This is not a criticism or partisan statement. America’s political history shows that notoriety is not essential for success.
From 2 percent to the White House
Jimmy
Carter’s name recognition was at 2 percent when he launched his
presidential campaign. Congressman Gerald Ford was largely unknown
outside his Michigan district before he became vice president and then
president.
Few
believed first-term senator Barack Obama stood a chance against Hillary
Clinton in 2008. When Donald Trump announced he was running for
president in 2015, how many people thought he would win?
Notoriety is not always essential to success in other areas of life as well.
When
Manuel Franco stepped forward Tuesday to claim a $768 million Powerball
prize, the twenty-four-year-old Wisconsin resident went from anonymity
to national headlines. I had not heard of diver Josh Bratchley before he
helped rescue Thai cave schoolboys last summer. I had not heard of Edd
Sorenson before he rescued Josh Bratchley from an underwater cave in
Tennessee last week.
How Americans spend eleven hours each day
We may never be household names, but we all want to be special to someone special.
God
made us social creatures: from Adam to today, “it is not good that man
should be alone” (Genesis 2:18 NKJV). The human story is a long
narrative centered on interaction, from spouses to families to tribes to
cities to city-states to nations to multinational alliances. Across our
history, we have connected with each other through speaking, art,
music, writing, printing, radio, movies, television, and now social
media.
We long to be connected with other people, even if we experience them vicariously or digitally.
Screens and souls
However,
a screen cannot replace a soul. A computer cannot hug us when we
grieve. Just as we all have a “God-shaped emptiness” (Pascal), we also
have a “people-shaped emptiness.” The body of Christ is not composed of
cell phones but of humans.
Here’s the good news: you and I can make an eternal difference in eternal souls, whether the world knows our names or not.
I
was invited to church as a teenager by two men whose stories I have
never seen in the media. The pastor’s wife who led me to Christ has
never appeared on Netflix. My most significant mentors in college,
seminary, and beyond were women and men whose names would probably mean
little to you. But they mean everything to me.
Who has made the greatest impact on your life? Have they ever made the headlines?
Paul’s unnamed nephew
Reading
through the book of Acts, I have been struck by the unnamed individuals
who changed the course of history. We know only a few of the 120 who
were filled with the Spirit at Pentecost and ignited the Christian
movement (Acts 1:15; 2:4). We don’t know the name of the “man lame from
birth” whose healing led “all the people” to hear the gospel (3:2, 11).
The
missionaries who first took the gospel to Antioch (the future home base
for Paul’s ministry) are unnamed (11:19–21). We don’t have the name of
the Philippian jailer (16:25–34), the “leading women” who came to faith
in Thessalonica (Acts 17:4), or the “noble” Bereans (17:11).
The
“town clerk” who protected Christians from an Ephesian mob is unnamed
(19:35–41). Paul’s unnamed nephew saved the apostle from a plot to
assassinate him (23:16–22).
Imagine
a world without the miracle of Pentecost or the missionary work of
Paul. As Alfred North Whitehead observed, great people plant trees
they’ll never sit under.
Writing “the history of this generation”
The
technological revolution makes it possible for us to get God’s word to
more people than ever before. Every Christian who uses his or her
digital platform to share biblical truth is continuing the work begun by
Paul and his fellow missionaries twenty centuries ago.
At
the same time, our personal relationships are central to fulfilling our
Commission (Matthew 28:18–20). Our personal interactions bring the
compassion of Jesus into the hurts and hearts of people hungry to
encounter his grace.
Robert
Kennedy: “Few of us will have the greatness to bend history itself; but
each of us can work to change a small portion of events, and in the
total of all those acts will be written the history of this generation.”
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