“Plans fail for lack of counsel, but with many advisers they succeed.” (Proverbs 15:22)
Recently I was asked whether I had a mentor when I was starting out in prophetic ministry.
I have always had a mentor. Even now I have many mentors, but what does that look like and what does that mean.
We in North America seem to have this idea that we need one particular person to mentor us, so we seek for many years to find that person. While I have these sort of mentors in my life – that I can call upon whenever I need – I don’t generally point to one or two persons as my mentor.
You see life is significantly complex enough that one person cannot mentor me in all my needs, save of course the person of the Holy Spirit, because he is the only person that knows me completely. He can nurture me and mentor me to become the person that God wants me to be in Christ.
The scripture that always comes to my mind when I consider my philosophy of being mentored is Proverbs 15:22, “Plans fail for lack of counsel, but with many advisers they succeed.”
There is a fine line that you walk between listening to God through your own visions and dreams and listening to God through the godly advice of those with whom you are in a relationship of accountability.
I trust that I hear from God, but I don’t always trust that I understand what he wants me to do and to know, and so I extend myself to my mentors to help me make sense of what God is saying to me.
Therefore every place I find myself becomes a potential place to be mentored. What do I mean by this?
It means that when I enter into any environment – whether church, work or someone’s home – I know that there is wisdom there for me. If I am humble, then I can be taught by anyone or anything – not that I am always humble – just ask those who know me best.
There is also the lesson to be learned from Balaam’s donkey. Advice can come from any source, so in my life I try to listen to the Spirit of God from wherever he wishes to speak.
Sometimes this is through mighty prophets of God, sometimes my mom, sometimes the people I work with, go to church with, meet in the street. If you are wise you can even learn from the poorest of the poor living in the streets. We must not be proud because God can speak to us through whatever means he wishes. If I live with this as my compass, then I can hear from God wherever and whenever he chooses to speak.
Many of my mentors are now long dead. I think of Augustine, Aquinas, Anthony the Desert Father, Saint Francis of Assisi, Aimee Simple Macpherson and Smith Wigglesworth.
Many of my mentors are people who don’t even know that I am being mentored by them including: Bill Johnson, John Paul Jackson, James Goll, Bob Jones, Patricia King, and Todd Bentley.
Some are the people that I serve with in the Ottawa Valley. I consider every Pastor I work with to be one of my mentors, someone from whom I can glean understanding and wisdom. Many of these men and women have been in the ministry much longer than me and have gone through the same trials that I have gone through, and therefore wisdom says, “Listen to them.”
God is starting to bring me even more mentors: some that are well known and some that aren’t. It doesn’t matter where these folks are from. The point is God will use anyone to speak wisdom into my life if I am willing to listen.
So the short answer is I have many mentors, but my main mentor is the Holy Spirit who guides me in all things because he is the wonderful counselor that Jesus promised would come.
“And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another advocate to help you and be with you forever— the Spirit of truth. The world cannot accept him, because it neither sees him nor knows him. But you know him, for he lives with you and will be in you.” (John 14:16-17).
Who are your mentors?
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