In an arena with 13,000 leaders, it’s easy to feel insecure, insignificant, or even inundated with where you are in life. Spending the last week in Atlanta for Catalyst was an amazing calibration for the how and why of ministry. But if you’re anyone who is walking out leadership in a public arena, it can also be a cesspool of comparison and insecurity.

I had to chance to meet up with a blog reader who opened up about the difficult challenges of student ministry. He began listing off other student ministries who were doing this and that and had bigger budgets and had more students and had more volunteers and more, more, more.

I put my hand on his shoulder as if bracing him for a Cher in Moonstruck momentSnap out of it! Then I spoke in hushed tones as if I was going to tell him a secret. He leaned in. I spoke. God has a plan… for YOU. It’s going to look the way that He wants it to look, not the way you expect it to look. 

We all can fall victim to the evil monster Comparison, but we need to refrain from dancing with this demon because God doesn’t want us to be frustrated and feel unworthy of the blessings He desires to give us.

Comparing our lives with other people’s lives is unfair, to them and to us. It’s unfair to them because if we become jealous of what they have, what they know, how they look, who they’re dating, we start to resent them. Then we can no longer appreciate them as the person God made them to be.

It’s unfair to us because it limits God’s plan for our lives. Comparison says to God, I want to edit Your work in my life to this and nothing else. I just want to be like this other person.

But God has an individual plan for each of us. His plan for us is greater than we could possibly imagine. I’m not spouting this off from a remote ivory tower; I’m walking this out for myself. On Friday I was surrounded by 13,000 leaders. On Saturday I stood among 30 believers in a refurbished barn and reminded myself that the power of God was present in the arena as it was in the barn. I refuse to compare myself to those on large stages; I reject the notion that their calling is greater than or less than mine; I will not believe that I have been dolled out less Holy Spirit power than the rest of humanity.

My boyfriend Paul the Apostle put it this way: Make a careful exploration of who you are and the work you have been given, and then sink yourself into that. Don’t be impressed with yourself. Don’t compare yourself with others. Each of you must take responsibility for doing the creative best you can with your own life [Galatians 6:3-4, said like a BOSS]. Boom!

So dear friends, stop looking at His plans for others so you can walk in the plans He has for you. Whether with 13,000 or 30, just be who you is!

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