Buechner: Spiritual Gifts

 Buechner: Spiritual Gifts

“The place God calls you to is the place where your deep gladness and the world’s deep hunger meet.”—Frederick Buechner.

Our Sunday lectionary readings often are about a call, the call of the disciples, Jonah, Moses, and Paul’s call.
 In today’s world, Frederick Buechner gives us the best advice about how to find our ministry in perhaps his most quoted phrase about the meeting of “our deep gladness and the world’s deep hunger.”

The Spirit gives us gifts for our ministry for doing God’s work. “The varieties of our gifts” are mentioned in 1 Corinthians 12, but we are unaware of many other spiritual gifts. The Rev. Dr. Kate Alexander reminded us recently that we must not limit our spiritual gifts to those described in biblical times. Many spiritual gifts may initially not seem “spiritual.” She gives the example of proofing the Sunday bulletin to further God’s work as a vital ministry performed by people with a very detailed, unique ministry.

We must remember that the gifts are to further the work of God, not necessarily our work, our agenda, or our goals.

Besides giving us several inventories, material from the Stephen Ministry by Stephen Haugk leads us through other clues to our spiritual gifts. For example, the skills we see in our most admired person may be ours. The gift we use to bring about our most fulfilling life events may be our gift. The action of Jesus we most appreciate may be our gift.

 I also learned from Lloyd Edwards in his book, Discerning Your Spiritual Gifts that significant gifts may come from our woundedness. For example, those in recovery stay by helping others recover from addiction. Likewise, those who have experienced the death of a significant person are often the ones who can later best help heal others who are grieving.

Parker Palmer’s, Let Your Life Speak, is another classic book about where and how God leads us into the servant ministry God has created us to participate in.

My experience is that I am using my gift when the ministry in which I am involved energizes me. I put energy in, and more comes out. The tried and true biblical fruit of the Spirit can also indicate when we are using our spiritual gifts. Galatians 5 reveals that when we are connected and guided by the Spirit, we feel and know “love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control.”

God seeks each of us out and calls us by name. We are each so needed today and tomorrow in our troubled world, healing that only each one of us uniquely can do, where “our deep gladness meets the world’s deep hunger.”
Joanna    
https://www.joannaseibert.com/