Secret Sins Will Undermine (and May Destroy) Your Ministry – Here’s How to Fight Them (Part 1/2)

This is the first of a two-part post offering advice to ministers fighting secret sins (See part 2 here)

I have written this because there are currently disturbing stories of people in gospel and Bible ministry whose long-term secret sins have come to light. I want to encourage those already in ministry to appropriate and godly vigilance. And I want to encourage those who are thinking about full-time ministry in the future—and those who are about to begin their ministry—to take this issue seriously, but not to despair or give up.

It is possible to continue in ministry with a godly life. God is in the business of sustaining us and keeping us in his grace.

Because it is possible to continue in ministry with a godly life. Most people in ministry have done it, and most people currently in ministry will do it. God is in the business of sustaining us and keeping us in his grace by the power of Christ’s death and resurrection, and by the transforming power of the Holy Spirit.

Here are some suggestions about how to be vigilant. Sometimes long-term sin continues because it is invisible to the person committing it. Sometimes the person recognises the sin but does not repent, does not stop committing the sin, and tries to keep it a secret from others.

People sometimes say to me: ‘It must be wonderful being in gospel ministry because there are so few opportunities for sin’. I reply: ‘Gospel ministry brings more temptations and more opportunities for sin!’

Remember that what hinders our usefulness to God is not our lack of energy, time, gifts, or resources, but our sins. It is sin that distorts our thinking, feeling, deciding, and doing; sin that clouds the glory of God in our lives; sin that diminishes our authenticity and compromises our spiritual effectiveness.

Remember: The punishment for secret sins in ministry is certain; the rewards for faithfulness in life and ministry are great.

God knows the secrets of our hearts (Ps 44:21).

The heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure. Who can understand it? I the LORD search the heart and examine the mind, to reward each person according to their conduct, according to what their deeds deserve (Jer 17:8,9).[1]

Nothing in all creation is hidden from God’s sight. Everything is uncovered and laid bare before the eyes of him to whom we must give account (Heb 4:13).

Those who teach are judged with greater strictness (James 2:1).

We must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, so that each of us may receive what is due us for the things done while in the body, whether good or bad (2 Cor 5:12).

I strike a blow to my body and make it my slave so that after I have preached to others, I myself will not be disqualified for the prize (1 Cor 9:27).

I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith. Now there is in store for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will award to me on that day—and not only to me, but also to all who have longed for his appearing (2 Tim 4:7,8).

People in ministry are likely to engage in secret sins, because public sins would end their ministries.

What Sins?

These secret sins include the dramatic and newsworthy sins of:

These secret sins include the undramatic and un-newsworthy sins of:

You may be conscious of these sins, or they may be invisible to you. You may think that your ministry is satisfactory even though you commit one or more of these sins. You and your ministry would be much healthier if you did not!

How do you Fight Secret Sins?

1. Avoid a Dangerous Ministry Culture.

First, do your best to avoid a ministry culture in which:

 

2. Maintain a deep, constant, and fervent dependence on God to sustain and keep you as a believer, and to sustain and keep you in integrity and faithfulness as a minister.

 Have mercy on me, O God,
   according to your unfailing love;
according to your great compassion
   blot out my transgressions.
Wash away all my iniquity
   and cleanse me from my sin …

Create in me a pure heart, O God,
   and renew a steadfast spirit within me.
Do not cast me from your presence
   or take your Holy Spirit from me.

Restore to me the joy of your salvation
   and grant me a willing spirit, to sustain me …

My sacrifice, O God, is a broken spirit;
   a broken and contrite heart
   you, God, will not despise (Psalm 51:1,2,10-12,17).

May God himself, the God of peace, sanctify you through and through. May your whole spirit, soul and body be kept blameless at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. The one who calls you is faithful, and he will do it (1 Thess 5:23,24).

You will ‘do your best to avoid secret sins’ if you depend deeply and prayerfully on God, because he is the only one who can rescue you and transform you from the inside, as he has promised to do. Here are some ways you can do this:

Pray every morning:

Remember …

Remember that your chief and main comfort is God so that you do not suffer a consolation deficit, and so turn to other people, things, or sins.

When you feel able to do so, pray these prayers:

Our God and saviour, please give me such a great passion for your glory and honour and reputation, that I will do anything and everything I can to adorn your doctrine.

Dear heavenly Father, please do whatever it takes to transform me into the image of Christ by the power of your Spirit, from one degree of glory to another.

Dear heavenly Father, please make my sins as odious and unpleasant and displeasing to me as they are to you.

Dear heavenly Father, please end my life rather than letting me disgrace you in life or ministry.

You will ‘do your best to avoid long-term secret or unrecognised sins’ if you depend deeply and prayerfully on God, because he is the only one who can rescue you and transform you from the inside, as he has promised to do. In my next post, we will talk about how being accountable to other Christians can help you too.

