“I am not trying to do what I want, 
but only what [my Father] who sent me wants.”
John 5:30 (GNT)

You can’t please everyone. It’s a truth pastors learn early on in their ministries. If you haven’t learned it yet, you likely struggle with stress.
 
If you please group A, group B will be upset at you. And if you please group B, you’ll upset group A. One minute you’re a hero; the next minute you’re a zero.
 
Even God can’t please everyone. Think of all the sporting events where people on both sides pray for a win. Only one team can win the game. One person prays for rain. Another prays for snow. Only one gets their prayer answered.
 
If God can’t please every person, it’s foolish for us to think that we can.

If you don’t know whose approval you’re living for, stress will always follow you.
 
Jesus models this for us. We’ve been sharing with you Jesus’ seven principles for handling stress. Last week, we looked at the Principle of Identification.
 
Next is the Principle of Motivation. You must know what (and more importantly, whose approval), you’re living for.
 
Jesus showed us this in John 5:30 when he said: “I am not trying to do what I want, but only what [my Father] who sent me wants” (GNT).
 
Jesus wasn’t trying to win a popularity contest. He lived for an audience of one. He had a simple life in many ways. He just did what God put him on Earth to do.
 
Jesus never let approval or rejection of others control him. It’s part of the reason he lived without stress.
 
In fact, Jesus reminds us in Luke 16:13, “No one can serve two masters” (NLT). You can’t live for the approval of others and live for God’s approval at the same time.
 
Pastor, whose approval are you living for?

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