Undercooked Brownies
A few weeks ago, I decided to bake some brownies to bring to
a friend’s house. “This shouldn’t be too hard,” I thought. However, when they
were out of the oven and just about cool, I started cutting into them to find
the disappointing truth: I undercooked them. I guess I am not the greatest
baker after all.
The funny thing about undercooked brownies is you don’t know
they are undercooked until the moment you cut into them and the still gooey
batter is revealed as it sticks to your cutting knife. Sure you can do the
toothpick trick before you take them out of the oven to try and get a hint
whether they are done or not (which I did by the way and still managed to
undercook them), but you never truly know the full story until the moment you
cut into them.
This may be a stretch, but I think this is true of people
too – you can never really know the full truth about someone until you
figuratively “cut into them.” So many times in life, we assume we know
everything about a person without even talking to them. “That mom must want to
pull her hair out taking care of those crazy kids every day,” we ponder. “Their
job sounds amazing, they must be really well off.” Or we even go as far as to
thinking something along the lines of, “at least we are better off than this
person because they are struggling with ________ (fill in the blank, you get
the idea). You see, comparing and assuming things about people can ultimately lead
to us finding a way to prove we are better than someone else. It makes us feel
better about ourselves without actually hurting anyone because we never say
what we are thinking out loud. My pastor from my church has a three-step plan
for humility, and one of them is “never presume.” If we want to work towards
humility, we should hold back from assuming something to be true of someone
else. We should stop assuming we know someone without “cutting into them”,
without hearing the full story.
When I cut into my brownies just to find that they were
underdone, it left me frustrated and even a little confused. “I worked too hard
for imperfection,” I thought. “I followed all of the directions correctly and I
still didn’t get the results I was hoping for.”
This too relates to us struggling with humility: we just
want something to show to others so they can say, “you did a good job” or
simply, “you are great.” We think if we follow the directions perfectly,
everything should turn out, and then we will receive the praise we think we
deserve. We know deep in our hearts this isn’t true, because life just isn’t
that simple or perfect, but we still talk ourselves into thinking this way. But
as we grow in Christ and strive to be more humble, the truth will soak in, the
truth that states we don’t need perfect results or to receive praise from
others to feel that we are doing something right.
2 Corinthians 3:1-6
Are we beginning to commend
ourselves again? Or do
we need, like some people, letters of recommendation to you or
from you? 2 You
yourselves are our letter, written on our hearts, known and read by everyone. 3 You show that you are a letter from Christ,
the result of our ministry, written not with ink but with the Spirit of the
living God, not on
tablets of stone but on
tablets of human hearts.
4 Such
confidence we have
through Christ before God. 5 Not that we
are competent in ourselves to claim
anything for ourselves, but our competence comes from God. 6 He has made us competent as ministers of a
new covenant—not of the letter but of the
Spirit; for the letter kills, but the Spirit gives life.