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Walking in the Light of His Glory: Part 2 – We Hear His Call!

Walking in the Light of His Glory: Part 2
We Hear His Call!
1 Samuel 3:1-10

Jesus, Son, Savior

May the grace of God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ be a call in your life that you always answer with great joy!

  • A poor night’s sleep….

As I read the reading about the young Samuel learning to interact with God, I felt terrible for Eli, the prophet-priest.

The poor guy has gone blind, his kids have turned their back on God and on him, and this little kid keeps leaving the tabernacle to come to wake him up.

Eli, Eli, did you call me?

imagine you have had a long, long day, you just get to sleep, and you hear this voice…

Eli, Eli, wake up, did you call me?

and then, just as he went back to sleep,

Eli, Eli, wake up, did you call me?

He might have been thinking, “Go back to bed, you little brat!”

If only they had recognized where the young man was resting…

if you and I only recognized where we find our rest….

If you and I only could recognize the Voice calling out to the world.

  • In the Presence but not knowing it…

If you were all Old Testament Scholars, you might pick up where little Samuel was sleeping. He is sleeping in the sanctuary to ensure the oil lamps on the Lamp of God do not go out. That puts him over in the corner of the Holy Place. He was probably not far from the thick curtain which separated the Holy Place from the Holy of Holiest places.

That is the place where God’s glory sat, over the Ark of the Covenant and its seat of mercy. This is where God promised Israel that He would be…. For them.

Even so, Samuel didn’t recognize the Voice of the Lord. He is sleeping just a few feet from the glory of God, hidden behind the curtain…

He didn’t recognize the Voice… and the Bible explains why…

Samuel did not yet know the Lord because he had never had a message from the Lord before.

Someone forgot something!  Eli had never taught the young child to listen to God.

Eli was getting that repetitive message because he sinned. He didn’t teach the young man how to listen to God. Here was the man of God, whose own sight was failing, wasn’t preparing the future generation to see God.

That is the priest’s job to make sure young believers, whether 4, 54, or 94. And we are all part of God’s priesthood! We need to be the people that God uses to draw others into the presence of God and help them learn to hear His Voice.

not Bob’s, or Chuck’s, or mine

We need to help them hear God’s Voice.

Samuel would learn to do this, as he would help all of Israel hear God, and then he would try to help King Saul and the then King-elect David hear the Voice of God.

But first, Eli needed to realize that God was calling Samuel. He had to wake up and notice this. He needed to look past his own blindness and see what was going on in Samuel’s life.

That means we must get by what blinds us, what causes us to go to sleep…

We must know we dwell in God’s presence as well. For then, we realize that their annoying cries are simply a misguided attempt to answer the call of the Voice of God.

They hear His Voice, but how will they recognize it unless we help them come to the point where Eli guided Samuel.

“Go and lie down again, and if someone calls again, say, ‘Speak, Lord, your servant is listening.’ “

We can help them be still, to know that God is God…. Help them find the rest that replaces the stress and anxiety in this maddening world.

But we have to be there, in the place where we are listening to God, where we hear His Voice cry out to us…even as we respond, “Speak Lord, your servants are listening.”

  • How is calling you to do? How will you serve?

I can see parallels for everyone here.

We are like young Samuel, trying to understand Who is calling us.

We are like tired old Samuel, with eyes tired that no longer want to see 2020…yet God has called us to guide others to dwell in His presence and to hear His Voice.

The thing that they had in common, that you and I share with them, was the call of the Voice of God.

The call that draws us nearer to Him, that draws our attention to the altar, to the places where He has told us He will meet us, places where He reminds us of the cross, and the resurrection. Places where He pours out His mercy, and His forgiveness

Come and listen… and then help others hear Jesus call….

And hearing the Voice of God…telling you He loves you…and inviting you to partner with Him in your life and ministry, you will dwell in His peace.

For Jesus keeps you there.. your heart and mind. AMEN!

He Set You apart!

He Set You Apart!

Jeremiah 1:4-10

 In Jesus Name

 May you realize the grace of God our Father and our Lord Jesus Christ, who set you apart from before you were formed, who will have you share with others His love, and our need for it!

To the Nations

A few weeks ago, 6 of us had the blessing of picking up 24 youth who were all born in Eritrea.  Just curious, how many of you know where Eritrea is?

Last week, Pastor Bernie shared for a few moments about what happened in the Sudan, where he put stoles that our ladies made, on the shoulders of 16 newly ordained pastors, just as he had three years prior.

Yesterday, some of us went to a Himalayan restaurant in Artesia, and celebrated with a young lady and her family, as she prepares for a wedding next week.

Next week on our campus, our brothers and sisters in the second service will be celebrating Chinese New Year.

As I look out over our congregation or our preschool chapels, I see people from all over the world, from 5 continents.  And from even some very, very different places, like Lawrence, Massachusetts.

