All my life, I've viewed
vocational challenges as exciting opportunities to grow. When "No."
is the answer to, "Do I have experience doing this?" I seldom view it
as a conversation-ending answer, but as a possible beginning point for a new
adventure. “No.” may really mean “Not yet.”
I am not so much an adrenaline
junkie or a risk-taker, as someone who believes that flexibility, creativity,
and openness are keys to living a life of deep meaning, joy, and fulfillment.
The longer I stay on this path, the more I recognize God's guiding hand
throughout. I don't believe I was created to learn a particular skill set and
be satisfied with spending the rest of my life practicing those skills in the
same setting.
The critical vocational question
for me is calling. Is this the time, place, and task toward which God is
calling me? While the answer to this question can never be known with
certainty, I've come to recognize a few familiar identifying characteristics.
Rather than basing my decision
only on an examination of my own experience level, I look for places where God
is already at work; ways in which divine action has already begun
serendipitously clearing, plowing, and planting in people's hearts, lives, and
communities; and ways that my own gifts can expand as I offer others an
opportunity for growth and hope. I also look for ways that the unknowing of my
anxiety are beginning to be flavored by anticipation or even excitement.
Keys, for me, are keeping the
door open enough to make room for divine surprise to arrive, and surrounding
myself with people who are both passionate about and open to God's penchant to
"...accomplish abundantly far more than all we can ask or imagine."
(Ephesians 3:20)
© 2015 Todd Jenkins
Helpful way to put things. I am at such a point as well.
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