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by Gary Barkalow Here's help with choosing your major, launching your career and planning your
future.
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| Click here to browse our bookstore for great college resources. Or click the image to order. |
Whether you’re a freshman registering for your first spate of classes or a senior filling out job applications, that question hangs heavy in the mind of most students. What does your future hold and what courses should you take to prepare for it? I’ve heard of students covering seven or eight majors in the course of four years, finally settling for one in a desperate attempt to graduate on time. Why is it so hard to choose a major? Maybe because you feel like you’re being forced to commit to a life long career path. But what if you get three years out from college and decide zoology wasn’t such a glamorous vocation after all? As important as this decision seems, there is more at stake than good money and self-fulfillment on the job. God is shaping you for something bigger. In Ephesians, Paul reminds us that "we are God’s workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do" (Ephesians 2:10). God has something specific in mind for you — your calling. And the decisions you make about your major, your job, even the way you spend your time flow from knowing what your calling is.
Know Your Own
Heart
You are unique among God’s creation. In addition
to His universal commands (do justice, love mercy,
etc.) He placed in you a call that is unlike any
other. "The call of God ... is implicit," wrote
Oswald Chambers in My Utmost for His Highest.
It’s "like the call of the sea, no one hears
it but the one who has the nature of the sea in
him. It cannot be stated definitely what the call
of God is to, because His call is to be in
comradeship with Himself for His own purposes..."
The Fat Eagle’s
Fate
In 1984, I was in the opening ceremonies of the
Olympic Games. Los Angeles. The entertainment
capitol of the world. Everyone expected it to be
one of the most spectacular opening ceremonies to
date. Plans included the flight of an American
Bald Eagle from the western rim of the L.A.
Coliseum, around the perimeter, to the top of the
Olympic Rings at the playing of the National
Anthem.
The choreographers hired one of the top Hollywood
trainers to work with the eagle. But, he ran into
several problems. First, the eagle was a member of
the distinguished endangered species list and
extremely hard to find. The trainer found only one
in captivity. Second, the eagle — misfortunately
named Bomber — had not flown during his 12 years
of captivity. He looked more like a Butterball
Turkey than a eagle. After two months of intense
training, Bomber journeyed to the coliseum for
several trial runs.
Tragically, the stress of the rehearsal killed
him. Actually, he died of vascular collapse and an
acute bacterial infection. In the words of the
trainer, reported in Time magazine, "The
eagle had been fat and coddled for years and when
finally called upon to behave like an eagle, he
failed."
In this life, there is something you will be
called to do. Through the enabling of the Holy
Spirit and your passion and gifting, God is
equipping you to do His will. Are you training?
Are you ready? When it’s time for your flight,
will you be toned and strong, or coddled and fat?
Unlocking the
Secret
Your life is full of hints about your calling.
They’re woven through your dreams and passions and
visible in what motivates you and what you’re good
at. First, you become aware of needs. You may find
yourself thinking, Something needs to be done
for the homeless and hungry in our city; for
single moms left alone to fend for themselves and
their children; for those who haven’t heard a
compassionate and clear presentation of the
Gospel; for the outlandish policies government is
making.
Over time, your interests narrow. You start
thinking, reading and talking about one need more
than others. You move from thinking about homeless
shelters, to actually working in one. It’s
becoming intensely personal now. Eventually, if
your heart is not "choked by life’s worries,
riches and pleasures" (Luke 8:14-15), you will
find focus on one or two of those areas and be
moved almost irrepressibly to action. You may
start working full time for a homeless shelter,
become actively involved as a board member or run
for public office.
What needs weigh heavily on your heart? Is there
an issue worth "pounding the table" over? Is there
a problem you feel compelled to solve?
Trading Somersaults for
Spreadsheets
Typically, your gifting determines what you enjoy
doing. When you are operating in the abilities God
has created in you, for His purposes, you will
experience joy. Mistakenly, we can sometimes feel
guilty - not guilty about what we do enjoy but
rather about what we don’t enjoy. Again, God has
put the desire in us to do certain things in
certain ways.
Even if you're not living according to God's will,
you will find joy when you use the talents God has
given you - your "natural abilities." They are an
intricate part of your design. This is true for
most people. But that joy will be limited and
meaningless.
Joy does not preclude hardship. Oswald Chambers
said "God gives
us a vision and then He takes us down to the
valley to batter us into the shape of the vision,
and it is in the valley that so many of us faint
and give way." Struggles, frustrations, small
steps forward, failures, misunderstanding,
brokenness: unless these, too, are welcomed with a
certain joy, the claim to being called has a
hollow ring.
