Write from your Passion
First published on Godspacelight 9th July 2024

In Christine Sineโs newsletter to those of us who write for Godspacelight she talked about writing into her passion. This is probably one of the bests prompts Iโve had in ages. I have tried writing what I ought to write. I even set up a Substack account to write about writing for well-being but itโs failed. Why? Because, much as I love free writing for my own well-being, I wasnโt writing into my passion. I was trying to be something I wasnโt. I even tried putting in a regular structure to when I blogged but Iโm afraid that isnโt me.
How often do we do that โ try to be something we are not? Whether it is in what we write or what we do? I think of many times when I have done something โ job or ministry โ that is so significant but isnโt me. Too many times to remember. It could even be something Iโm good at, have talents in, but it isnโt my passion. I suppose if one jargoned it up I could say it wasnโt โmy calling.โ
As Iโve got older Iโve learned more and more not just what my skills and talents are but what I am passionate about. I love people, though I need time alone with a book too. If Iโm honest my perfect day would be to go for a dog walk, coffee and breakfast with a friend and have a rolling, random conversation that covers deep and meaning as well as trivial and silly; come home and write a blog piece on something that either the conversation has triggered or that was buzzing in my head; and finish the afternoon on the couch to have a read of a good book, then maybe some intense Netflix drama with a glass of red wine to finish the day. Somewhere in that Iโd like to ponder writing a short story or flash fiction, though maybe never get to write it; Iโd like to email someone I enjoy writing to; run a writing workshop where I encourage others to get the most from putting pen to paper; and probably free write or journal myself.
But I can get into thinking I โought toโ write X, Y or Z; I โought toโ be connecting with a certain person or group and โought toโ be doing something with them. But that is my โoughts and shouldsโ and not my passion coming through.
Iโve just read Timothy Kellerโs The Prodigal God in which he talks of the older brother attitude being the one that says โitโs not fairโ when God doesnโt do as we think they should do because we were โgood Christiansโ. My โought toโ comes, I think, from a place that is where Iโve decided what a โgood Christianโ or a โgood writerโ would/should do. It isnโt coming from a place of my passion.
I think for all of us there are times when we do not run with our passions for many reasons; a need to fit in, a fear of missing out, having been told by a parental figure that life isnโt meant to be about fun, or whatever. Iโm sure we all, if we allow ourselves to really hear our hearts, can come up with many reasons why we donโt follow our passions in work, in writing, in church stuff, in life in general. All of them have some truth in them but remember the devil goes around like a angel of light. The one who keeps us away from our true selves does it subtly not overtly. If it was overtly we would notice and rise above it. But it is filled with limited truths and comes from people who do care for us and want the best for us. But it is still lies if it keeps us from our passions and our true selves.
Iโm grateful to all the healing that Iโve received so I can hear God clearly, hear my heart clearly, and be bold enough to step out into my passions. Iโm also bold enough now to walk away from when Iโve try to do something that looks good but isnโt me; when Iโve done an โoughtโ. But this has come about because I know God loves me unconditionally all the time โ not just when I get it right/write

















