I learned some things recently, and it’s not exactly rocket
science.
This fellow looks like an eighteenth century British
scientist, kind of like Sir Isaac Newton. Both were knighted by the queen
(different queens), and they’re both astrophysicists, but this fellow is way more
well known than Newton, though not primarily for his astrophysics.
Sir Brian May is better know as the guitarist and co-founder
of a band that the Guinness Book of Records
says is literally more popular than the Beatles ever were. He’s also a Doctor
of Astrophysics, a 3-D stereoscopic photographic authority and a passionate
advocate and campaigner for animal rights. (https://brianmay.com/brian/biog.html)
I was listening to a song he wrote in honor of a flippin’
spaceship of all things (it’s a wonderful song: https://youtu.be/j3Jm5POCAj8), when
some interesting thoughts wandered by.
• Your reputation does not determine who you are, or what
you get to do with your life. (There are exceptions.)
• Your gifts and skills, even your gifts, do not determine
who you are or what you get to do with your life. (Though they may provide some
limits.)
• If you have great skills in one area, don’t be afraid to
use those skills. (Planet Rock rates
May as the seventh greatest guitarist of all time. [https://nwp.link/2FvwYoa])
• If God blindsides you with success in an area, don’t be
afraid of changing your path. (May was in the midst of his doctoral thesis on
the Motions of Interplanetary Dust when his side gig, a band called Queen,
suddenly found some success. He quit his studies to play guitar.)
• If you follow the blessing of God, don’t necessarily let
go of your previous dreams. (After a 30-year break for rock-and-roll super-stardom,
May finished his thesis, and got his PhD in 2007.)
• You can still follow other interests, too. Your job or
your studies (or your ministry) is not your entire life. (May started a stereoscopic
imaging publishing company, was a University chancellor for a few years, and
was a collaborator with NASA for the New Horizons Pluto mission.)
My sense is that some people (I decline to comment about
whether this includes myself or not) have sometimes felt, “Well, I have some
gifting [or some success, or some training] here, I guess this is what I’m
going to do with my life,” as if the gifts of God were a life sentence.
Stated in more blunt vocabulary, a lot of western believers
seem to be awfully religious about their life choices, choosing a career
because of religious expectations, or following a path of failure (of one sort
or another) just because they see it as their religious “duty.”
I’m not saying your choices will lead you down an easy path.
Most of God’s paths aren’t rosy: look at Jesus’ example. But if Jesus isn’t on
the path, maybe you shouldn’t be either.
If you’re looking for Biblical support for this, consider
how Jesus walked away from successful ministry (Luke 4:43), or how Paul
bypassed part of the Great Commission for his ministry choices (compare Matthew
28:19’s commands with 1Corinthians 1:17).
Walk with Jesus. Know him well. Love him well. Then do what
you want, what you feel you should do. Do what actually works for you.