“To Do” or “To Be”?: Exchanging Checklists for God’s Presence
Not long ago, I finished up a beautiful study on the book of Hosea by Jennifer Rothschild. She challenged her readers to do something I love: to make a to-be list instead of a to-do list.
I’m prolific at creating master to-do lists. They give me a sense of control, a sense of accomplishment and keep my cluttered mind from letting crucial jobs slip through the cracks of my faulty memory. (Correction: these things give me illusion of control, accomplishment and clearer brain function.)
Despite my love of meddlesome to-do lists, I think they are overrated. Our culture is so consumed with “do more”, schedule-juggling, organizing, managing and rearranging that we’ve lost sight of something quite important. Call me crazy, but I think we’ve got the whole cram-more-into-your-day-and-wonder-why-we-need-caffeine-and-stress-management-to-keep-up thing down.
No. Better organization isn’t the problem. What we choose to tackle in a day has less to do with a checklist and more about what our priorities are. In other words, to do is not nearly as important as to be.
As yourself the question, “Who do I want to be?”
For you hard-core list makers, start writing. I started my to-be list and, in just a few minutes, I was running out of room on the page.
To Be:
Compassionate
Loving
Kind
Less prideful
Less stubborn
More flexible
Teachable
Heart to serve others
Look at people through God’s eyes
Wise
Slow to speak
Serene
Joyful
Encouraging
Prayerful
Seeker of God’s heart…
The longer I gripped my pencil, the more I realized I was circling around one person, one focal point. All these character traits and more were compressed and displayed in the person of Christ. Scanning the list, it became clear…I want to be like Jesus.
Flip over to 1 John 2:6 and you’ll see that John worded it this way: “the one who says he abides in Him[Jesus] ought himself to walk in the same manner as He walked.”
So to be like Jesus, I just need to walk like Jesus. Got it. Check that off the list.
If only it were that easy.
That’s kind of a tall order, you know? It’s like saying to be a great basketball player, just play like Michael Jordan. To be pretty, just look like Cindy Crawford. It seems unattainable. Impossible.
Before I crumpled the overwhelming list in my hand, I took a deep breath. The Lord knows I’m not perfect, and He knows I have, and will continue to, mess up. That’s why He sent His Son.
The idea isn’t to be sinless…it’s to strive to be like Him. To please Him. To know His heart. To let Him mold me into the image of His Son.
So like any good, organized girl does, I made a list.
How did Jesus Walk?
- His prayer time with God was long and a priority.
- He sought out the broken, rejected, abused, mistreated & social outcasts.
- His concern was doing God’s will, and ONLY God’s will.
- He battled temptation with scripture.
- He touched the untouchables.
- He made people mad.
- He spoke the truth.
- He was a God pleaser, not a people pleaser.
- He wasn’t consumed with material wealth.
- He did not chastise the broken for being broken. He offered them Living Water instead.
- He served those he knew would betray and abandon Him.
- He wept for people who rejected Him.
- He forgave.
- He offered compassion.
- He loved people, even when they were messy.
This list barely scratches the surface, but it’s a start. I may never be all I should be, but with His help, I can strive to respond like Jesus, to show forgiveness like Jesus, to extend a hand like Jesus and to love like Jesus.
There’s an old story that claims when Michelangelo revealed his masterpiece statue of David, a man asked him, “However did you create such a breathtaking work out of nothing more than a block of lifeless marble?”
Michelangelo replied, “It is not difficult. A person need only chip away the parts that do not resemble David.”
That’s what God wants to do with us—chip away all the hard stuff in our hearts and lives until we look like His Son.
A good way to start? Drop the to-do lists and focus on how to be like Christ. Spend time with Him. We are who we hang out with. When we shift our focus on to-be, our to-do list rewrites itself.
And isn’t that a relief? No more to-do lists.
Check.
I’d love to hear your thoughts. What are other ways that Jesus walked? Are you a list-maker? Have you ever switched your to-do list for a to-be list? What differences did you notice in your focus?
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This is beautiful, Tara! I’m a list maker as well, so my heart resonates and I actually laughed out loud when you broke into the LIST about Jesus. But seriously, that is a beautiful and profound set of insights about Him. I needed to read this, this morning. I’ve been beaten up quite a bit by some tough critiques on my writing lately and my flesh wants to hang onto a sharp edge…until I remember how Jesus did it. That’s what my heart and spirit want to look like… Thanks for the reminder.
BTW, I did that Jennifer Rothschild study this fall with my Bible study girls. I coupled it with a “book club” style, 3-week introduction to the book of Hosea, using Francine River’s Redeeming Love. WOW, was it powerful. Our hearts were so ready to understand Hosea. So thankful for writer’s out there that God is using.
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Oh, those harsh critiques about writing…so easy for people to fling the barbs yet little do they realize the hurt they leave in their wake. I recently looked up Amazon reviews of the Bible…the BIBLE and saw scathing reviews plastered about every conceivable part of it. From the violence in Judges to the implausibility of horns blowing down an impenetrable Jericho wall to the beauty of Christ’s coming and everything in between. Not that anything you or I write is comparable to God’s Holy Word, but I started thinking if people criticize the inerrant Word of God, yeah, they’ll criticize me too. Not everyone is going to “get it”. Takes the sting out, in an odd sort of way.
What a beautiful idea! Studying Hosea along with “Redeeming Love” is a wonderful idea! Powerful indeed. Thank you so much for taking the time to encourage me this morning. I’m praying for you!
I love this! Thank you for sharing your excellant thoughts! P.
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Blessings to you, Pat!