home > Pastor’s Desk > 2024 >June 14th > MY BIGGEST BURDENS

A burden is something that weighs on you. You could be burdened emotionally because of a relationship that is weighing on you. You could be burdened psychologically because of the weight of a looming deadline. You could be burdened spiritually because of the weight of guilt you are carrying. You could be burdened physically because of your weight and depleted strength. We all carry burdens. There are seasons in our life where some burdens are big and you do not feel that you will be able to bear up under the enormous pressure you are under. Those seasons will pass. For those in leadership there is the constant burden of the weight of responsibility that must be carried. (Have you ever noticed what this kind of burden bearing does physically to a President or Prime Minister over their term in office?) In the Bible we read that GOD actually gives people burdens so that they become stronger, wealthier, happier, and more productive. These types of burdens always involve caring for others. (Have you ever considered why Jesus was sweating great drops of blood as He was praying just before He went to the Cross via His hours of humiliating pummelling, beating, scourging, hair-pulling, and mockery?) I want to share with you why I am now carrying an enormous burden that I would consider the biggest burden I have ever had to carry. I do so in the hope that this might help you to bear your burdens with greater expertise and joy. Yes, joy.

Look to Jesus, the Founder and Perfecter of our faith,
who for the joy that was set before Him endured the cross,
despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of the throne of God.
Hebrews 12:2

BURDEN BEARING PRINCIPLE #1 – BE YOKED

The Epistle to the Hebrews was probably written around AD 63. Within a few months, into AD 64, a bloody and a deadly persecution against thousands upon thousands of Christians around the Roman Empire would break out. In preparation for their possible martyrdom, the writer encourages the Hebrew believers to remember Christ in His sweating-blood moment of passion who was in that moment carrying the burden of the world’s sins all the way to the Cross. The writer’s insight into Christ’s burden-bearing moment was that His burden was co-carried by the other members of the Trinity. Here is the first principle of burden bearing: Be yoked to Christ (Matt. 11:29). That is, as the writer of to the Hebrews said – Look to Jesus for the help you need to be able to carry your burden. As I am now labouring under the biggest burden I have ever carried, I am looking to Jesus and walking yoked to Him.

 

BURDEN BEARING PRINCIPLE #2 – SEEK FIRST THINGS FIRST

In Christ’s famous Sermon on the Mount, Jesus gave the ultimate set of success principles for the spiritual life. He then summed them all up with this principle: Seek first the Kingdom of God and His righteousness and all these things [which you worry about] will be taken care of for you by your Heavenly Father (Matt. 6:33). When you stop, get quiet, turn off your interruptions, and take up GOD’s Word to thoughtfully and prayerfully read it, you are seeking first the Kingdom of God in your life. As Kate Smith tells new Christians, at least treat the Bible like you would with Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings. No one would open up The Lord of the Rings to a random page and read a few sentences and then close it. They wouldn’t pick it up a few days or weeks later, open to another random page and read a few more sentences then close the book and continue this pattern for a few more weeks and expect to understand the story! Yet, many Christians treat their Bibles like this. At least start at Genesis 1:1 and read a 3 or 4 chapters a day until you get to the end of Genesis 50. Then go to Matthew 1:1 and read 3 or 4 chapters a day until you get to John 21:25. What you will discover, perhaps much to your surprise, is that the Bible is a story just as – if not more – riveting as The Lord of the Rings! And, when you are about to read your 3 or 4 chapters a day, pray this prayer: Lord God, please speak to me through Your Word, Amen. And after you have read your 3 or 4 chapters a day, pray this prayer:  Thank You Father for Your Word. Help me to understand and obey it. Amen. Here is the second principle for burden bearing: Seek first the Kingdom of God and His righteousness in your life. As I now bear my biggest burden, I am daily and moment by moment seeking first the Kingdom of God.

 

BURDEN BEARING PRINCIPLE #3 – PRAY WITHOUT CEASING

Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, give thanks in all circumstances;
for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you.
Do not quench the Spirit. Do not despise prophecies
First Thessalonians 5:16-20

As I have discovered, bigger burdens require bigger prayers. Bigger prayers are not necessarily long prayers. Bigger prayers are thankful heartfelt prayers to God seeking His will to be done and interspersed with our humble requests.

Do not be anxious about anything,
but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving
let your requests be made known to God.
Philippians 4:6

Taking note of the apostle Paul’s words in First Corinthians 14:18, I thank God that I can pray in the Spirit in tongues. This enables me to pray in a way that the apostle Paul must have thought was very important. And here is the next principle for burden bearing: Pray, pray, pray. As I continue to strive to carry my biggest burden, this is what I am doing.

 

BURDEN BEARING PRINCIPLE #4 – BEAR ONE ANOTHER’S BURDENS

When Paul wrote to the Galatians, he told them their church was a family with people who were formally disconnected from each other due to race, language and culture. But now, in Christ, they were one family despite their status, gender, or ethnicity (Gal. 3:28). As a family, he concludes his epistle by telling them to bear one another’s burdens (Gal. 6:2). It’s too easy to get pre-occupied with our burdens and thereby neglect our poor brother or sister who is struggling with their own burdens which we might be able to alleviate.

