A question I am asked quite often goes something like this: “Do you ever have a day where you just do not want to write anything?” Are there ever days when the absolute last thing I want to do is to sit down and write? I can answer, quite honestly I think, that this happens only very rarely. There are definitely times where I don’t feel like I have much to say (and some would argue more than others, I suppose, about how often this happens) but there are very few days where I don’t care to write at all. The reasons is simple, really, and is something I’ve expressed often. Writing has become a critical part of my spiritual development. I write about things I’ve learned, and the desire to keep having things to write continually motivates me to seek to learn more. I think Saint Augustine said this best: “I am the sort of man who writes because he has made progress, and who makes progress by writing.”
I love those words. They inspire me to see writing not only as a way of gaining more knowledge, but as a way of marking the progress of applying any knowledge I’ve acquired. I do not want to be a person who knows a lot but who has little ability to apply what I’ve learned or to use it to draw closer to God. Intellectual development may be important and may be gratifying, but it is a lousy end in itself. Rather, I see the pursuit of knowledge as the means to a greater end—glorifying and enjoying God. I write when I learn and learn by writing. There isn’t much I know that I haven’t written about.
So no, there are few days when I just can’t consider writing…
(A person who argues that everything I wrote here was just an excuse to share the quote from Augustine would probably be pretty well correct.)






Comments (5) »
1. deborah
November 18, 2007
5:23 PM
How old were you when you realized how much you love writing?
2. mmm real name? heres part of it anyhow...Michael
November 18, 2007
5:43 PM
How do your priorities look?
I mean, I enjoy writing informally and occasionally even formally, and I do think it is worthwhile, but as a college student with a good bit of a social life and so on, and even without a job I find very little time to actually think thoroughly about writing anything other than school papers.
I understand that for you, this passes as a bit of a promo for your Web development business, and thus has a little more value as far as money is concerned, but I don’t understand how you and other bloggers can handle the volume of writing you do.
—propjets aka michael
(p.s., you might consider changing the commenting so that if we forget to fill out an required part of the form, we can do that without losing the comment we just spent 15 minutes writing…just happened to me.. but I love the back button:D)
3. Staci at Writing and Living
November 18, 2007
8:21 PM
Well, it’s a great quote, so I’m glad you built a post around it. :o)
4. Mickey
November 19, 2007
12:28 PM
Nice Augustine quote, for sure… great way to start out the week!
I am married and in seminary and I struggle with carving out time to read and write, and so I enjoyed your reflections last week on your reading habits and schedule. I would like to piggy-back on Michael’s question and ask when and how much you find time to write? Are you able to write during the day, or does it cut into your reading time?
Also, how do you balance reading and writing/ journaling about what you read? I seem to be all or nothing: I either read while writing little or I get started writing about what I’m reading and so I get precious little reading done.
In Christ!
Mickey
5. Michael Krahn
December 1, 2007
3:03 PM
Tim,
I totally identify with the Augustine quote and I, like you, cannot stop writing… which is not to say its all good, but that it is all good for me. To me writing is like eating… if I don’t do it for a while something tells me I need to.
Writing college papers is as good an outlet as journaling for me . It certainly broadens the subject matter.
I have benefited immeasurably from writing, from simply reading good books and writing down whatever is triggered in my mind.