Do What
You Are Once upon a time the animals decided they should do something meaningful to meet the challenges of the new world. So they organized a school. They developed an activity curriculum of climbing, swimming, running, and flying. To make the administration easier all the animals took all the subjects. The duck was excellent in swimming, in fact better than the instructor. But her grades in flying were barely passing. Her running grade was very low because she was so slow. Since she was so slow she had to drop swimming, which she really enjoyed to spend extra time running. This running caused her webfeet to be badly worn, so that by the end of the semester she was only an average swimmer. The rabbit was at the top of the class in running. Swimming, however was a challenge, she developed a nervous twitch in her leg muscles because of the make-up work in swimming. Her speed fell of because of this nasty muscle twitch. The squirrel was excellent in climbing, but he was always in trouble in flying class. The teacher insisted that he start from the ground and go up but he wanted to start in the treetops and go down. He developed cramps in his legs from overexertion, and his grade fell in climbing, which he enjoyed, to a “C.” His flying teacher gave him a “D” because he could not follow instructions. The eagle was always being disciplined. For instance in climbing class he beat everyone to the top of the tree but he insisted on using his own way to get there... flying. The moral is clear. Each animal has its own natural abilities that is was designed to use. The only way the animal fails is if it is forced to do something it was not gifted to do. What is true of the animals of the forest is also true of us who walk upright. God has not made us all the same. Discover your natural abilities and enjoy them. Rabbits don’t fly. Eagles don’t swim. Squirrels don’t have feathers. Ducks look funny trying to climb trees. So what exactly were you designed to do? Yehudi Menuhin, the famous violinist, has held audiences all over the world spellbound with his playing. He made his debut in San Francisco at the age of 7 and started a worldwide tour by the age of 12 with his historic concert at Carnegie Hall. In his memoirs, Unfinished Journey, Menuhin tells about his love affair with music. From the time he was 3, Menuhin’s parents took him to concerts in New York where he heard Louis Persinger. Menuhin asked his parents for a Violin on his fourth birthday and for Louis Persinger to teach him how to play. A family friend provided the violin, but it was a toy one with metal strings. Although he could have hardly held a full size violin, he was furious with the gift. He writes, “I burst into sobs, and threw it on the ground.” Menuhin said he realized he wanted nothing less than the real thing because he writes, “I knew instinctively that to play was to be.” This story is not uncommon for musicians, John Coltrane, the saxophonist who played for Dizzie Gillespie and Miles Davis had a similar experience. Coltrane nearly died of a drug overdose; he came to faith in Christ and gave up the drugs and drinking. His later works were some of his best. He wrote “A Love Supreme” a thirty-two minute musical praise to God. After an extraordinary performance one night he stepped of the stage and said, “Now let your servant depart in peace.” He confessed that his mission was done; God had sent him to make music and write “A love Supreme.” Maybe we are designed to do, who we are. Again, think about it, maybe we are designed to "do who we are." In Biography magazine there was a feature on Katie Couric. Her sisters say that even as a child she would gather the other children around and entertain them. Which was obviously good training to work with Matt, Bryant, and Willard. In this world “we usually become what
we do” but shouldn’t it be “we do what we are.” There are children and
youth that have not made this most crucial decision, further we have
senior adults who no longer have to consider their career, and then
there is the rest of us who daily wonder, “Why do we do what we do?”
This message, however is not about career (which would include only a
few), it is about hearing and following God’s calling for our lives
(which concerns us all). To find work that perfectly fits our calling is not a right but a blessing. Michelangelo once complained, “times are contrary to art [his calling] I do not... have any hope of further salary.” In more modern times George Foreman the boxer said, “Preaching is my calling, boxing for me is only moonlighting.” We find ourselves intersecting this
issue either as one who is responsible to train a child to follow a
calling, or as one who is searching for our own calling, or as one who
is trying to rediscover their gifts and calling. Help children discover their natural
gifts and point them in that direction instead of letting them do what
is in vogue. Graham Green wrote in The Power and the Glory, “There is
always one moment in childhood when the door opens and lets the future
in.” John Coltrane and Yehudi Menudin verify this. Consider this “God
normally calls us along the line of our giftedness, but the purpose of
giftedness is stewardship and service.” After we are prepared for our career we find ourselves working our job for a few years and then we begin to think, “Maybe I’d be happier doing something else.” So we look in the paper, get in touch with our contacts, and in short order we are setting up a new desk. A few years later and we repeat the same routine, same song, second verse. We think by changing our job, our address, or our spouse that we will somehow find the yellow brick road that leads to Oz. We are confused. Our longing is not for a new desk to sit behind or new people to work with, our longing is to use our gifts, to discover our calling. A job will not quench this thirst only a calling can quench this longing. To discover who we are and what we were
meant to do it is important to have a heart to heart talk with
ourselves. We need to ask ourselves some unsettling questions. Rediscovering what we are designed to
do often takes the form of a search. In our twenties we may pursue one
thing but by our forties we may be burned out on it and discover that
our passion lies elsewhere. Sometimes it takes trial and error to happen
upon our calling. Thomas Paine did not discover his calling until his
forties, when he found himself, out of necessity writing political
commentary in a print shop in Philadelphia. Prior to this he had been a
seaman, a soap maker, and a government agent in England. Even after the
publication of Common Sense and the discovering of his calling as a
writer he had to make a living as a soldier, as a clerk for the State of
Pennsylvania, and as Secretary of Foreign Affairs. Our career is our gift to ourselves. It provides the resources needed to survive. Our calling is God’s gift to the world. It is where our deep gladness meets the worlds deepest needs. Graphics, Design
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