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I was strolling down a crowded street—minding my own business—when a little boy dressed in a red cape bumped my arm and whizzed past me.
He spun around mid-run and stuck out his tongue.
“Catch me if you can!”
As he ran off in the distance, I spotted the word HAPPINESS sewn in sequins on the back of his cape as it flapped in the wind.
Where is he going? Who does he think he is?
I made it my life’s mission to catch that kid.
I set out for college to pursue my dream job.
And guess what?
I spotted that dang kid at orientation. I pushed through the mass of sweaty college freshman to stop him, but he slinked through the crowd like a snake in the grass and slithered out the gym doors.
On my wedding day, he made a surprise appearance and offered to be my ring bearer. I never did catch his name. He vanished once the ceremony was over.
A few years later, I found myself surrounded by toddlers. On a trip to the park, I swear I caught a glimmer of his cape as he whooshed down the tube slide. When I went to investigate, he was no where to be found.
Time passed. I was itching for change. We loaded up a U-Haul and headed across the country in search for greener grass. While on the road, that little punk sped by us in an old beat-up station wagon with his nose pressed up against the window pane. I took down the license plate number, but I was never able to track him down.
Some days, I forgot about the little boy in the red cape.
Other days, I obsessed and plotted ways to hunt him down and capture him once and for all.
But without fail—every few years—I would spot him. Each time, we were both a wee bit older and a tad slower, yet he always seemed two steps ahead of me.
Then one glorious day, I snagged the back of his cape. To my utter shock, it was merely a cheap tablecloth from the Dollar Store that tore to shreds in my hands. With the cape now gone, I noticed the boy—now a man—was sporting a jersey with the word PURPOSE across his shoulders.
Don’t waste your life chasing after cheap Dollar Store tablecloths.
Don’t spend your time sprinting toward happiness instead of healing.
Don’t drown out the cry of your heart for purpose with shiny new places and things.
Because change on the outside will never produce change on the inside.
Your longing for HAPPINESS is actually PURPOSE in disguise.
Purpose can only exist outside oneself.
And your purpose can only be revealed by the one who created you.
Chase after Him.
“For we are God’s masterpiece. He has created us anew in Christ Jesus, so we can do the good works he planned for us before time began.” (Ephesians 2:10)