“But you are not to be called ‘Rabbi,’ for you have one Teacher, and you are all brothers. Matthew 23:8
“In the spiritual life, more than anywhere else, the proper order and sequence must be observed from the start. Guests at a dinner may not like the introductory dishes and may feel more attracted by what comes later, but they are forced to comply with the order of the courses…
To become a true monk a man should not work backwards from the end to the beginning, but start at the beginning and so advance towards perfection. In this way he will himself gain what he seeks, and will also be able to guide his disciples to holiness. Most people, however, without exerting any effort or making any real progress, small or great, in the practice of virtue, simply chase after the status of spiritual director, not realizing how dangerous this is.
When others urge them to undertake the work of teaching, they do not refuse; indeed, they even wander about the back streets, recruiting anyone they find, and they promise all kinds of perquisites, as if making a contract with servants about food and clothing.
Spiritual directors of this kind like to appear in public supported by a large crowd of attendants, and to have all the outward pomp of an abbot, as if playing a part on the stage. So as not to lose the services of their disciples, they are forced to keep on gratifying their whims. They are like a charioteer who drops the reins and lets his horses go where they like.
Their disciples are allowed to run wild: carried away by their desires, they fall over precipices or stumble at every obstacle in their path, because there is no one to stop them or to restrain their disordered impulses.
Instead of doing this they ought to obey the true teacher Christ, and to refuse, as far as possible, to assume the direction of others. For He says to His disciples: ‘Do not be called Rabbi’, and if He admonished Peter and John and the rest of the apostles to avoid such work and to consider themselves unworthy of such a position, how can anyone imagine himself superior to them and claim for himself the office from which they were debarred?
For in saying ‘Do not be called Rabbi’, He does not mean that we are free to assume the office so long as we avoid the title. But what if someone, not from any choice of his own, is obliged to accept one or two disciples, and so to become the spiritual director of others as well?
First, let him examine himself carefully, to see whether he can teach them through his actions rather than his words, setting his own life before them as a model of holiness. He must take care that, through copying him, they do not obscure the beauty of holiness with the ugliness of sin.
He should also realize that he ought to work as hard for his disciples’ salvation as he does for his own; for, having once accepted responsibility for them, he will be accountable to God for them as well as for himself.”
Neilos of Sinai (d. 430) in Philokalia 1.157.
What does our example as spiritual directors and teachers have to do with generosity? Everything.
In my last day in Mumbai, I had the privilege of speaking to 14 of the leading accountants, lawyers, and professionals in the city, thanks to the hosting of chartered accountant, Raja B. Singh.
I spoke on the heart of generosity, giving deep biblical instruction in an interactive format.
All the while, I acknowledged that I had made ever mistake, committed every sin, and learned each stewardship lesson the hard way. I shared the lessons I had learned by experience.
Why take this posture? In the words of Nilus of Sinai from the classic work, Philokalia, we must not “obscure the beauty of holiness.” Any direction we give people, any instruction we impart, must be tempered with the truth that Jesus is the only leader and rabbi.
We are learners. I have discovered on yet another stretching trip about the faithfulness and generosity of God. And also that I am accountable for the growth of those I serve. It’s happening praise God. I see it.
Today, I have a prayer for my colleague, Rebecca Nilanjana, GTP Regional Facilitator for South Asia. She has her entrance exam to law school. Would you pray with me for her that God helps her?
She has sacrificially served with me and others since 11 January 2025. She could have said no, but like Deborah in Judges 4:9, she said, “Certainly, I will go with you.”
Even as God delivered Bangladesh into her hands, and gave us victories in India, pray for a good outcome to her test. God has raised her up for such a time as this as a “model of holiness” for her people.
And let me know if you’d like a copy of the India and Bangladesh trip reports. I’m headed home now. I am not the same person I was when I left. The hard trips change me.
Form me into a true monk, Lord. I pray your hard times transform you too. And I pray Rebecca aces that test.
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