“Thanks for reaching out” were the words coming through the telephone receiver into my ear. I had just remembered the stoma nurse’s words to us to call her when we were scheduled to see the surgeon for the post-op visit, I hadn't really felt I should bother her. But a couple of days before that event, I did pick up the phone and place the call, leaving a voice mail. It was answered by another voice mail, to which I responded with my original message again. And finally a real person was on the other end of the line. Arrangements were made for the day of the consultation with her final words to me being ‘Thanks for reaching out.’ Initially that surprised me, but on further reflection I began to see that only by my reaching out to her was she able to finish doing the job she was trained to do.
Sometimes in this culture we see ‘reaching out’ or ‘asking for help’ or ‘admitting that we don’t know what to do’ to be a sign of weakness.We should be able to cope, we tell ourselves. Someone else needs the help or expertise more than we do. But do we ever see the other side of reaching out? Do we realize that we are giving someone else an opportunity to use their skills, to feel needed and useful?
Everyone has their own special abilities or talents. Sometimes you will hear these talents are described as ‘God’-given or innate. One person is a good listener, another is a whiz with numbers, a third might be healer or a teacher. We are social creatures for this very reason. No one person is self-sufficient. We were created to share in the talents of others.
The other side of this coin is that we need to ask for what we need. It isn’t the other person’s task to decide what that is. It well might not be what they see as being required, but something very different. This world is full of institutions from government down that feel it is their role in life to tell the rest of us what we need. They have no interest in what we want or even what we ask for, especially if those things go against their agenda.
Unfortunately the church falls into this group all too often. They are quick to tell us what we must believe, how we should worship, when and where we should worship, etc. All these things came into being many hundreds, if not thousands, of years ago and were the thing right for the people living then. But when people today suggest the things might be changed, be brought into the 21st century because that is what they need, does the church ever say “Thanks for reaching out.” and then act on it?
Just asking........
Unfortunately the church falls into this group all too often. They are quick to tell us what we must believe, how we should worship, when and where we should worship, etc. All these things came into being many hundreds, if not thousands, of years ago and were the thing right for the people living then. But when people today suggest the things might be changed, be brought into the 21st century because that is what they need, does the church ever say “Thanks for reaching out.” and then act on it?
Just asking........
Comments
Post a Comment