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Gifts, God, Community and the Internet
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This month we take a look at our gifts and, especially, our often apparent lack of them. Aaron White asks: How do we know what our Spiritual Gifts are and how we should use them? Can computers help?

One of the best things about the Internet is that you can find all kinds of online quizzes and questionnaires that will help you to know who you really are. There are literally thousands of these invaluable tests out there in cyberspace, and I have taken many of them.

For instance, I learned by answering a number of online questions that the religion best suited to my personality and beliefs is “Liberal Quaker.” I have not been to any Quaker meetings, let alone “liberal” ones, but I’m sure they are wonderful, and wonderfully suited to me. How could they not be? The Internet says it, so it must be true.

I have also discovered other amazing things about myself online, such as how exciting and fulfilling my life is on a scale of 1-10; what my perfect mate would look and smell like; and what Star Wars character I would be, if I were a Star Wars character (Princess Leia, apparently. This worries me.)

You can also take a test online to determine your spiritual gifts. You answer something like 80 questions, detailing your experiences, hopes, and abilities. Then the computer spits out the results, and tells you that based on your responses, you are destined for a life of prophecy, service, martyrdom, or celibacy, etc… These types of tests used to be done by hand, and you can still get them that way, but the computer is so much more efficient.

Now, I know I shouldn’t ever doubt the accuracy of these results, but I confess to wondering sometimes if they aren’t just a complete waste of time. I have taken these types of questionnaires several times during my life, and each time I come away with a different gift mix. Of course, God could be giving me spiritual gifts at different moments for different tasks. But it is also possible that I have learned to answer the questions in such a way that I come up with the gifts I want to have, or think I ought to have.

I don’t even do this consciously. I know in my mind the kind of person I would like to be, the kind of talents and abilities I would like to be known for having, and this necessarily skews the test results. I can’t be completely objective about myself. Nobody can. But the tests really only work if you are being utterly honest, with no bias about yourself.

I’m also aware that the Spiritual Gifts Questionnaires do not claim to provide any conclusive answers, and that they are only designed as tools to help you find out how God has gifted you.

So they can be useful, I suppose. But they are not useful on their own. An impersonal test can never let you know who you are. And neither can you. We are built for community, for blessing and being blessed, for challenging and being challenged, for forgiving and being forgiven. God set us up in such a way that we are to experience Him, to relate to Him, communally. God is Our Father, not just My Father.

So the gifts and abilities our Father gives us are for the building up of the community of the saints. They are not for our own personal benefit. Therefore, these gifts must be discovered in community. How do you best serve and bless your community? Which role do you fill? What do people around you who know you, love you, forgive you and are forgiven by you say about your giftings? Community will help you discover your gifts, and should help you to grow in the exercise of them as well.

Of course, the opinion of your community is not without its faults. It will be biased, and mistakes have certainly been made by churches concerning people’s gifts and abilities. Unhealthy communities will also be more concerned with suppressing people’s gifts than with allowing them to grow. But the input of your community – the people who will be most effected by your gifts – is still essential if you want to know how God has gifted you.

The other essential input (and it seems strange to have waited this long to mention it) comes from God. We are talking about Spiritual Gifts after all; they come exclusively from God, and they are given to enable us to fulfill His purposes on earth. So make the matter of your gifts an issue of prayer. Ask God about it. How has He specifically gifted you? For what purpose? How can you practice, especially if your gift is martyrdom or celibacy?

Remember, these gifts are good, they come from God, He wants you to have them and use them to bless those around you. That is how He wants His community to function. So it’s not like He’s wanting to keep them a big secret from you, like He won’t tell you and you have to sleuth it out by taking several online questionnaires. You don’t need personality profiles to tell you who you are. Let the One who created you do that, and live out that personality and those gifts in the freedom and fullness of community as He intended.

But I am going to try the Star Wars test again. I really want to be Chewbacca.
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