On Purpose and Brokenness

Did you ever see the movie Hugo? The one about the boy who lives inside this giant clock in a Parisian train station? It's based on the book The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick, a magical tale about an orphan boy trying to uncover a secret left to him by his father.

There's a strikingly truth-filled line in the movie where Hugo says, "Maybe that's why a broken machine always makes me a little sad because it can't do what it was meant to do. Maybe it's the same with people. If you lose your purpose, it's like you're broken."

Purpose, the answer to the 'what am I here for' question, the reason we get up every day and put one foot ahead of the other. It's the who, what, and why of life, and without a clearly defined purpose, we can manage life, but the point of why we do what we do gets lost.

Brokenness happens to everyone. We go through devastating trials and hard times, and we just can't see a purpose through our pain as it rises up, smothering everything in its path, devouring and erasing the point of life.

And it will if we let it.

I firmly believe each and every one of us is born with a grand purpose, an adventure appointed just for us, a desire planted deep in our soul that God alone can breathe to life. Our job is to take it by the hand and make it real.

The enemy of our souls will try everything in his arsenal to destroy, dilute, or distract us from God's purpose for our lives. He'll try to break us and remove our effectiveness because he knows if we figure out our purpose and take God at His word, we really can change the world.

Our enemy hopes we never believe the truth about us being 'fearfully and wonderfully made' because he wants us to believe we aren't and God has nothing for us. Or he'll try to make us think God is not what He says, injecting doubt and fear to make us believe his low-down lies. Why?

Because he wants us to stay broken.

He wants us to stay bitter, wallowing in self-pity, ineffective and weak, less than what we are created to be, so we miss our divine purpose.

Knowing our purpose is a wonderful gift because it positively affects and focuses our lives.  Purpose does all these things and so much more:

  1. Purpose defines our dreams

  2. Purpose drives us forward.

  3. Purpose allows us to sacrifice the good for the best.

  4. Purpose allows us to say no.

  5. Purpose keeps us on course.

  6. Purpose is long-range vision in the short-term days.

  7. Purpose helps us push through the pain.

  8. Purpose challenges us to dream big.

  9. Purpose helps us live with the end in mind.

  10. Purpose causes us to set our faces like flint.

  11. Purpose gives our big idea a goal.

  12. Purpose keeps us on course when distractions pull in every direction.

We're all broken somewhere. But in the broken places of our lives lie the beautiful, fearful fragments of our purpose. God alone can glue them together anew with a fresh look and a new resolve. He alone can take the shattered and make them sure, driving our dream back to the realm of the possible.

Purpose is real. You have one my friend, and so do I. I didn't know what mine was for a long time, and I only found it in knowing Jesus, the one who fearfully and wonderfully made us all. Out of your relationship with Jesus will flow a life of meaning and purpose. Together, as we seek Him, we will learn to live on purpose, and we will change the world. And though we can't change our history of brokenness, our broken lives will be made whole in His hands.

And we'll do what we were meant to do.

And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose. Romans 8:28

Kate Battistelli

Kate Battistelli is the author of The After Party of the Empty Nest: Mom is Not Your Only Name, the bestseller, The God Dare: Will You Choose to Believe the Impossible, and Growing Great Kids: Partner with God to Cultivate His Purpose in Your Child’s Life. She's a contributing writer to the (In)courage Bible for Women and The Spirit-Led Woman's Bible, and her writing has appeared in Guideposts, The Joyful Life magazine, The Better Mom, Mici magazine, and more. She is one-third of the popular Mom to Mom Podcast. In addition, she is an honoree with She Leads Tennessee.

As a young actress in New York City, Kate had a life-changing experience, going from understudy to starring as Anna in the Broadway National Tour of The King and I opposite Yul Brynner for more than 1,000 performances. Kate and her husband laid down their careers in the Broadway theatre in answer to their first “God Dare”, moving out of New York City and into a life of homeschooling and home business. She lives in Franklin, TN, near her daughter Francesca and seven grandchildren. Kate serves women by encouraging them to step out of their safe space and into His irresistible future.

https://katebattistelli.com/
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When Faith Feels Hard