Hope For First RespondersSýnishorn
Your Calling
Being a first responder is a heavy responsibility. Not everyone can do what you do. It takes fortitude and a special gift. As you know, there's a certain amount of inner “calling” you must own and respond to (Phil 3:14) in order to embrace your role. There’s too much stress with this job without being called.
Your job is not always enjoyable. It's a crisis-driven career with unsympathetic brass requiring long hours, shift work, and unplanned overtime. Those hours are often filled with the worst of humanity, and depending on your particular job, some blood and gore, too.
Every day you face unpredictable, life-threatening, split-second decisions. Some of you do this while being filmed or even spat upon by some exasperating, uninvolved citizen. Many of you experience on-the-job injuries, court appearances, and internal investigations that cause you to be filled with skepticism, suspicion, and distrust of everyone around you.
Sometimes, the only way to cope is to joke about it with coworkers. But you are definitely called, and maybe that’s what keeps you going.
But there’s more.
Colossians 3:23 reminds us that there is a higher calling than simply your job. After all, your job is temporary compared to your eternal purpose beyond this limited existence.
It's true. God prepared you for this special occupation—whether for a short season or a lifetime career. He is cheering you on, along with a host of angels and any first responders who have gone to heaven before you.
But ultimately, he has a calling on your life to know him intimately. That relationship is what makes your role most significant. Without it, your job is just another occupation—something to pay the bills.
From the beginning of time, God had a plan to dwell with mankind and have intimacy with us. That's still his desire today for all of us. Without it, without a dedication to follow Christ, make him Lord, and live a life pleasing to our Creator, everything we do (regardless of how noble) accounts for little.
It sounds like an extreme statement, but God's Word is clear about good works without His higher, holy calling of faith. Because according to Matthew 7:11, even the wicked do admirable things for others.
This heavenly calling aims to keep our eyes on Christ and our eternal purpose for being here—which goes far beyond our occupations.
Your significance will then be mirrored not only on the job but at home, in your relationships, leisure, and every other area of your life. This perspective makes weak, sinful people like you and me become more like Jesus. In the words of renowned missionary C.T. Studd: “Only one life, twill soon be past. Only what’s done for Christ will last."
My friend, be filled with hope that when you walk in your true calling as a child of God, you're making a difference everywhere, as a light in this dark world. Your eternal calling is what's most important, and the Lord will provide all you need to accomplish each day's work.
You are a gift to your city, your county, your state, your country. God has a purpose and uses you to instill hope into those depending on you. It's a big job, but we have a big God. As you consider God's plan for you, where might your significance and value in life need re-evaluating?
About this Plan
The position of first responders is often unpredictable and infuriating. It’s difficult to balance your physical, emotional, and spiritual health, along with your social and family life, as you serve the public. The Lord is with you, both in remarkable events and insignificant moments of your job. He’s placed you in this vital role, so be encouraged and filled with hope to bravely serve society and the Lord.
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