Tags
anticipate, anticipation, control, dance, God, good, Holy Spirit, impact, Lent, movement, planner, spiritual

So, what does a Dancing with the Williamsburg Stars competitor do after the competition? Well, in my case, you get back in the studio! Before the competition even began, I already knew I wanted to keep dancing. I was having such a great time stretching my mind and body learning new things that I knew it was a good physical, and spiritual, discipline I wanted to maintain.
Now, you may be wondering how in the world ballroom dancing can be categorized as a spiritual discipline. The truth is, I encounter the sacred in ballroom dance all the time. I talked about it once before HERE. This week, as I started my first post-competition class, we went back to basics, learning the rumba and cha-cha. There’s a certain humbling that comes with learning a new dance that I had forgotten from when I started months ago. As we progressed through the class, I felt like I was slowly getting the hang of the technicalities – that is, until we started turns. At one point, my instructor said, “Stop anticipating!” He reminded me that he would show me where to go, but if I anticipated what he was going to do next, I would mess up our unique dance.
Those two words have been rattling around in my head. Stop anticipating. You see, I am a planner by nature. Anticipation is my jam. I am constantly thinking ahead, wondering about decision trees and the potential impact of each branch. I like thinking about the larger system and strategically guiding my parish in our next steps. So, the idea of stopping anticipation seems anathema.
But the more I thought about it, every good thing that has come about in my ministry was nothing I actually anticipated. In my current parish, I might have conducted a needs assessment with the community, listened to my parish’s desires, and researched a particular new ministry. But what I didn’t anticipate was an outside group needing space to do the exact ministry we were contemplating. I might have envied other parishes with digital ministries, but what I never anticipated was a worldwide pandemic that would launch my church’s own digital ministry. I might be dreaming with my parish about alternative revenue streams and the repurposing of our spaces, but what I didn’t anticipate was three conversations that fell into my lap in the course of three weeks about potential partnerships. When I finished the planning and stop anticipating, God happened each time.
I wonder in what ways your anticipation is blocking the movement of the Holy Spirit. In what ways are you anticipating a left-hand turn, only to discover, God is over the to right, ready for you, if you can just stop anticipating? For those of you who are lifetime planners, I know this is hard spiritual work. Perhaps this Lent, you can join me in my prayer, “Lord, help me stop anticipating.”