The science of serving others

Written by Marshall Jones Jr.

Topics: Articles & Tutorials

Serving others requires experimenting (Photo: Juhansonin)

Science is based on observation and experimentation. When it’s not, it’s not science. Serving others is, in this way, a science.

The hodge-podge experiments

When I was about seven years old, like other seven year olds, I performed “experiments.” I had the privilege of being home schooled, so for the most part my experiments were encouraged. Plus, I was inspired by watching and “helping” my mother in the kitchen.

So I’d dump flour and baking soda and raisins and vanilla and basil and other “usually not meant to go together” ingredients into a mixing bowl. And I’d stir. And perhaps freeze it. I didn’t have much direction – I had fun.

In the beginning, that’s what serving others looks like. It’s a hodge-podge of ingredients that don’t usually go together… with not much direction.

The deliberate experiments

Later, I moved on to actually following direction. Directions gave my experiments purpose.

For example, I remember poking holes in the side of a can with a nail, taping over the holes, and filling the can with water. I carried it and a flashlight into a dark bathroom then pointed the light inside the can. Holding the can and water over the sink, I removed the tape.

The water poured out the holes and the light from the flashlight followed the flow of the water. What does that mean? It means light can bend (instead of shining straight out from the holes). Totally cool, right?

This is when serving others gets productive. Not when we start bending light, but when you and I begin experimenting with a purpose in mind. That’s when we discover what works.

Start by forming hypotheses

For experiments to work properly, you have to guide them with hypotheses. As you know, a hypothesis is a guess about why something happens the why it does. When you make those predictions then go out and test them, you’re working like a scientist.

That’s how we have to work when serving others.

Why form hypotheses

The whole purpose of taking guesses and testing them is to discover general principles that will apply to a many situations. The scientist might suppose that gravity causes an apple to fall from the tree to the ground instead of the other way around.

From that, the scientist tests other situations and could eventually come to the conclusion that fruit, any object really, will try to fall to the ground. Not every fruit will fall to the ground – there are always exceptions (like if a table is in the way). But the scientist can establish some general principles from the results of the tests if start from decent hypotheses.

[My apologies to real scientists here who recognize that I'm way over my head talking about gravity.]

You and I have to use some of the same techniques when serving others. We can try different approaches, but if we don’t track the results or start off with any purpose in mind, it’s difficult to discover what works and what doesn’t.

Yes, we’ll stumble upon principles by “accident”, but if we’re not paying specific attention, you and I won’t recognize the beauty of the “accidents” when they occur.

Serving others is certainly an individual skill – you can’t generalize the humanity out of it. But assuming generalizations automatically don’t apply to people is ridiculous. The more we serve others and the closer we come to understanding how God works, the stronger and more workable our generalizations will become.

Here are a three favorites of mine to give you an idea of what I mean:

1. If you want to get, give

2. Reminders are more helpful than new information now

3. bondChristians live driven by thankfulness

These are all generalizations, but they help define how and why to serve others. There are many more principles like these. Much of what I write here is about exploring these and applying them to real, day to day living. From there, it’s a matter of fleshing them out for ourselves, aligning our desires with God’s, and diving into the trenches to find how they all work for His glory.

Serving others is a deliberate act. Learning it is deliberate too. Like science, it’s a painstaking process of trying and failing and trying and failing and finally finding what doesn’t work, switching our assumptions, and building in a new direction toward what does work.

Craziness.

Science isn’t easy. And serving others is messier than most. But like my hodge-podge experiments, it’s not worth much to anyone else without all the rigor of that comes with science.

“Test all things; hold fast what is good.” -Thessalonians 5:21

Serving Suggestions:

(1) Experiment. Try new things. Push in a direction until you know why it doesn’t work. Many of the guiding principles are given in the Bible. It’s up to you and I to apply them to daily life and find precisely how to best serve others. If we’re adding ingredients haphazardly, we’re not going to get too far.

(2) Have you experimented lately with serving others? How do you start? How do you find what works? What have you found that does work?

2 Comments Comments For This Post I'd Love to Hear Yours!

  1. Ryan Tate says:

    Great post, but are you saying that vanilla doesn’t go with basil? Hmmm…

    I love your first point in “serving suggestions”, especially about adding ingredients. We are always trying to add our own ingredients to help the flavor, but more often than not, any ingredient we come up with on our own turns out to be bitter, sour, or even poisonous.

    When experimenting with serving we might learn alot from collecting data and taking measurements up front. Learning directly from other people of their needs and desires would tremendously help to narrow the scope.

    • I love your comment, Ryan.

      Funny you’d mention about vanilla and basil… after I wrote it, I thought, Yeah, I’m sure someone could make something decent out of all that actually. I remember specifically thinking that. Perhaps they do/can go together… mine certainly didn’t, perhaps because I added everything in roughly equal amounts. :)

      But yes, I like what you said about creating something sour or bitter or poisonous. That’s exactly it. We try to add all this stuff that individually might be fantastic but combined in a certain way is dangerous.

      It’s the classic case of trying to be right instead of being righteous. Or trying to be a caring person instead of just caring.

      And one of the best ways to transition into serving something pleasant and wonderful is to ask up front what people want. I’ve found that most often people don’t really know what they want or at least can’t put it into words, but simply asking provides a ton of ques to start with.

      From there, much of it is trail and error. It seems like God likes to teach that way at times because it forces us to trust Him even when everything doesn’t turn out the way we want.

      -Marshall Jones Jr.

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