Some Thoughts About Mentorship

April 1, 2024 Pastor Chris Oswald
Thesis Biblical mentorship emerges organically when younger believers hunger for wisdom, work diligently with what they have, and align themselves with older believers who share their life mission and love the same things they are learning to love.
Series
Type
Topical
Tone
Method
What's in this sermon

The shape of the argument

39 units across exposition, application, illustration, theological claim, and conclusion. The pastor's argument is built from these moving parts.

Pastoral correction · unit #13
"Oswald applies the principle by instructing listeners to pray for wisdom and explaining that the discipline of prayer trains the heart to desire wisdom, which in turn makes a person more receptive and profitable to mentor."
Doctrinal loci· 6 surfaced
Pastoral Theology · 9 Ethics / Moral Theology · 4 Providence / Sovereignty · 3 Sanctification · 2 Christology · 1 Doxology / Worship · 1
Bible citations· 9
Proverbs (general) | James 1:5 | 1 Kings 3 (Solomon's request for wisdom) | Proverbs 25:20 (listed as 25:5 in manuscript, likely 20:5) | Proverbs (hunger of a worker) | Proverbs 27:7 | Acts 16:1-5 | James 1:6-8 | Proverbs (wisdom crying out in the streets)
Illustrations· 4
  1. historical example · unit #12 — Oswald illustrates the proper motive for seeking wisdom through Solomon's request in 1 Kings 3, emphasizing that the request arose from humility, a sense of inadequacy, and love for those he was called to serve.
  2. personal story · unit #15 — Oswald illustrates the cost of wisdom-seeking through a personal anecdote about attending a talk by George Gilder, an elderly thinker whose idiosyncratic delivery tested the audience's patience. He contrasts the squirming younger listeners with his own willingness to endure the tangents and imperfections in order to glean wisdom, arguing that the expectation of neatly packaged information is a barrier to genuine learning.
  3. personal story · unit #30 — Oswald illustrates the principle with a personal story of his love for learning and research. What began as a selfish pleasure became a means of serving others when he realized not everyone shared his facility or passion for it, and this realization was part of God's call to pastoral ministry.
  4. personal story · unit #34 — Oswald illustrates the power of the church's stable of mentors with a provocative hypothetical: a homeless person's life could be transformed in a year simply by joining the church and receiving the wisdom and practical help available there.
Theological claims· 17
  1. God deserves praise for His faithfulness in providing mentors at the right time in a believer's life. unit #4
  2. Hustle attracts help—when younger people work hard and do their best, they become visible to those who can mentor them. unit #5
  3. Mentors are drawn to those who are working hard because they see both effort and opportunity to help someone reach the next level. unit #6
  4. Busy people attract mentors because mentors want to invest in those who respect time and will use counsel wisely. unit #8
  5. Seeking wisdom is more fundamental than seeking counsel; counsel-seeking is subordinate to and flows from the broader pursuit of wisdom. unit #10
  6. Mentorship is something God does for you in response to prayer for wisdom; it is not primarily a formal arrangement but a providential gift. unit #11
  7. Loving wisdom means being willing to work for it; wisdom requires effort to extract, not passive reception. unit #14
  8. If you are truly hungry for wisdom, you will overcome your preference for convenience or polish and receive wisdom however it comes. unit #17
  9. Hunger for wisdom is self-motivating and drives the necessary labor to obtain it. unit #18
  10. Fullness of self breeds contempt for wisdom, but hunger for wisdom makes even difficult or bitter counsel sweet and desirable. unit #19
  11. Mission compatibility is the foundation of biblical mentorship; mentor and mentee must share the same fundamental life goals and priorities. unit #23
  12. Mentorship is two people doing the same thing at different stages and scales, united by shared mission and differing only in maturity and scope. unit #24
  13. Mentorship should be reciprocal, and long-term mentoring relationships often mature from unequal benefit to full reciprocity over time. unit #25
  14. General mentorship based on shared life mission is naturally abundant in the church, but highly specific mentorship requires a different approach. unit #27
  15. God's call to potential mentors is to love others with the things they themselves love—to share their unique passions and competencies as an act of love. unit #28
  16. Most of what God has asked of the preacher is to include others in the things he loves and to think of others while doing those things. unit #29
  17. The church provides both general wisdom through shared mission and specific wisdom through members' unique loves, and both are accessed by asking God for wisdom in faith. unit #35
Quotations· 2
"when the student is ready, the teacher arrives" — Chinese proverb (unit #4)
"hunger is the ultimate sauce" — old saying (unit #17)
Read it

