You Have Something to Offer
My mouth dropped open at the number on the screen. A few minutes earlier, a friend sent a text that a gift was on the way. “It isn’t much . . . but it’s something!” she said, knowing that medical bills were starting to show up and add up.
Her “not much” brought me to tears. With the click of a button, she completely covered the cost of a medication that I needed to pick up that afternoon.
It wasn’t long before another bill arrived. With no answers in sight, I opened the envelope and skimmed the lines, my eyes landing on the amount insurance would cover: $0.00. I sighed, wrote another check, and mumbled “Really? Nothing? They won’t cover even one penny?” to an empty room.
Two days later, I walked to the mailbox and found a card inside. After months of working on a project for one of my clients, a short and sweet note arrived with this exact sentence:
“You’re worth every penny.”

The words were kind, no doubt about it. They would have meant a lot on any day of any month of any year. But more than the phrase, it’s the timing and the specifics that I haven’t been able to shake. Before I held a bill, someone else picked up a pen to write a note with the exact words that I needed.
On a morning when bare branches stood in stark contrast against nearly white skies, I opened Instagram and was instantly hit by a wave of kindness in the middle of winter. Much to my surprise, an acquaintance shared several of my posts with her people, suggested that they click over for more encouragement, and then carried on with her day. In doing so, she pulled out a seat at the table to make a little more room, generously and graciously using that word we all love to hate—her platform—to support another.
These three moments happened over the course of several months. A whole lot of life was lived in between, and yet I continue to come back to these thoughtful gestures.
Each one may have been small to the giver, but they were day-changing, week-making, still-reflecting-on-it-months-later to the recipient.
Three different women offered what they had, and it turned out to be abundantly more.
It reminds me of a story found in all four Gospels. Matthew, Mark, Luke and John each tell of a time when Jesus fed several thousand people with one child’s lunch.
“When Jesus, with compassion for the hungry and restless crowd, instructed the disciples to feed those who had gathered, Philip replied ‘It would take more than half a year’s wages to buy enough bread for each one to have a bite!'” (John 6:7)
Quite simply, there wasn’t enough. By any worldly standard, it was impossible. The only solution they could come up with, other than sending the people away, was laughable.
“Here is a boy with five small barley loaves and two small fish, but how far will they go among so many?” (John 6:9)
Does it strike you that the description John gives us—twice—is simply the word small? And yet the story doesn’t end with lack but with plenty.
Each Gospel writer shares their own perspective, but they all have one common theme: abundance.
They all ate and were satisfied, and the disciples picked up twelve basketfuls of broken pieces that were left over. The number of those who ate was about five thousand men, besides women and children (Matthew 14:20-21).
They all ate and were satisfied, and the disciples picked up twelve basketfuls of broken pieces of bread and fish. The number of the men who had eaten was five thousand (Mark 6:42-44).
They all ate and were satisfied, and the disciples picked up twelve basketfuls of broken pieces that were left over (Luke 9:17).
Jesus then took the loaves, gave thanks, and distributed to those who were seated as much as they wanted. He did the same with the fish. When they had all had enough to eat, he said to his disciples, “Gather the pieces that are left over. Let nothing be wasted.” So they gathered them and filled twelve baskets with the pieces of the five barley loaves left over by those who had eaten (John 6:11-13).
It isn’t printed on the pages of Scripture, of course, but each mention of the twelve baskets feels like a wink written right into the story.
Not only did an ordinary lunch become a small offering that satisfied thousands . . .
Not only did a meager offering become more than enough . . .
Even the leftovers are a miracle in and of themselves, plenty for all twelve tribes of Israel and provision for the entire world.
In the hands of Jesus, “not enough” becomes abundantly more.
And sometimes, as three women showed me over the last year, God uses the body of Christ to be the very same to one another.
Whether it’s our resources, our words, our time, our kitchen tables, or our social media feeds, may we be women who believe we have something to offer and then share what we have, no matter how small, trusting that the Giver of all will satisfy and multiply.
Additional posts…
Willing {Five Minute Friday}
Oh you... You've shown up again and I am proud of you. There are commitments and to-do's, an endless amount of jobs and projects to complete and coffee dates to plan. But you're here. I know it feels like the words have run dry and there's nothing left to...
Choose {Five Minute Friday}
Oh happy day, happy day! I can finally share with you news that is burning a hole inside me! This one took a little bit longer than 5 minutes, as there are a few things at the bottom I'm asking you to pray for. So happy to be here on another Thursday night sharing...
Building Bridges Instead of Walls {an (in)courage post}
I've been keeping a secret from you for months. Too many times to count I've almost burst, and if you pay special attention to my tweets then you saw a few weeks ago what still comes as a complete surprise to me. I'm sharing my story during (in)RL this year. Not just...
Your Voice Is Your Art
It's my last Monday as the Alabama Women Blogger of the Month, and I'd love if you'd join me as we wrap up what it looks like to use your one voice to change the world. To catch up on previous posts: Your One Voice :: We need to hear your story. We need you to speak...
Small {Five Minute Friday}
We gather. Fast and in five minutes, with sisters and lots of delicious. Every Friday the prompt goes up and #fmfparty slows down. We write. We breathe out our hearts, sharing the hurts and the joys and splitting hearts and words wide open. START It's three notes of a...
Your Ordinary Voice
It may have gone missing or maybe you’ve lost it – but you’ll find it again. Maybe it’s too quiet, silent, or you just haven’t found it yet – but you’ve got one. A voice. You have a voice. Even if it rarely shows up or speaks up, even if you’ve done something terrible...
Love Will Rewrite Your Story {More To Be}
I've been single for just shy of twenty-one years and three months. I don't regret a single day of it. I love the story He's writing, but sometimes I wonder when the love story part of my story is going to, well, begin. But then I'm reminded that Valentine's Day is...
For When You Wonder If You Even Have A Voice
There are times when God opens a door you were never even expecting to walk through, but it becomes so wide open so unexpectedly that you simply say "sure!" and take the next step. That happened to me two weeks ago, and you can read all about it here. Each Monday this...
Write {Five Minute Friday}
There aren't many things I'm willing to be defined by. I'll own up to "awkward" and "slow runner" and "takes too many pictures." But there are things that I have a much harder time claiming, often because I don't see it in myself or because if I speak it out loud,...
For the Bad Days and the Hard Days and All the In Between
You're going to make it. Up that mountain and through all the chaos and questions and uncertainties - you're going to make it. More importantly, you're going to look back and it will be worth it. Not because you've learned a lesson or two or because the pain has...


















