One of the, if not THE biggest challenge of beach mission at the being of the ear was how completely and utterly useless I felt. Honestly, I felt like a bit of deadweight flapping around and contributing exactly zero.
And, of course, Satan immediately came in with all those lies I've spent a life time battling.
Those insidious lies that I am worthless and I have nothing to contribute. God can't use me. What was I even doing there? Who did I think I was? I didn't just have nothing. I was nothing.
On the third day, in a moment of utter loneliness and desolation, I found myself breaking down, unable to hold my pain in.
And, of course, God acted to show me just how wrong Satan's lies are.
In a moment when I thought I was invisible, though I was alone in my pain, two team members found me and prayed for me, assuring me through their words and their actions that they loved me and saw me, and, more importantly, that God saw me and loved me. Loved me enough to care that I was alone and hurting. And, so many others came and hugged me, checked to make sure I'm alright. I have no words to explain how truly grateful I am.
Still, that sense never left me, and I finished the week feeling certain I had contributed nothing to the mission.
It was interesting, chatting about it on the last day with some of the other members of the team. Their reactions to my confession of feeling useless showed me that from their point of view, I had contributed. More than that, my contribution was valuable and valued. To know that was certainly encouraging.
Now, having had a number of days to reflect on the experience, I now realize that there were a number of factors at play there that week. Both in me and around me. It helped that a dear friend of mine was willing to sit down and chat about it.
So, in this post I'll be talking through what the first factor was. I'll be writing about the over the next couple of days.
So, the first factor was definitely my own sin.
I was, quite bluntly, extremely self-absorbed. To be honest, it pains me to admit that, even to myself. Selfishness is a trait I loathe, but I despise hypocrisy even more. So, there you have it: I was being selfish.
Don't get me wrong, I was actively looking for opportunities to serve and sacrifice. I trust that I can say, without arrogance, that the Holy Spirit has been working in me for too long for me to simply abandon a genuine love and compassion at the first sign of trouble.
But, in my heart, my sinful nature was exerting itself and twisting the selflessness God has developed in me on myself - making me selfish. Does that make any sense at all?
Essentially, instead of rejoicing in every act of service I was doing as an act of God's grace, I was focusing on every act of service I wasn't doing as a sign of my failure and lack of ability. Instead of focusing on God and what He was doing, I was focusing on myself and what I wasn't doing as a measure of my worth.
Completely selfish and extremely dumb.
Another sin I was committing was that of comparison and coveting.
Which, you know, is 100% connected with selfishness. But part of my problem was that I was looking at, and comparing myself to, some of the other team members. And I'm sure you know the kinds I'm talking about. Those who were my opposites in terms of gifting. I looked at those who gifted at connecting with people instantly and striking up natural, easy conversation. People who were gifted at things that leave me shaking in my boots and tongue-tied.
And, I'm sure you know how comparing works, but I was setting their ease and comfort up as the standard I as trying to attain. More than that, I was meant to be. And, of course, I was falling short.
Which led to a discontentment with myself that fed into my certainty of my failure and blinded me to what I was capable of and what I was actually doing.
I hope that at this point you've been able to follow what I've been saying. At the moment, I'll leave this year, and tomorrow I'll talk through this some more.
Heavenly Father, I Cannot, but You Can (part 2 of 4)
Heavenly Father, I Cannot, but You Can (part 3 of 4)
Heavenly Father, I Cannot, but You Can (part 4 of 4)
Yay! blog post. :)
ReplyDeleteand it's a good one