Wednesday, November 17, 2021

Thankful for the Riches of My Calling

 


In preparation for a Thanksgiving service, I did some reflecting on my spiritual riches in Christ. Part of those riches is my calling to serve as a local church pastor. I am 65 years old, and I’ve been at it now for 40 years. Here are those reflections …

 

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On a June morning in 1974, on the grounds of Baptist Hill Camp in Mt. Vernon, Missouri, God laid his hand on my shoulder and called me to preach. God has never been more real to me either before or since that moment when he called me to preach. I was heading to the University that August, and preaching was not on my list of possible careers. I wasn't closed to the idea of preaching, but I wasn't looking for it either and had never even considered it. God surprised me with the calling. My salvation came like the dawn. My calling like lightning bolt.

 

And it’s been an interesting way to make a living. I have been a pastor for 62% of my life and on a church staff for longer than that. Since 1975, I’ve been on a church payroll. and it’s been a pretty cushy gig to only work on Sundays. Not! In all honesty, it’s been a lot of work, much of it hard work. I’ve prepared and preached a gazillion sermons. I’ve had countless teaching opportunities in and out of the church. Had the privilege to adjunct in “Theological Field Education” at Midwestern Seminary in the late 80s and early 90s. Had the joy to adjunct at Ouachita Baptist University and teach “The Story of the Bible” and “Bible Interpretation” a few times. I can’t imagine how many hours I’ve spent in preparation of sermons, lessons, funerals, and weddings. Some of the time flew by, some moved like molasses. Hard work, but I’ve loved almost every minute of it.

 

But preparation and speaking are only a piece of the work. I’ve been invited into some of the worst nightmares people experience—divorce, sudden death, suicide, bankruptcy, mental illness, alcoholism, child and spousal abuse, depression, life and death decisions, infant death, AIDS, all kinds of cancers, life-changing accidents, jail cells, Covid, you name it. None of this is easy, and I have never felt “up” to any of it. But I’ve never engaged any of it alone either: Jesus went before me, stood by me, and left his fragrance behind me.

 

But by the same token, I’ve had the joy of performing marriages, celebrating the birth of children, and marking blessed milestones in people’s lives. I’ve had the privilege of preaching the gospel on 5 continents, the pleasure here, near the end of my fulltime ministry, to write a couple of books to share some of what I have learned across the decades about being a pastor and preacher. And nothing’s much better than leading people to Christ, baptizing them, and watching them grow into a daily walk with the Lord. Few things are more satisfying than watching people who have pretty much been Sunday-focused, church-only Christians most of their lives become Jesus-centered, 24/7, serve-God-with-joy Christ-followers for the rest of their lives. I’ve also had the joy to help two churches in these 40 years get a vision, grow, get on world-wide mission, start new ministries, build buildings, and get out of debt. I’ve worked with some gifted staff members and some of God’s choicest volunteer servants anywhere who all made me look way better than I am.

 

Sometimes I really like my job, and sometimes I wouldn’t give you a plug nickel for it. The constant deadlines and pressure to produce sermons and ministry and leadership is wearing over time. There are seasons when I wonder if what I do makes any more difference than I’d make by putting my finger in a bucket water and pulling it out again. There are times when I get discouraged and tired and burdened, times when I question my leadership and wonder what God was thinking when he called me to do this and what I was thinking when I said yes. Most times I feel so unworthy and so inadequate in this ministry. Sometimes I’m depleted and exhausted by it all. Twenty months of Covid issues hasn’t helped. And now I just feel old and wonder how much longer I can sustain this pace.

 

Yet in the trying times, Jesus comes to me. He lifts me up. He gives me strength. He puts folks around me to offer prayer and encouragement. He gathers up the dry, dusty straw of my heart, kneels beside it, scratches a couple of sticks together, blows the wind of his Spirit on it, and once again ignites his fire in my heart. He reminds me how helpless and hopeless I am apart from him. That he is the vine and I’m but a branch. Without him I am nothing. And he gets me on my feet again. And he reaffirms the calling he put on my life that summer day in 1974. I’ve doubted my capacity to be a good pastor numerous times, but I’ve never doubted my call to be a pastor for a single second. Jesus reminds me of that. He reminds me that we’re in this together, that he has been with me in this since day one, and that he will be with me all the way home.

 

So in this season of thanksgiving, I thank God today for the riches of my calling. I give thanks for my health and longevity. I give thanks that Jesus has never abandoned me for an instant. And I give thanks that my labor in the Lord is not in vain. I can’t imagine doing anything else. A prayer attributed to Martin Luther has been my prayer all along:

 

Oh Lord God, Thou hast made me a pastor and teacher in the church. Thou seest how unfit I am to administer rightly this great responsible office; and had I been without Thy aid and counsel I would have surely ruined it long ago. Therefore do I invoke Thee.

 

How gladly do I desire to yield and consecrate my heart and mouth to this ministry. I desire to teach the congregation. I, too, desire to ever learn and to keep Thy Word my constant companion and to meditate thereupon earnestly. 

 

Use me as Thy instrument in Thy service. Only do not Thou forsake me, for if I am left to myself, I will certainly bring it all to destruction. Amen.


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