Clank! A pot – or something that kind of
resembled a pot – was set down on Otto’s makeshift desk. Right on top of his
open journal. Not again. He gripped the pen that was in his hand just a
little tighter as he looked up from his work.
A short man stood on
the other side of the desk. He was smiling; his ‘white’ teeth a stark
contrast to the dark face.
"My wife say you
fix this." The man said.
At least, Otto was
pretty sure that was what he had said. He took a deep breath, gritted his
teeth, and reached for the rusted, battered, and badly burned object.
Everyday! He thought to himself. Everyday, without fail, and always just when I sit down to get some real work done! He looked the pot over - sticking his finger right through a hole that had corroded through the side. This thing is no good! Don't they know what garbage is?
He knew they didn't. In fact, it was likely that the man or his wife had gotten this pot out of someone's garbage pile in the first place.
Everyday! He thought to himself. Everyday, without fail, and always just when I sit down to get some real work done! He looked the pot over - sticking his finger right through a hole that had corroded through the side. This thing is no good! Don't they know what garbage is?
He knew they didn't. In fact, it was likely that the man or his wife had gotten this pot out of someone's garbage pile in the first place.
He looked up and met
the man's eyes again. "No... good." He said, laboriously choosing
each words needed to convey his meaning. “I...can't...fix…this.”
Apparently, he thought of the right words for the man's smile disappeared.
"You're no
Christian!" The man shouted, throwing the pot to the floor of the little
porch on which they stood.
Otto didn’t have to
guess the meaning of his words. He had heard that phrase so many times in the
last few days that he had it memorized. It was the new response that the
natives used whenever he didn't do what they asked him to. They were accusing
him of being a hypocrite. Accusing him of preaching something he didn’t
practice. Accusing him of not helping them. Yet he hadn't added a single word
to his list in over a week because he had been too busy helping them. Besides
that, he was doing this language study to help them! The whole point was
to learn the language so he could translate the gospel for them.
With this in mind, Otto was very tempted to
shout something back – something that would have been just as nasty. But he
couldn’t. He couldn’t because he couldn't seem to remember any insulting words. He had heard the natives shout all sorts of curses at each other, but
the phrases never seemed to come to mind when he needed them. With his luck - and God's intervention - he probably would have ended up complimenting the man rather
than insulting him anyway. In addition to that problem, he had another - a
nagging feeling that they were right.
The man stomped away,
leaving Otto alone with the familiar feeling of being a failure. He glanced
down at the rust-streaked, but otherwise blank page and the feeling only
increased. How he hated that feeling - that feeling of working his hardest and
yet getting nowhere! He could just imagine what the missionary board would say
when they saw this month’s report. If he ever got around to writing it that was.
He would have to say something like: No progress on the language studies. No
closer to starting the translation of John. Have been too busy fixing broken
pots, busted shovels, bent machetes, and a rusted harmonica. Otto couldn’t
help but laugh aloud at his imaginary report, despite how pitiful it sounded.
He rose from his
chair, picked up the sorry-looking, little pot at his feet and turned it over
in his hands…
Otto Koning had come
to Irian Jaya, Papua New Guinea to be a missionary and he wasn’t keen on
failing that assignment. His job was to win the people over to Jesus. Or, more
specifically, to do language studies, keep books, report to the mission board,
preach the gospel, and translate the book of John into the native
tongue. It was not to spend all his time fixing broken pots, busted
shovels, bent machetes, or rusted harmonicas.
Otto had a
predetermined vision of what his job in Papua New Guinea should look
like and, because of this, he could clearly identify success and he could clearly
define failure. But for some reason success always seemed to be out of his
reach and failure was constantly frustrating him.
Most of us, at some
point or another, have felt what Otto was struggling with. You know where you
need to go, or what you need to do, and yet - try as you might - you just can’t
seem to get there! It doesn’t seem to matter how hard we try or how many times
we go back to the drawing board because for some reason we’re just bound
to fail.
What do we do in that
kind of a situation? Well, it seems like there are three options: We can throw
in the hat. Quit. Give up. And then try to console ourselves in self-pity. Or
we can keep trying. Fight an uphill battle. Be persistent and refuse to ever give up.
Or we can choose the third option. We can re-evaluate. We can ask God if our
definition of success and our definition of failure is matching His.
Throughout all of his
growing-up years, Otto’s dad had told him that he would never amount to
anything. He wanted to prove him wrong. He wanted to be a good missionary - to
do his job well. Was there anything so bad about that?
Not really. But what if God’s definition of Otto doing his job well was different from Otto’s definition? What if being a good missionary looked different than what Otto pictured? What if God had a different definition of what it meant to ‘amount to something’ than Otto’s dad had laid out? What if Otto was off in his understanding of what success was? And what if we are too?
Not really. But what if God’s definition of Otto doing his job well was different from Otto’s definition? What if being a good missionary looked different than what Otto pictured? What if God had a different definition of what it meant to ‘amount to something’ than Otto’s dad had laid out? What if Otto was off in his understanding of what success was? And what if we are too?
The missionary’s
assignment was a good one – to win the people over to Jesus. That was done
through language studies, book translations, and gospel preaching not
through fixing broken-down, no good junk. Right?
Wrong. Otto’s job was
to share the gospel and it was just possible that serving the natives by fixing
their stuff might do that more effectively than translating the book
of John could. Not fixing their stuff didn’t seem to be getting
him very far, so Otto decided to put it to the test. He began fixing broken
pots, busted shovels, bent machetes, and rusted harmonicas and he did so willingly.
A short time later
his supervisor paid him a visit to see how the ministry was getting along. Otto
braced himself for the worst. He was dejected. He was miserable - ready to be
chided for wasting time. To be excused. Sent home. Deemed a failure as he had
feared. The man said,
“What have you been
doing!”
Otto tried to think of some way to explain
himself but, a moment later, he found that he wouldn’t have
to.
“Otto,” his
supervisor continued, “you are ten years ahead of every other missionary we
have!”
Otto was incredulous!
Apparently, God had a plan in fixing broken pots. Perhaps, He had placed a value
even in that rusted harmonica; choosing it to accomplish His purposes!
“Trust in the Lord
with all your heart, and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways
acknowledge Him, and He shall direct your paths.” (Proverbs iii.5-6)
How many of us have a
pre-determined definition of success? How often do we think that we know what
will and won’t get us where we need to go? Do you deem anything that deviates
from your plan to be a failure? Do you lean your own
understanding, rather than acknowledging God?
What if true failure isn’t deviating from our plans, but refusing to accept His?
What if true failure isn’t deviating from our plans, but refusing to accept His?
The greatest failure
of all is the failure to accept the gift of God – Jesus and the sacrifice He became upon the
cross to purchase our salvation. You can have all the success in the world,
but if you fail in that one point, success is empty. It means nothing and will
vanish away. In the same way, we can try to achieve whatever we want – even try
to achieve it for God – but if it isn’t what He desires for us, if it
isn’t where He leads us, what good will it be?
The fear of failure
can be overcome simply by choosing to trust fully in the person of our Lord
- not just for eternity but in every day He gives. The exciting
news is - He never fails.
“He who calls you is
faithful, who also will do it.” (I Thessalonians v.24)
In Christ
quiana
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