A reporter once asked Mother Theresa about the secret to her success. Her response was not what the reporter expected. She reported that she started her day with prayer at 4:30 a.m. Then she told him she was just like a pencil. Here is her full response, "I don't claim anything of the work. It is all His work. I am like a little pencil in His hand., that is all. He does the thinking. He does the writing. The pencil has nothing to do with it. The pencil only has to be allowed to be used."
As followers of Jesus we are like pencils. We are just instruments in His hands. Vessels through whom He works through. It is not up to us to dream grandiose dreams of what we want to do. It is up to us to be available and to remain in the Master's hands. We let Him write His story and the role we play in that story. He plots the drama and we remain in His hands to write it out.
There are many Christians who desire to play prominent roles. That is not our choice to make. He chooses the parts. We submit and are to remain faithful whether He uses us to do something significant, or whether He calls us to remain faithful in a more obscure role. We are all working together for the same purpose. To advance His kingdom and to glorify Him in the process.
The reminder of the pencil alleviates the need for striving to get ahead and climb to the top. We are to submit. To surrender our will to His will and allow Him to write His plans through us. Yielding is not a posture that comes easy for many of us. We are doers, movers, and shakers. Yielding and submitting take us completely out of the driver's seat. We are passengers on this journey. Jesus is behind the wheel steering our lives and the end destination.
The story of the pencil reminds me of what Jesus told His disciples in Matt 16:24. If we want to come after Him, we are called to deny ourselves, take up our cross and to follow Him. Each of those actions require submission. We don't always get to do what we want or even what we think is best. For instance, twice last week Brenda and I were out eating. Each time she looked at me and said, "I think God wants us to buy those people's meal." Both times I had already thought the same thing. Now, I am not saying we are rich. Our finances get stretched like a rubber band sometimes. Nor am I saying we are poor. In one case, two additional people joined the party of four we were paying for. Brenda and I looked at each other and said it is only money. God can make up the difference. We high fived and told the waitress our plan. That is just a part of what denying yourself looks like. Recently, I cast vision for a project at the church requiring us to raise $15,000. I had saved my money for months. I get a weekly allowance and I scrimped and saved. I am not saying it was a great deal of money to most, but it was to me. God prompted me to empty my wallet and to be the first to give to the project.
Taking up the cross involves suffering. Most of us prefer to avoid suffering at all cost. Sometimes following Jesus leads us to suffering or to minister to the suffering like it did for Mother Theresa. Brothers and sisters we must not mind a little suffering when our own Savior suffered on the cross.
Following Jesus could lead us anywhere. A little over a year ago He moved us to the Panhandle of Texas. Sometimes I catch myself thinking," I can't believe we live here. " Two years before we moved I got the sense that God was not only going to move us, but that He was going to move us to the Panhandle of Texas. The story is famous around here now, but I did not pursue this church. They contacted me. Someone sent my resume to them without ever telling me or asking my permission. In a phone interview with the search committee the last thing I told them was, "Don't ever contact me again unless you are convinced I am God's choice for your church." I did not hear from them again for five months. They did contact me to tell me I was their top candidate. Now you know the rest of the story. Being a pencil in the hand of God meant moving up north in the state of Texas to serve a church who experienced more hurt in the past ten years than any church I had ever heard of before. God chose to set Brenda and I in the middle of their pain to be pencils for God to write out a ministry of healing.
I'm grateful for the lesson of the pencil. I hope you found it helpful. All we have to do is remain available to the Master and remain in His hands. He does the thinking and the writing. We are just vessels.