I was a gymnast for fifteen years with Athletes in
Action, a ministry of Campus Crusade for Christ.
During my final year, I sensed that God was
leading me to fulfill my calling somewhere else. I
struggled with this because I enjoyed what I was
doing and wasn’t dreaming of doing something else.
A friend of mine asked me several, very
penetrating questions. He asked if I was
passionate about evangelism. That was a tough
question for me. After all, I worked for an
aggressive evangelistic organization committed to
reaching the world with the Gospel by the year
2,000. With a little bit of guilt, I admitted
that, although I was committed to the importance
of evangelism, I was not passionate about it. Then
he asked me if I was passionate about sports. With
a little embarrassment, I admitted that the only
sport I was passionate about was gymnastics (and
that was fading along with my back handspring).
Then he asked me what I really enjoyed about my
work. I told him that I loved to help people and
organizations find clarity and purpose in their
work. That was a point of revelation. Suddenly, I
could put my finger on what God had put in my
heart to do. Shortly after we talked, Focus on the
Family offered me a job that relied on these
skills. I knew fairly quickly, by knowing what
motivates me and what I’m good at, that God was
moving me.
Before I started with Focus, another friend
counseled me that God may be placing me in a new
setting because my gifting and character needed to
be stretched and developed beyond what it was in
my current job. Both conversations proved critical
to what I was to encounter. During my first year,
I felt totally lost. I wasn’t sure what I was
supposed to do or what I had to offer. I doubted
every ability and interest I thought I had, even
the belief that there was a calling on my life. I
was so busy trying to fit in, to be somebody, to
do something that was appreciated and needed, that
I forgot who I was. If it wasn’t for God, I would
have lost my heart. God reassured me that He was
in this to deepen my character. After twelve
months, I realized that I needed to live from my
heart, to bring who I was, not who I thought
others wanted me to be, to the position and to
God. It was at that point that my enthusiasm and
sense of calling returned. My contribution to my
position increased dramatically because I was
working out of my passion and gifting, with a
renewed sense of intimacy with God.
There are many tests, inventories and indicators
you can take to learn what your spiritual gifts,
personality type and abilities are. One of the
most helpful things I did to bring more clarity to
my calling was to identify several action words
that describe what motivates me. These words
create for me a sense of excitement and energy.
You see, each person has a certain way of
operating, a mode of action, that is unique. I
discovered my "action verbs" by drawing a line
down the center of a marker board. On one side I
wrote the things I enjoyed doing — the things that
energized me — over the past two years. On the
other side I wrote the things I disliked; the
things that sapped my strength. When my list was
finished, there was a theme of common words that
portrayed my heart in action. (You can do this
exercise, too.)
Once you know your action verbs, review them
frequently and see if they continue to represent
your heart. When you have established several
words that describe your enthusiasm and gifting,
you will be better able to discern the
opportunities that God is putting before you in
alignment with your calling. In Matthew 25, Jesus
tells us about a man who, in preparation for his
journey, gave each of his servants an opportunity
for investment and achievement. He did not give
them identical opportunities, or talents. Instead,
he gave each servant a portion consistent with
their ability. In the same way, God gives us
opportunities according to our abilities, which we
will only recognize if we know what our gifting
is.
The Ultimate Why
When we are engaged in what God has called us to
do, every part of our spiritual life comes alive.
There’s a reason to grow. We have a compelling
reason to pray, to stay in close contact with our
leader and Guide when we walk unfamiliar,
threatening paths. There’s a strong drive for
fellowship, allies and friends, close at hand,
because what God calls us to, we can’t do alone.
There’s an undeniable need for worship, a clear
vision of who God is and His commitment to meet
our every need as we walk with Him into the
future.
God has gifted you to do a work for which you are
uniquely qualified. The Apostle Paul urges us to
offer our bodies —our very selves — as a living
sacrifice to God (Romans 12:1). This offering
can’t be made in some abstract way with pious
words or religious acts. That is why, according to
Os Guiness in The Call, "calling is the
most comprehensive reorientation and the most
profound motivation in human experience; the
ultimate why for living in all history."
Please see: Part 2: Exercises for Discovering Your Calling
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____________________ Copyright © 1998 Focus on the Family. All rights reserved. International copyright secured.Gary Barkalow is the director of Legislative and Cultural Affairs in the Public Policy division of Focus on the Family. He also lectures and writes on the topic of life stages |
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