Memory Verse: 1 Corinthians 12:6 – “There are different kinds of working, but in all of them and in everyone it is the same God at work.”
The Word for Today devotional by United Christian Broadcasters (UCB) says
Skilled potters recognise that when they press clay it presses back, giving them an indication of what it can and cannot become. Amateur potters often lack that discernment - and the end work proves it.
When you do not honour your raw material, reality becomes your enemy. The word vocation comes from the Latin word for ‘voice’. Discovering your calling involves listening very carefully.
If you close your ears and pursue something you are neither called nor equipped to do, you will end up living with anxiety that whispers, ‘You’re trying to do something God didn’t tell you to do.’
The courage to acknowledge what you are not brings great freedom; the lack of it imprisons you. Parker Palmer writes, ‘You cannot choose your calling; you must let your life speak.’ Perhaps you were created to learn, and in so doing to benefit others.
If you are, you will find yourself drawn to reading, reflecting, writing, and teaching. However, if you are convinced (or allow others to convince you) that you must be a corporate success in order for your life to count, you will always be going against the grain of your life. Instead, learn to ride the horse in the direction it is going.
Philosopher Mortimer Adler writes about brilliant minds called to sit at the table of what he terms ‘the great conversation of the human race’.
Well, guess what? Ninety-nine percent of us will never sit at that table!
But we can look forward to the commendation: ‘Well done … good and faithful servant’ (Matthew 25:21 NLT), that God promised to those who hear His call, accept it, and devote their lives to fulfilling it.