Christmas Vocations Part IIISample

Christmas Vocations Part III

DAY 1 OF 4

We begin our exploration of vocations with John the Baptist, whose role was to “prepare the way” for Christ, as we see in today’s passage—an excerpt from Zecharaiah’s prayer after John’s birth.

Right from the get-go, John was told he would never be top dog. His purpose in life was to play the proverbial second fiddle to his cousin Jesus.

And all throughout the gospels, we see John joyfully embracing his secondary role. Referring to Jesus, John famously said, “He must become greater; I must become less” (John 3:30).

John knew his place in God’s cosmic drama. The question is, do we? Sure, we do intellectually. But functionally, I think many of us spend an ungodly amount of energy clamoring to be center stage. As Christian rapper Sho Baraka says, “We find ourselves feeling like extras on the set of life, trying desperately to write a meaningful part for ourselves.”

How does this restless search for a “more meaningful part” in God’s story show up? It looks like obsessing over “winning” and “being the best” at work rather than leading and serving others well. Or believing the lie that you must do something extraordinary for your life to matter rather than basing your significance on Christ’s extraordinary work of adopting you into God’s family. Or fixating on having “more impact for the kingdom” instead of wholeheartedly working on what God has already entrusted to you.

If you can relate to what I’m talking about, please hear this: Ironically, it is only once we embrace our role as “extras on the set of life” and Jesus as the star that we can be truly “successful.” Because then success is secure regardless of the part you play. It is based on the fact that God has given you an irrevocable invitation to enjoy and participate in the only eternal production there is. And once you grasp that, you are free.

If you struggle to embrace your role in the proverbial supporting cast of God’s kingdom, consider these three practices.

#1: Start every day on your knees in prayer, physically signifying your submission to Christ.

#2: Write John 3:30 and post it near your desk (“He must become greater; I must become less.”)

#3: Fast from social media for at least a week as these apps subtly (and not so subtly) try to convince us that we, rather than Christ, are the center of the story of life.

Now, go fade into the background behind Christ as you work today!

Day 2

About this Plan

Christmas Vocations Part III

The vocations represented in the characters of Christmas can teach us a lot about God and how our work is a means of co-laboring with “the newborn King.” In this four-day plan, we’ll look at the vocations of John the Baptist, Caesar Augustus, Matthew, and the famed Star of Bethlehem to draw out applications for our own work today.

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