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?



This is a wonderful letter to yourself, Bob, reflecting on God's leading and empowering presence in your life. I'm glad you found it a fun writing exercise. I especially appreciate the way you have honoured Jocelyn in your letter. May God's presence continue to shine in your life.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Lorrie.
DeleteThis spoke to me deeply. Much wisdom is wrapped in your words. I love the bucket of water analogy. Each of our lives is truly a vapour. What God senses is the only thing that counts. Thank you for this. Pattie Janzen
ReplyDeleteThank you, Pattie. I'm glad you felt something from reading the post..
DeleteIt's a blessing to hear the wisdom of our older selves. And it will be wise if we heed it for the future.
ReplyDeleteπΎππΎ
You are so right.
DeleteHow wonderful are the lessons you’ve learned along the way, Bob. Much can be gleaned from your words for all of us. I appreciated the way you spoke of Jocelyn. Sounds like you are a great team. God bless you both and thanks for a great post.
ReplyDeleteJocelyn helped me learn most of those lessons, Sharon. She's a good one.
DeleteThank you for this insightful and honest message, Bob. As a former pastor, I related to every word. You nailed it with your beautiful words about Jocelyn. She must be an extraordinary woman, like my wife, Terry. These following statements moved me because they are so real and honest. 'Listen to her. She has insight about people that you don't have. Trust her judgment. She is intuitive.
ReplyDeleteShe 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.
Blessings to you, brother, for your faithfulness to your calling and also recognizing the supreme value of your beloved, Jocelyn.
Alan, I think we have learned some of the same lessons from very good instructors.
DeleteI loved your letter to your way younger self. It was a joy to read. So much wisdom gained through the years. Thank you, Bob.
ReplyDeleteBrenda, a joy to write and a joy to read. Awesome.
DeleteI enjoyed reading this as well. Thanks so much Bob.
ReplyDeleteThanks for reading and commenting, Michelle.
DeleteGood Morning Pastor Bob. I loved this blog...and the letter you wrote to your younger self. I think I will write a letter to my younger self as well. Just to go back in time and talk to yourself about the goals achieved, the journey of life with it's joys and heartaches...can be a cathartic exercise. I turned 64 in November of 2025...and I think that I am ready to write that letter. I will be a full-fledged senior at 65 in 2026...collecting an Old Age Security Pension from the Government of Canada....I think I have enough life experience to write that letter now. LOL!
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing your blog with us. I always look forward to reading it. Have a great weekend! <)
It's me Julie...This format is a little different that commenting directly on Rev Words. I thought you might have known who it was....by the time of the comment was made...5:37 am on a Friday morning....the "early bird" who is up, and waiting for the world to wake up. LOL! Have a great weekend! <)
ReplyDeleteDear Pastor Bob,
ReplyDeleteThis post brought tears to my eyes. It was so beautifully written. Your love for Jocelyn is so evident, and your gratitude for the gift that God has given you if so humbling.
Much of my words to my younger self would be similar. I would tell myself to trust God more. Trust God that he loves me more than I can ask her imagine. That ultimately he is in control, he made me, he knows what’s best for me. Follow his ways, because they are good and true.
Stay Attached to the vine, rest in the shadow of his Wing.
I would also tell myself that I already have way too many clothes in your closet, but go ahead and buy the shoes. :)
I would tell myself to remember that I am on the same team as my husband, and we can win when we’re working together. I would tell myself that my voice matters and that I do have something to say.
As a teacher, I would say, relax, touch the kid’s hearts and their minds will follow.
Always play your music loud. Always.
Compassion, love, grace, and understanding go a lot further than anything else. I would tell myself to forgive myself, let it go and breathe.
Lastly, take magnesium, wear slippers to bed, and pray more before going to sleep.
Always good to read your blogs and yes you have an amazing wife by your side.
ReplyDeleteGreat post Bob! Esp. loved and will endevour to follow how you should cherish your wife in all ways at all times! Great advice!
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed the letter. Good way to take inventory of our lives. Write a letter, mine would be a long one!! So grateful HIs blessings.
ReplyDelete