There are burdens for other people that we who are “spiritual” (see Gal. 6:1 where Paul addresses those Christians who are “spiritual”) should simultaneously bear. Added to this, we should also have a burden to reach the lost; a burden to pray for our State and National leaders; and a burden to pray for our own families for their salvation. This is the fourth burden bearing principle: bear one another’s burdens and have a burden for others to know Christ. As I am staggering under the load of my biggest burden, this is something that I am pastorally and evangelistically undertaking to do.

 

MY BIGGEST BURDENS

For those who know me, you may suspect that my biggest burden is my failing health. It is not. You could expect that my biggest burden is what Kim and my future may hold as we conclude our pastoral ministry at Legana due to my health. It is not. You may consider that the PhD I am undertaking with Monash is my biggest burden. It is not. Perhaps you would reckon that my biggest burden is financial as Kim and I will soon be out of a job. It is not. Whatever my biggest burdens are, I know that being yoked to Christ as I seek first His kingdom, and pray without ceasing, that there will be no burden that can crush me as Paul’s principle in First Corinthians 10:13 depicts: 

No trial has overtaken you that is not faced by others. And God is faithful:
He will not let you be tried beyond what you are able to bear,
but with the trial will also provide a way out so that you may be able to endure it.
First Corinthians 10:13

My biggest burden is for you – our church, over which God had appointed me an overseer (1Peter 5:2) – and ensuring that I do not leave you as ‘orphans’. My biggest burden has been to ensure that a new pastor, a shepherd-hearted leader, who will love you, feed you, protect you, and grow you, will be appointed before I conclude my ministry among you. This is my ‘fatherly’ longing; this is my biggest burden. When the historians write the history of our church in four-hundred years, it is my hope that I will just be an entry in the long list of pastor-shepherds who have served God and His people here at Legana. And perhaps, just maybe perhaps, with each successive pastoral-leadership transition that a historian will discover a fleeting mention that with each of these transitions there was a supernatural weight of responsibility – a heavy burden – evident on each of the transitioning pastor’s shoulders as he passed the shepherd’s mantle onto his successor.

Your Pastor,

Andrew

Let me know what you think below in the comment section and feel free to share this someone who might benefit from this Pastor’s Desk.

3 Comments

  1. Norman Smail

    Thank you Pastor Andrew for sharing your heart with us.
    God’s ways are not our ways, but with humility and joy in the Holy Ghost we can partner with Him.
    As with Elijah and Elisha may a double portion of the anointing rest on your successor;
    here’s looking forward to what God is going to do.
    Norman.

    Reply
    • Andrew Corbett

      Thank Norman. Yes indeed – I hope that my successor will enjoy a two-fold anointing on his ministry.

      Reply
  2. Elkanah

    Very deeply moving

    Reply

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COMMISSIONED FOR A PURPOSE

Think about your life for a second. How important are you daily activities? What if I told you that God’s grand plan for the world isn’t just about some extraordinary few, but includes you, right where you are in the tediousness of every day life? You may have heard this sort of thing from an animated and passionate preacher: That the same God who set the stars in place has a purpose for your life that echoes into eternity… sure, that’ll preach, but what if it were actually true?

WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO HONOUR SOMEONE’S LIFE’S WORK?

This is the question that’s been on my mind since I stepped into the role of Senior Pastor here at Legana Christian Church. I think we all know what it looks like to deface someone’s life’s work! Back in 2022, there were 38 “Art Attacks” staged by groups like Extinction Rebellion. They went into museums and threw food, paint, and sometimes even glued themselves to significant works of art. In the midst of it all, I’ll be honest, I wasn’t thinking about how I should save the world. Rather, I couldn’t help but think: What had the artist done to deserve such disrespect? What did vandalising art have to do with fossil fuels, cutting down rainforests or large-scale mining? Maybe I missed the point, but this seemed more like childish, attention-grabbing tantrums than meaningful protests.

Looking Forward in Faith and Finishing Well

Have you ever had one of those moments when you just know something significant is about to happen? That feeling where everything in your life has been preparing you for this moment? That sense that, through all the trials and struggles, God has been at work preparing you for ‘such a time as this’? That’s exactly how Bec and I feel as we step into this new season here at Legana Christian Church. From the moment we—Bec, the kids (Nissi, Otto, Mila and Bijou) and I—arrived, I’ve felt so welcomed by the congregation’s warmth and encouragement. The last few years have been a whirlwind for us, but already we feel like part of the family. So, before I say anything else, I’d like to say thank you to the congregation for embracing us wholeheartedly. It really means the world to our family.

