- Mar 14, 2005
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I was reminded this morning of a phone call I had received, many years ago, from a dear lady when I was working at a radio station as the weekend personality. She was 70 then, and worked in one of the local Adventist's organizational offices. I could hear the material I was playing from my station in the background, so she must have been listening when I gave the number for callers to contact me.
She asked me if I was getting paid for that day's work (since it was Saturday), and I told her yes, that I was on the payroll. She then asked, "How could you do that; work on the Sabbath and get paid?"
Well, I tried to explain that I didn't need that paycheck, and had been donating 100% of it to the local Salvation Army, since I knew that everything given to them is used to meet needs.
Needless to say, she wasn't satisfied, and persisted in the idea that I was sinning, because I was breaking the ten commandments. Something ocurred to me while I patiently listened to her voice becoming more shrill with outrage as each passing moment progressed into another.
Finally, I stopped her with my question: "Is preaching on Saturday part of your pastor's duties your congregation expects of him as your pastor?"
"Absolutely," she replied.
"Do you people pay your pastor"?
"Why of course," she responded, "that's scriptural."
So, I hit her with what was nagging at the back of my mind, "Tell me, if he stopped preaching on Saturday, would your church fire him and hire someone else?"
"Of course we would! It would be unthinkable for him to stop preaching on Saturday and expect us to... Wait a minute! That's ridiculous! I see where you're going with this. That makes no sense. What are you trying to pull-"
"Excuse me, but you already said that of all the duties he is assigned, that failure to perform this one duty, among all the others he shoulders, would certainly bring down upon him being fired and replaced. You already acknowledged that, correct?"
"Why yes, but that's a ridiculous question. You tricked me," she whined.
"No. I asked a simple question that you initially answered honestly from your understanding of the priorities of his duties for which he was hired. He's being paid to preach to your congregation each Saturday, and you already acknowledged that."
"No. I didn't. He performs many, many other duties for which he is paid, but not that one. He receives nothing for preaching on Saturday," she quipped.
"Then why doesn't someone else preach to you all on Saturdays if he wasn't hired to do that? After all, if he isn't being paid to preach on Saturday, then anyone else in your congregation could do it, right, like an elder?"
"Because we hired him as our-. Oh, no you don't. There you go again, trying to trick me! You're an evil man, and you call yourself a 'christian'!"
"Lady, I never said anything about what I am. You assumed that in spite of anything I said. I love the Lord, and I seek to obey Him at all costs, but I don't go around trying to impress people with a label. Also, you already admitted that your pastor would no longer receive a paycheck if he stopped preaching on Saturdays. You answered honestly, and then tried to back out of the implication that you know is true."
It was at that point that she didn't have time to talk, having too much to do in the office before the "service," so she had to hang up and go. There she was, working in the office on Saturday, right before the service, serving a "pastor" who would no longer receive a paycheck if he refused to preach on Saturday, telling me what a scoundrel I was for working that day at a Christian radio station, merely ministering and talking to people, and getting paid for it, doing pretty much the same thing her "pastor" does on that same day of the week.
BTW
She asked me if I was getting paid for that day's work (since it was Saturday), and I told her yes, that I was on the payroll. She then asked, "How could you do that; work on the Sabbath and get paid?"
Well, I tried to explain that I didn't need that paycheck, and had been donating 100% of it to the local Salvation Army, since I knew that everything given to them is used to meet needs.
Needless to say, she wasn't satisfied, and persisted in the idea that I was sinning, because I was breaking the ten commandments. Something ocurred to me while I patiently listened to her voice becoming more shrill with outrage as each passing moment progressed into another.
Finally, I stopped her with my question: "Is preaching on Saturday part of your pastor's duties your congregation expects of him as your pastor?"
"Absolutely," she replied.
"Do you people pay your pastor"?
"Why of course," she responded, "that's scriptural."
So, I hit her with what was nagging at the back of my mind, "Tell me, if he stopped preaching on Saturday, would your church fire him and hire someone else?"
"Of course we would! It would be unthinkable for him to stop preaching on Saturday and expect us to... Wait a minute! That's ridiculous! I see where you're going with this. That makes no sense. What are you trying to pull-"
"Excuse me, but you already said that of all the duties he is assigned, that failure to perform this one duty, among all the others he shoulders, would certainly bring down upon him being fired and replaced. You already acknowledged that, correct?"
"Why yes, but that's a ridiculous question. You tricked me," she whined.
"No. I asked a simple question that you initially answered honestly from your understanding of the priorities of his duties for which he was hired. He's being paid to preach to your congregation each Saturday, and you already acknowledged that."
"No. I didn't. He performs many, many other duties for which he is paid, but not that one. He receives nothing for preaching on Saturday," she quipped.
"Then why doesn't someone else preach to you all on Saturdays if he wasn't hired to do that? After all, if he isn't being paid to preach on Saturday, then anyone else in your congregation could do it, right, like an elder?"
"Because we hired him as our-. Oh, no you don't. There you go again, trying to trick me! You're an evil man, and you call yourself a 'christian'!"
"Lady, I never said anything about what I am. You assumed that in spite of anything I said. I love the Lord, and I seek to obey Him at all costs, but I don't go around trying to impress people with a label. Also, you already admitted that your pastor would no longer receive a paycheck if he stopped preaching on Saturdays. You answered honestly, and then tried to back out of the implication that you know is true."
It was at that point that she didn't have time to talk, having too much to do in the office before the "service," so she had to hang up and go. There she was, working in the office on Saturday, right before the service, serving a "pastor" who would no longer receive a paycheck if he refused to preach on Saturday, telling me what a scoundrel I was for working that day at a Christian radio station, merely ministering and talking to people, and getting paid for it, doing pretty much the same thing her "pastor" does on that same day of the week.
BTW