
2 Timothy 4:1 “In the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who will judge the living and the dead, and in view of his appearing and his kingdom, I give you this charge…”
Some things are just serious business. Surgery is serious business, especially when it involves vital organs or microscopic precision. If the doctor is operating on your brain, or your spinal column, or your heart, you expect him to be intensely focused on what he is doing, not playing catch with the surgical tools or telling jokes and laughing so hard that he can’t keep his hands steady.
Rescue operations are usually serious business. If someone is trapped and injured under a pile of debris, you don’t want to move something the wrong way that shifts the weight of the pile and crushes the victim. Hostage situations tend to be serious business. If law enforcement isn’t careful about what they say, where they move, and how they react, hostage takers may start hurting people.
I am sure you see what these situations have in common: they are all matters of life and death. Even a small wrong move may end up in tragedy. That’s why they’re serious business.
Christian ministry is serious business. I don’t mean to suggest that pastors ought to be humorless bumps on a log with a perpetual frown on their faces. I hope that I am not perceived that way. But Christian ministry is often a matter a spiritual life and death. What pastors say, how they act, especially how they handle the word of God can make a difference for someone’s soul.
That sense of seriousness comes through in Paul’s words to Timothy. God is always present, watching, listening. He means business! He isn’t present like I am when I attend a baseball game. I like baseball, but I tend not to be so serious about it. The last professional game I attended, I spent half the game talking to friends, admiring the ball park and the field, and watching the other people in the stands.
God, on the other hand, is watching us intently. Some day he is coming back in all his ruling power to judge all people. Don’t forget that, Paul tells Timothy, as you consider your pastoral duties.
So what does that mean for you and me? As you consider your pastor’s work, remember who is watching him. In the past some members have expressed surprise that their pastor actually disapproved of some sin they were committing, that he disapproved out loud and called for a change.
It was as if to say, “Pastor, don’t be so serious. This can be our little secret. Why can’t we just agree to let me have or do this one little thing I want so long as it doesn’t disturb anyone else?” It’s as though the pastor made the rules up himself, or as though he could cut a deal someplace where God wasn’t watching, and God wouldn’t know.
God is watching, all the time. That means a ministry that has no room for compromise, not for the sake of popularity, not even for the sake of your friendship. He is trying to spare you from the wrong side of God’s judgment. Remember that as you consider your pastor ministers to you, and pray that he remembers it as well.







