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Whatever Happened to Faithfulness?

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J. Lee Grady

Two elderly missionaries inspired me this week to
value character so I can finish well.

You’ve probably never heard of Hobert and
Marguerite Howard. They didn’t write best-selling books. They aren’t rich. They
don’t preach on television or pastor a megachurch. Fame was the farthest thing
from their minds when they both surrendered their lives to serve God on the
mission field.

In 1951 this Pentecostal couple boarded a
steamship and sailed for 50 days to India, where they built orphanages, schools
and churches and trained Christian leaders. This week the Howards officially
retired, and I had the privilege of attending a special reception to honor them
for 60 years of service.

Faithfulness is such a rare commodity today that it has disappeared
from our lexicon. In this day of quick divorce, loan defaults, addictive
personalities, broken contracts, deadbeat dads and religious scandals, we’re
surprised when somebody actually follows through and keeps their promises.”


I had to choke back a few tears as I listened
to Hobert talk about the fruit of his labor. Many of the children he and his
wife cared for in their three orphanages are leading churches today. One boy,
R.D. Murmu, was just 24 days old when the Howards took him in and raised him to
love Jesus. Today R.D. oversees many churches in the north Indian region of
Jharkhand.

Another orphan boy, Samuel Banerjee, from the
Bihar region, was just six days old when he was brought to the Howards. They
raised him in their orphanages and schools, and today he is the pastor of New
Life Center in New Delhi.

The Howards also trained three little boys
from the Balla family: Moses, Vijay and Sundar. Today they are all in
ministry—Vijay is a missionary to Bangladesh, Sundar leads church-planting
efforts in north India, and Moses is the overseer of all Pentecostal Holiness
churches in his country.

Hobert says at least 30 of the children he
and his team trained in their 12 schools are now in full-time ministry,
reaching Asia with the gospel. When I asked him how it feels to leave such an
enduring legacy, his wrinkled face beamed. “It’s more humbling than
gratifying,” he said.


As these spiritual heroes shared their story
with a crowd in North Carolina this week, I was struck by their remarkable
faithfulness. Besides the fact that they’ve been married for more than 60 years
(some Americans view that as
weird), they dedicated their lives to a spiritual
cause and never gave up—in spite of huge financial challenges, pressures on
their family and intense spiritual opposition.

They prayed, fasted, preached, waited, prayed
some more, preached again and waited for years to see spiritual breakthoughs in
a predominantly Hindu nation. They fought through discouragement time after
time after time. They never gave up. They understood that faithfulness, as one
preacher has said, is “the crowbar of God.” His promises will eventually open
to those who don’t quit.

Faithfulness is such a rare commodity today
that it has disappeared from our lexicon. So let me insert the dictionary
definition: “Reliable; trusted; steady in allegiance or affection; loyal;
constant.” In this day of quick divorce, loan defaults, addictive
personalities, broken contracts, deadbeat dads and religious scandals, we’re
surprised when somebody actually follows through and keeps their promises.

The Bible says faithfulness is a fruit of the
Holy Spirit (see Gal. 5:22-23), yet even in the church we see failed marriages,
unstable families and pastors with unreliable character. In our topsy-turvy
charismatic world we downplay the need for faithful leaders and instead exalt
pulpit entertainers who provide cheap spiritual thrills.


We think we can offset our lack of solid
character with a big dose of Holy Ghost hoopla. But when faithfulness is
missing, everybody can see our noisy show is a sham. Instead of being
doctrinally reliable, we promote goofy, “flavor of the month” doctrines and
lose credibility in the process. Instead of being steady in tough times, we are
spineless and unstable. Instead of being loyal, we revel in our independence
and flaunt our rebellion.

Early 20th century preacher Arthur W. Pink
wrote this about faithfulness: “No matter how gifted a man may be, if he is untrue
to this trust, he is an offense unto Christ and a stumbling block to His
people.” He added: “It cost Joseph
something to be faithful! It did Daniel; it did Paul; and it does every
minister of Christ in this degenerate and adulterous age.”

Hobert and
Marguerite Howard’s faithfulness—and their testimony of a faithful God who
rewards obedience—inspired me to keep my hand on the plow and go the distance.
I hope you will do the same.

J. Lee Grady is
contributing editor of Charisma. You
can follow him on Twitter at leegrady. His most recent book is 10 Lies Men Believe (Charisma House).


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J. Lee Grady is an author, award-winning journalist and ordained minister. He served as a news writer and magazine editor for many years before launching into full-time ministry.

Lee is the author of six books, including 10 Lies the Church Tells Women, 10 Lies Men Believe and Fearless Daughters of the Bible. His years at Charisma magazine also gave him a unique perspective of the Spirit-filled church and led him to write The Holy Spirit Is Not for Sale and Set My Heart on Fire, which is a Bible study on the work of the Holy Spirit.


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