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I’m almost 40 and I still don’t know what I want to be when I grow up.
It’s humbling.
I should be paying off my mortgage, building my 401K, and designing the layout for my future retirement bungalow in Florida.
Instead, I find myself back at square one asking the same questions my guidance counselor asked when I was a teen sporting GAP hoodies and white Keds.
“What are you strengths? What do you enjoy?”
Twenty-two years later, I’m still trying to figure this out.
But if we’re brutally honest, we all feel a little lost sometimes.
America’s Got Talent featured a singer who goes by the name Nightbirde last week. She has been given a 2% chance of survival after a grim cancer diagnosis. Nightbirde received the golden buzzer for singing—what I believe—is the anthem of our hearts.
The chorus repeats this one line:
“It’s okay if you’re lost. We’re all a little lost and it’s alright.”
Everyone of us is a little lost—some of us are just better at hiding it than others.
What if feeling lost is actually a good thing?
Jesus shares three stories in the Bible of something that is lost and must be found:
In each story, the more valuable the lost item was to the owner, the more intense the search was to recover it, and the bigger the party was when it was found.
During the pandemic, I lost my thermometer. I didn’t even look for it. I was so sick of reporting those dang health screenings to the school everyday, I just started making up numbers.
“98.4 sounds about right.”
A few years back, the diamond to my engagement ring went missing. I swept the house from top to bottom, rummaged through every garbage can, and prayed to St. Anthony for a month (and I’m not even Catholic). I finally gave up only to find the diamond the very next day while giving my son a bath.
One summer, my Autistic daughter went missing. I dashed out of my house, leaving my other kids unattended, and frantically searched our neighborhood while screaming her name. I still have nightmares about it. We notified the police and in less than five minutes, six cop cars and twenty neighbors had join in the effort. When she was finally found—almost an hour later—I wanted to rent a giant bounce house, set off fireworks, and throw a massive welcome home party in my backyard.
God is a good dad.
You don’t have clean yourself up and get your life in order to find God—he finds you.
He is frantically calling your name.
He doesn’t think twice about leaving the rest of the family behind in search of you.
He can’t eat, can’t sleep, can’t think, until your are safe at home.
So maybe feeling lost is a good thing.
Maybe it means your Dad is out there in the darkness, hollering your name, shining his flashlight your way, waiting to welcome you home.
Maybe feeling LOST means you’re one step away from being FOUND.