It is an amazing thing to think of, as we hear again, God’s word to Jeremiah

“I knew you before I formed you in your mother’s womb. Before you were born I set you apart and appointed you as my prophet to the nations.”

God’s words to Jeremiah, and to us.  Yes, to us.
The message

Jesus has done the same thing to us that He did to Jeremiah.  He set us apart with a purpose, to share a message with people from all of the world.  A message that we all need to hear, even as it has to tear some down, and lift others up.

What we call law and gospel in “Church language”.  That’s the message Jeremiah was given; it is the message Jesus died to reveal, it is what Peter and Paul and others claimed from the Middle East throughout all of Europe to Central Africa to India in one generation.
It is the same message that everyone needs to hear, no matter if they are 3 or 93, no matter their ethnicity or their culture.

It is a message that crushes those of us who think we are the only righteous folk around, revealing to us that we are sinners, and there is nothing we can do to repair what we’ve broken.  For that is what sin does.  It shatters relationships; it shatters family, it shatters us as individuals.

God’s law isn’t just about behaving properly; it is a way God designed for us to live in peace, to know we are loved.  And when we step outside the plans God has for us, it crushes us, as the things He warns us against come true.

One pastor put it this way, use the Law to afflict those comfortable in their sin, and those afflicted by their sin, comfort them with the good news.

The news every prophet, every pastor, every evangelist and every believer counts on and is chosen by God to embrace and share with others.

The news of the gospel.  That God loves us that He will heal our brokenness. That He will make our lives like new.  That our sin will be forgiven, that our the relationships will be reconciled.

This is the gospel that all need to hear, it is the reason we have hope.

God has made all of the creation, and all of us in it, with a purpose.  The purpose of living with him, as His children, as the people He loves.  He loves us so much that Christ died to make this possible.  TO heal our relationship with Him and with others, not just until the next time we destroy it, but for all of eternity.

That is why when we are saved when He cleanses us, there is no need to do so again.

But us?

Like most ministers, Jeremiah had a  problem with God trusting Jeremiah with the message.  We can find a million reasons why we shouldn’t have to share God’s message with our neighbors and family, never mind to the world.

But God has chosen us. He knows us as long as He knew Jeremiah, from since before we were born, from before we were conceived.

The message isn’t complicated, and as we realize it, the inclination to share it is automatic.  God is with you.  He loves you; He wants to comfort you and reconcile and heal that which is broken.

Don’t hold back, let Him do so…and rejoice!

AMEN!

The View from The Back

 7  He told a parable to those who had been invited, noticing how they were choosing the places of honor at the table. 8  “When you are invited by someone to a wedding banquet, do not recline at table in the place of honor. A more distinguished guest than you may have been invited by him, 9  and the host who invited both of you may approach you and say, ‘Give your place to this man,’ and then you would proceed with embarrassment to take the lowest place. 10  Rather, when you are invited, go and take the lowest place so that when the host comes to you he may say, ‘My friend, move up to a higher position.’ Then you will enjoy the esteem of your companions at the table. 11  For everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, but the one who humbles himself will be exalted.Luke 14:7-11 (NAB)

949    To aspire to positions of responsibility in any apostolic undertaking is a useless thing in this life and a danger for the next. If it’s what God wants, you’ll be called. And then you ought to accept. But don’t forget that wherever you are, you can and you must sanctify yourself, for that is why you are there. (1)

One of my favorite apologetic works, The Hitchhilker’s Guide to the Galaxy, talks about the leadership in a rather unique way.  Simply put, the one who is best to lead is the one who desires it the least, and even abhors it, but takes it on because of necessity. 

It’s one thing to want to be the leader in elementary school or even the class president in high school, or the captain of a team.  It is far different to lead a company, or for that matter, to lead a congregation or a church body.  It is a task that no one should want, for the pains, and experiences can shatter a man’s faith.   And they often do.

But there is something else that can grow in such a crucible, a level of faith and dependence upon God that goes beyond the security we seek.  An assurance of the presence of God’s comfort, of God’s love, and of His presence.    An accepting of the task, a determination to go the distance.  Not confident of our own abilities or strengths, but simply confident of the fact that we aren’t leading, He is.  THat is what holiness, sanctification is truly about.  Not about pious appearance,,, but about walking with Christ.

Christ the Saviour (Pantokrator), a 6th-centur...

Christ the Saviour (Pantokrator), a 6th-century encaustic icon from Saint Catherine’s Monastery, Mount Sinai. NB – slightly cut down – for full size see here (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

It is then we are ready to undertake such a role….

Thanks to all who lead…. in Christ.  ANd may those who lead btw own strength, find the courage and strength to let the Paraclete lift them, turn them and guide and support them as they follow God.

(1)  Escriva, Josemaria (2010-11-02). The Way (Kindle Locations 2201-2204). Scepter Publishers. Kindle Edition.