Wednesday, March 11, 2009

conversation about calling...

exerpt from The Vision and the Vow, by Pete Greig (pg 73-75)

"I don't know what God is calling me to do," he confessed, and asked me to pray about what it might be.
"Why?" I asked. "I already know what Jesus wants you to do!"
"You do?" he gasped with excitement. "So, what is it? What is my call?"
I paused, enjoying the suspense. Drums rolled. String quartets tuned up. My friend held his breath...

"Your call," I said slowly, "is to be a worship leader..."
He looked pleased, really pleased, so I continued: "...but not necessarily with a guitar in your hand."
"Okayyy," he murmured.
"Your call is to befriend that funny little lady at the end of your street..."
He seemed less pleased with this prospect.
"To feed the hungry and spend yourself on behalf of the poor..."
By now he was looking distinctly troubled.
"... and to offer hospitality to strangers who just turn up in town needing a place to crash."
Consternation.
"And it's to fast."
He was starting to look furious."
"And it's to pray so long and hard that your run out of words and tears."

There was no going back:
"Your call," I continued, "is to preach the good news of Jesus to every person who will listen and a few who won't. Your call is to go somewhere, anywhere, wherever, whenever, for Jesus, and never stop. Your call is to love people no one else loves and to forgive them when they treat you like dirt- or worse. Do your job to the very best of your ability without grumbling about your boss or whining about your colleagues. Your call is to pray for the sick, and when they are healed, to dance all night. And when they aren't, to weep with them and love them even more."

I glanced across at him and was relieved to see that his expression was beginning to mellow.

"Your call is to honor your parents, pray for your leaders, study the scriptures, and attend lots of parties. Be a peacemaker in every situation: when the fight breaks out on the bus home late at night and when the gossip starts to cirulate at church. Your call is to pick up litter in the street when no one else is looking, to wipe the toilet seat, to pull the gum off from under the desk. It's to get to meetings early to put out the chairs."

By now he was smiling.

"Your call it make disciples and to teach them to obey everything Jesus commanded. And don't forget to minister grace to them when they sin. Which they will. Your mission is to baptize and to cast out evil spirits. Your call is to bind up broken hearts wherever you find them, and you will find them wherever you look. It's to visit prisons. And hospitals. And to..."
"Yeah, yeah," he interrupted good naturedly, trying to shut me up..."
"Your call," I continued resolutely, "is to listen more than you talk and to listen with your eyes as well as your ears... It's to do the chores again and again without grumbling. It's to buy ethical coffee and to recycle your bottles. And while you're at it, don't forget to leave anonymous gifts on people's doorsteps."

By now we were both laughing...

"And when you've done all that," I grinned, " come back and see me, and we can spend a little time praying about Phase Two..."

1 comment:

beautiful feet said...

this is amazing! actually have had a few conversations about exactly this lately! makes me chuckle.