The February prompt is to write a letter to your younger self. What advice would you give?
Dear Bob:
Congratulations on landing your first assignment in pastoral ministry. You've been given a sacred opportunity. Your new role as an assistant pastor will demand more of you than anything else in life. This role is way more than a job; it is a calling.
You will put in long hours, sometimes seven days a week. At the beginning you won't know what you're doing but that's OK. You'll feel that way for every new major challenge that God calls you into. Bible College trained you to parse Bible verses but not to deal with the complexity of human interaction. You will run programs not people.
No matter what happens, people are never the problem. The problem isn’t even the problem. How you look at the problem is the problem.
Don't sweat the small stuff. It's all small stuff.
The most important person in your life is your wife, Jocelyn. She will be with you day in day out for decades. In due time you'll leave your first congregation and enter into a new ministry opportunity and Jocelyn will be there with you for that. She is the only person you'll carry forward, aside from your firstborn son.
Pay attention to Jocelyn. She is God's best gift to you. She is smart. She is good.
She wants you to succeed and she will do everything she can to help you achieve that.
Listen to her. She has insight about people that you don't have. Trust her judgment. She is intuitive.
She loves you. Put her first. Make time for her. Quantity and quality time. Do your best to understand her. Live at peace with her.
Have fun with her.
Together, you will walk through the deaths of your parents, and life-threatening illnesses, and travel to dangerous places. Hold hands all the way and hold each other tight.
You will be privileged to journey with stellar leaders through plans and projects to the glory of God. Your labour will endure. You will see a harvest of souls from the seeds you will sow.
You will walk many congregants and community members through death, devastating trauma, and grief. Those experiences will be God’s training to prepare you for your own personal losses.
Your lifetime will pass by seemingly at the speed of light. Just as the scriptures advise us, “our days are but a handbreadth.” Live in the moment. Treasure every day. Start with Bible reading, prayer, journaling, and coffee. Always coffee.
Your collection of the front pages of newspapers from Canada and around the world will end up in the garbage. The books you purchased for your study will be given away to younger leaders and a Bible college library. The Coca-Cola bottle and can collection that will eventually define your office space will end up on other people’s shelves. But the relationships you develop, the leaders you call up and invest in, and the people that you share Jesus with will last eternally.
Settle your priorities early.
You can't put God in the centre of your church or your marriage or your role. But you can put God in the centre of your life and that choice will affect everything else.
All work and no play will make Bob a dull boy.
So, listen to Jocelyn, take time off, relax, and make use of all your holidays every year. The church will survive without you. Put your hand into a bucket of water and then draw it out and the hole that remains defines how indispensable you are.
God is for you. No matter how dire the circumstances, or how much you doubt yourself, God is for you. Walk in that truth. It will sustain you, give you grit, and keep your heart and mind quiet and at rest as you trust Jesus.
God bless you, Bob.
Your friend,
Bob
I'm grateful for the life and wife and family and friends and opportunities God has given me.
How about you?



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