I’m one of those people who, when asked what she wants to do with her life, will answer, “Make a difference.” For years, this desire to make a difference is
what drove me. It was at the forefront of almost
everything I did and it was my main reason for going to work each day.
Then I realized something. While technology has advanced
and science has come to explain a lot of things, humanity, at its core, is
pretty much the same as it’s always been—broken, unjust, divided, judgmental,
hungry for power, thirsty for war, and very, very, well, human. And while one
life can have a positive influence on other lives, that one life will most
likely be forgotten within a couple of generations and that one life will most
likely have changed nothing in the world. Let’s face it, in the scheme of
humanity, very few people are remembered for making a profound, prophetic mark
on history.
This realization sent me into a period of depression. I
became somewhat hopeless. I lost my purpose and my way. I questioned everything
I did and wondered what the point was if making a difference wasn’t actually
possible. I wondered if making a difference was just a pipedream that people
perpetuated to boost morale.
Friends: This is a very dark place to be.
Thankfully, in the years since that initial realization,
I have learned to accept its truth but to also live with knowledge that making
a difference is far more than a pipedream. Yes. I will likely be forgotten
within decades of my death. Even if I’m able to erect a building or start a
scholarship fund, or even if I’m able to write and publish a book, the bulk of
my life’s work and impact will probably be forgotten. I know this now. And I’m
okay with it. Because I’ve realized that making a difference doesn’t mean
changing the course of human-kind by rewriting its history. Making a difference
means influencing the lives of human-beings.
Making a difference is finding a ride to a performance
for the student who otherwise would not have been able to attend. Will this
student still face many hardships as she grows up? Absolutely. But for that one
night, she was safe and happy.
Making a difference is singing a song of hope and
encouragement with your best friend at your dad’s first retirement service.
Will my dad still struggle as he learns to navigate the waters of
retirement?Absolutely. But for that one moment, he was at rest and peace with
God, and he knew that he truly was not—and would not ever be—alone.
Making a difference is inviting a friend to dinner,
talking, and laughing together.
Making a difference is showing up for a friend during a
major time of crisis.
Making a difference is following the music with your
niece as she learns to read.
Making a difference is hugging a kid each morning and
telling him to have a good day.
Making a difference is helping someone up when she falls
down.
Making a difference is singing a song with a shut-in and
seeing her face light up when she actually remembers something in a day full of
forgetting.
Making a difference is doing anything you can to add
light and joy to the lives of those around you anytime you can because life is
the sum of all of its moments and each of us only has one life to live and God
is the God of the light and joy that are slowly, steadily, and patiently
fighting to redeem a broken humanity, one life and soul at a time.
Amen.
—Originally posted on 3.14.16. It’s Throwback
Thursday!
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