Fruitful and Fulfilling

Kurt on June 25th, 2009

A few years ago I began using the phrase “fruitful and fulfilling” to describe what I believe is an ideal goal for our ministry experience be it full time, part time, volunteer and regardless of what our ministry role happens to be.

FRUITFUL: You’re good at it, you see some sort of results, the kingdom is being advanced, there is tangible “fruit” as a result of your labors.

FULFILLING: It brings a sense of purpose to you, it “feels” right in your gut, it’s something you are called to and gifted at. At the end of a bad, bad day you still put your head on your pillow with a sense of inner peace knowing you are serving where you are meant to be serving.

ministry….especially youth ministry….especially junior high ministry….is sacrificial by definition. When you and I signed up for it, we knew there were inherit sacrifices. Financial sacrifices, security sacrifices, family sacrifices etc. If you think ministry is an easy road, or that it should be, I’m afraid you don’t understand the nature of it.  But I’m not convinced that sacrificing fulfillment in what we do is part of the mix, and lately I’ve spoken to quite a few people who love ministry and want to serve well but aren’t fulfilled….they are fruitful, but not fulfilled.

Question: is “Fruitful and Fulfilling” an accurate (or even biblical) expectation for ministry?

Question: If yes, then what do we say to men and women who are faithfully serving Christ who aren’t experiencing any true fruitfulness or fulfilment?

Question: If no, then why do things like spiritual gifts, learned skills, passions etc. matter?

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KevinL at 6:52am June 26

HMMM..interesting post (especially for junior high workers). I definitely agree with the fulfilling part, although you have to be fulfilling over a period of time. Generally speaking, in order to last you have to see that you are where God wants you to be.

The fruitful part is a bit more complicated. I agree that you should see fruit, but what are the fruit to look for? Is it conversions? Is it spiritual disciplines? Is it simply staying connected to a church through high school or college? For me, the fruit I look for in my ministry are persistence in faith, increasing love for Christ, growing in knowledge of God’s word, an understanding that they are supposed to play a part in the Kingdom (just to name a few) In junior high ministry we might not see the fruit for years (which is why it’s more satisfying the longer you are in it).

All that to say that just because we SHOULD be seeing fruit and feeling fulfilled, does not mean that we won’t, at times, be tested and shaped by God for his purposes and our benefit. Look at Moses, at the surface, his ministry did not experience fruit. The Israelites rebelled constantly for hundreds of years. Would we consider his ministry a failure?