So, I've basically realized this summer that I have no idea what I'm going to do with my life.
I have so many passions, and I like so many things, and they all sound great. I don't know which one I would be best at, which career I can help the most people with, or what God wants to do with me. Right now I'm thinking med school. Because I know I can work hard enough, and if I can achieve that, then I need to go for it. But I must say, other less challenging career paths are definitely tempting.
I know what I want to do in the long run. I want to be like Jesus. I want to serve people. I want to start a children's home or a children's clinic or tell the elderly and the widows about Jesus. I want to take care of people. But what is the means of getting there? That's what I'm wondering right now.
A few ways I've been encouraged through my career crisis:
-I don't know where this illustration came from, but once somebody told me of a man standing underneath a fruit tree, and he was looking at all the beautiful fruit that he could pick. But he had such a hard time deciding which delicious fruit to pick from the others, because they were all so good-looking. So he just stood there and couldn't decide, until all the fruit were rotten, and he ran out of time to pick a good fruit.
So basically, I just need to pick a fruit. Because they're all good.
-Leading onto my next word of encouragement...
I told my friend Maddie about my qualms about my future. And she reminded me that a career does not define our servanthood in Christ. I asked her, "well, don't you think we each have a calling on our lives?" She wisely responded, "Was Jesus' calling to be a carpenter?" And from that, we can ask, was Paul's calling to be a tentmaker, was Luke's calling to be a doctor?
No, Jesus' calling was to love. Paul and Luke's callings were to share the gospel. It did not interfere or depend on their jobs.
My calling is to love. My calling is to be a servant. My calling is to be like Jesus. I can do that whenever and wherever I am.
- I have had some of the most incredible opportunities for ministry and pouring into other people this summer. And I didn't have to be in any career position to do it. I do my very best to give myself to the Lord's work each and every day. And that is enough for Him to work!
-When I pray about what study path I need to go on, what kind of graduate school I need to attend, what career I need to end up adopting, I receive peace. I have a big peace in my heart that God is going to reveal that to me at the right time, and I am going to look back and think, "Wow, he is so faithful."
A really great poem by George Tersteegen, that I wrote about a year ago on my wall in my bed-closet:
Let Him lead thee blindfold onwards,
Love needs not to know;
Children whom the Father leadeth
Ask not where they go.
Though the path be all unknown
Over moors and mountains lone.
My Father's leading me. I don't need to feel the pressure of knowing where exactly I'm going. He'll tell me when I need to know.