Substitute Teachers

Doubtless, if you’ve ever attended a school, at some point in time you’ve had a substitute teacher. After all, there is only so much a teacher can put up with before he/she has a meltdown and has to take some time off.

Anyhow - we all have our stories about substitute teachers. Some of the substitute teachers were absolute push-overs. They’d show up for class ready to do absolutely nothing. They’d give you busy work (I’d always end up drawing) so that they could finish the Harlequin romance novel they dragged into class. Others attempted to get the students to do “real” work but would often be content with a quiet classroom. Every now and then, though, you’d get the substitute teacher that was determined to fill in for the missing teacher. This sub would often come in to the classroom with an air of responsibility and authority. However, most students would resent this. Either because they wanted to take advantage of the situation or because the substitute just doesn’t have the same authority and respect that the actual teacher does.

In many ways, if you call yourself a Christian, you’re a substitute teacher. You’re filling in for the main teacher while He’s gone. And that’s great, except for when we show up expecting people to give us the same respect as the teacher. You see, the Teacher paid a price to get where He’s at. A price you and I didn’t have to pay. He made it possible for us to substitute in the first place. Without Him, we don’t even have a job, much less an audience with the students he’s asked us to watch over.

It’s this position that we have - substitute teacher - that I believe should temper how much we try to “teach” the students around us. We’ve become so convinced that we have the same knowledge and authority of the real Teacher, that we have no problem telling the students how things should be done. And just as in school, the students resent it.

I guess the obvious question is how does this relate to our Spiritual life? Easy - we don’t need to be telling people what it means to be a Christian, no more than we want others to tell us. For example, if we come across a gay person who claims to know Christ, it’s not our responsibility or position to tell that person they are living in sin (as many Christians are quick to do). I know many people will take high offense to this statement, but here’s the gut-level truth. We don’t believe the Holy Spirit works anymore. We often turn into the overzealous substitute because we don’t think the Teacher is doing the job.

Ouch - you read that right. When we take on the role of “convictor” or “sin recognizer,” we’re actively engaging in what God Himself said he would take care of. If someone has truly turned himself over to Christ, then Christ will teach the lessons that need to be learned. We can trust in that, because He promised that. The process of discipleship is not about revealing and conquering sin, it’s about developing a closer relationship with the real Teacher so that we can ultimately learn our necessary lessons from Him. He knows intimately what lessons are needed and when. He knows the heart of each man, woman, boy and girl and can determine how best to teach that lesson. We are simply not equipped like He is. Let’s leave the hard stuff to Him.

As substitute teachers, we’re simply here to keep watch and to love the students He’s asked us to care for. We need to trust that when it comes time, the students in His care will learn the lessons they need to learn.

5 Responses to “Substitute Teachers”

  1. onbendedkneez says:

    What a great reminder of how easy it is to become or to be seen as overly spiritual to those around us who don’t know the real Teacher. I often find it hard, however, to share my faith with my non-Christian friends who seem to be, in one way or another, truly seeking truth, righteousness, forgiveness,etc… without coming across as overly zealous or “better” than them. Every day I ask God to use me or to speak through me, yet when those few times do come around, I always seem to mess up, miss something, or just not get the right thing across. And then I wonder, is God really using me? Yes, trusting God to do the work is the hard part, but is there not more that I can do for those around me who need Him so desparately? There are so many times when I feel like I am just not doing enough!

  2. David says:

    I often wonder how much God really uses me. Or if He even wants to. Surely, he can find a better orator than myself?

    Then it occurs to me - we’re placed on this huge, spinning rock to live our lives. Part of that living happens with other people. It’s messy and complicated and rarely goes according to plan, but that’s the beauty of it. Rather than figuring out what we need to say or do for every circumstance, we live our lives driven by love. Rather than figuring out how to articulate our faith or how to communicate to different people, we live our lives driven by love.

    I think the church often does a disservice to people by trying to “prep” them for spiritual matters. The truth is, no one will listen to us unless they know we love them. If we can’t convey love, then anything else we do is in vain.

    As you stated, “is there not more that I can do…” - there is, but it’s more than just the 7-step process of how to become a “Christian.” If a man is hungry, give him food to eat. If he thirsts, give him drink. If he shivers, cover him with blankets. And if he cries, comfort him. Only then will our faith matter to anyone other than ourselves.

  3. David says:

    By the way, just so it’s clear, I’m not particularly good at the “loving strangers” thing - I’ve just recently come to understand that it is the most important thing we can do.

    Truth be told, I’m better at speaking/writing about it than actually doing it. Something I hope to work on and fix in my remaining years.

  4. onbendedkneez says:

    As the saying goes, people don’t care about how much you know until they know how much you care. That is the philosophy I strive to live by everyday, especially in the workplace(i.e: the classroom of mini-adults who really DON’T care how much I know!) On the other hand, we must always spend time in the Word, “ready in season and out of season.” (2 Tim. 4:2) For me, the challenge I face most often is being knowledgable of the Bible “on the spot”! But in this, I take comfort:
    “Now thanks be to God who always leads us in triumph in Christ, and through us diffuses the fragrance of His knowledge in every place. For we are to God the fragrance of Christ among those who are being saved and among those who are perishing.”
    2 Corinthians 2: 14-15

  5. David says:

    That’s the saying I was trying to come up with. Unfortunately, I flubbed it.

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