Published June 3, 2018

To Will One Thing—Danielle Strickland—GLS 2018 Faculty Spotlight

Danielle Strickland’s leadership combines a commitment to justice and spiritual depth in a powerful way. We are thrilled to announce that she will be joining us for GLS 2018.

Purity of heart is to will one thing. —Kierkegaard

Many of us believe that God should be leading our lives. But most of us, in moments of honesty, will admit He rarely is actually leading. Most of us have the luxury of planning and control. We get to decide what happens, from our daily schedule to our yearly calendars. I’ve been booking my 2019 calendar for months already.

How do we make room in our controlling, highly planned, busy lives for God to actually take the lead?

This is what I’ve been trying to figure out lately. It’s actually helped to have my calendar cleared for a month or two because of a broken bone and moving to a different country (most recently my son’s leg bone and today a raging storm affecting flights in and out of the airport I was headed to).

What I had planned was thwarted, and I couldn’t help but surrender to the idea that maybe God had some other plans—plans to put a 15-year-old ahead of my speaking schedule for starters, plans to make my first mission my home mission right now, plans to pay attention to my own people, up close and personal. My mission was being made through lunches and Lego® parties, school forms and bath times.

It’s not the normal, high-powered, frenzied, road-tripping, change-the-world life I’m used to. But I’ll tell you this: It feels more like God is leading. It’s fascinating to surrender to His lead instead of mine.

Surrender is a key word in this season.

What drives me most days is significance. I want what I do and who I am to matter. I think everyone has this hope. The problem with this drive is how you measure significance. The thing that makes our lives significant isn’t successful ventures or big crowds or even perfect families. The thing that gives our lives real “eternal” significance is doing God’s will.

Jesus made this super clear. He simply did one thing with His whole life—the will of His Father.

And if you look at the trajectory of His ministry, He really seems to waste a lot of time on seemingly insignificant ventures—small towns, low places and rowdy people—not the normal successful trajectory of significant living. But in the witness of history there has never been a more significant life than Jesus’. His life changed the world forever.

Maybe we overcomplicate what living a significant life looks like. Maybe it could look like one thing—doing God’s will.

I was talking to my Infinitum partner about this very thing. Every day when she wakes up, she asks God how she can obey Him today. “What would you like me to do today?” She tells God that her desire for the day is to do His will, and then she looks for opportunities to do just that.

As she was telling me this daily habit of hers, I was arguing with myself that it couldn’t be that simple, while realizing that is exactly what it is—simple… Just one thing. Today. Present tense. Available. Not forced, but surrendered. Open-handed. Not panicked, but trusting—trusting that God has a plan and invites me to be part of it on a daily basis. It’s believing with my thoughts and actions that His plan is better than any I could have possibly imagined. And it’s ditching my ideals of significance for simple obedience.

Yes. It’s becoming clearer that when Jesus told the Church He measured love through people who did what He said, He meant it. Because the only way love can be demonstrated is in relationship. You have one job—to do God’s will.

I’m starting to get better at this “letting God lead” business, and I’m really simplifying my life goals. It’s down to one thing—to will one thing.

Here’s the whole poem/prayer by Kierkegaard, if you are interested in turning this simple practice into a daily prayer:

To Will One Thing—a prayer by Søren Kierkegaard

Father in Heaven, what are we without you?
What is all that we know, vast accumulation though it be,
But a chipped fragment if we do not know you?
What is all our striving?
Could it ever encompass a world,
But a half-finished work
If we do not know you?
You, the One who is one thing and who is all.

So may you give
To the intellect, wisdom to comprehend that one thing
To the heart, sincerity to receive this and this only
To the will, purity that wills only one thing
In prosperity, may you grant perseverance to will one thing
Amid distraction, collectedness to will one thing
In suffering, patience to will one thing.

You that gives both the beginning and the completion
May you early, at the dawn of the day,
Give to the young the resolution to will one thing
As the day wanes, may you give to the old
A renewed remembrance of that first resolution
That the first may be like the last
And the last like the first
In possession of a life that has willed only one thing,
To know God.

Translated from the Danish—Kierkegaard, Purity of Heart Is to Will One Thing
Original article appeared here.

About the Author(s)
Global Leadership Network

Global Leadership Network

GLN Staff Writer

globalleadership.org

The Global Leadership Network is a community committed to learning from each other and using our influence to accomplish God’s purposes on earth. No matter where your influence is, when you commit to grow your leadership, everyone around you wins—businesses work for good, communities are transformed and churches thrive! Both global and diverse, our network includes partners in 1,400+ cities and 135+ countries. We are committed to deliver fresh, actionable and inspiring leadership content both at The Global Leadership Summit, and year-round through our digital platforms.

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