Intelligence and Religion

June 7, 2009 by Tellie  
Filed under My Inner Kindlings, Religion

I posted this about a couple weeks ago but didn’t put it on my main blog. So now I am:

While in church I came across a scripture that spoke to me. I’m not a real religious person, I’m more on the spiritual side. I don’t think it’s necessary for me to go to church every Sunday when I know that I’m living the right way. Anyway, the passage came from Romans Chapter 12.

3 For by the grace given me I say to every one of you: Do not think of yourself more highly than you ought, but rather think of yourself with sober judgment, in accordance with the measure of faith God has given you.
4 Just as each of us has one body with many members, and these members do not all have the same function,
5so in Christ we who are many form one body, and each member belongs to all the others.
6We have different gifts, according to the grace given us. If a man’s gift is prophesying, let him use it in proportion to his faith.
7If it is serving, let him serve; if it is teaching, let him teach; 8if it is encouraging, let him encourage; if it is contributing to the needs of others, let him give generously; if it is leadership, let him govern diligently; if it is showing mercy, let him do it cheerfully.

Sometimes I really wish I were average. I’m younger than all my friends, professors point me out, and no matter how hard I try to “blend in” it just doesn’t happen. I could sacrifice my grades and appear to be average, but in my grades lies my future. So when the class average is a 50 on a Calculus II test and I score a 99 and I am the youngest freshman in the entire school AND I’m in Calculus II , a junior class, It’s impossible to blend in.

It’s hard being smart. And when I say smart that is probably an understatement for myself. I am a genius. I know it. I could have been done with college long ago, but I’m glad I’m with people closer to my age. It’s tough now and I couldn’t possibly imagine if I had finished college at age 10. I don’t understand how parents can allow their child to finish school at such a young age. Kids like that end up shunned from society…friendless. Maybe I’m being stereotypical, but that’s what I’ve seen.

I really really don’t want to appear conceited about my intelligence. I feel my smarts were just a matter of luck. Some people are born to be great basketball players, to be virtuoso musicians, I was born smart. There is no reason for me to hold my head up high and look down on people when I could just as easily been born below average. I have never thought highly of myself for this very reason… But why must others think so highly of me?

  • Sometimes it's easier to just be "average"...but trust me--that's not the way to get anywhere! Use what you've got...no matter what anyone else thinks/says/does! I was "smart" and "extraordinary" all my life...then somewhere along the lines I started caring more about what other people thought of me than what I thought of myself. I too could have graduated at a much younger age...gone to college...then...God only knows...but instead...I'm a "college dropout"...and no matter what I have to say I'm never considered "extraordinary" anymore...because I lack a piece of paper. I'm "just another housewife". That being said...I'm happy to be a housewife. I'm home with my kiddos--who don't care about my piece of paper...and I know that I'm intelligent....no matter what anyone else believes. God blesses people with different gifts--and some people just need to accept that! Also...I am a firm believer that religion kills spirituality. Some people are too worried about religion to truly ever know God.
  • Yea, I guess I just have my moments. Somedays I wish I were average, and then there are days that I realize how much easier certain aspects of life are when you're above average. I guess the grass is always greener on the other side.
  • Emmanuel
    Have you ever read C S Lewis? I dont mean the Narnia stuff. Those are good, but even better for intelligent folks are the books Mere Christianity, The Four Loves, The Abolition of Man and The Problem of Pain. I totally identify with you on being singled out because of being too intelligent, but these books gave me a very fine perspective on life, otherwise I might have ended up devoting my life to one of the 'fire-and-thunder' preachers or the other extreme of hedonism.
  • I have not heard of those books, but I shall definitely check them out. I'm very familiar with CS Lewis and read a lot of her books, but I don't remember which ones exactly since it's been well over 10 years since I've read them. What topics do they cover?
  • Ok, this is going to be a long comment, but it's striking how similar our stories are. I'm older than you, but also grew up playing classical music; resisted going straight to college after 8th grade (for social reasons, like you) and instead took multivariable calc and engineering physics at the UC during my freshman year in high school. I know what it feels like to be singled out. Finished HS in 3 years, went to college on a full ride at 16, entered med school before I could drink legally.

    You have an excellent perspective regarding your intelligence, and honestly it's fine NOT to blend in. I understand you want to, but after a while, people get used to seeing you in classes and it's not so much of a novelty any more. Especially in a university setting with a narrow age range, it will probably happen any time you go to a new class, but in the real world there will be more diversity of experience as well as intelligence.

    If you truly want to blend in, challenge yourself to find a situation where your natural talents are in fact average for that population-- then you don't have to downplay your intelligence or feel singled out. Just my 2 cents; I understand how alienating intelligence can be.

    <abbr>RenaissanceTrophyWife’s last blog post..The End: Getting to “Rich” (Part I)</abbr>
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