Blooming Where Planted

Colorful Spring Flowers
©iStockphoto.com/bluestocking

I’m a task-oriented person. I like to-do lists and the ability to cross things off of them. I like to be focused on a specific goal and working towards accomplishing it. Defined roles, detailed plans, and clear expectations are all my friends. I, in other words, am a friend of order and clarity.

Despite my affinity for these things, life doesn’t always reflect them. As history and science will tell us the world is in a constant state of atrophy. Things are naturally disposed to go from order to disorder unless some outside force acts upon them. This is true in nature, and it’s true in our lives as well. Chaos is bound to occur; we can do our best to manage it, but things will not always be as clear-cut as we may desire them to be.

Sometimes the hardest area for me to reconcile my desire for order with a state of uncertainty is in the area of ministry. In my mind, having clear expectations produces better results. However, ministry is not about crossing things off a to-do list but showing Christ’s love to other people. Because life is sometimes messy, so will ministry be. I may want to confine it to my carefully crafted plans, but God may have bigger and better expectations for what He has called me to do.

This was brought home to me recently as I went to serve at an event my church was having. I wasn’t originally scheduled to participate, and because I’m pregnant and it was an outside even on a hot day there was limited work that I could do. I wanted a concrete task; I was asked instead to simply hang out in a shaded area and greet people. While I was looking for clarity, the opportunity was ambiguous.

Yet as I stood there wrestling with whether I should go ask someone to give me something specific to do, I realized that serving God doesn’t always come with concrete measures of success. There was nothing for me to cross of the list that day – except whether or not I served God in such a way that it would please Him. Did I do the best with the opportunity that He had called me to? Did I greet people as if I was greeting Christ Himself? The task may have been ambiguous, but the expectation wasn’t. My goal needed to serve the people that came across my path as if my Lord and Savior was the one who was walking before me.

This is the same objective regardless of the clarity that we have in ministry. In whatever God has called us to do, our desire should be to use that opportunity to its fullest in order to bring God the most glory. The task may be small, but that doesn’t mean it’s significance in the Kingdom is. If God plants us somewhere, it’s because that is where He wants to use us. Our objective then should be to bloom wherever He plants – to make the most of every opportunity for His honor and renown.

When Christ was on this Earth He taught His disciples that what they did for the “least of these” was done unto Him (Mt. 25:40) When we have been given the opportunity to serve our focus shouldn’t be on the nature of the task but on the need of the people.  If this is the case, if we are more concerned with demonstrating Christ’s love than we our with our own comfort and convenience, we can be confident that God is able to use the small seeds we may plant to grow something beautiful – in their lives and in our own.

 

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Bits & Pieces (10/5/12)

God is good all the time – “We are not self-existent, therefore any goodness we have must come from an outside source, namely God. Because we cannot see good as He does, when inevitable trials come our way, His goodness may not feel good at all….Part of understanding God’s goodness to us is realizing that His good works toward eternal purposes, not our momentary comfort and satisfaction.  If God’s good happens to result in a good we would choose for ourselves, is entirely because He wants it to be so.”

 

The Spreading Goodness – “And therein lies the very goodness of the gospel: as the Father is the lover and the Son the beloved, so Christ becomes the lover and the church the beloved. That means that Christ loves the church first and foremost: his love is not a response, given only when the church loves him; his love comes first, and we only love him because he first loved us (1 John 4:19).”

 

Recommended Biographies of Christian Women – This looks like a great list of biographies to add to your “books to read” list. if you are interested in learning more about the life and faith of saints who have gone before us, I encourage you to check it out.

 

Misrepresenting the Person & Work of Christ – “This is the constant danger when we don’t simply open the Scriptures and listen to their testimony about Jesus: we make a Jesus in our own image, usually domesticated. Sadly, much that dominates the Christian media seems to fall foul here. Any Jesus who isn’t both Savior and Lord, Sacrificial Lamb of God and Reigning King, cannot be the Jesus of the Gospels. And any Jesus who does not call us to radical, sacrificial, and yes, painful, discipleship, cannot be the real Jesus.”

 

The Role of Beauty – “In today’s world, many are sincerely inspired by nature. They love long walks, visits to the country, and absorbing the beauties of the world around. They often make nature an end in itself. They celebrate its magnificence, but are left to see it all as a random outcome of chance and necessity. Some Christians, through neglect, do much the same thing.”
Honest to God – This book by Joshua Weldman is available for free in the Kindle edition. (H/T)

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