EXCELLENCE by Jon Morrissette at Lakeside Christian
Church. It is important that, in our newly forming partnership, we agree on the
values that we will embrace collectively as a church and personally as
individuals. It cannot be assumed that a great location, a great facility and a
great opportunity will automatically spell "success" for this or for any other
church. It cannot be assumed that strong, vibrant, healthy, growing,
Christ-honoring churches just happen by default. Furthermore, it cannot be
assumed that everyone here is on the same page. Therefore, it is imperative
that we rally around those values that will enable us to best accomplish those
purposes that God has set forth for us in his word. The first mark of a healthy
church is excellence. Over the next several weeks, I want to share with you
what I consider to be the eight marks of a healthy church. Everything I plan on
sharing with you is straight out of God's word and reflects God's will for all
of us, both personally and corporately. In other words, the values I will share
are not just my values. They are God's values. They are values that work. They
are values that generate genuine, God-honoring results. These are results that
glorify God and produce fruit for his kingdom. So having said this, I want to
begin today by talking about the first mark of a healthy church. The first mark
of a healthy church is excellence. Now I have to confess that excellence, as a
value, doesn't sound very spiritual. It sounds more like something you would
hear out of corporate America, or in a television ad for automobiles, or even
at a company training seminar. And who would disagree with the sentiment that
is so strongly expressed by many God-fearing, Bible-believing Christians? There
are many who feel strongly that the profit-driven values of corporate America
should have no place in the church and that they should most certainly not
appear on a list pertaining to marks of healthy church. But today, I would like
to challenge you to think differently about excellence. It is my belief that
excellence honors God and inspires people. Let's spend some time talking about
this. Excellence honors God. King Solomon In 2 Chronicles 2, we find King
Solomon making preparations to build God's temple. First, he gathers together
70,000 men to carry in the finest building materials available. He buys cedars
from Lebanon, and gold, silver, bronze and blue yarn. Then he drafts 80,000 men
to be stonecutters and he sends them out into the hills surrounding Jerusalem
to find stones for the foundation of the temple. Solomon even sends off letters
to the other kings to solicit their help in assembling a team of the finest
craftsmen available in all the known world. Solomon spares no expense as he
prepares to construct God's temple! As we come to 2 Chronicles 2:5 (NIV),
Solomon makes a stunning declaration. He says, "The temple I am going to build
will be great, because our God is greater than all other gods." It was
Solomon's contention that the best deserved the best. For Solomon, the most
excellent God was worthy of his finest efforts. Solomon believed that for him
to be committed to anything less than excellence was for him to be committed to
less than God. But as we continue in 2 Chronicles 2, Solomon finds himself in a
predicament. In 2 Chronicles 2:6 (NIV) he asks, "Who is able to build a temple
for him, since the heavens, even the highest heavens, cannot contain him? Who
then am I to build a temple for him, except as a place to burn sacrifices
before him?" Solomon knew, deep down in his heart, that his very best, his most
excellent effort, would not come close to capturing the excellence of his God.
But did that stop him? Absolutely not! In 2 Chronicles 2:7 (NIV) he writes to
King Hiram saying, "Send me, therefore, a man skilled to work in gold and
silver, bronze and iron, and in purple, crimson and blue yarn, and experienced
in the art of engraving." In 2 Chronicles 2:8 (NIV) he says, "Send me also
cedar, pine and algum logs from Lebanon, for I know that your men are skilled
in cutting timber there. My men will work with yours to provide me with plenty
of lumber, because the temple I build must be large and magnificent." You can
spend time reading the rest of the story later. But for Solomon, God was worthy
of nothing less than his most excellent effort. Excellence for an excellent
God. Excellence honors God. Malachi the prophet. As we make our way over to
Malachi, the last book of the Old Testament, we learn another valuable lesson
about excellence. God is announcing his judgment on the people of Israel.
Evidently, when it came time for the people to give offerings to God, they had
grown accustomed to giving less than their best. Instead of offering their best
to God, they would go out to their flocks and find that blind, injured,
crippled or diseased lamb. Then, they would offer that imperfect lamb as an
offering to God! Bill Hybels, in talking about this passage, offered this
comment. "Instead of offering the lamb that would win the blue ribbon at the 4H
show or the lamb which would bring highest price at market, they were giving
God their junk. Instead of offering their choice lamb, they would say, 'Oh,
it's just for God.' They were doing the exact opposite of King Solomon." God
demands the Israelites' excellence in worship. And so in Malachi, God responds
in several ways. First, in Malachi 1:6 (NIV), God quizzes them. "Hey, am I not
worthy of excellence?" In this passage God says, "A son honors his father, and
a servant his master. If I am a father, where is the honor due me? If I am a
master, where is the respect due me?" Second, in Malachi 1:8 (NIV), God
basically tells them point blank, "No one wants your junk. Try giving your junk
to anyone and see what they say!" The verse reads, "When you bring blind
animals for sacrifice, is that not wrong? When you sacrifice crippled or
diseased animals, is that not wrong? Try offering them to your governor! Would
he be pleased with you? Would he accept you?" Third, in Malachi 1:10 (NIV), God
pleads with them. "Oh, that one of you would shut the temple doors, so that you
would not light useless fires on my altar! I am not pleased with you." God is
saying, in effect, "You might as well have stayed at home rather than coming
here to offer me anything short of your very best. I'm not a Goodwill box. I
deserve more than your hand-me-downs!" Lastly, in Malachi 1:14 (NIV), God
pronounces a curse. "Cursed is the cheat who has an acceptable male in his
flock and vows to give it, but then sacrifices a blemished animal to the Lord.
