It seems like yesterday. I sat in the last row of chairs with my peers and classmates at the commencement ceremony. As my friends were called up to receive their degrees, a sense of dread overshadowed my mind. Iâd finished what Iâd spent the prior four years working to achieve. Yet I hardly knew what was in front of me. Instead of walking through a wardrobe door into the brilliant light of a new world, I was looking into a dark tunnel of uncertainty. Leaving the comfort of my college surroundings, I headed off to an unknown life. Honestly, I didnât want to graduate.
For many high school and college graduates, fear and anxiety are pervasive. The questions of âWhatâs next?â âWhere are you going to college?â or âAre you excited to start working in your field?â can be difficult to answer because you donât know whatâs ahead. Completing a significant milestone can lead to worry about whether what you plan to do next is the right thing, or if youâll have the right stuff to be successful.
When I graduated, I had to rethink what graduation means. Iâd come to see it as a finish line, but I needed to see it as a launching pad. The graduate (whether from kindergarten or college) is stepping up from one level of formation, education, and aptitude to another. You may be graduating with a diploma or degree in engineering or nursing, but when you step up to the podium, you shouldnât neglect to move forward in your Christian walk as well.
Here are five ways you should step up as you pass from graduation into a new stage of life.
1. Step up in loving God.
Iâd come to see graduation as a finish line, but I needed to see it as a launching pad.
A new season of life can give space for reflection and prioritization, but it can also leave you stagnant in what feels familiar. So think about this next stage as one where youâre more energized to grow in your love for God. Make progress in understanding his character and nature as you read his Word. Enrich your soul by meditating deeply on Godâs love for you displayed in Christ. Preach the good news of his person and work to yourself again and again. Go to church and sit under faithful gospel preaching so your love doesnât grow cold but flourishes.
Donât just stay where you are in your love for God. Step up in knowing and loving him.
2. Step up your pursuit of Christlikeness.
Character is developed, not accomplished. We love and follow the perfect, sinless God-man: Jesus Christ. Our lives were intended to behold his glory and be transformed by that vision so we become like him (2 Cor. 3:18). Graduation is a perfect time to ask how you can grow in integrity, righteousness, justice, and mercyâall the ways Jesus lived.
C. S. Lewis spoke to students at Kingâs College and said there was a significant likelihood some of them would become corrupt âscoundrels,â even though, as they heard his address, none would envision it. Why did Lewis believe that was the case? Because he knew many would begin to compromise their integrity, leave their character and virtue undeveloped, and chase after the wrong things.
Graduate, now is the time to embrace greater devotion to Christlike integrity and character.
3. Step up in using your spiritual gifts.
Godâs Spirit has given each of us unique abilities, talents, interests, and gifts to advance the gospel and build up the church. Every Christian is called to be equipped for âthe work of ministry, for building up the body of Christâ (Eph. 4:12). As parts of Christâs body, we each have a part to play in service.
After graduation, you have the opportunity to offer up your training, maturity, and desires in service of what God has called the local church to do. Perhaps in this next season, youâll better understand your gifts. Maybe itâs time to receive further training. Itâs certainly time to put your hand to the plow and use your gifts for Godâs glory in the local church. Consider your graduation as a launching pad to the next stage of growth in gifted service.
4. Step up into a vocation.
Graduations typically mark educational mastery in your general education or a particular field or your career. For some, going off to college or entering the workforce can seem mundane and even spiritually insignificant. But if you see your career path as a call from God (a vocation) with a purpose to serve others, youâll better understand your workâs significance.
Now is the time to dedicate yourself to the next level of Christlike integrity and character.
As you graduate, consider how your career will serve others, benefit society, and contribute to human flourishing. Be the best student, craftsman, educator, lawyer, or dentist for Godâs glory and the good of your fellow human beings. Level up by seeing your career path as a call to serve.
5. Step up and share the gospel.
Do you know the core components of the gospel message? Can you communicate them to someone who doesnât know or follow Jesus? When you graduate, youâll enter a new mission field with new coworkers or classmates. Look for opportunities to share Godâs grace, love, and forgiveness, and the hope youâve received in Christ.
Make sharing the gospel with those who donât know Jesus your driving ambition. Wherever youâre called to work and serve, youâre also sent as a follower of Jesus to share the great news of Godâs love with those who are currently his enemies. Donât graduate with mere career ambitions; make it your ambition to advance the gospel.
âThere are difficulties in everything except in eating pancakes.â There was no better way for Charles Spurgeon to state that truth. The challenges, difficulties, and obstacles to glorifying God are innumerable. Following Christ is never easy. With each step up, we must develop a deeper resilience and ability to persevere. In the words commonly attributed to William Carey, the famous English missionary to India: âExpect great things from God. Attempt great things for God.â But all these aspirations take endurance. As you graduate, keep stepping up in doing the next obvious hard thing for Godâs glory.
News Source : https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/graduate-step-up/