Discovering Your Gifts – Called, Not Compared
I remember how some schools used to run specialist sessions for pupils labelled “gifted and talented.” While the intention was often positive, the unintended consequence was painful. By default, other children could be left feeling of lesser value, somehow deficient in intellect or ability. Those quiet inner narratives—I’m not good enough, I don’t measure up—often shaped confidence, learning, and long-term achievement.
That same dynamic can quietly slip into the life of faith.
It is one thing to discover our gifting; it is another to use it wisely and lovingly. When gifts become tools for self-promotion, comparison, or competition, they lose their God-given purpose. Worse still, they can wound others and fracture community.
Scripture offers a radically different vision. Paul reminds us, “To each is given the manifestation of the Spirit for the common good” (1 Corinthians 12:7). Spiritual gifts are not medals to be worn but means by which love is expressed. They are sovereignly distributed by the Holy Spirit—to every believer—so that the whole body of Christ may be built up and God glorified.
Illustration
Imagine a stained-glass window in a church. Each piece of glass differs in colour, shape, and thickness. On its own, a single fragment may seem unimpressive, even insignificant. Yet when placed in its proper position and light shines through it, the whole window tells a story of beauty and purpose. Remove one piece, and the image is incomplete. The value of the glass is not in how it compares to others, but in how it allows the light to pass through.
So it is with spiritual gifts. Our role is not to compete for attention, but to let God’s light shine through us for the blessing of others.
Challenge
This week, take time to name one gift—visible or hidden—that God has placed in you. Then ask: Who benefits when I use this gift? Look for one simple, intentional way to use it to encourage, serve, or support someone else.
Prayer
Gracious God,
Thank you that you call each of us by name and gift us by your Spirit.
Free us from comparison and the need to prove ourselves.
Help us to receive our gifts with humility and to use them with love,
for the common good, the building of your Church,
and the glory of your name.
Amen.