Full transcript

27,927 characters 39 units ~31 min reading time Listen instead →

0 · Oswald opens with self-deprecating humor about the podcast's niche audience, establishing an informal, conversational tone and building rapport with listeners by acknowledging the modest scale of the endeavor

Foreign. Welcome to the Providence Podcast. My name is Chris Oswald, Senior pastor at Providence Community Church. Contrary to some of the chuckles I got a few weeks ago on Sunday mentioning this extremely important and popular podcast, I want you to know that we are, we are in the top five most popular podcast produced in the 66215 zip code. So, you know, take that and, and consider how lucky you are to be part of this highly selective audience.

1 · Oswald explains the delay in addressing mentorship due to Holy Week observances, situating the sermon in the liturgical calendar and affirming the priority of corporate worship over topical teaching

Well, we are overdue for a discussion on mentorship. It was on my docket for last week, but last week was quite full, full of wonderful things. What a wonderful week to spend extra time with the church family and to celebrate the gospel as it plays out over a week. The triumphant entry of Jesus arriving into Jerusalem, headed to die, offering himself up in obedience to the Father on the cross and in three days raising to glory and ascending to the right hand of the Father. So a wonderful week. One of my favorite handful of weeks that there are in a year. And so lots going on and didn't get to the discussion I wanted to regarding mentorship.

2 · Oswald disclaims expertise while asserting relevance and personal experience, managing listener expectations and establishing his ethos as a practitioner rather than a theorist

Now, just so you know, just so you know, I would not consider myself to be an expert on this subject, but it's something that I know that many people are interested in and I do have some thoughts and some experiences and some scriptures to share and so on and so forth. So let's go ahead and get into it.

3 · Oswald pauses to give personal testimony of God's faithfulness in providing mentors at critical junctures, grounding the entire discussion in gratitude and providence rather than technique or human effort alone

One thing I will say is that I have been incredibly blessed to have a significant number of mentors in my life at various times. What I have found is that there's a Chinese proverb that says that when the student is ready, the teacher arrives. And so the first thing I want to do before I talk about some practicalities is I just want to praise God for His faithfulness to me in this area. Because it just seems like every time I would reach a point where I really couldn't go any further with the information that I had or the skills that I had or the perspective that I had. The Lord would bring somebody into my life and, and allow me to learn from them, usually older men and allow me to learn from them. So actually a couple times are older women too.

4 · Oswald explicitly names the theological foundation of the discussion: God's sovereign kindness in orchestrating relationships for the sake of wisdom and growth

So this is probably where I should start is I just want to say thank you to the Lord for his faithfulness and care in that area.

5 · Oswald introduces the first practical principle: diligent effort makes a person visible and attractive to potential mentors who are in a position to help

Now I want to move from there into sort of what maybe was going on in those moments when the Lord provided some mentors to me. So first thing would be a practical, a practical observation. I would say that one of the most important things you can understand as a younger person in particular, is that hustle invites help. I'm sorry, Hustle attracts health is how I would put it. Hustle attracts help. When you are evidently going hard and doing your best, I think very often people notice that. People that are in a position to help you, to encourage you, to support you, they notice the effort.

Where this fits

Recent preaching context

The three sermons immediately preceding this one in the preaching schedule.

Mar 24, 2024
Successful Christian parenting requires parents to possess sincere (non-hypocritical) faith rooted in regular experience of God's grace, supported by deep integration into a local church that provides additional godly influence as children's lives expand beyond what parents alone can guard.
Mar 31, 2024
Christianity is grounded in verifiable historical facts that are rejected not for lack of evidence but because accepting them requires abandoning the pleasure-driven life, yet Jesus died precisely to rescue people from that futile treadmill and give them abundant life.
Ephesians 2:1-10
Mar 31, 2024
Because Christ has been raised from the dead, believers must reorient their entire lives around the prize of knowing Him, counting all earthly achievements as loss and embracing suffering as the path to deeper fellowship with the resurrected Lord.
Philippians 3:1-16
April 1 · This sermon
Some Thoughts About Mentorship
Biblical mentorship emerges organically when younger believers hunger for wisdom, work diligently with what they have, and align themselves with older believers who share their life mission and love the same things they are learning to love.
Take it further

