As a student preparing for ministry
I am coming to a greater realization that having a mentor who is in ministry is
vitally important. The set of verses that constantly come to mind are the words
Paul wrote to Timothy in his second letter, “You then, my child, be strengthened by the grace that is
in Christ Jesus, and what you have heard from me in the presence of many
witnesses entrust to faithful men who will be able to teach others also.” (2
Timothy 2:1-2, ESV) Listen to how Paul speaks to Timothy; he calls him my
child, showing such a deep loving relationship. We know from human standards
that a father is to teach his children how to live in all aspects of life. We
need mentors the same way we need to have fathers in our lives to set the
patterns for us to follow. Without them we have the tendency to go astray.
The
relationship of mentoring is not a one-way street; it is one that branches off
to others. We should be learning from our disciple maker while at the same time
taking what we are being taught and teaching it to other men (and women) in the
faith. In order to be in a disciple
making relationship it requires work to be put in, along with time. Jesus
invested his time in twelve men whom he would send out into the world to teach
others. He not only sent out twelve but at one point he sent out seventy-two
men two by two (Luke 10:1). The best way for us to be sent is by a man we are
learning from so we can implement what is being taught.
What
does a mentor look like? A mentor is going to look different for each person;
you may not have just one mentor in you life or at one point of time. There
will be areas in life that you need to have the footsteps of someone else to
follow whether it be in a hobby, in your profession, or in general guidance for
your life. This person should be some type of authority on the subject; not
necessarily having to have credentials but having done a what ever it is you
are seeking them for a period of time with a good track record. You do not want
to start following after someone or seeking their help when they have no idea
how to handle the struggles you are facing because they have just started the
activity themselves.
Do you
have an idea on how this association should look? It is imperative that when
you enter into a formal mentoring relationship that some standards be set. The
type of standards I am referring to are like how often will there be contact
made, what forms of contact are best for this relationship. What kind of
accountability is going to be set in place if any at all? Are you both going to
keep this association merely about the mentoring/disciple making or is this
going to become more of an intimate friendship where lives overlap?
I would recommend depending
on the type of commitment being made, that lives become intertwined with an at
least weekly (if not several times a week) contact. It does not matter where
the contact comes from be it a phone call, text message, social media
interaction. And no less than once a month interaction face to face in a
setting that is not sterile, but inviting conversation and allows the
relationship to feel more organic and real.
It is my hope that this work
will inspire you to strengthen those relationships that are in place and to
possibly form new ones. I leave you with this who is investing in you and who
has the Lord placed on you heart to invest into?
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