Community Requires Vulnerability
For
the first 8 years of our ministry at an established church, I didn’t
have a friend to my name. In those same years, I birthed and stayed home
with three children, and I remember willing myself not to get sick
because I didn’t know who I would call for help if I did. Community was
something I created for other people, not something I enjoyed myself. At
least that’s how I felt.
When
we prepared to plant out of that church, my husband gathered
prospective core team members in our living room and asked, “When you
dream of what church could be, what is it that you think of?” For me,
the answer was simple, and I timidly spoke out loud what I’d held inside
for so long: “I don’t want to feel as if I’m standing outside of
community, helping it happen but not enjoying it myself. I want our
church to be the kind where I get to enjoy the inside. I want to have
friends.”
What
I didn’t yet realize is that community isn’t something that comes to
us; it’s something that we go toward. We make choices that either
invites community or hinders the very thing we so long for. The reasons
I’d struggled in friendship were many--my lack of initiation, the very
specific parameters I’d placed around what type of friend I wanted and
how they would related to me, time constraints that I used as an
excuse--but primary among them is that I chose not to take the risk of
vulnerability with other women.
God
gave me a do-over with church planting, because the difficult nature of
the work made it nearly impossible to hide behind carefully maintained
facades or self-sufficiency. My spiritual, physical, and emotional
neediness pointed like arrows toward asking wise and faithful women for
help. And so I did.
Vulnerability
is the spark for us to enjoy and help cultivate true community. Only
through vulnerability can we fulfill the “one anothers” of
Scripture--pray for one another, confess to one another, forgive one
another, bear one another’s burdens--because only then do we know the
burdens of others and only then do they know ours.
Vulnerability
is risky and must be done wisely. I have learned to move slowly toward
vulnerability with others, praying all the way for God to give me wisdom
and discernment not only in who I am vulnerable with but in what I
share. Who are wise women around me? Who holds confidences well? Who
speaks truth with grace to others around them? Who values me as a child
of God and not just as the pastor’s wife?
In
discerning what I share, it’s important to note that there are just
some things that we won’t be able to talk about with anyone in our
church community, but I can generally always share about myself. I can
share how God is working in my life, how God is convicting me, and how I
need prayer. I can even share how I am struggling with church-related
things without giving details that are inappropriate to share. Simply
put, vulnerability has been key for me in developing community that is
not just one-sided but mutual and life-giving.
I
look back at those first 8 years of ministry, and I see that I did in
fact have fledgling friendships. All those prayers I’d prayed to God for
a friend? He’d actually answered it with Kelly, Jamee, Ashley, and
Niki, but I’d never taken the risk of vulnerability with them. I’d been
more concerned with impressing them than knowing them or letting them
know me. As a result, the friendships had faltered before they’d even
truly started. I had been my own worst enemy all along.
Dear
one, don’t be your own worst enemy. Resist making excuses or thinking
of yourself as “other” because of your role within the church. Yes, be
wise, but don’t let fear and severe self-protection hinder the very
thing that you long for. Take that risk of vulnerability.
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