Faith Today

Where love leads

Gifts for the gospel, not plans for the future

- Words by Robbie Down | LOVEISMOVI­NG.CA

One late night in my bedroom, I recorded an impromptu arrangemen­t to Philippian­s 4:8. I was inspired by how well we remember song lyrics, simply because they’re set to a melody. It doesn’t matter whether it’s the songs you identify with and love or those dreaded geography or chemistry songs you learned in school.

The melodies and lyrics stick like super glue until you find yourself humming them in showers and shopping lines. Naturally, I and many others before me have concluded we ought to be singing the Scriptures for ourselves and within our communitie­s.

I sent the demo to a good friend of mine. Months later, he sent a message thanking me for the simple arrangemen­t. Even long after, it would still bounce around in his head, encouragin­g him to ponder Christ. His words affirmed that my music could be a gift for the benefit of the Church. Since then, I have poured much time and energy into my craft. My eyes were opened to the roles Christ has given us to serve His people. Now as obsessed as we sometimes get with trying to find and use our gifts, there is a simplicity at the root of one’s spiritual growth and journey.

In his book Invitation to a Journey, Robert Mulholland says the foundation of our spiritual growth can be described as “a process of being formed in the image of Christ, for the sake of others.” This process encompasse­s all our experience­s and the direction of our Christian faith.

Often when approachin­g spiritual gifts, it’s as if we were digging for buried treasure within ourselves, trying to find the hidden gold that God cunningly covered beneath hours of deep prayer and mountains of life experience. This view of chasing our gifts is deceivingl­y endless, and believers are not called to this striving.

While introspect­ion has its benefits, focusing intently on the gifts themselves might cause us to miss the people right in front of us who need Jesus. Often, though not always, the Holy Spirit leads us to meet those people where they’re at through the ways in which we are gifted. As 1 Corinthian­s 13:2 says, “If I have the gift of prophecy and can fathom all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have a faith that can move mountains, but do not have love, I am nothing.”

So then, being formed in the image of Christ and discoverin­g your gifts looks like lovingly serving the needs of those around you. Take, for example, a sports team. A coach situates players in certain positions, not because they think it has the coolest title or gets the most attention. Instead, they are placed there because that’s where they best use their skills to serve the whole team and be successful. In the same way, by practicing loving others, over time it becomes clear where in the Body of Christ we fit—and yes, we all fit. Often, I get asked where I see myself ending up down the road with my music. As if I practise reading my tea leaves next to the New Testament in the morning. These kinds of questions are often the signs of our anxietydri­ven, self-achieving culture seeping in.

On the flip side, James instructs us in such a way: “Instead, you ought to say, ‘If it is the Lord’s will, we will live and do this or that.’ As it is, you boast in your arrogant schemes. All such boasting is evil” (James 4:15-16). This counteract­s the idea of “making a path for yourself” and finding “what works best for you.” In seeking to build what’s best for us based on what feels

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