The
Second Sunday after Epiphany
Year B
God
Calling
Readings:
1 Samuel 3:1-10, (11-20); Psalm 139:1-6, 13-18; 1 Corinthians 6:12-20;
John 1:43-51
I
understand that Canadians have the distinction of being the greatest
users of the telephone in the world.
We are used to calling others and to being called.
In this day and age we feel uneasy if we go out the door without
our cell phone. But when it
comes to being called by God, we are less sure.
We wish it were as easy as receiving a phone call. We question. What
does it mean to be called? How
does it happen? How can we
discern God’s call? Are
we all called by God? Our
readings today explore the ways in which God reaches out to us and helps
us to discern our calling.
Samuel
received a call from God when he was just a child. He was three years old when his mother took him to live in
the temple at Shiloh where he was to serve.
Eli, the priest in the temple, was an old man. His two sons were servers in the temple.
But their greed had given it a bad name amongst the people.
Eli had not spoken out about their bad behaviour.
This had cut him off from God’s good graces.
There
in the darkness of the night, God called Samuel.
Samuel heard the call, but not on his own. He needed Eli, the very one who was out of favour with God,
to help him respond. He
needed someone’s guidance. He
needed help to know that it was God calling him.
Fast
forward! Jesus invites Philip to follow him.
He in turn finds his friend Nathanael and invites him.
Nathanael’s first response is negative - perhaps even scornful.
“Can anything good come out of Nazareth?” He retorts.
Philip knows better than to argue.
But he also knows Jesus. And
indeed the answer for him is a resounding “yes!” So he invites Nathanael with the same words that Jesus used
in inviting him. “Come
and see.” What is he
inviting him to come and see? Come
and gain insight into the mind and purpose of God.
Come and deepen your relationship with God.
Come and answer the call to serve.
Fast
forward to the present! The Oprah Winfrey! Oprah is interviewing writer,
James Hillman, author of the book, The Soul’s Code: In Search of
Character and Calling. His
is not particularly a Christian way of looking at call, but he comes
surprisingly close to describing the process through which God helps us
to determine who we are meant to be.
He says that even very young children have a sense of call, and
that if we really listen to what they are saying, we can help them to
discern their life’s work. He
recounts the story of the English philosopher, Collingwood, who at eight
years of age tried to read Kant’s Theory of Ethics.
He could not understand it.
He knew with a sense of urgency that he needed to.
It became his life’s work.
Was he called by God? That
is how I would name it.
Martin
Luther King was aware even as a young child that God was calling him to
fight against racism. Even
when his family, worried about his safety, opposed his efforts, he
continued to challenge racial discrimination.
How
do we personally discern God’s call?
Sometimes it happens through other people in our lives, people
like Eli who have insights into the way God works.
Such people are able to share their insights with us and help us
to discern God's call. I
had such a mentor when I came to discern my call to ordination.
I went to tell my parish priest that I felt called.
He leaned back in his chair, gave his characteristic hmmph!
"It's to be avoided if at all possible," he said to me.
Two hours later after I had given him all the reasons why I
couldn't avoid it, he said to me, "Well, that's wonderful, isn't
it!"
Sometimes
it happens through invitations like the one of Philip to come and see.
God calls us as individuals in a personal way to serve, to
follow, to share. Where
have you heard God’s call? How
have you passed on that call to others?
How do we become open to God’s presence and call?
Sometimes
it happens to a group of people who begin to listen and act on God’s
call to them. It rather
reminds me of the movie “Field of Dreams”.
In it, a man receives the message, “Build it and they will
come.” ‘It’ is a playing field.
And he builds it - not, of course, without running into
difficulties. He converts
the field on his farm into a playing field complete with lights and
seats for people to watch. ‘They’
are the great players of the past.
And they come out of the corn stalks to play great baseball.
People come from all over to see the games.
But most important, the builder is confronted by his own past.
“Build
it and they will come” seems sometimes to be the way we operate in the
church. A few people get
together and build a lovely church.
They begin to hold services and wait for people to come.
And it may work for a time.
Given the right location, people may notice the church and come.
Like Samuel, they may come in to find out what it is all about.
They may even become involved and begin to serve in some way. But, like Samuel, they may not yet know the Lord they are
serving.
Or
they may be like Nathanael, hanging around the fringes, rather angry and
suspicious. Yet there is
some sense of longing they cannot seem to fulfill.
A sense of need in their lives, or a sense of duty. ‘I come to church for my children, for my family.’
Or a sense of guilt! 'It’s
the right thing to do.’
But
if the church is really going to be vital, if it is really going to
reach out to the community, then just building it and waiting will never
work. The people who come
will never be enlivened. You
see, invitations need to go out. People
need to be invited to come and see, to come and meet Jesus, to come and
see who we are, to come and see what Christianity has to offer, to come
into relationship with the God who walks with us.
It
is not enough to assume that people will hear the message.
We need to invite them in a personal, eyeball-to-eyeball way.
So 'unanglican', isn’t it!
We are all ministers of the Gospel.
We all have parishes or arenas of service.
We can invite. People
should be able to see something of God’s love and saving power in our
lives, in the things we
say, in the things we do and primarily in how we live our lives.
What
is God’s call to us, the people of St. Francis of Assisi in Meadowvale? Is God calling
us to be a church which continues to struggle in obscurity?
Or is God calling us to be a vital and living message of God’s
love to this community? Do
we want to be an inviting and vital church in this community?
If we do, we must lose our complacency.
We cannot wait for people to come in.
We have been waiting for thirty years.
It doesn’t work to simply wait.
What is God calling us to do about it?
How is God calling us to be the church?
We
are in a good position to reach out to others.
Our community is growing. New
families are moving in to the community every day. Our church is well located.
But we cannot sit within these four walls and wait for people to
come. We must be inviting.
We must have good programs to offer them when they get here.
We must have good music, a fine Sunday School program, activities
for people young and old, people on hand to welcome, people to adorn the
sanctuary, people to keep this place looking beautiful and clean.
People
are looking for fulfillment and renewed spiritual life.
They are looking for God. If
God is at the centre of our lives, they will find what they are looking
for. This place will come
alive. Each of us must come
alive. Let us seek ways to
become alive in Christ. To
discover what Paul wanted the Corinthians to discover.
It is not a matter of just following the laws set out by the
community, but of living our lives centred in Christ Jesus. Being different. Being
set apart. Living lives of
prayer and service to God. Amen.
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