Friday, August 03, 2007
Too Busy for God
Michael Zigarelli, an associate professor at Charleston Southern's School of Business, polled more than 20,000 Christians of all ages from 139 countries about the busyness of their lives and how it affects their relationship with God. His report, which concludes almost six years of collecting data, echoes the obvious: yes, we're busy people; and yes, our hectic lives prevent us from spending more time with God. Turns out almost six out of every 10 Christians around the world agree to the latter. But there are a few elements to Zigarelli's study I find particularly fascinating.
- American Christians aren't necessarily the busiest. Japan, the Philippines, South Africa, the United Kingdom, Mexico and Indonesia all had a higher percentage of believers who stated they often or always rushed "from task to task."
- African Christians are most likely to claim their busyness gets in the way of developing their relationship with God. (Two out of three South African and Nigerian believers stated this.)
- The Unites States is the only country where women topped men in saying they were 1) almost always busy and 2) that busyness affected their spiritual walk.
And the whammy for most of you reading this ...
- Based on profession alone, pastors are the most likely to say they often or always rush from task to task. Yep, we beat out business owners, lawyers, teachers, salespeople ... you name it. And while a whopping 72 percent of Christian lawyers said their overloaded pace of life interfered with growing in the Lord, almost two out of every three pastors made the same claim.
We are busy. Too busy. And we don't need statistics to tell us that. But maybe a study like this will wake some of us up to this reality: We, of all people, must find a way to place the Lord above every urgent need, every pressing appointment, every desperate cry. The Bible is explicit in stating that as pastors and spiritual leaders, our standards are higher. Yes, the truth is, virtually everything we do stems from a God-given desire to minister. That's good. But the greater truth is, how can we truly minister without first being ministered to by God and receiving His empowerment? We must place Him above all.
YOUR TURN: Are you too busy? If so, how does that affect your relationship with God? What have you done to make that relationship top priority? What advice would you have for those—particularly pastors—who struggle to find time for God?
If I am not spending time alone with God in prayer, worship and Bible reading, how can I continue to grow. And if I am not growing, how can I help others to grow themselves.
As Pastors and church leaders, our primary responsibilty must be to walk closely with God and then help others to do the same.
Thanks,
Steve,
UK
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