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Fellowship
on How to Labor on the Campus
[Editor's note: These are excerpts from spoken fellowship with full-time
serving ones. These excerpts have not been reviewed by the speaker.]
I. We should not:
A. Do things by inspiration without thorough
planning. We should carry out the work with planning and with the Lord's
leading in real situations. Our plans shouldn't just be dreams. We
should carry out our college labor with proper planning, but it should
be according to both the Lord's leading and the real situation.
B. Merely make decisions without laboring. We should learn
to invest ourselves. We should not do things on our campus
by inspiration. We should realize that every decision we make will require
hours of labor to back it up. We are not a bureaucracy coming together
to make decisions yet without doing the real thing. If we want to labor
on the campus we must learn to invest ourselves.
II. We should consider ourselves as farmers or businessmen. Therefore
we need:
A. Seed (as a farmer) and capital (as a businessman).
If we were doing financial things, we would have to consider our capital.
The Bible says that we are businessmen, and we are going out to do business.
The Bible also says that we are like farmers. So we must ask ourselves,
what is our capital that we are investing, and what is our seed that we
are planting? If we don't have these five items as our seed and capital,
our labor is not going to work.
1. Our person
2. Our riches
3. Our time - Time
may be the hardest. Are we willing to consecrate our time to the Lord?
If we do not invest our time, than nothing will work.
4. Our wisdom
5. Our humanity
- If we are too spiritual, we will not be fruitful. People cannot understand
spirituality, but they can relate to our concern and our care. Are we
ready to labor as a human being, or are we just a "God-man"? Our concept
of a "God-man" never works. We ourselves must work. This is why we must
properly invest our humanity, because if we are too spiritual we will
not be fruitful. People are willing to be with us not because we are so
spiritual, but because we are so human. When people are with us, they
should experience peace, encouragement, and comfort. They should find
someone who can understand them, who can sympathize with them, and who
can stand with them in their situation. Then people will enjoy being with
us.
B. A field. Concerning our
field, we have to be very specific and practical. We have to be burdened
for the right field where we can invest ourselves. We should be practical
with our time and location.
C. To labor. To labor means
to sweat. We must labor diligently. When we labor on our field we must
mean business. No matter how attractive our humanity is, if we do not
labor nothing will result.
D. To look unto the Lord for His blessing.
III. We should invest ourselves both spiritually and humanly. This means
we need to invest with our:
A. Time. This will decide our success. We
should invest a certain number of hours per week. We must have a specific
amount of time each week for our labor on the campus. Our hours will decide
our success. How fruitful we are is based on how many hours we invest
ourselves to generate a harvest.
B. Companions. In our labor, we must
have companions. We must seek after companions, not colleagues. We cannot
do anything by ourselves. If we have no companions we must find at least
one. We must be able to come together with some companions to pray and
fellowship concerning our work. If we do not have a companion, perhaps
we can find one brother who has a little desire for the Lord. If we spend
time with him to pray and read the Bible, then eventually he can become
our companion. Then we can bear the burden of the university together.
We cannot labor by ourselves.
C. Tender care. This is related
to our humanity. If we get someone saved, we should take him out for ice
cream. If we find something promising with him, we should spend time with
him humanly. Every year we get many names of contacts from the campus.
The problem is we don' t care for them humanly; we only care for spiritual
things. Can we take our new one to the bank to help him open a bank account?
Can we walk him around the campus so that he knows his way around? Can
we show him our refrigerator and tell him that everything in there belongs
to him? This is against the American culture, which is a culture of privacy.
In our care for our contacts we don't need privacy. We should learn to
be human, just like a father who cares for his son or daughter. A father
has no reservation in taking care of his children's need. A father quickly
invests himself, without any thought of his privacy. This is how we should
care for our new ones.
D. Spiritual burden: We have to be
very burdened. Our work on the campus should not just be a thing to do.
If we preach the gospel and no one gets saved, and then we have no more
desire, then we are not laboring with a spiritual burden. If we are burdened
for someone and they reject us, and then we just give up, this also means
that we are not laboring with a spiritual burden. We are just laboring
for a goal. A genuine spiritual burden will cause us to keep trying, even
when we fail. After many of years laboring something valuable will be
developed. Our realization should be, "I am burdened to preach the gospel.
If I am rejected, I will still preach the gospel. I will eventually find
someone who will be saved. My gospel will go out with my genuine human
care for individuals." We need to have tender care in our humanity, but
we also must have the spiritual burden to carry such a work.
IV. We should watch the Lord's move and use our resources. In the
process of our labor we need to watch how the Lord moves and use what
the Lord has given us. Often when we work on the campus we consider how
many we are going to get saved. That is not the Lord's move. What we first
need is to consider what is really the Lord's move. Perhaps the Lord's
move is with a group of 15 brothers that are able to be together. Then
we should realize that there is a desperate need to revive these 15 young
brothers. We should then consider, how many of these can be our companions?
How many can be under our care? How many can be infused with life? Instead
of just wildly preaching the gospel on the campus, we should look for
one or two that we can grow up with. That is the Lord's move. If there
is already a good crop on our campus, then we should be very burdened
for the increase.
A. Different kinds of campus situations:
1. If we are alone:
We should look for someone who can be our companion.
2. If we are among only
a few: We should not stir ourselves up for having many people
saved. Instead, try to have 10-15 saints who are burdened. Be desperate
to revive these 10-15 and consider how many can be our companions.
3. If there is a good
crop already: We should be burdened for increase.
B. Resources:
1. Church gatherings
- Our ability to bring in new ones is fully related to the condition
of the church gatherings. If the church gatherings are weak, we will be
able to do very little. In such a case we may decide to have a home meeting
where the new ones can participate.
2. Families
- Nothing works without families. The best are working families. If
there are families that open up their homes weekly, then we can feel very
free to invite our friends to these homes. Our friends will enjoy this
kind of atmosphere, which is different from a meeting atmosphere. The
families' homes do not just have to be for meetings.
3. Co-workers / senior
or older brothers - We should consider which older brother or co-worker
can meet a particular need at a particular time. This is to use the resources
in the Lord's recovery.
4. Special
guests - In the Lord's recovery we have many respected scholars. We
have professors in all kinds of fields. We can utilize all of them. These
are our resources. We can preach a good gospel message about the Lord
and chemistry, or the Lord and engineering. For some reason we never use
these resources. We should utilize these resources to do the Lord's work.
V. We should have a proper goal, with flexibility. We must
have a goal, and we must also be extremely flexible. Everything has its
time. "For everything there is a season, and a time for every purpose
under heaven" (Eccl. 3:1). There is a time to sow and a time to reap.
At certain times we must do certain things.
A. Always labor to save some and to
raise up some. Also, we need to produce consecrated ones who give their
lives to the Lord. This requires a high labor. Among the ones
we are with some must give their lives to the Lord. This demands that
we be high persons with a high labor. When we are so common, no one we
serve will be absolute.
B. Have events according to our needs.
1. Outing for a day
2. Conferences
3. Visiting churches
4. Working with campuses
close by
5. Trainings - We
can give our own trainings with what we have learned. We can hold these
trainings quite regularly.
6. Special
events
VI. We should use the advanced technology.
A. Publications - We can write
our own tracts. With today's technology publications are very easy. We
don't need to only use the Harvest gospel newspaper. We should develop
our own tracts and write our own gospel messages, even if they are only
one page. Then we will be very burdened to pass them out. We should make
them look very decent so that people will want to collect them.
B. We should use the Internet.
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