Due to this pandemic-shift in my weekly routine I have more time. One activity I have taken on is teaching 3 of my grandchildren beginning Spanish, via Zoom. Two live in Florida and one in North Carolina. Now, you have to know that I am only an intermediate-level Spanish speaker. I’ve been working on acquiring Spanish, not yet two years. Being fluent in French has helped. God also has given me years of assisting kids acquire a language.
I do not FEEL up to this new task. But it’s not my limited Spanish that unsettles me, it’s my fear of not ‘being ENOUGH’ as a language teacher. I have doubts about creating and engaging my 3 students competently enough to hold their attention so that they both learn and enjoy Spanish.
This feeling of ‘not enoughness’, of not being UP TO the task is not new. I struggled with that same sense of inadequacy during the 27 years I taught French. I cannot remember one day when I ever approached my classes feeling confident in myself OR competent. In fact, I had a love-hate relationship with this career. On the days when a lesson would go well, I rejoiced and felt energized. But a previous day’s success never translated into the expectation that tomorrow would deliver the same outcome.
I know I am not alone. A pastor friend of ours ALWAYS asks Mike and me to pray fervently for the preparation and delivery of his occasional sermons. Like me, he evidently struggles with doubts and fears about being ‘up to the task’, as do many others I can think of.
What about parents raising kids? Do they ever have confidence in their ability to nurture, discipline and teach their children? I don’t know a single mom who does! I never did, that’s for sure.
Mike, my husband, rarely feels self-confident. During our 6 years in Western North Carolina, he would ask me to pray for EVERY radio script he researched, wrote and recorded, for EVERY article he composed for World magazine, for EVERY Sunday school class he taught, as well as for EVERY session meeting in which he took part. Here in Huntsville, he continues to ask for and I know he depends on my prayers to our good God on his behalf.
One of our sons who is an Army lawyer texts us to pray for each court appearance and airborne jump he makes. We also pray for the weekly work, travel and parenting needs of our other son and his wife. They regularly share the tasks that face them that keep them ‘needy’.
So, I ask you, is self-confidence wrong or is it the norm? Could it be there is something weirdly weak about me and the people I’ve mentioned?
Tabletalk, the devotional monthly magazine published by Ligonier ministries, reassured me this week that not feeling UP to it, to the assigned task, is normal. Pastor David Strain wrote in his March 21-22 weekend devotional (page 57 of the March 2020 issue):
…..the infinite God…only (is) enough. (This doctrine of God’s infinity) reminds the anxiety-riddled introvert: “You are right to feel your limits so keenly. But you are wrong to think you should be up to the tasks before you. You were never meant to be enough. You were meant to live depending on Me. Only I am enough! My grace is sufficient for you, and My grace is made perfect in weakness (2 Cor 12:9).”
What a relief! No wonder I don’t feel up to teaching the kids Spanish. I’m not supposed to. That uncertainty, that fear is a gift from our good Father. He created us to be needy, right from our conception.
I love 2 of the looser translations of Matthew 5:3 where Jesus proclaims the poor in spirit to be blessed.
Contemporary English Version: God blesses those people who depend only on him. They belong to the kingdom of heaven!
God’s Word© Translation: Blessed are those who recognize they are spiritually helpless. The kingdom of heaven belongs to them.
Is there no room for confidence in the Christian life? You know the answer to that! We put our confidence not in ourselves but in the One who is infinite, powerful, good, wise and sovereign over every one of us whom He created: whether rock, butterfly or human being. What a relief NOT to depend on Maria!
Apr 20, 2020 @ 18:33:20
Maria, I appreciate your focus on the necessity of neediness. Or poverty of spirit. I used the phrase âpoverty of spiritâ in my Serve Strong book in a chapter on brokenness, and the main editor at my publisher in Texas wanted to change it. I did not allow them to do so…. she was an excellent editor, though, otherwise. Your post reminds me so much of 2 Cor. 4:7: âBut we have this treasure in earthen vessels…..that the surpassing greatness of the power may be of God and not from ourselves.â Keep on living and serving strong, Terry on 4/2
Apr 29, 2020 @ 00:29:23
Maria, Excellent reminder when the world celebrates the strong and confident. Being immersed in that, it is hard to think counterintuitively. Strengthening your reminder of dependence on God, 2 Chronicles 20 demonstrates not only dependence marching firm in faith with the priests praising God BEFORE the army got to the battlefield but the army had no idea or reassurance of the outcome other than-This battle is not yours. Stand still and see. And you know what happened. They continued to march and were astounded to see the enemy had already been conquered! God gives no assurance of executing our expectations or intentions. His wisdom manifests itself in the perfect plan for His Glory. Anticipating Glory to God whether the plan turns out the way we want it, is true dependence the sacrifice of praise that pleases God. I think that is the struggle at Jabbock, metaphorically.