A few months ago, my Great Uncle sadly
passed away from cancer. I didn’t know him well or see him often, so I was very
surprised to learn that he had left me some money in his will. The money has
enabled me to purchase my own equipment for filmmaking – something I love doing
(not as much as my job at NYFC obviously) and something I believe God has given
me a talent in. I have been able to buy an amazing camera with everything I
need to make professional quality films.
This combined with the fact that I will be
moving on from my role with NYFC in the summer, has got me thinking about
inheritance. My Uncle left behind something that has enabled me to carry on
doing something I love doing. It was a gift that he never saw me receive,
something that didn’t benefit him in any way and something he didn’t have to
do. Inheritance involves grace and selflessness.
What are we going to leave behind?
I feel bad for young people growing up now
in what is essentially a society of bad inheritance, where previous governments
and bank bosses have failed to think about the long term consequences of their
actions and decisions. It is now our
young people who are paying the price for their mistakes. With budget cuts, massive
youth unemployment and the ever-increasing gap between the rich and the poor,
the inheritance we are building for future generations is not a good one. That
challenges me.
In every aspect of our lives we can be
challenged about what we are leaving behind us. In our jobs, in raising our
children, in our relationships and in the way we steward what has been given to
us. We will leave behind something, but whether it is good or bad, remains our
choice.
What are you leaving behind?
When Jesus left his disciples, he left the
Holy Spirit; ‘When you believed, you were marked in him with a seal, the
promised Holy Spirit, who is a deposit guaranteeing our inheritance’ –
Ephesians 1:13-14. The Holy Spirit is part of our inheritance, reminding us of
what is to come. What an amazing gift to leave behind! Jesus came to earth, invested in a bunch of young people others had
given up on, changed the world, made a way back to God, started the church and
gave us the Holy Spirit. Impressive!
For us as Christians leaving an inheritance
will rarely be about money. It will be the way we treat people, the things we
invest our lives into, the stories we tell our kids, what we spend our time
doing. Living a kingdom life leaves an inheritance, planting seeds deep in the
hearts of future generations that will one day sprout up into glorious
spiritual fruit. So much of youth work is about planting those seeds, trusting
that as we plant and water, God causes them to grow into live giving oaks of
righteousness, that will impact this generation and the generations to come.
jo@nottinghamyfc.co.uk
Jo is NYfC's key worker in Radcliffe-on-Trent