There are those moments in life when something you know in your head sinks down into your heart and lands with a “whump!” that reverberates throughout your whole being. What you knew to be true, or what you repeated to yourself over and over again is suddenly something you can feel. Many times these transitions sneak up on you, quiet, like the still small voice of God. That’s how it was for me the other day.
My framework for life has been to respond to needs and desires. So, you tell me what it is you need from me, and I will do my best to achieve it. In more recent years I have come to see that there are design pieces wired in there and I do try to function in those areas. But even so, I wait for a request. The impetus comes from outside of me. In my head I know that God made me with a specific set of gifts and I am to live according to that design, not to need. That was all fine and good, but in my emotional view of life, it all still hinged on people outside of me.
Well, the pot has been boiling lately, thanks to a recent album release from Sapphire. The teaching is called “Office of Personhood” and it is a gem. This teaching addresses the issue of emotionally embracing that you are a Person, not just an entity that accomplishes things. In Arthur’s words, a commodity. Like a bar of soap. Or a garden hose.
So, I have all these ideas stewing in my cooker, and something bubbled to the surface that I didn’t quite expect. I went to the car wash the other day and stopped to vacuum all of Philip’s mess out of my back seat. In the slot next to me was a Dad and his young daughter working on their SUV. I caught the eye of the daughter a couple of times and smiled at her. I started wondering what her life might be like, if she had good parents, what kinds of ideas were forming in her mind, and that sort of thing. Then something strange began to happen. I started thinking about what I could give her. What do I have as an adult Christian woman? What questions burning in her mind could I answer? How could I give her a role model of what womanhood could be like? What kind of fragrance could she pick up being around me?
WHOA, NELLY.
What on earth? Nobody had asked me for anything. She certainly wasn’t! Now, maybe her spirit was. I can’t deny the possibility. But not a single word passed between us and she was more shy about my smiling at her than anything. And here I was, all eager to give her gifts she hadn’t even dreamed of wanting.
Then came that little voice, slipping a crazy new thought into my head. It was deceptively simple. “I have things to give.”
Wait. I have things to give. Ok. This is going deep, way deeper than it should for a sentence that seems to bear little difference to the concept I already had. If I didn’t have something to give, then no-one would want anything, right?
Oh, but the difference is monumental. Not only was a shift from head to heart, it was a massive emotional paradigm shift. The impetus was no longer someone else. It was me. Intrinsically, in my essence, at my core, in all of my life’s experiences, I HAVE THINGS TO GIVE.
In the past, I waited for a request. But it was even worse than that. It also meant that I was continually trying to synchronize to the outside world of needs and wants. Not that I tried to satisfy everything that came my way, but let me tell you, it is tiring to look outside first instead of inside first. And it is awfully hard to maintain a stable sense of legitimacy in that context. Like trying to tap dance in an earthquake.
It doesn’t matter if anyone needs what I have to give. It doesn’t matter if they know about it or even want it. It is wonderful to pair up need with design, but the status of the need doesn’t determine the status of the design. That was the huge shift for me. If I was stranded on a slab of volcanic rock in the middle of the ocean without even a shrub to sing to, I would still have things to give.
I know the shift is something that God has been building behind my back. The teaching on personhood got the circuits crackling with more thoughts of freedom to enjoy being who God made me to be. Now I can enjoy giving what He made me to give, in any size context He arranges.
At the end of the day, this has let off a geyser of joy in my spirit. There is still lots to learn and develop in terms of the “how to”, but fundamentally, I now feel the truth of living out of design. I think there is something of the joy of God that we can partake of here. He gave massively out of His own essence to create a universe. Nobody needed it. There was nobody there TO need it! He did it because He had things to give and it was His nature to give them.
So, I share this for all of you who are on this journey too. Is your framework like mine was? If you look at the “why” behind living out your design, is it because of what is in you or because of what people need? Do you know this in your head or your heart too? Do you have joy because you know you have something to give?
May you be blessed on the road of discovery and truth. You, too, have things to give!
Wow! Thank you – your description rings so many bells, particularly the legitimacy side. Guess I have some work to do… Will be going to Arthur’s SA seminar on legitimacy but will have to get the Office of Personhood set in the meanwhile!
I can SO relate to this!!! Had more or less the same idea drop into my heart a year ago and that changed everything for me. It had a significant effect on how I navigate tough times and tough people. ( I had a really prickly situation on hands to work with) And the other more beautifull exchanges with people (with them knowing or just in spirit) became more exquisite, like the notes of a symphony landing on just the right bar. In my own words I phrased it as what life giving means. His life flowing through me.
Megan, how has knowing you have something to give helped you with the external competing demands of the need/wants?
I think that the shift that happened is not so much about determining when to say “yes” or “no” as it is to have the emotional confidence that I have good things to give, regardless of the outside need or desire. I believe that deciding when to give and to whom still has a lot to do with design and calling. One of the other things that Arthur talks about in the album is being able to find the verb and the noun of your “sweet spot”. Once you have that nailed down, you can be even more intentional in your giving. I haven’t quite gotten to that place yet. What I see about my design are still many independent facets and I haven’t found the common, underlying theme that pervades all of them. Always a journey!
Always a journey! And process…
Thank you, Megan.
This really touched me…this feels like me a lot. In the last year I am unpacking what it means to be a Mercy (who wished he was a prophet…or anything tough)…I can see this dynamic a lot in my life. I end up in a “receiving” posture in part because that’s a good thing…there is a lot of favor and requests for life that flow to me, but the passive nature of that posture has always bothered me somewhat. If indeed Joshua was a Mercy, then the exhortation “Be strong and courageous” applies to the rest of us Mercies (at least to me) in a special way, I think. It takes courage to acknowledge that we have something to offer and to live courageously from that place, not just a place of externally meeting needs. Good, good word for me.