship or worship or encouraged through mutual support.  They are heartbroken when there is conflict.  They love meeting in small groups where people honestly share their personal stories and don’t mind tears, hugs or late night prayer meetings.  They appreciate how Christ was so people conscious.  They feel that people are the business and introduce people to others and build them up as well.  They feel that when interaction is happening, God is present and the heavens are rejoicing.  Their prayer is that a small group would really care and pray more for each other.  The worst insult to them is to hear ‘you just don’t care’.  The warning for them is losing their focus on Christ and valuing more their own relationship with God



The Redemptive Gift of Mercy



This temperament had tremendous capacity to show love, always looking for the good in other people.  They are attracted to people who are hurting or in distress.  They take care with words and actions to avoid hurting others.  They try to avoid conflicts and confrontations. They tend to be indecisive, and are often prone to take up another person’s offence.



            Biblical examples of this are John the disciple of Jesus; Ruth (book of Ruth);  Rachel (Genesis 29-31); and  Joseph, the father of Jesus (Matthew 1:16-24; 2:13).  In the case of Joseph, you see great compassion toward Mary, when she was pregnant with the Son of God.  This is extravagant grace on the part of Joseph to continue to embrace her, and not shame her or hurt her in any way.



            When the person with this dominant trait walks into the hospital, they begin to softly weep with compassion, seeing their loved one in such a state. They will come close and comfort them, wiping their forehead and speaking soft words of sympathy.  They will stay endless hours to keep the patient company, supporting in any way possible.



The ACTIVIST instinct



This person sees all of Christ following as an activity of service.  Their key word is involved.  They love to take action with God and commune with Him about what is so needed in our world.  They have great compassion for the disadvantaged and poor.  They are angry about oppression and have a sense of urgency to introduce Christ to others.  They are committed to changing His world and love to connect with other activists, to plan, to think globally.  Prayer for this person is a tool or weapon to advance the kingdom of God.  The worst insult they could hear is ‘you are lazy or a hypocrite’.  They feel best when they are engaged and really don’t like to take time off.  The warning for this person is that they rarely relax and can experience burnout.  They are also susceptible to becoming shallow with others, being disillusioned and their own marriage could easily be in trouble.  It is a real balancing act.



The Takeaway

We all possess a natural inclination for two or three spiritual instincts, we might have a curiosity about a few and what’s left over...well, we have a hard time believing that they have any value at all. However, maturity in faith comes as we become conversant in all the languages of worship and the redemptive gifts as Christ was!  Jesus showed us the heart of the prophet, he wouldn’t mince words.  Mark wrote of him that very early in the morning he would arise and meet with the Father and commune with Him, He was the servant who washed His disciples’ feet.  He was the one who taught from His life and unpacked His teachings with His disciples.  He was the one who gave the words of encouragement…I will send a comforter in my place.  He showed us the greatest act of giving in showing no greater love than this that a man lay down his life for his friends, he led by his example and he had mercy to all who call on His name!



My thanks to Doug Heck for his work on the redemptive gifts  www.totalchange.org  and Arthur Burk.