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Paul’s lesson to the Corinthians that different people have different gifts to share with the world is precisely the kind of lesson we try to teach young children. We might respond to the bragging of a five-year-old with a comment such as “You’re right. You can ride a two-wheel bike already, but Connor can’t. Connor likes to draw more than he likes to play outside. Did you know he knows how to write the whole alphabet already? You’re still learning that, just like he’s still learning to ride a bike.” If we can teach our children to make observations - not judgments - about them selves and others, they will learn Paul’s point. Certain gifts, skills, talents, and abilities are not better than others, they are different from others.
Adults need to be reminded of this lesson too. How often do we compare our gifts with those of others? Sometimes these comparisons make us feel that we are somehow better. Other times our comparisons leave us feeling harshly self-critical. What if we instead focused on being grateful for the gifts we have been given and look for ways to use them in God’s service? Then maybe we could let go of our envy of others and be happy for them and the world that they have such gifts to offer. Our thinking might change to this: I’m not very good with groups of young children. Volunteering to help at first-grade field trips is exhausting for me. Thank God Mrs. Harris is better with six-year-olds than I am. Maybe I should concentrate on working with adults, because that’s what I’m better at. She’s better with kids; I’m better with adults. They are different spiritual gifts, not better or worse than each other.
Questions of the week
What gifts do you see in others that you appreciate because they are not your gifts, but they are needed in the world?
How do you use the gifts has God given you in service to others?