When you leave a meeting, do you leave anything behind? Do you think people noticed that you were there or that you left? How about bigger: when you leave a base, a church, a city or state, the military, or the earth? Are people better for you being in close proximity to them?
David said that goodness and mercy followed him all the days of his life. The chaplain ought to be a source of hope in every situation with encouragement, love, and life pouring into every person as God gives opportunity. In their wake should be people who were faced to think on eternity because of the christian's witness.
Being indwelt with the Holy Spirit means that you’re going
to bear much fruit in love, joy, patience, self-control, calmness (not a named
fruit of the Spirit, but I often say that a chaplain should be the calmest
person in the room), etc. because the chaplain ought to be an ever-present encouragement
to those he ministers to. They may not have the same beliefs but one of your
jobs is to make them jealous of how God is blessing you, so that they may be
saved (Romans 11:13-14).
There is no such thing as neutrality, we are either for
Christ or against Christ. Everyone you meet will be better or worse for having
you in their life. You’ll either push them towards the Kingdom of Heaven or inoculate
them against the truth. Richard Wurmbrand is an extreme case, but he spent
years in a Romanian prison and found a ministry in which he was able to lead several prisoners
and at least one guard to Christ. He summarizes his ministry like this, “It was
strictly forbidden to preach to other prisoners. It was understood that whoever
was caught doing this received a severe beating. A number of us decided to pay
the price for the privilege of preaching, so we accepted their terms. We were
happy preaching, they were happy beating us, so everyone was happy.”
Chaplain, how can you be spreading love and hope? Is it true of you that goodness and mercy follow you all the days of your life?
I pray that when I die, all of Hell will rejoice that I am no longer in the fight. ~ C.T. Studd (When I paraphrase this I say, "I pray that you will live your life and so order your faith that when you die, all of Hell will rejoice that a great saint has stepped off the field of battle.")
Key Verse: Thanks be to God, who in Christ always
leads us in triumphal procession, and through us spreads the fragrance of the
knowledge of him everywhere. ~ 2 Corinthians 2:14
More:
1. I tell new servicemembers that if they are running low on hope to visit a chaplain, because we have an overabundance of hope and we’re happy
to give some away. The adage says, “Hope floats all boats!” Are you ready to
give a reason for the hope that is in you, that is, Christ in you, the hope of
glory? If you don’t have any hope to give away, how can you, as Heath Lambert
declares, “Go nuts in the hope department!”?
2. As a chaplain I regularly have people miss appointments or
fail to do something optional that they said they were going to do. Often
because of the rank disparity they ask if I’m going to report them. My response,
“I’m here to alleviate stress, would reporting this alleviate stress or add
stress?” Granted, there is room for accountability and the blessings thereof, but would
you say you’re better at stressing people out or bolstering their hope? What
would they say about you?
3. An anecdote from the Soviet Union says that soldiers despondently said they were having an “average” day. When asked what was average about it, they said
it was “worse than yesterday, but better than tomorrow.” That's a sad “average”; are you making people’s day worse or better than yesterday? My prayer for you, dear reader, is that you’ll have an average day: better than yesterday,
but worse than tomorrow, and that you'll do likewise for those God has put you in close proximity to. Only in Christ can this prayer be answered.
4. Further Resources:
Burroughs, Jeremiah. The Rare Jewel of Christian
Contentment. Reprint, Edinburgh: Banner of Truth Trust, 1964.
Wurmbrand, Richard. Tortured for Christ. Washington
Depot CT: Spire Books, 1971.
Wurmbrand, Sabina. The Pastor’s Wife. Bartlesville,
OK: Living Sacrifice Book Co, 2005.