Piano is my chosen instrument.
I started playing the piano when I was five years old and loved it from the beginning. The ability to make music with my own fingers seemed like magic to me.
After a year of piano, my parents bought a spinet organ and for about seven years I took lessons on that instrument, but it never had the same magic for me. When I switched back to the piano I was much happier. While a powerful organ can blow your socks off, an organist never has the same control of the touch and sound that a pianist does.
This week I was reading the well-known story of the conversion of Saul in Acts 9:1-19. I have read this story many times so I asked God to show me something new this time around.
And what I noticed was in the exchange between God and Ananais–the man God sent to Saul after Saul’s encounter with God on the road to Damascus. Ananais was pretty skeptical about going to see the man responsible for executing Christians all around the Roman kingdom. But God reassured Ananais that this was the plan:
“The Lord said to Ananias, “Go! This man is my chosen instrument to proclaim my name to the Gentiles and their kings and to the people of Israel.” Acts 1:15
Saul (or Paul–as he was later known) was God’s chosen instrument.
And I thought: What significance is in the phrase “chosen instrument”? If I am also an instrument of God, what does that mean?
First of all, when an instrumentalist performs, the audience rarely praises the instrument. They applaud the performer. As an instrument of God, I do not receive the admiration and acclaim. God does.
Second, the instrument cannot make music on its own. It relies on the hands of the performer. Yes, now there are marvelous machines that can be attached to pianos to make music automatically, but even there the machine is made and programmed by human hands. Music is dreamed up by talented composers. On its own, the piano can only sit on a stage and take up space. I sometimes think that I am like the machine that can produce something wonderful on my own, but in truth it is all in the hands of the Creator who made me, the Programmer who guides me, and the Performer who works through me.
Finally, I thought of how a piano doesn’t rebel in the hands of a musician. My piano doesn’t stop making sound if it doesn’t like the song I’m playing. It doesn’t run out of the room if it doesn’t agree with my musical interpretation. It doesn’t pout and complain if the song is too difficult. Here is where I am much different from my piano!
Paul was God’s chosen instrument to the Gentiles of his day. And he acted as an instrument should. He worked for the glory of the Performer. He relied on the power of the Creator. He didn’t complain if the song was too hard.
I believe we are each God’s chosen instrument. The Father lovingly chooses each of us to play for His glory. He works through each of us in various concert venues around the world. He produces beautiful music in those who yield to His gentle touch.
Next step: Reflect on your role as God’s chosen instrument. How have you made beautiful music in the hands of God? How have you performed for your own glory or tried to make music on your own?
Dear Sharla,
What an interesting post Sharla. I thought how these days you can by a track with all manner of even piano music on it but what it lacks is the heart and soul of the live performer. The depth the performer can convey through the touch of his hands on keys can not be duplicated.
This too is like all of us who are born into the kingdom of God we do our works with a depth the world can not understand. We do it out of love for a Savior Who gave His very life on that brutal cross to save us. The world can not understand why we would get up an hour earlier on a Sunday AM to attend a Bible study or teach Sunday School. Why we would risk our lives to reach others with the Gospel of Christ. Our heart and soul belong to the Master performer Who works through us to make beautiful music!
Thank you for a great post this AM!
Much Love,
Betty M
How true Betty! Only those who know Jesus can understand why we would give up the spotlight on us to shine the spotlight on the Savior!