“Would any of you all like to
be famous?” I asked my gathered family.
Six-year-old Elise was the
first to put in her 2 and ½ cents. “I
would NOT want to be famous,” she said firmly.
“Because when you are famous, people follow you around and take pictures
of you when you don’t want them to and that would be SO annoying.”
“That would be a downside to
fame,” I agreed. “As it is, you only
have to deal with your mom and dad taking pictures of you.”
“I would like to be inspicuous,”
Anna said.
“Inspicuous?” I asked.
This was a word with which I was unfamiliar.
“You know – kind of the opposite
of conspicuous, but not exactly the opposite – inspicuous.”
“You mean inconspicuous,”
Elliot said. “That’s a word and
inspicuous isn’t.”
“No, I don’t think I mean
inconspicuous – just inspicuous. Anyway,
I don’t really want to be famous,” Anna said, thoughtfully. “I’d rather be infamous – like you, Dad.”
“Infamous like me?” I asked.
“I hadn’t realized I was infamous – notorious, maybe, but certainly not
infamous.”
“It’s all of those botched
surgeries,” Elliot put in helpfully.
“What do you think infamous
means?” Elaine asked.
“Oh, it means famous, but only
to a select group of people. So, like
Dad is famous in Brookneal and to some Mennonites, but he isn’t famous all
across the country. That was infamous
means.”
“Oh, no, Anna,” I said. “Infamy has to do with fame for bad
reasons. So, for instance, if I took to
the high seas as a pirate, I would be infamous as the first Mennonite Physician
Pirate, but hopefully, I’m not infamous now.”
I sometimes think about
fame. It seems as though there are many
people who desire a bit of fame and in the internet age, it is possible to get
attention from others. We call some of
these people “influencers” and can follow their trials and travails on their
You Tube channels.
Of course, most of these people
aren’t famous for any particularly great reason. They haven’t fixed world hunger or brought
peace to the Middle East – they simply make content that other people are
willing to click on and even sometimes “like and subscribe.”
The Bible makes it clear that
our goal should not be to gain fame or attention for ourselves. Jesus said, “Those who speak for themselves
want glory only for themselves, but a person who seeks to honor the one who
sent him speaks truth, not lies.” (John 7:18)
If we are representing Jesus, we will attempt to honor Him with the
things we say and share – even if we get little or no attention for ourselves.
At the end of the day, our goal
should not be to be famous – or infamous – or even “inspicuous.” Our goal should be to bring to glory to
God. As His fame grows and His name is
well known, the world can be changed for good in a way that a million internet
influencers never could.












