Control Freaks

“My sheep hear My voice, and I know them, and they follow Me. Yet they will by no means follow a stranger, but will flee from him, for they do not know the voice of strangers.”1

Pastor Verne Arens writes how “he once knew someone who was a leader in the congregation. At one time or another he had filled most (if not all) of the important leadership positions in that church. More than that, however, oftentimes he was the one who would volunteer for those tough, dirty jobs that no one else wanted: washing dishes after a potluck supper, helping to teach the confirmation class, stacking shelves at the food bank.

“This is the kind of person you would like to clone and with whom you’d like to fill the congregation,right? Wrong! This person was a delight to have around until things didn’t go his way, and then he was a nightmare: disruptive, divisive, even destructive. He didn’t understand the meaning of community and was not a team player. And when (not for the first time) he and his wife climbed into their huff-mobile and drove away after some disagreement, the congregation finally had the good sense not to beg them to come back. Finally that congregation had learned to distinguish between the voice of a shepherd and the voice of a stranger.”2

Another description of this type of person is control freak. Sometimes, after a reasonable number of rebukes, the most loving thing we can do is to ask them to leave. As long as we keep giving in to them, we become a part of their sickness (terrible insecurity). It’s interesting to note that when they threw Jonah overboard, there was a great calm!

Suggested prayer, “Dear God, please grant that I will never be a control freak and thereby play the role of God in other peoples’ lives. If I ever am, please open my eyes to what I am doing and help me to change my ways. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. John 10:27, 5 (NKJV).
2. “(Good) Help Wanted,” by Rev. Verne Arens

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The Door

“So Jesus said to them again, ‘Truly, truly, I say to you, I am the door of the sheep.’”1

George Adam Smith, the 19th century biblical scholar, tells of traveling one day in the holy land and coming across a shepherd and his sheep. He fell into conversation with him and the man showed him the fold into which the sheep were led at night. It consisted of four walls, with a way in.

Smith asked him, “This is where they go at night?”

“Yes,” said the shepherd, “and when they are in there, they are perfectly safe.”

“But there is no door,” said Smith.

“I am the door,” said the shepherd.

He was not a Christian man and wasn’t speaking in the language of the New Testament. He was speaking from an Arab shepherd’s viewpoint.

Smith looked and him and asked, “What do you mean, ‘you are the door’?”

“When the light has gone,” said the shepherd, “and all the sheep are inside, I lie in that open space, and no sheep ever goes out but across my body, and no wolf comes in unless he crosses my body; I am the door.”

And that’s what Jesus is for all of his children, the sheep of his pasture.

Suggested prayer, “Dear God, thank you that we have the promise that Jesus is always with us no matter in what circumstances we find ourselves, and that he is the door to watch and guard over each one of his children—including me. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. John 10:7 (NASB).

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