I Don’t Care Enough to Pray

Posted by

-

Complacency is a dangerous thing.

Effective leaders develop their teams across broad skill sets. Unfortunately, the spiritual development of a team is often neglected by leaders of work teams.

Is the spiritual development taboo at work? Is it not politically correct to encourage faith? Are we concerned about HR issues?

Perhaps the problem with faith in the workplace is similar to the problem with faith in churches.

It seems to me that faith crises are issues of complacency. Too often, leaders are aware of hurting team members but fail to address a problem because of work priorities.


Complacency is a dangerous walking companion. The battle cry of this walk is “I just don’t care.”  

Survey research probably couldn’t uncover the reason leaders don’t care about their team’s spiritual development but spiritual complacency is a clear marker of independence from God.

If we don’t care, we must be satisfied with our progress. It’s easy to be satisfied with the way things have become.

“For the turning away of the simple will slay them, and the prosperity of fools will destroy them.” (Proverbs 1:32, MEV).


Do you demonstrate complacency about spiritual matter?

May I suggest a one-point action plan?

1. Offer prayer.

Make it clear to your team that you make prayer a priority. Encourage your team to seek the Lord in your workplace. 


Aren’t you glad Jesus wasn’t complacent?

Prayer creates care.

P.S. Do you subscribe to Ministry Today? Will you please consider doing it? 

With the link below you will receive my special publisher’s offer. Our baseline subscription is $24.97. My offer to you is a one-year subscription (6 issues) for $10.00.


I’d like to know what you think of Ministry Today and would love to hear from you.

Please click here today for the Dr. Greene special.

 


 

Today’s Scripture

“Now I ask you, brothers, through the Lord Jesus Christ and through the love of the Spirit, to strive together with me in your prayers to God on my behalf” (Rom. 15:30).


 


 

Platform Tip No. 80

One of my jobs while growing up was to go out to the driveway and retrieve our daily newspaper.

I remember asking my mom why we got a newspaper every day. The answer seems obvious now. Someone in our household needed to read the daily news. It was OK because I wanted the Cardinals’ box score.

Can you imagine receiving a daily email? 


If someone is sending you a daily message of hope and help, you probably welcome it.

 


 

Do you want to learn more about developing your personal platform?

Send for my free series of lessons titled, “The Fundamentals of Creating, Curating and Developing Content for Multiple Platforms.” Send your request to: [email protected].

This is an exclusive offer to Ministry Today and “Greenelines” readers. 


We will not share your email address with anyone. 

 


{eoa}

+ posts

Leave a Comment

Scroll to Top

We Value Your Privacy

By using this website, you agree to our use of cookies. This use includes personalization of content and ads, and traffic analytics. We use cookies to enhance your browsing experience, serve personalized ads or content, and analyze our traffic. By visiting this site, you consent to our use of cookies.

Read our Cookie Policy and Privacy Policy.

Copy link