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Unmasking Imposter Syndrome

Unmasking Imposter Syndrome

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Friends, today, we are talking about a feeling most of us have felt, but few of us admit: the feeling that we are totally unqualified and may lack confidence in our role that God has given us. That somehow, the job we have, the table that we have been invited to, or the ministry we are in…….all happened by accident—and any second now, someone is going to tap us on the shoulder and say, 'You don't belong here.'

Have you ever felt like you don’t belong? More specifically, have you ever wondered if you were included, accepted, or invited by mistake? Have you worried that someone might have overestimated your abilities, or that you are underqualified? If so, this is called imposter syndrome.

And Imposter syndrome is the reason we quit early… before we have the chance to disappoint others… or so we think. Imposter syndrome is why we never fully step into our calling: we lack confidence. It hides in the shadows of our insecurities, shaming us with lies about our inadequacy. Imposter syndrome is the feeling that “you are not enough," and the persistent, internal, and often irrational fear that you are unworthy of God’s love and unqualified for your calling, despite evidence to the contrary.

Most of us struggle with it at one time or another, totally unaware that the person right next to us might feel exactly the same way we do.

While the term is modern, the struggle has been there through the ages.

For example, Moses was a Reluctant Leader when God first called upon him. In Exodus 3:11, Moses asked God, "Who am I?" that I should go to Pharaoh and lead the people of Israel out of Egypt?”

And God’s response was not a pep talk to Moses but a promise of His Divine Presence. God simply answered Moses in verse 12, "I will be with you".

Another example in the Bible is Jeremiah, who could be considered The Youthful Skeptic. In Jeremiah 1:6, Jeremiah claimed he was too young and unskilled to speak for God as a prophet. Yet God commanded Jeremiah to shift focus from his own limitations to his divine appointment. God tells Jeremiah in verse 7, “Don’t say, I’m too young, for you must go wherever I send you and say whatever I tell you”.

And let’s take a look at Paul in the New Testament, who learned that God's power is "made perfect in weakness" and that God’s grace is enough for us. Paul's confession of his weakness to God allowed Christ's power to rest upon him. Imposter syndrome says, "I'm weak, and that's a problem." But Paul understood, "I am weak, and that's a platform for God’s power." In 2 Corinthians 12:9-10, Paul states, “Therefore, I am very happy to boast about my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ can work through me. So now I am glad to boast about my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ can work through me. That’s why I take pleasure in my weaknesses, and in the insults, hardships, persecutions, and troubles that I suffer for Christ. For when I am weak, then I am strong.”

Friends, our weakness isn't a liability; it's the platform where God's strength is most visible.

Another issue with Imposter syndrome is that it thrives when identity is anchored in the performance of what we do. My friend, the World wants you to believe the Lie: "that you must qualify yourself to be worthy."

But God’s Truth is that our Worth is inherent, not earned. We are God's "handiwork" or masterpiece, created for purposes designed in advance.

We are not a masterpiece because of what we did; we are a masterpiece because of who made us. Imposter syndrome disappears when we remember that our identity is anchored in grace (when we remember that our identity is who God says we are).

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