God calls out Moses
A friend of mine recently shared with me
that his church brought in a young seminary grad to discuss the possibility of his
becoming part of a needed ministry.
After extensive questioning one member
asked about the young man's calling to which he responded that he didn't accept
the traditional idea of a "calling"; whatever the church needed him
to do he would do.
My friend was very disturbed as was I.
Lately, this has become an all too often
repeated answer given to church search committees. Ministerial candidates refer
to themselves as having "chosen a field of ministerial service"
rather than being actually called by God.
Being "called by God" is not a
choice. When God truly calls you, you
know it and God doesn't stop until He gets you.
The Bible is full of examples of how God
calls people out for His purpose. Moses (the burning bush), Samuel (direct
revelation) Isaiah (Temple vision), Jeremiah (direct revelation), Daniel (dream
and study), Ezekiel (wheel within the wheel), Saul (Paul) (Jesus on the road to
Damascus) and Timothy (his study and revelation) (just to name a few) are such
examples. None of these men had any doubt about their calling; it was from God
and they knew they couldn’t refuse.
I was raised in a Christian home but even
though I didn’t accept Christ as my Savior until I was fifteen years old, from
the time of my child hood I knew God was calling me to preach; I had no doubt
about it and I still have no doubt.
When I was called, I knew I had to accept.
I heard God, I felt God, I could sense His presence. When the man of God is
truly called, he will struggle like a mother trying to give birth. To be called
by God is to become pregnant with God’s word and purpose and you cannot stop fulfilling
God’s call and purpose.
Over nearly 53 years of ministerial
service, I have often felt God’s call so strongly I accepted calls to churches
with no pay simply because I knew God had a plan and a purpose.
A man might be extended a call to and by a
church but if he isn’t called first by God, he needs to stay home; to do
otherwise could be both church and self-destructive.
My mentor, the late Dr. Jess Moody used to
say, “Gentlemen, be sure of your call; no call and you’ll most certainly fall”.
I saw his words fulfilled all too often.
No church should ever extend a call to a
man which can’t definitively say, “Yes, I am absolutely called by God”. In like
manner no minister should ever consider accepting a call to a church that hasn’t
asked the question, “When were you called?” and “Would you explain your call”.
We read the prophet Isaiah’s call, “Then I heard the voice of the Lord saying, “Whom shall I send? And who will go for us?” And I said, “Here am I. Send me!”
He said, “Go and tell this people (Isaiah 6:8-9).
We’re reminded in the calling of Paul (Acts 9:4-16) that God made it impossible for him not to accept his call. Paul was blinded and had to wait on Ananias to aid in his healing and Paul was taught that he would have to be totally dependent on God. Paul had no choice but to accept God’s call. He said, “Go and tell this people (Isaiah 6:8-9).
Accepting God’s call is a hard life and a hard thing to do but if done it’s the greatest experience imaginable.
Charles Spurgeon, Dwight L. Moody, Billy Sunday and Billy Graham all knew and expressed strongly their calling by God to preach God's word. We need more pastors, preachers, ministers and missionaries to know the certainty of their call; even to the point of putting their lives and lively hood on the line for the cause of Christ.
Churches and ministers both would do well
to re-evaluate their call.
May God bless those who genuinely accept God's call.
© 2019 Lee W. Outlaw III, PhD
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