I like writing. I’ve been keeping journals since my early
teens. However, I don’t write blogs super often, because I have this idea in my
head that writing about myself is conceited and not glorifying to God (even
though I read memoirs and autobiographies all the time). So, I open word
documents and start writing stories about the things I see and hear, trying to
make a story that’s somewhat original, informative, entertaining, and not at all about
myself. And then I get frustrated and close said word documents without ever publishing.
However, the longer I work in the ministry world, and the
longer I work alongside people, especially hurting people, the more I realize
the only story I have the right to tell is my own.
Because, honestly, it’s not my story anyway. It’s God’s
story, and I just happen to be the main character in this particular chapter.
Kind of like how Friends isn’t
actually about Phoebe, but she happens to be one of the characters, and some
episodes are more about her than others.
So, here we go. Cheers to vulnerability.
Guilty pleasure confession: I enjoy personality tests. Everything from the little dorky ones (I am Rapunzel, a Rebellious Punk, a Ravenclaw, and my boyfriend is Tom Hiddleston) to the more serious, “scientific” ones. As people, we long to know and be known, to understand and be understood, and to love and be loved. I think we (or at least, I) spend time clicking options and filling in bubbles on these quizzes in an attempt to be known, understood, and loved.
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But, it’s not. I am a 5 – The Investigator. According to the
test, I thrive on knowledge and learning. I need to feel competent and capable. If I don’t, I isolate myself. I have difficulty trusting people and opening up
emotionally. I need people to know that I know what I am doing. I need to be independent, original, and nonconventional.
Well, that doesn’t make sense (even though it totally does).
Missionaries aren’t 5’s. I read all that, and thought “NERD.” What about
helping people? What about having compassion? What about faith? Do these
Enneagram people even know me? Do they even know my life, the crazy stuff I’ve
had to do without proper training and education? Do they understand the insane
leaps of faith and trust in God I’ve had?
So, because I am a 5, I isolated myself. I felt like an
incompetent missionary, because my personality type doesn’t make any logical
sense for the field I’m in. It doesn’t make any logical sense for God’s calling
on my life.
And then I became even more hyperaware of my other
differences I perceived as weakness. Most missionaries I know are extroverts. I
am very, very introverted (INFJ-A, to
be exact). Being around loads of people for extended periods of time drains me.
Some days, I don’t even want to talk to people. I want to sit in my room and
just be alone. But the ministry field is all about God and people, and that requires
listening to people, talking to people, spending time with people, and having
extroverted coworkers and friends who want to spend time with you on your day
off when really all you want to do is sleep past noon and have a date with a
cup of coffee. Alone. In your house. Away from noise and conversation.
If we are part of God's flock, and missionaries are the black sheep going against the grain, I feel like
the purple sheep. Not fitting in with either group.
I’ve been struggling with this. It’s a weird paradox in my
head – I want to be original, and not follow the crowd. I see the problems of
the world (and of the ministry world), and I don’t want to be part of that. I
want to contribute something unique. But I want to fit in and be understood by
my community. I want to be competent, and I’ve perceived competence as being
the same as the other competent people around me. Why did God even call me to
ministry if I’m not like the others who are obviously more suited for this job?
Because I have strengths where others have weaknesses. Where
a 2 might see a need that needs met, I search for the deeper meaning
behind the need, its roots and origin, to grasp the bigger picture and find the
most effective, long-term solution. Where an extrovert might struggle sitting
in silence with someone who is hurting, I am perfectly comfortable being
nothing more than a presence, without filling the air with empty advice, prying
questions, or unimportant chatter (not that all extroverts do that, and there
definitely is a place for advice, questions, and small talk). As a 5, I love to
learn, and I will gladly sit in trainings, conferences, and language classes
for hours without tiring.
Thanks, God, for my personality. Thank you for making me,
me. Thank you for my story. I pray it continues to glorify You.
P.S. - I totally recommend taking personality tests (like the Enneagram and Myers Briggs) to learn about your strengths and weaknesses, and your dot on God's design
P.S. - I totally recommend taking personality tests (like the Enneagram and Myers Briggs) to learn about your strengths and weaknesses, and your dot on God's design