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How AIM Started:
Dealing With Failure
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| On a Mexico Project |
More difficult by far was the crossroads experience I had two years
later when my heart was broken by a trust betrayed. I had thought
that good intentions were enough. Ministry success had puffed me up
– I was ready to save the world!
The ministry I had helped start with a friend and partner came to a
fork in the road after two years of rapid growth. Either he was
going to have his way or I was going to have mine. In my mind there
was only one right thing to do – after all I was the one who was
best equipped to lead the ministry forward.
My coworkers didn't have the same opinion of my abilities that I
did. I was asked to leave the ministry I'd helped start. It seemed
to me that everything I'd been working for had been dashed to bits.
The world came crashing down around me. What I couldn't understand
at the time is that I was in God's laboratory – He had used those
two years as an internship, not so much to shape my vision as to
show me myself – my weakness apart from Him.
After being told that I didn't have a job anymore, I was ready to
give up on ministry. I was a victim. I had sold out to the ministry
and felt unappreciated for the commitment I'd made.
“Who needs Christians?” I asked God bitterly. It didn't seem to
matter that my wife was pregnant with our fifth child. The path of
abandon had left me abandoned. Not only were my dreams dashed, but I
still had a family to support.
Immediately I began making contingency plans. I took tests and got
my stockbroker's license. I started a travel agency. I began doing
consulting work.
“Don't grow weary”
Most of my communications with God were probably of a complaining
nature. When I was at my lowest point, He spoke to me from Galatians
6:9, telling me not “to become weary in doing good, for at the
proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.”
I felt like saying, “Thanks God!” Thanks for leaving this wonderful
life of sacrifice and ministry open to me.”
The surrender God was requiring of me was total. Given my bleak
record and current prospects in ministry, to abandon the responsible
alternatives available to me seemed reckless indeed. Starting
Adventures In Missions in my garage seemed foolhardy. What had God
shown me that made Him seem trustworthy?
But somehow, God met me at the bottom of my pit. He threw a rope
down to pull me up and showed me that the path of ministry, though
it seemed crazy to many, was still my path.
Time brings clarity. God showed me other things as the hurt subsided
over the years. He showed me that if I had failed along the way, it
was in not trusting Him enough. The really reckless thing, He showed
me, was to trust in my own competence instead of trusting Him fully.
The way of total abandon was really the path that offered the
greatest security.
Next: The First Days of AIM »
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