For I am a great king, says the Lord Almighty, and my name is to be feared
among the nations." Excellence honors God. Our very best honors God. "Good
enough" is just not good enough when it comes to glorifying God. Excellence
honors God, but excellence does something else as well. Excellence inspires
people. When Solomon built God's temple with excellence, he wanted to attract
people to his God. He wanted their hearts to skip a beat. He wanted them to do
a double take. He wanted them to taste something of God's greatness and
excellence. You see, when it comes to the church, non-Christians assume that
things will be shoddily done. Non-Christians assume we will have low standards.
Non-Christians expect us Christians to give less than our best. They think
everything we are doing is a big charade. But when we value excellence, as
Solomon did, it makes a statement about the kind of God we worship. It makes a
statement about the commitment we have to our excellent God. This past week, in
preparation for this message, I listened to several tapes. One particular
preacher said, "What you feel the most deeply about you will try to do to the
best of your ability." Our excellence tells others that we care deeply about
God's honor. Our excellence communicates to others that we care deeply about
God's honor. If people drive up to our building and notice that the grass has
not been cut and that there are weeds growing alongside the building, what do
they think of our God? Or if people receive our newsletter, or some other
church publication, and the print is faded, and the paper is cheap, and there
are typos, what do they think of our God? Or if people go to use our restrooms
and things are unclean, what do they think of our God? What do they think if
the music is unrehearsed, or if the worship does not flow, or if the nursery is
unkempt, or if there is no parking available? What do they think if the
teaching, preaching, communion and offering thoughts are given off the cuff,
with little real preparation? If we did not care about excellence, would anyone
care about our God? Would anyone be motivated to give his or her best to God?
Would they be inspired to give their lives to Christ? A commitment to
excellence makes a real difference. Excellence honors God and inspires people.
In 1 Corinthians 10:31 (NIV) Paul says, "So whether you eat or drink or
whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God. Do not cause anyone to
stumble." There is no place for anything less than excellence among God's
people. Now having said this, I want to make a distinction between excellence
and perfectionism. Excellence versus perfectionism. Excellence is motivated by
a sense of God's greatness. God has given us everything. He has given us his
best grace, his best love, his best mercies, his best forgiveness and his best
power. He gave us his best lamb, his son Jesus Christ. Excellence is our gift
back to God for all that he has done for us in sending his son to die on the
cross for our sins. In contrast, perfectionism is something altogether
different. According to Dr. John Castelein, a professor at Lincoln Christian
Seminary, perfectionism has standards that continually crush people. Excellence
lifts our spirits and makes our souls feel noble. Perfectionism keeps prodding
us from behind, making us feel guilty. Excellence inspires and motivates. It
says "come". It draws us in. Perfectionism is always commanding, "you must."
Excellence invites us and says, "you may." Perfectionism orders, "here is the
pattern, copy this pattern." Excellence challenges saying, "all I ask is that
you give your best, your personal best." Perfectionism is artificial. It
neglects the heart and it motivates by guilt. Excellence is authentic and
heart-driven and it is motivated by God's greatness. Perfectionism is done out
of a sense of duty. Excellence is contagious and inspires people. Dawson
Troutman, the founder of Navigators, was a man who understood the importance of
excellence in his life and ministry. When he was alive, he had set his heart on
doing things right for God's glory. He trained his secretaries to carefully
place address labels on envelopes and to fold letters with perfection. He used
every opportunity to teach his employees the importance of excellence. One day,
Dawson Troutman asked one of his missionaries, John Crawford, to work on the
front door and back door of their office building. John spent most of the day
rebuilding the front door. He sanded it. He painted it. He carefully hung it.
But when it came to the back door, the door that opened up into the alley where
the trash was kept, where mud was splashed and where bums slept, John just hung
the door and did not put too much care into it. When Dawson returned, he
complimented John on the front door. But when he saw the back door, he asked
John, "What's up with the back door?" John said, "Hey, it only opens up into
the alley! Very few people see it." But Dawson stopped him and said, "John,
when we do things for the Lord, the back door looks just as good as the front
door." Bill Hybels, founder of Willow Creek Community Church, had this to say
about excellence. "Good enough is just not good enough when it comes to
honoring God through the Church. In response to his holiness and greatness, in
gratitude for his monumental sacrifice for us, our attitude ought to be to pay
tribute to him with the best we can offer. Not obsessive perfectionism, but an
attitude of excellence that permeates all we do in the Church and in our
personal lives. What we do as Christians reflects on the Christ we serve."
Friends, excellence honors God and inspires people. From the front door all the
way to the back door, whatever you do. "Whatever you do, do it all for the
glory of God." 1 Corinthians 10:31 (NIV)
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