Classic State of Mind
Classic State of Mind is a thoughtful Christian podcast for reflective listeners who want to see grace, meaning, and the presence of God hidden inside ordinary life. Through story, memory, metaphor, and quiet observation, Ken Jones invites you to pull up a chair on the front porch and hold everyday life up to the Light.
Classic State of Mind
Backstage
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This week on Classic State of Mind, Ken Jones reflects on ‘Backstage’ … the unseen places where ordinary faithfulness quietly changes lives. While our culture celebrates platforms, spotlights, and large stages, Jesus often pointed to smaller things instead: seeds, salt, lamps, yeast, and everyday people carrying light into dark places.
Most of us will never stand before crowds. But we will stand in hallways, kitchens, classrooms, hospital rooms, and conversations where someone desperately needs light.
A thoughtful four-minute reflection about obscurity, faithfulness, and the 'steady light' ordinary believers bring into a dark world.
I'm Ken Jones, and this is a classic state of mind with a word about backstage. Every Sunday morning I get to lead the classic service at church. We have a wonderful group of committed musicians and singers. We help the congregation that's gathered focus on God musically with traditional hymns, choruses, gospel songs, and even an occasional contemporary worship song. We try to keep the focus on Jesus, but everyone in the room is faced toward the platform, or what a secular audience might call the stage. Whatever's happening on the stage is what folks are thinking about and focusing on. But some of the most important elements of what I get to do every Sunday morning doesn't happen on the stage. It happens backstage. Have you noticed when we go to a concert, nobody cheers when the microphones are plugged in correctly. Nobody applauds the guy who's adjusting the curtains or sweeping the stage after everyone's gone home. No, we're accustomed to thinking as audience members that the people standing in the spotlight or standing out front, or in my case, leading the service, are the most important thing that's going on. But as a classic service worship leader and pastor for many years, I can tell you I know better. I know how many unseen hands it takes to make our worship time possible. We live in a culture fascinated by platforms and stages, bigger audiences, more followers, louder voices, even stadiums full of people raising their hands in worship, experiencing brightly lit stages occupied by well-known pastors or worship leaders. But Jesus never suggested that the kingdom would mainly move through celebrities or even people standing in the front who are well known. When he taught kingdom principles, he chose common ordinary things to describe impact potential in the kingdom. Things like seeds or bread or yeast or salt or lamps that give light in the darkness. Jesus still looked at ordinary people and said, You are the light of the world. The challenge is not knowing what Jesus said, the challenge is truly embracing the idea that small things really do make a huge difference. That ordinary people living godly, faithful lives every day have an extraordinary impact on the world in which they live. Most of us will never stand before thousands of people on a stage. Almost no one writes a best-selling book or becomes a household name. Most believers, believers Jesus described as the light of the world, will live their entire lives in what they might perceive to be relative obscurity, unless, well, unless they embrace the reality that there are far more dark rooms in this world than there are stadiums, and the darkest rooms often need the steadiest light. Some people are called to stadiums. Most of us are called hallways or dinner tables or classrooms. We don't stand on stage where everyone can see us. We're backstage, plugging in microphones or ushering people to their seats or greeting people at the door. But that is where much of the kingdom quietly advances. The light dispelling the darkness one soul at a time, one conversation at a time, one act of faithfulness at a time. It is a profound truth. When life becomes painfully dark, nobody asks where the light's coming from. Nobody critiques the style of the lamp or complains about its design. They simply move closer to the light because light dispels their darkness. The light that has Jesus as its source of power and most often has its effectiveness from a venue unnoticed because it's not in the limelight, is totally committed to being the light of the world backstage. I'm Ken Jones. This has been a classic state of mind.