Church Leadership | Chemistry Staffing

Giving Birth to Naphtali

Written by Matt Steen | Jan 29, 2019 12:30:00 PM

The danger of the comparison trap

This morning I was reading the story of the birth of Naphtali in Genesis 30. As you probably recall, Naphtali is one of the sons of Jacob, born from Bilhah, the servant of Rachel. The story of Rachel and Leah is fraught with bitter jealousy and constant competition with one another. What struck me this morning was the naming of Naphtali, found in verse 8:

Then Rachel said, “I have had a great struggle with my sister, and I have won.” So she named him Naphtali.

This verse has stuck with me all day... a name is a big deal. A name carries meaning and memory and in some ways defines the trajectory of someone's life. I wonder what it was like to be Naphtali. What was it like to be the one that put Rachel over the top (temporarily) on the son scoreboard? What must it have been like when the next son was born... or when Rachel gave birth to her own biological son? I wonder if Naphtali felt like a true son... or a pawn in a bigger game.

We live in a time where church leaders feel significant pressure to see their church grow. While I believe that church growth can be incredibly healthy, there is also a significant downside to this pressure. I have seen where this pressure can cause church leaders to give birth to their own Naphtali... hiring a staff member, launching a program, or building a facility in order to be like another church.

The temptation to look over your shoulder at another church and covet is real. The danger of this temptation is that we become so focused on having the numbers, programs, or staff of other churches that we lose sight of what we have been called to: leading our congregation to be more like Jesus on a daily basis.

One of my college professors, knowing that the comparison trap is real for ministry leaders, encouraged us to lean on Psalm 139:23-24 before launching into any new program or before any significant change within our ministries:

Search me, God, and know my heart; test me and know my anxious thoughts. See if there is any offensive way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.

Before launching into a new program, hiring a new position, or starting a major initiative, take a moment to breathe and ask yourself and our God, "is this what we are truly called to do... or are we giving birth to Naphtali?"

I'd love to be a safe space to wrestle through these decisions with. You can click here to schedule a time for us to talk.