Discuss · apply · pray

Couples · three questions over coffee

Hunger for Wisdom Together

  1. What stood out to you about the connection between hunger for wisdom and the mentors God brings into our lives? Where do you sense that hunger—or its absence—in yourself right now?
  2. How do we cultivate shared mission in our marriage, and are there ways we've closed ourselves off from receiving wisdom because we've settled into comfort rather than staying hungry for growth together?
  3. What unique loves and passions has God given each of us that we could invite the other into more intentionally—not as correction, but as an act of love and mentorship?
Draft · pending review
Small-group discussion

6 questions for your group this week

  1. Chris described mentorship as 'two people doing the same thing at different stages and scales, united by shared mission.' What does this definition help us see about mentorship that we might otherwise miss or misunderstand?
    → Can you think of a relationship in your own life—or in the church—that fits this description, even if you wouldn't have called it 'mentorship' before?
  2. The sermon emphasized that 'hustle attracts help'—that mentors are drawn to people who work hard and respect their time. What makes this true, and what does it reveal about how God has designed relationships of growth and development?
    → How might this reshape the way you think about your own work—not as something to do alone, but as part of how you become available to receive help?
  3. Chris contrasted 'seeking wisdom' as the broader pursuit with 'seeking counsel' as something more specific and subordinate. Why does this distinction matter, and how might approaching mentorship from a posture of hunger for wisdom change what we're actually looking for?
    James 1:5
  4. One of the sermon's claims was that 'fullness of self breeds contempt for wisdom, but hunger for wisdom makes even difficult or bitter counsel sweet and desirable.' Where do you sense this tendency in your own heart—the pull toward complacency or satisfaction that dulls your appetite for growth?
    Proverbs 27:7
    → What would it look like in your life this week to actively cultivate hunger for wisdom rather than waiting to feel motivated?
  5. The sermon taught that mentorship is 'something God does for you in response to prayer for wisdom; it is not primarily a formal arrangement but a providential gift.' How does this change the way you might pray about mentorship in your own life or in the lives of others around you?
    James 1:5
  6. Chris said that God calls potential mentors 'to love others with the things they themselves love—to share their unique passions and competencies as an act of love.' What are the things you love, and who in your sphere might benefit from being invited into those loves with you?
    → What would it require of you to think of others while doing the things you love, rather than treating them as separate from your personal pursuits?
Draft · pending review
Daily readings · Monday–Friday

5-day reading plan

This week we walk through the foundation of biblical mentorship: God's sovereign provision of mentors in response to our hunger for wisdom, the role of diligent work in making us visible to those who can help us, and the reciprocal love that marks mature mentoring relationships in the church.

Monday James 1:5

James invites us to ask our generous God for wisdom, and He gives freely without reproach—establishing that our pursuit of mentorship begins not with networking but with prayer. When we petition the Lord for wisdom, we are asking Him to arrange the very mentors and circumstances that will shape us; we trust His timing and His choice of instruments. This reframes mentorship from something we merely secure through effort to something we receive as a gracious answer to believing prayer.

Tuesday 1 Kings 3

Solomon's request for wisdom in the midst of his great calling shows us that diligent work creates the context in which God grants wisdom and the mentors who embody it. His visibility as a faithful steward of his burden—the weight of leading Israel—made him the kind of person to whom God and His representatives would draw near. Our own faithful labor in our calling does not earn mentorship through human merit, but it positions us where God's providence can connect us to those who see our hunger and capacity to receive help.

Wednesday Proverbs 27:7

The full soul loathes the honeycomb, but to the hungry soul every bitter thing tastes sweet—a profound inversion of how we naturally approach counsel. When we are satisfied with our own competence, our own answers, even the most gracious mentor's words will feel unnecessary or insulting; but when we are truly hungry for wisdom, we will receive hard words, uncomfortable correction, even unfamiliar voices with gladness. This hunger is not a weakness but the very posture that makes us apprentices, capable of being transformed by those God sends.

Thursday Acts 16:1-5

Paul chose Timothy not because of a formal mentorship program but because they shared the central mission—the advance of the gospel and the strengthening of the churches. Their mentorship flourished precisely because they were yoked to the same ultimate purpose; Timothy's willingness to join Paul's apostolic labor made him the kind of companion who could receive and embody Paul's wisdom. When we align ourselves with others around the mission that God has given the church, mentorship happens naturally, because mature believers see in us the same hunger for Christ and His kingdom that drives their own lives.

