When people leave our
community, we can fill their roles,
but we can’t replace them.
I quit my job two weeks ago, determined that I had no passion for the work, that this position didn’t fit within the scope of God’s call on my life. And I felt incredible relief when I resigned.
A week later, however, I received a call from the owner. The company could refill my position. But it couldn’t replace me. He asked what I’d like to do. And how much. And when.
Isn’t this how the Church ought to operate? When people leave our community, we can find new workers to fill their roles (like parts in a well-oiled machine). But we can’t replace them.
Our culture values self-reliance, independence, professional distance within relationship. The Church should be different.
We don’t have everything figured out. We make mistakes. We secretly hurt (and not-so-secretly hurt each other). And this is precisely why we need community. We’d never make it on our own (no matter how self-sufficient we appear). So let’s be honest and admit our need.
The world doesn’t know how to admit its dependence. And it’s dying for lack of a good example.
Read the full article and more like it at Barclay Press.
2 comments:
Hi Eric: I have nothing particularly witty or insightful to add, I just wanted to thank you for these daily posts you've been doing with Barclay Press. I enjoy the simplicity of the shorter daily observations.
In Friendship, Martin Kelley
Thanks, Martin. I regularly read Quaker Ranter, so it's an honor to have you comment on my own posts.
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