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Weekly Offering Devotionals |

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Talent Is On Loan From God
by Marvin Olasky
Choose a career to help you glorify God and enjoy Him forever.
Now that the school year has begun, seniors in high school and
college need to think through what they will do once it ends. Its
time, therefore, to present my four-step formula for thinking through
careers: End, Talent plus Enjoyment, Talent, Employment.
I can explain the first part of the formula by quoting and applying
the most famous question from the catechism of the Westminster Confession,
What is mans chief end? The answer: Mans
chief end [purpose] is to glorify God and enjoy Him forever.
In our careers, we glorify God by using full throttle, in godly
ways, the talents He has given us. Since God does not give talent
arbitrarily or willy-nillywhat He gives we should useits
vital to find out what our talents are, because the existence of
talent is a powerful way of ascertaining Gods will for our
occupational lives.
Discerning talent is easier said than done. Schools for the most
part applaud generalists who can do well in a variety of subjects,
but most occupations demand specialization: the ability to do one
thing well. Grades used to be a powerful aid to discernment, but
grade inflation now pushes teachers to deliver false signals. Out
of ignorance or pseudo-friendship, few people are honest enough
to call a splatter a splatter; instead, we tell those we like that
they have created masterful paintings. Its important to find
a mentor, colleague, or true friend who will be achingly honest.
Concerning enjoyment: Since forever begins right now, we should
derive satisfaction as well as sweat from the way we earn our daily
bread (realizing that thorns and thistles will frustrate us at times).
That does not mean we will be laughing all the way as we earn money
to take to the bank. It does mean that if were miserable on
a job, sometimes we need to change our attitudes and sometimes our
jobs (keeping in mind that, whenever possible, we should not leave
one job until we have another).
Heres my possible leap of fatheadness: I believe that most
of the time the two questionsWhat work am I good at? What
work do I like doing?can be reduced to one, What work am I
good at? Thats because most of the time, if were good
at a particular occupation, sooner or later we will derive pleasure
from our competence and from the feedback we get concerning our
performance. To put it simply, we either like doing what we do well,
or we grow into liking it. Of course, if young people dont
enjoy a task, they will probably be reluctant to put in the time
needed to further develop their talentbut my advice most of
the time, when a person is talented in a particular field, is to
stick with it.
Here are some caveats. By enjoyment, rightly understood, I dont
mean laugh-a-minute, but long-term satisfaction. I distinguish between
lawful and unlawful activities, and also tell young men that unless
they are called to singleness, they will want an occupation sufficiently
remunerative so that wives are not required to work outside the
home when they have young children. I also offer a tie-breaker question
to those rare individuals who have several areas of talent: Is there
a particularly great need in one of those areas, perhaps because
relatively few people have the talent and inclination to achieve
great things within it?
Heres the summary: TE, talent and enjoyment, often comes
down to talent alone, and then finding particular employment that
fits a person to a T. God does not distribute talent by chance.
If God gives someone a lot of something, its not accidental,
but a signal from on high that it should be used for Gods
glory.
Many students ask, essentially, What do I want to be? My suggestion
is that God has in most cases already answered that question by
handing out sets of talents and capacities. The better question
to ask is, What has God shown, by His distribution of abilities,
that He wants me to be? Some people react by saying, But I
may not like what God has chosen out for me. When a person
is maximizing talents, he usually learns to like his God-arranged
career, even if it might not be what he would have chosen for himself.
A career does not need to be love at first sight. It does need to
be a good match.
© World Magazine, 2002. Reprinted with permission from
World Magazine. To learn more about World, visit the magazines
web site at www.worldmag.com
or call (800) 951-NEWS (6397).
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