Skip to main content
ClergyVocation

WHEN GOD ASKS YOU WHAT YOU ARE DOING (2)

By October 10, 2014No Comments

(Continuing reflecting on Elijah and you and your call.)

GOD’S INVISIBLE HAND

Keep moving forward through your first position in service to the church. For some it has come out of secular employment, for others it was a call to a church, or maybe you went directly from seminary into serving the larger church.

 

However it took shape, watch it as if it were a movie playing before your eyes and note how God has worked with you in both the exciting and challenging times.
Reflect on what happened to move you to your current position. How had your previous experiences prepared you for this call? What was it about the call that fed your spirit? What were the challenges that you saw and how have you responded to that which you sensed God calling you.

 
Take some time to reflect on how that sense of call provides you with some of the gifts you need to creatively respond to the present challenges of your position.

HEARING ANOTHER PERSON HEAR YOU

The musings of our minds are important but they become more powerful when they result in some public testimony. Find a colleague, preferably not one to whom you are accountable or who is accountable to you, and invite them to hear your story. This would be an excellent opportunity to take advantage of Skype to share with someone from another area. There could be value in building a relationship with someone in a similar position in another denomination. Regardless of your choice, whether in person or through technology, you need to build a relationship before you are going to feel comfortable sharing with any depth.

 
Once you are ready, ask your colleague to hear your story in the explicit form of God’s involvement in your life. What I mean is, regardless of whether you are used to talking in this manner or not, this time as you tell your story, in the manner that Scripture does, anthropomorphize your story of God’s involvement in the evolution of your call.

Risk verbalizing that God gave you this gift or worked with you in this experience with this result that led to God’s calling you to this position. Of course there is value in the more abstract and sophisticated form of describing your call, but I am inviting you to experiment with the concreteness of a child in telling your story. I think you will find it a powerful experience.

 
If your friend is willing, there would be double value in inviting him or her to have thought about God’s call in their own life as well.

THE SPIRIT OF SPONTANEITY

Now ask your colleague if s/he would be willing to listen as you spontaneously talk about where you think God may be leading you over the next five years. Speak from your heart and allow yourself to hear what is coming out of your mouth.

Ask your friend to reflect with you what s/he has heard. Allow yourself to ramble a little and even correct yourself as you talk. This is not a final product but a work in progress.

Especially if both of you invest in this process, it may take more than one or two sessions to speak and listen to each other and to reflect on what you hear. Both as you talk and listen, allow your third ear to listen to what God is saying to each of you.

Leave a Reply

Skip to content