Does My Writing Even Matter?

@LucindaSMcDowel

Katherine was a human computer.

A black woman in the mid-century America NASA space program. Among other responsibilities, she calculated the trajectories for both the Mercury and Apollo missions.

But no one knew about her work.

Until the recent book and movie “Hidden Figures”revealed the true story of the “West Computers” – women who were at the heart of NASA’s advancements.

“They worked through equations that described every function of the plane, running the numbers often with no sense of the greater mission of the project. They contributed to the ever-changing design of a menagerie of wartime flying machines, making them faster, safer, and more aerodynamic. Unlike the male engineers, few of these women were acknowledged in academic publications or for their work on various projects.”(The Smithsonian)

We all want our work to matter.

The psalmist, Moses, prayed “Let the favor of the Lord our God be upon us; And confirm for us the work of our hands; Yes, confirm the workof our hands.” (Psalm 90.17) I pray a similar prayer. “Make the small and large things You have called me to do help bring light and hope to the world.”

In the Old Testament Hebrew, the word for confirmor establishmeans “firmly fixed, stable, secure.”  We all want to believe that all we have invested in during this life will be appreciated and hopefully, will make difference.

But there are no guarantees.

How do we ever know the results of “the work of our hands?”For author Philip Yancey, writing is a very isolated occupation. “We write in desperate hope that the sometimes-tedious tasks of researching, composing, and polishing words will eventually become a virtual chain that links us to others.”

Still, he has been amazed at some responses. “A woman in Lebanon told me how much my book “Disappointment with God”meant to her. She read it a few pages a night in the midst of the civil war there, in a bomb shelter by the light of a kerosene lamp. Another woman in Beirut wrote that my book “What’s So Amazing About Grace?”helped her have a better attitude toward the P.L.O. guerrillas who had commandeered her apartment. I read such letters and think to myself, I really had in mind a chronic illness not a civil war, and neighbors who play loud music, not guerrillas who move in uninvited.Again and again God has surprised me by using words written with mixed motives by my impure self to bear fruit in ways I never could have imagined.” (Philip Yancey, “Why I Write”)

When I am tempted to wonder if my writing, speaking and teaching will ever make a difference, invariably I will get a note from someone sharing the impact of my words. This spurs me on tremendously.

Writer Robert Benson points out, “The real reason we cannot quit is because of the friends, known and unknown to us, who have somehow come to expect that the bits and pieces of our personal lives… do indeed reveal the places where the One Who made us has made an appearance will shed light on the ways such appearances are taking place in their own.”(Robert Benson, “Dancing on the Head of a Pen”)

Instead of asking “Does my work (writing) even matter?” perhaps we should just follow the command to do our best work – as unto the Lord.

Lucinda Secrest McDowell, M.T.S., is a storyteller and seasoned mentor who engages both heart and mind while “Helping you Choose a Life of Serenity & Strength.” A graduate of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary and Furman University, McDowell is the author of 13 books and contributing author to 30+ books. Her books include the award-winning Dwelling Places (2017 Christian Retailing BEST Award for Devotional)Ordinary Graces  (2018 Selah Finalist), Live These Words, and Refresh! Lucinda, a member of the Redbud Writers Guild, received Mt. Hermon “Writer of the Year” award and guest blogs for The Write Conversation, Blue Ridge Mountains Christian Writers Conference Blog and (in)courage. Whether co-directing  “reNEW ~ retreat for New England Writing,”  pouring into young mamas, or leading a restorative day of prayer, she is energized by investing in people of all ages. Lucinda’s favorites include tea parties, good books, laughing friends, ancient prayers, country music, cozy quilts, musical theatre, and especially her family scattered around the world doing amazing things.  Known for her ability to convey deep truth in practical and winsome ways, she writes from “Sunnyside” cottage in New England and blogs weekly at http://www.EncouragingWords.net/ 

Follow Lucinda on Twitter: @LucindaSMcDowel

 

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3 Comments

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  1. Cherrilynn says:

    Cindy, Thank you for the reminder. I heard you say this at the first writing conference I attended in 2014. I grasp hold of this truth every time I write. Your words do matter, Cindy, even your spoken word. I write to please God and leave it in His hands. When I find myself asking if my writing matters, your words sing in my ears. I fret less and write more. Thank you again! I hope to see you at Blue Ridge.

  2. Your post reminded me of that wonderful movie and the fact that when we obey God, it matters. Thank you!

  3. Lori Hatcher says:

    Thank you, Lucinda, for this beautiful reminder.