It doesn’t really matter what the arena is; The job, fly fishing, sports, debating politics, teaching, or
dealing with complicated moral religious
issues, I have often been perplexed by the certainty I see expressed in others.
There seems to be little doubt.
I don’t know if I missed a seminar somewhere on positive
thinking, self confidence or self esteem. Or, maybe it was a class on how to always know the
absolute one way to live life and always catch fish.
When it comes to fly fishing (and for that matter many areas
of life) it often feels as though it is a “toss up” whether I will catch the
fish I am stalking. It also feels like a toss up if I am offering the right
advice to a client I may be guiding or a friend I may be offering counsel.
Maybe it is an illusion, but often when I talk to others I
get the feeling they sound so much more certain. . This seems to be particularly true if one is offering a service
or selling a product of some kind. We seem to be getting the message that one better come across as certain or people
will lose their confidence in you and what you are offering. But there is something that seems inauthentic about always being so confident.
Ironically, I find some comfort when I hear uncertainty in the
voices of those I interact. In fact, I am far more comfortable and trusting
being around people who are less certain. I get particularly uneasy when people
confidently start pontificating what God’s will is.
In regard to faith, I think our uncertainty and our doubting
can be an indication that our faith is more authentic and reverent. But, often, I guess
I am not even certain of the value of my doubting.
During an evening church service, minister and friend Dave
Shaw shared with us some thoughts about reverence. This theme of certainty and
uncertainty and knowing or not knowing God’s will was at the core of the discussion.
We seemed to share the idea that proper reverence of what God’s will might be
has some level of uncertainty. And in a sense this admitting of uncertainty is
reverence.
We ended the evening when Dave shared some words by Abraham
Lincoln while he was struggling with some very tough religious moral issues of
his day.
“They come to me and
talk about God’s will …
Day after day, laymen
and ministers , . .
Defining me, God’s
will…
But all of them are
sure they know God’s will,
I am the only one who
does not know it.
And yet if it is
probably that God
Should, and so very
clearly state His will
To Others, on a point
of my own duty, It might be thought He would reveal it to me
Directly, more
especially as I
So earnestly desire to
know his will”
( Paraphrase by Stephen Vincent Benet in “John Brown’s
Body”)
And those words strangely help me feel better about not being so confident in myself.
And those words strangely help me feel better about not being so confident in myself.