Last week Brian mentioned this book, and called it “one of the most important books any Christian can read.” I would heartily agree and, to take it a step further, would like to add Instruments in the Redeemer’s Hands by Paul David Tripp as the inaugural member of the “Shoreline Must Read” list. Pastors have a tendency to call just about anything with solid theology and decent application a “must read,” inundating people with stacks and stacks of books that they could never read even if they wanted to. That is why the “Shoreline Must Read” list is going to be limited to 5 books (Why 5? I don’t know…it just seemed right). If I want to add another book to the list once it’s full, I promise to take a book off of the list first. How does that sound?
So, why is this book so important? One of my favorite descriptions of this book is the subtitle: “People in Need of Change Helping People in Need of Change.” That is the church! Instruments (as I like to affectionately refer to it) is essentially a book about discipleship and counseling. However, it wreaks havoc on the idea that counseling and discipleship in the church are to be done by the “professionals” or those who “have figured it out.” Scripture paints a very different picture than that when it comes to how we are to grow in godliness and deal with the issues, disappointments and temptations in our lives. Galatians 6:1-3 comes to mind:
Brothers, if anyone is caught in any transgression, you who are spiritual should restore him in a spirit of gentleness. Keep watch on yourself, lest you too be tempted. Bear one another’s burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ. For if anyone thinks he is something, when he is nothing, he deceives himself.
Scripture tells us that there is no actual “professional” class of Christians and that none of us have “figured it all out.” As a result, all we’re left with as a messed-up person who needs help are other messed-up people who need help who can point us to Christ through the ministry of the Word and the Holy Spirit. Tripp puts it this way:
The problem is that most of us think that God is carrying around a very small toolbox! A successful carpenter uses many tools, each one designed for a particular job. God has a huge toolbox, and his principal tools are his children. Sadly, many people in the church do not see themselves this way. They think of ministry as something for the paid professional. When they think of their own involvement, they don’t think very far beyond saying a prayer or making a meal. Yet their adoption into the family of God was also a call to ministry, a call to e a part of the good work of the kingdom.
In this book, Tripp starts from the assumption that we are all counselors, and that we should be less concerned about “the thousands of hours of formal counseling that are not based on God’s Word” than we are with the millions of hours of “counsel” that goes on between Christian friends.
If you are alive on this planet, you are a counselor! You are interpreting life, and sharing those interpretations with others. You are a person of influence and you are also being influenced…The issue is not who us counseling. All of us are. The core issue is whether that counseling is rooted in the revelation of the Creator.
Tripp does an incredible job of not only demonstrating the core and heart of the issues, temptations and disappointments in our lives, but he also is uniquely helpful in laying out how we can combat the sin in our hearts and the pain in our lives with the truth of Scripture. In addition to being the most Scripturally sound book on this topic I have come across, Tripp is a writer who is very easy to read and whose insights are uniquely practical. There is no way that you can read this book and not be changed in radical ways in how you view God, your problems, and the world around you.
I will say, there is one characteristic of this book that does seriosuly frustrate me. Although Tripp talks, over and over again, about how this kind of “personal ministry” is for all Christians to be done in all of life, almost every one of his ministry examples takes place in a formal (clinical?) counseling setting. I know that a clinical setting is not the only (or even best!) setting for personal ministry, and so it is frustrating that in addition to his encouragement to all Christians to live this out, Tripp cannot provide many of them with an example that they could see taking place in their own life (most of us do not have “counseling offices”…even if we’re pastors!) However, this is an easy shortcoming to overlook in light of the incredible truth laid out in Instruments.
Towards the end of his book, Tripp sums up the heart he would desire to communicate regarding personal ministry and discipleship. It sums up the reason I would love for you to read this book as well:
I am hit with the utter simplicity of biblical persnal ministry. It is not a secret technology for the intervention elite, but a simple call to every one of God’s children to be a part of what God is doing in the lives of others. It is living in humble, honest redemptive community with others, loving as Christ loved, and going beyond the casual to really know people. It is loving others enough to speak the truth to them, helping them to see thmselves in the mirror of God’s Word. And it is standing with others, helping them to do what God has called them to do. It is basically just a call to biblical friendship!…At the same time, there is a grandeur to personal ministry that cannot be captured with words. God is painting his grace on the canvas of human souls. One day we will stand with him in Glory and see that canvas completed, and we won’t be able to do anything but worship. (emphasis added)