Friday James 1:6-8

James warns that one who doubts is like a wave tossed by the wind, unstable in all his ways—a picture of the person who seeks advice without first seeking wisdom from God. The order matters: we ask God for wisdom in faith, not wavering between His providence and our own schemes; from that foundation, counsel and mentorship become tools in wisdom's service, not substitutes for it. Our job is to pursue wisdom from the Lord with whole-hearted hunger; His job is to answer through the mentors, circumstances, and voices He sovereignly provides as we ask and believe.

Draft · pending review
Pray together this week

A Prayer for Wisdom and Faithful Mentorship

Father, we come before You with grateful hearts, acknowledging Your sovereign faithfulness in providing mentors at precisely the moments we have needed them most. You are the God who ordains our steps and places wise counselors in our path as expressions of Your paternal care. We praise You that mentorship is not mere chance but Your gracious providence working through the body of Christ.

Yet we confess that we often approach wisdom passively, expecting it to come to us without the hunger and labor it demands. We settle for convenience over growth, polish over substance, and comfort over the difficult counsel that shapes us. We ask for wisdom without truly seeking it, and we fail to recognize the mentors You place before us because we are not genuinely hungry enough to receive them. Forgive us for our half-hearted pursuit of the wisdom that would transform us and align us more fully with Christ's purposes.

In the gospel, Christ Himself embodied the hunger for wisdom—He increased in wisdom and stature, submitted to the Father's counsel, and now sits as our supreme Mentor and Lord (Luke 2:52; Hebrews 12:2). Through His finished work, we have been granted access to the wisdom of God; by His Spirit, we are made new creatures capable of genuine desire for growth. The gospel humbles us and awakens in us a hunger that no amount of self-sufficiency can satisfy.

Grant us, we pray, a deep and persistent hunger for wisdom—the kind that makes us willing to work for it, to receive it in whatever form You send it, and to recognize Your hand in the mentors You place alongside us (James 1:5). Stir in us a love for the things You love, and give us the courage to invite others into those pursuits as an act of love. Help us to see that mentorship flourishes when we are united with others in shared mission and gospel purpose, and give us wisdom to know when to ask, when to labor, and when to receive counsel gladly. By Your grace, make us both faithful mentees and generous mentors, knit together with our brothers and sisters in the glad pursuit of Christlikeness. To You alone be the glory.

Draft · pending review
Sunday-evening family table

Who's Teaching You?

For the parent

This prompt invites kids to think about the real people in their lives who are showing them how to do things well—not famous figures, but actual mentors they encounter. Listen for who they notice and what they're learning; this opens a conversation about how God provides teachers through our community.

Who is someone you know—maybe a coach, a teacher, a parent of a friend, or someone at church—who is really good at something and is teaching you how to do it? What are they showing you?
works for ages 7+
Draft · pending review
Memory verse this week

James 1:5

If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask God, who gives generously to all without reproach, and it will be given him.

Why this verse: This verse captures the sermon's central conviction that mentorship is fundamentally God's providential response to prayer for wisdom rather than a formal arrangement we engineer. It anchors the truth that wisdom—and the mentors God sends—comes through asking God in faith, making it the theological foundation for the entire message on how believers attract and receive mentorship.

Draft · pending review
Where this was preached

About the church

Providence Community Church
Lenexa, KS
Sundays · 10:00 AM
About us · What we believe
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# Providence Community Church

A church preaching expository sermons through the books of the Bible.

## Sermons
- [Successful Christian Parenting, Part 2 (2024-03-24)](/ProvidenceLenexa/sermons/2024/03/successful-christian-parenting-part-2)
- [No Mere Myth (Ephesians 2:1-10, 2024-03-31)](/ProvidenceLenexa/sermons/2024/03/no-mere-myth)
- [The Prize (Philippians 3:1-16, 2024-03-31)](/ProvidenceLenexa/sermons/2024/03/the-prize)
- [Some Thoughts About Mentorship (2024-04-01)](/ProvidenceLenexa/sermons/2024/04/some-thoughts-about-mentorship)

## About
- [About the church](/about)
- [Plan a visit](/visit)

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