Chasing Big Things

person on bench

Have you ever noticed something about Jesus? Despite the world’s flaws…

  • He didn’t race from house to house, knocking on doors, searching out every sick or hurting person he could find.
  • He didn’t panickedly confront every social issue or instance of political corruption he could find in the social systems of his day.
  • He didn’t rush from religious building to religious building, trying to argue every dissenter into the faith with his list of doctrines.
  • He didn’t manically pursue every dream he thought would make a significant mark on the world.

Sometimes it BLOWS MY MIND how many times Jesus (often UNLIKE me) limited his focus to JUST. ONE. PERSON.

  • At the well in Samaria, there were likely other women coming to draw water throughout the day. But the Bible only records one conversation with one woman.
  • Even though it is likely that many sick people gathered in that area, when Jesus went to the Pool of Bethseda, the Bible reports him healing only one man.
  • Jesus met one Jewish leader, Nicodemus, by night.

(The list goes on and on. I’ll let you fill in the rest for yourselves.)

But the point is, Jesus obviously didn’t go to the same leadership trainings I did. If only he had a consultant like me to coach him along and ask the good questions:

  • Why not stand at the well and repeat the Living Water metaphor for every woman that came to draw water? Get those women to be your “street team” pushing your water message to the masses? Send out ambassadors to other wells…
  • Why not sweep into an area where people are sick and perform mass healings? Why not scoop up every sick person you pass by, striding into their homes and breathing health on the hurting? Maybe come up with a catchy name, a logo, a clear one-line slogan.
  • Why not turn your talk with Nicodemus into some sort of movement of thinkers who meet at night to discuss religious thought? Maybe release some books. Develop a free web resource with good content.

NOT saying Jesus ignored the five year plan or that he was a small-thinker.The Great Commission kinda suggests otherwise.

Just saying, sometimes it surprises me when I remember: 

  • BIG isn’t what drove Jesus. Bringing what God was stirring inside him to expression drove Jesus.
  • NEED isn’t what drove Jesus. He didn’t seek out need, yet he never failed to respond to it whenever someone in need crossed his path.
  • Sometimes, in my effort to be significant, I take on mentalities (“change the world” “meet every need” “inspire the human race”) that Jesus himself–THE SAVIOR OF THE PLANET–didn’t even take on.
  • Jesus, 100% God, himself respected the natural limits of human time and energy.

This challenges me. If you surveyed 100 of my friends, 100 of them would report I err on the side of chasing BIG, significant things. Talk to me for five minutes and I’ll try to sell you a way to globalize what you’re doing.

But I also want to be a person who recognizes that the BIG THING going on in my life SOMETIMES lies … in ONE PERSON.

I want to recognize when a person’s spirit is hot with God’s presence…
When they need permission to dream…
Someone who wants them to heal…
A trustworthy voice to come out of the woodwork to support them and the God-in-them that needs to come out…

I’m not gonna lie. I want to do BIG THINGS. But it’s good for my conscience to remember: even the small things are big things if they are the RIGHT things.

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5 Comments

  • comment-avatar
    KellySinging September 2, 2010 (11:06 am)

    I love, love, love this! Especially this line: “Jesus, 100% God, himself respected the natural limits of human time and energy.” There is balance even in ministry. :)

  • comment-avatar
    becky September 2, 2010 (11:20 am)

    There is much here in this post that I love….I have I think been afraid to read your book….but it is on my list now. Please keep wiriting here.

  • comment-avatar
    Lindsey September 2, 2010 (2:21 pm)

    Great post Sarah! You hit the nail right on the head for me today! I am so glad that I got introduced to your blog through listening to you speak @Kary Oberbrunner’s book release party this week. The tension I feel in my heart and soul everyday revolves around what it is big that I am supposed to be doing. It is as if my heart is so much bigger than the rest of my body–so much bigger than my mind, strength, heck, even my will. I feel so limited by my human frailty and the limits of what I can imagine. The great thing is that God is allowing me to retain some sense of peace through it all in that He alone can see the big picture and that He is revealing to me only one piece at a time of the puzzle so that I will not become paralyzed or overwhelmed once I do understand my place in His story. Right now I am just living full of wonder, day by day, in the middle of the chaos that is my desire to grow–in both the big and the small. You are right, the small is not really so small! I am not sure there really is a “small” if we could see how far reaching one person’s impact is in the big picture. Brings to mind a great TED vid by Nicholas Christakis: http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/nicholas_christakis_the_hidden_influence_of_social_networks.html

  • comment-avatar
    Sherie September 3, 2010 (12:05 pm)

    Sarah, your words touch me again. I have been wrestling lately with how my life and have have to be more about action and less about talk, but in that it is so tempting to think we have to accomplish something and be a success (by the world’s eyes). The only eyes I really want to be concerned with are God’s. You just helped ground the struggles I have been wrestling with. Thank you! Look forward to seeing you in Chicago.

  • comment-avatar
    Sherie September 3, 2010 (12:06 pm)

    have have = faith have

    See you have me all tongue tied now!