
You know the feeling. You've got a list this week that actually matters: Call everyone in your small group, prep the lesson, recruit a few volunteers, rehearse the music for Sunday. You know you'll be glad when it's done. You know people are counting on you. And still, you can't make yourself start.
After decades of ministry, here's what I've learned about that moment: It’s up to me to keep my own fire burning. I don't focus on motivating other people; I only worry about motivating myself. If I stay motivated, it becomes contagious. People catch your enthusiasm, and they catch your vision. So your first job isn't to light a fire under everyone else; it's to keep your own burning.
That's harder than it sounds, because so much of ministry is plain mundane. There's no thrill in stuffing bulletins or setting up and taking down. But Paul says, "Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord, because you know that your labor in the Lord is not in vain" (1 Corinthians 15:58 NIV). The Good News Translation says it this way: "You know that nothing you do in the Lord's service is ever useless" (1 Corinthians 15:58). Jesus said even a cup of cold water given in his name counts. The work matters. The real question is how you keep going when you don't feel like it.
Here's how I do it. It comes down to three things: Get it on paper, get started, and keep the fire burning.
Most of the weight you're carrying isn't the work itself. It's the vague sense that you're not getting it all done. Dawson Trotman, who founded The Navigators ministry in the 1930s, said, "Thoughts disentangle themselves when they pass through the lips and the fingertips." If I can say it and write it down, it's clear. If I haven't written it down, it stays vague. And vague is heavy.
So write out what you want to accomplish. Then break it down until it's small enough that you have no excuse not to start. When I planted Saddleback, I'd never started a church in my life. So I got a stack of cards and wrote one task on each: Rent a building, print a bulletin, find someone to lead music, line up nursery workers. Then I laid them out, put them in order, and worked backward from opening day until I knew exactly what had to happen first.
Inch by inch, anything's a cinch. How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time. Decide what comes first, put a date on it, and you've turned a mountain into a next step.
Here's the most honest thing I can tell you about motivation. Most of the time when we say "I can't," what we really mean is "I don't want to." Be honest enough to know the difference. Some days you just have to get tough with yourself and do it whether you feel like it or not.
Because here's the secret of success in one sentence: Successful people have developed the habit of doing things unsuccessful people don't feel like doing.
When a task feels too big, I play a game with myself. I call it the Five-Minute Game. I tell myself, "I don't want to do this, but I'll give it five minutes." Almost every time, once I get going, it's not nearly the deal I thought it was.
I've written books that way. I'd roll a blank sheet into the typewriter, type "My Next Book, by Rick Warren," and pull it back out. Sometimes that's all I did. Then I got up and walked away. But I'd started. Once the rocket is off the launch pad, the rest gets easier. How many projects have sat around your house for six months until the day you finally did one and thought, "Why did I wait? That took 25 minutes."
Perfectionism produces procrastination. It paralyzes you. We tell ourselves, "If I can't do it well, I won't do it at all." But very few things in this world are ever perfect. If it's worth doing, do it, whether you do it perfectly or not. Give yourself the right to make mistakes, and you'll stop letting indecision freeze you in place.
Starting is one battle. Staying motivated over the long haul is another. A few things keep me going.
Remember the payoff. When my mind isn't there after a long week, I ask myself, "How am I going to feel when this is finished? What's it going to accomplish?" The Bible says Jesus endured the cross because he looked to the joy beyond it. Much of ministry is mundane, and you do it for the result, not the thrill.
Stay optimistic. Optimism creates energy. The person who says "I can" and the person who says "I can't" are both right. I've walked into church sure I wouldn't make it through the day, then reminded myself, "I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me" (Philippians 4:13 NKJV). Tell yourself you can.
Don't carry it alone. If a big task is all on you, you'll probably put it off. Get a partner. "Two are better than one. . . . A cord of three strands is not quickly broken" (Ecclesiastes 4:9, 12 NIV). If you schedule time with someone to complete a task together, you're far more likely to actually do it.
I keep a running list of one-liners taped where I can see them when I need a nudge:
Do the worst first.
Doing beats stewing.
If not today, when?
Winners don't wait.
Beginning is half done.
Choose this day to use this day.
Pick the one ministry task you've been avoiding this week. Don't wait until you feel like it. Get it out of your head and onto paper. Give it five minutes, and let your own motivation do the rest. Nothing you do in the Lord's service is ever without value, and the fire you keep burning is the one your people will catch.