Mission Statement
November 1, 2021 by bjcorbin
In his mega-selling book, “The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People”, author Stephen Covey encourages the reader to “Begin with the end in mind” (i.e. Habit 2), which includes the development of a personal “Mission Statement”.
This statement is meant to define the overarching purpose of a person, entity or group; and may include the values they mean to uphold along the way, and/or the destiny they hope to fulfill in the end. Once established, it is intended to be a touchstone, which is revisited periodically as a reminder. For a follower of Christ, this would seem to be a worthwhile exercise.
Ultimately, our mission is to succumb to God’s love, and to abide in the vine (i.e. Jesus), allowing His love to freely flow through us, so that He can be manifest upon the earth. In this way, He remains the Head, and we function as the Body.
Establishing His Kingdom rule in our hearts is what brings about, “Thy Kingdom come, Thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven”; not the establishment of some revised religious structure, or the overthrow of the corrupt governments of this world.
Living a life wholly given over to Christ is how we make disciples of all nations. Not through our exceptional giftedness, or our clever evangelism techniques, or by our persuasive arguments; but by allowing Him to draw men unto Himself, through us. Indeed, it is “Christ in us” that is the hope of His glory.
Our efforts to reduce the mission to some sort of practical, predictable, manageable, marketable, tactical strategy have stripped it of its supernatural power.
In the midst of shouts to “make our voice heard”, and calls to take up arms against our oppressors, I beseech thee brothers and sisters to be mindful of the mission, and who we are called to be.
Shouting at the darkness will not make it flee, but being the light will.
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Mission Statement
November 1, 2021 by bjcorbin
In his mega-selling book, “The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People”, author Stephen Covey encourages the reader to “Begin with the end in mind” (i.e. Habit 2), which includes the development of a personal “Mission Statement”.
This statement is meant to define the overarching purpose of a person, entity or group; and may include the values they mean to uphold along the way, and/or the destiny they hope to fulfill in the end. Once established, it is intended to be a touchstone, which is revisited periodically as a reminder. For a follower of Christ, this would seem to be a worthwhile exercise.
Ultimately, our mission is to succumb to God’s love, and to abide in the vine (i.e. Jesus), allowing His love to freely flow through us, so that He can be manifest upon the earth. In this way, He remains the Head, and we function as the Body.
Establishing His Kingdom rule in our hearts is what brings about, “Thy Kingdom come, Thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven”; not the establishment of some revised religious structure, or the overthrow of the corrupt governments of this world.
Living a life wholly given over to Christ is how we make disciples of all nations. Not through our exceptional giftedness, or our clever evangelism techniques, or by our persuasive arguments; but by allowing Him to draw men unto Himself, through us. Indeed, it is “Christ in us” that is the hope of His glory.
Our efforts to reduce the mission to some sort of practical, predictable, manageable, marketable, tactical strategy have stripped it of its supernatural power.
In the midst of shouts to “make our voice heard”, and calls to take up arms against our oppressors, I beseech thee brothers and sisters to be mindful of the mission, and who we are called to be.
Shouting at the darkness will not make it flee, but being the light will.
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Posted in Commentaries, Thought for the Day / Quotes | Tagged being the light, kingdom come, mission, mission statement | Leave a Comment
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