I grew up suffering
from low self-esteem, a lack of confidence that could easily turn to
frustration. Uncertainty about
self-expression could lead me to say something incomplete or offensive and not
at all what I sought to convey.
When I
became a Reader, these frustrations were relieved ... almost overnight. Suddenly, I was able to stand in front of a
congregation, many of whom were much older than me, to lead and teach them. I had been given ‘permission’; I felt I had authority
to do and say these things ... I had the Bishop’s licence. As I look back, I’m still amazed at the way that
single sheet of grey paper had changed my behaviour.
In his
letter to the early Christians, the apostle James wrote about the power of
little things. He used the example of a small
piece of metal placed in a horse’s mouth to control it. He referred to the rudder steering a great
ship and a tiny spark setting a forest on fire (James 3:3-5). As the song says, “Little things mean a
lot!” James went on to talk about the
tongue, another very powerful little thing!
He described it as a restless evil, full of deadly poison (v.8). I certainly couldn’t tame mine in those
younger days!
Later, when
I was no longer in ministry as a Reader, confidence left me to some extent. I could stand, apparently chatting in a group,
but spend the whole time listening, contributing nothing at all for ages. I was hesitant and found it difficult to put
the right words together; by the time I did, the conversation had moved on.
And when it came to action, ... ! I remember with shame sitting in my parked
car in the street after seeing an old man fall down on the pavement. I waited and watched as someone else came and
helped him to his feet. It was as if I
was paralysed by the thought of doing something caring and practical.
I’ve
recently noticed a change in my behaviour.
Not suddenly, as if the result of therapy or the side-effect of new
medication, but gradually over a period of some months. For the second time in my life, I’ve become
more open, more willing to engage with other people. Take, for example, an incident when I was shopping the other week. I noticed a woman trying to balance her
basket of groceries on the handles of a pushchair. The basket fell, spilling the contents on the
ground. Without thinking, I sprang
forward to help her gather them up. Only
a few months ago, I would have retreated into an adjacent aisle in
‘mind-your-own-business’ mode.
In the
church hall, while chatting over coffee earlier this year, my eye caught some
young children playing on the edge of the stage (somewhere that children shouldn’t
go). I went over to encourage them to stay
off the stage, and engaged a nearby teenager to keep an eye on them. A year ago, such a quasi-parental move
wouldn’t have crossed my mind.
What’s
caused this change in me? A word comes from
the past in a new guise: licence.
Last
autumn, I was invited to take on the role of the church's Health & Safety Officer. I realised that, with retirement already
partially upon me, it would be a worthwhile use of some of my ‘spare’ time. Although having no past experience, I accepted
and began to ‘learn on the job’.
When the annual
‘gifts and skills’ form came round, I repeated my usual commitments to
lesson-reading, leading prayers and so on, but then wondered what else I could
help with. I noticed the rota for giving
lifts to church to those in need. I
could tick that one. There was also a
box for helping with special events; I could move chairs, set up tables ...
another tick.
It’s as though
a simple ‘Yes’ and a couple of ticked boxes have moved a mountain. Through the ‘authority’ they have given me, new
doors have opened up and I’ve engaged
with many people who had previously been beyond the limit of my conversational
ambit, bringing fulfilment to their needs, and a new level of involvement and
fellowship for me.
A little
further in James’s letter comes the statement, “the prayer of a righteous person
is powerful and effective” (James 5:16).
Maybe someone noticed my dormant state and prayed for me.
Is there
some little thing in your life that needs a tweak to release your potential?
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