WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE?

A young doctor once told me about attending a symposium of Christian physicians. He said they raised the question, “What is the difference between a Christian doctor and a doctor who is not a believer?” Their conclusion was simply that a Christian doctor prays for his patients.

I can think of a number of spiritual gifts and spiritual fruit that God might use through a Christian physician. And I suspect some doctors who are not necessarily committed Christians pray at least occasionally for their patients. Still, I suspect they touched the heart of the matter simply out of years of practicing medicine.

Thinking of this made me wonder about the difference between a Christian writer and one who does not believe. I do not want to minimize Christian subject matter. But I think there are differences beyond what we write about. There will be some difference between a Christian journalist and one who does not know the Lord. What about a travel writer? What about a restaurant critic? I believe two differences are foundational; whom we trust and whom we please and honor.

Two ferry boats cross a river. One runs along a cable stretched across the water. The other does not. When the river runs smoothly, the operator of the one without the cable claims his fairy moves faster. And that may be true, although I'm am not sure. But when the river is raging the one without the cable will be swept away in the flood.

A writer who knows Christ has an anchor of meaning and confidence in the sovereignty of God that a writer who does not know the Lord does not have. That is not to say that she is not bewildered by evil or unfairness. A Christian writer may write about evil or tragedy that she has no answer for. But beneath everything she has a confidence that that there is an answer and God knows the solution even when we do not. A Christian writer may suffer from writer's block. But she knows that she can pray for inspiration.

Most of you are far too young to remember the television series The Millionaire. In it Michael Anthony, played by actor Marvin Miller, was “the confidential secretary to the trillionaire John Beresford Tipton.”  Each week on the show at the philanthropist’s Direction he gave a million dollars to an unsuspecting recipient. While Michael Anthony gave wonderful things, a million dollars, a much greater fortune in 1955 than it is now, he did not work for them. He worked for the eccentric trillionaire. He obeyed his direction. The checks were drawn from the wealthy man’s bank account. And the secretary had to please him and him alone.

A Christian writer ultimately writes to please God. God is the source of her insight. He is the one who calls her to write. I am not primarily focusing on how a Christian ought to write. Although we seldom get all of this together, these are fundamental principles of belonging to Christ. A Christian writer seeks to speak from God and for God. She seeks to honor God rather than herself. And in this motive the truth of what she has to say is anchored.

In John 7:18 Jesus said,

“He who speaks on his own does so to gain honor for himself, but he who works for the honor of the one who sent him is a man of truth; there is nothing false about him.”

Who are you writing for?

 

 

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Comments

  • One last thought - by writing to honor God and to serve others, we're bringing our writing into line with the two Great Commandments.

  • David, I couldn't agree more, especially with your statement about whom we try to please.  Fundamentally, our purpose for writing (it would be the same for any other work) is different from the purpose of the non-believer.  We work "as working for the Lord, not for men, since we know we will receive an inheritance from the Lord as a reward".

    One of the results of this is that we write with our audiences, not ourselves, in mind.  I attend the Write-to-Publish conference, a Christian writer's conference at Wheaton College, every summer (in fact, it's coming up next week).  I often meet new writers there who are so wrapped up in expressing themselves that they haven't stopped to consider what benefit they may or may not be bringing to an audience.  They've made their writing all about their story, their message, their idea.  And those may all be good things - but if we're writing for ourselves then we're not writing for God (oh, and the books won't sell either).

    The believer who has submitted his writing to God writes with a servant's heart - as we're called to do everything in life.  Writing becomes about honoring God and inspiring/helping/equipping others, rather than about expressing myself.  Naturally, I express myself in the course of doing all those things - but that isn't the purpose or the focus.

    If I could tell new writers one thing, it would be this:  Write to honor God and to serve others.

  • I hope people in a variety of professions apply your premise ...
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