WHEN JESUS SPOKE, PEOPLE DID MORE THAN LISTEN

William L. Thompson was born in Ohio in 1847. He studied music as a young and was talented enough to be invited to study music in Germany. After some time in Germany, he returned to America and became a popular song-writer for famous performing artists. But Thompson also began to experience rejections from music publishers. During this difficult phase of his life he turned to Christ. He had begun reading through the Gospels with fresh zeal and discovered that the Jesus described in those Gospels was deeply caring, very tender especially with women and children and anyone who truly turned to Him. Even though he had started his own music publishing company and also a music store in Ohio, his focus and priorities had now changed.
In the 1870s there were many people in the America and the United Kingdom who were coming to Christ under the evangelistic ministry of Dwight L. Moody. Thompson was certainly aware of the great evangelist. He had moved from writing popular songs to writing hymns. He wrote a hymn that he felt was appropriate for the type of evangelistic meetings that Mr. Moody was conducted. He called it, an invitation hymn. It was designed to come after the sermon and led to what had become referred to as ‘the altar call’ where people were invited to receive Christ and become a Christian. The invitation hymn was called, Softly and Tenderly. When D.L. Moody first heard it he insisted that they begin using it in their revival meetings. In fact, it almost became known  as D.L. Moody song! As the aged Mr. Moody was confined to what would be his death-bed, he called for Mr. Thompson and told him: 

DUMB PRAYERS THAT I HAVE PRAYED AND GOD HAS ANSWERED OVER THE YEARS

Over the past nearly 29-years of pastoring Legana I have occasionally mentioned that one day I would write about “the dumb prayers that I’ve prayed.” It’s not really that they are all ‘dumb’ prayers, it’s that they are the kind of prayers that are guaranteed to be answered by God (because they are “surrendered” prayers) but have not been fully considered what God’s answer might entail. I do not consider the more well-known and obvious “dumb” prayers – such as praying for revival to bring in hundreds of lost/lonely/broken souls into the kingdom and then being surprised by God’s answer resulting in exhaustion, burn-out, over-stretched resources, spiritual attacks, and the inevitable pride. Neither do I consider the even more obvious “dumb” prayer for patience and humility and the resultant means (difficult people and obvious trials!) by which such a prayer can only be answered. Instead, I begin with a prayer I prayed as a teenager then others that I prayed down through the years which have led me to this unexpected point. What I hope, and pray, you might discover after you have read this is something which will might benefit you in your knowledge of God and how He often answers prayers.

COMPEL THEM TO COME HOME

Who is welcomed into your home especially if they are unexpected, unannounced and unknown? As Jesus travelled around Israel He often told a story which His disciples would have repeatedly heard. It was the story of a nobleman who was hosting a great banquet in his large home and had invited other nobles to be his guests. But one after another each made a weak excuse for not attending. The nobleman then told his servant to go and invite the outcasts to be his guests instead.

TRUST GOD, THE BIBLE TELLS ME SO

The Bible is the all-time best-selling book for good reason. It is a book like no other. If you have a problem, the answer is in there -if not directly, it shows where the answer is found: God. He is the most powerful being in the world. He is able to split the sea (Ex 14:22), make hungry lions oblivious to the ‘righteous food’ in front of them (Dan 6:22), stop a storm mid-track (Luke 8:24), win un-winnable battles (such as 1Kings 20:26-30), overfill previous bare fishing nets (Luke 5:5-6), permit pregnancy in (very) old age (Gen 21:2) or even without a man (Luke 1:34-35), and, heal the sick and make demons flee (Matt 4:24). These were all answers to difficult problems. Each is a remarkable and exciting story in itself, but the repetition of such extraordinary and powerful works shows it was never just a fluke or a mere coincidence. He is a powerful God-able to make the impossible possible.

WHAT DO YOU?

home > Pastor's Desk > 2024 > August 9th > What Do YouWhat do you want? What do you want to do? What do you hope to achieve? What do you long to buy? What do you wish for your community? What do you need to change? What do you aspire to learn? What do you...

Was Jesus Even A Christian

AS my pastoral ministry at Legana rapidly draws to an end it is my hope that I leave a deposit in your soul that encourages you to also Love God with all your mind as well. It is my contention that with the increasing screen addiction to social media — where viewing “memes” and watching “celebrity YouTubers” — is being confused for factual information with even believers susceptible to deception. I want to offer some ways to guard what might be being allowed into your heart.

HOW DID THEY UPSET MALACHI SO MUCH?

Over the past twenty-nine years of pastoring Legana, I have generally preached through biblical books verse-by-verse. These biblical books series have been interspersed with various shorter topical series (which is why it took me eight years to preach all the way through the Book of Jeremiah). As I now commence my last biblical book teaching series, through Malachi, I hope to leave a deposit in your souls about the value and authority of God’s Word and how we need to worshipfully approach it. While we all want to “cut to the chase” and “get to the point” when we approach God’s Word we must do so carefully. This takes time. “Time” is what most people complain they do not have. This is why I am doing so much background work on this often-neglected book so that you can take advantage of my time investment on your behalf. In this series so far, I have introduced the context of this book, discussed who Malachi was, explored where Malachi was, and examined who was Malachi’s immediate audience. I am now considering why Malachi was so profoundly upset and what we can learn from his passionate love for God and His Table.