Here are some of my daily prayers, which are proactive, preventative and prophylactic against my secret and habitual sins. (You will be able to work out what my secret sins are from these prayers!) I pray some of them in the morning  each day, preparing myself for the temptations to come that day.

  • Help me to die to sin and live to righteousness every day.
  • Rid me of my petty idolatries, and help me to repent of them. 
  • Please rid me of bad temper, self-pity, and constant regrets.
  • Please rid me of arrogant and petty judgementalism.
  • Please help me to do difficult tasks, and not avoid them.
  • Please make me quick to admit mistakes and accept rebukes.
  • Help me to be patient and gentle when others need it, not just when it suits me.
  • Increase my forbearance and forgiveness.
  • Please help me to know your sufficient grace, and your power made perfect in my weakness.
  • Help me to be content in you, and your providential care: when you give, and when you take away.
  • Help me to count every trial and temptation as joy, and as a chance to grow in endurance and maturity.
  • Change me so that I do ministry for your glory and the benefit of others, not to meet my own needs, and give me a great passion for your glory. 
  • Help me to focus my ministry priorities, so that I do what is best to serve your purposes. Increase my usefulness and effectiveness in ministry, and protect me and my ministry.
  • Please keep me in wisdom, gospel truth, and integrity of life and ministry.
  • Help me love and forgive those who hurt me intentionally or unintentionally.
  • Please make me wise in conflict.
  • Help me trust your providential care of your Gospel work around the world, and not to confuse a good zeal for Gospel progress with an ungodly desire to get my own way.
  • Help me to carry the burdens of ministry, trusting in your sovereign grace.
  • Please protect me by the blood of Christ from Satan’s accusations, lies, and tricks, and help me stand in the power of Christ’s death and resurrection.
  • Please give me a long life and ministry, and help me persevere to the end.
  • Help me to guard my heart by your power and compassion.
  • Dear heavenly Father, help me to: love lavishly, without recognition; serve generously, without reward; give cheerfully, without grudging; listen lovingly, without impatience, forgive fully, without resentment; forbear fruitfully, without frustration; minister patiently, without murmuring; serve hopefully, without hesitation; remember thankfully, without regret.
  • Alert me to sin’s deceitfulness and especially to the deep sins and hypocrisies in my life that are currently invisible to me, and help me to repent of them and change the way I live.
  • Today I offer my body to you as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to you.
  • Please give me contentment and joy in you, your will and your ways. Satisfy me with your steadfast love, that I may rejoice in you all my days.
  • I trust you: to provide all the gifts, time, energy and health for me to live for you and do the good works you have prepared for me to do; to place me where you want me to serve you; to use my life and ministry; and to hear and answer my prayers. 
  • Help me to stop comparing myself with others, feeling either jealous or superior. Help me to honour and love others in ministry and not compete with them. Take from me the desire to be noticed and praised by others, and from looking for immediate thanks and appreciation: instead make me desire your love, affirmation, approval, and acceptance, and to live for your glory and honour. 
  • Take from me the desire for happiness: instead help me to pursue holiness.
  • Keep me from bitterness, anger and deep resentment when I am hurt. Help me to forbear, forgive and forget quickly and completely. Rid me of impatience.
  • Please help me to not treat my personal preferences as if they are gospel principles.
  • Please help me to learn to be content with your gifts and your will, to avoid self-pity, and to embrace your loving discipline.
  • Help me to know that slight momentary afflictions work an eternal weight of glory, and that nothing is wasted in your economy.
  • Please remove my intimations of infallibility: help me trust the insights and corrections of others.
  • Please remove my intimations of irreplaceability: help me encourage others in their ministries, to rejoice when others take on ministries I used to do, and increase my trust in your sovereign and providential rule, and your sovereign grace and wisdom.
  • Help me to trust you in times of weakness and frailty: help me to repent and pray each day, and not to fail through moral lapse.
  • Renew my inner nature day by day by your Spirit.
  • Help me to pour out my heart to you when I am distressed, stressed, disappointed, hurt, or depressed, and to find your compassion and comfort in times of trouble.
  • Give me self-discipline in eating, drinking, sleeping, reading, working and exercising.
  • Please help me to grow in patience, wisdom, humility, grace, love, trust and openness.
  • Please rid me of jealousy, competition, bad temper, self-pity, impatience, and constant regrets.
  • Guard my tongue, and keep me from slander, lies, untruth, unbalanced or un-pastoral truth, and from causing unintentional hurt.

Continue to Part 2 of this article here.

Recommended reading

John Owen, The Mortification of Sin, Christian Focus, 1996

Tim Lane, Unstuck: A Nine-Step Journey to Change That Lasts, The Good Book Company, 2019.

[1] Bible refs NIV11.