Thank you to Amy DeBurgh, Director of Volunteers & Guest Services, for writing today's blog.
If you want to know what effectiveness looks like, you will
have to look hard. A passing glance, at
any institution, organization or individual, will not immediately reveal the
treasure that lies within.
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Effectiveness is a word measured by degree.
The degree of something is a range.
For example something finds its place somewhere
on the spectrum from worthless to worthy, from cold to hot.
The hottest volcano on earth can’t be judged
by a cool photo on someone’s Instagram page.
You have to be brave enough and care enough to get dangerously close to
understand just how effective that volcano is at being hot.
People
are like that.
So are institutions,
organizations, churches and ministries.
It takes time and concern - even bravery - to really find out which of
these are most effective.
This is an
important step if you want to give a person, place or institution your time,
energy or money.
When you do, you won’t
regret it.
It will be priceless to get
to the end of your life, to the end of your wealth, and realize you didn’t toss
it all away into a very hot-looking, but dormant volcano.
When
Jesus said, “What you do unto the least of these, you do unto me,” in essence He
was saying be wary of doing that which seems like it means something, but
doesn’t. Don’t get ripped off in how you
spend your resources. Care for the truly
needy and do it with no thought of self, but with an all-consuming interest in
Christ’s glory.
This is
Shepherds Ministries to me. Here, we
believe that people with intellectual disabilities are created on purpose for a
purpose to reflect the image of God with the freedom that comes from knowing
they are a glory-bearing champion. They are growing in the independence necessary
to express that awesome purpose. We and
they have a need to be effective.
So, to
me, the volunteers who give their time, energy and wealth to such a cause
aren’t missing out. They are flying
helicopters into the volcano, while tourists are snacking on cotton candy below.
Speaking
of cotton candy, it is difficult in a cotton-candy-world to wake people up to
the reality of volcanoes. It shouldn’t
be, because hot, flowing lava is dangerous, interesting and way cooler than the
passing pleasures of eye-candied, vaporous trivialities that so many Americans
are consumed with today. We can be such
a distracted people.
There are those who get it,
though. I find that volunteers are not
only effective, but they are interesting people. They are tossing off the emptiness of boring
self-service and venturing into better places.
This is because they are interested in interesting things. Follow them to the real things, the
meaningful things. They are in good
company. Christ Himself ventured
down. He gave up wealth, entered time
and history to show the value of serving in this sacrificial way. And, it’s safe to say, He was effective.