Showing posts with label call. Show all posts
Showing posts with label call. Show all posts

Friday, April 24, 2020

It Was A Woman

Women Arriving At The Tomb by He Qi © 2013 

This was my testimony for the Presbytery of the New Covenant meeting in Orange, Texas, July 16, 2016, at which the ordination of women was being celebrated.
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Luke 24:1-9 But on the first day of the week, at early dawn, they came to the tomb, taking the spices that they had prepared. 2 They found the stone rolled away from the tomb, 3 but when they went in, they did not find the body. 4 While they were perplexed about this, suddenly two men in dazzling clothes stood beside them.  5 The women were terrified and bowed their faces to the ground, but the men said to them, “Why do you look for the living among the dead? He is not here, but has risen.  6 Remember how he told you, while he was still in Galilee, 7 that the Son of Man must be handed over to sinners, and be crucified, and on the third day rise again.” 8 Then they remembered his words, 9 and returning from the tomb, they told all this to the eleven and to all the rest.
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I grew up in Southern California. Until about 10 years ago, that’s the only place and the only culture I knew.  Southern California is not like the south, even though it has the word “south” in it.  It’s definitely not part of the Bible belt.  So when we moved to South Carolina in 2005, it was quite a culture shock.  Life moved a little slower.  Different things were important.  In California, some people care about football.  In South Carolina, much like Texas, EVERYBODY cares about football.  Even if I hadn’t finished my bachelors at Clemson University, I would have had to be rooting for the Tigers because that’s just what you do there.  When I got to Erskine Seminary in the little tiny town of Due West, which is due west of nothing but not too far north of Presbyterian College, I got another bit of culture shock. 

Erskine Seminary is run by the Associate Reformed Presbyterians, and is multi-denominational.  My classmates were Methodist, Baptist, Anglican, AME, EPC, PCA and PCUSA.  I knew about Methodists and Baptists and Anglicans before I went there, but I had to Google ARP, AME, EPC and PCA.  Before I went to seminary, I had no idea there were Presbyterians who weren’t PCUSA.  And I had no idea that some people thought woman couldn’t be a pastor. I hadn’t run into that idea in California.

I had read what Paul says in 1st Timothy about women, but I didn’t think what Paul said was relevant to our time.  I have a high regard for scripture, though, and I respected my new friends, so I had to take a step back and consider.  Had I heard God wrong about this idea of becoming a pastor?  Had I taken Paul’s words too lightly?  I wanted to be sure that I was following God’s will, and not my own.  I wanted to make sure I was ready to stand by this call.

At my first annual meeting with the Committee on Preparation of Foothills Presbytery in South Carolina, the committee asked me if I was running into any challenges with seminary.  “Well, actually, yes,” I said.  And I told them about my concern.  CPMs can be so wonderful.  They didn’t tell me I was right or wrong.  They encouraged me to make my own decision.  “But in your considering,” one of them said, “be sure to remember what happened that Easter morning at the tomb.  It was a woman who first heard that amazing news, and who first spread the gospel.”

That took awhile to sink in, but it did eventually sink in rather deeply.  And so here I am today, standing before you as an ordained teaching elder.  I would love to tell you that it’s been smooth sailing ever since.  I haven’t stopped wishing that things worked that way, but I know that’s not how it works.  Jesus said “In this world you will have trouble.”  He was maybe understating that one just a bit.  But he didn’t stop there.  He added, “But take heart for I have overcome the world.”

Thanks be to God.


Tuesday, September 5, 2017

What Could Possibly Be Next?

This sermon was preached on Sunday, September 3 2017 at United Presbyterian Church in Sterling, KS.  Listen to the sermon here.

Read Exodus 3:1-15 and Matthew 16:21-28 here.

Listen to the choir anthem here.
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How do you answer when someone calls you on the phone?

My dad sometimes answers, “Joe’s Pizza.  What’s your order?”

Another fun way to answer:
Bill's Roadside Diner: You kill 'em, We grill 'em!

Steve Martin in the movie L.A. Story (1991):
"Hi, this is Harris. I'm here right now, so you can talk to me. Please start talking at the beep. *beep*"[1]

How do you answer when God calls?

In the story we read today from Exodus, Moses answers by saying, “Here I am.”  But then when he hears what comes next, Moses becomes much more reluctant to say yes to God. 

Last week we read the story of Moses’ birth in Exodus 1 and 2. Moses was one of the Hebrew babies that Pharaoh wanted killed because he was afraid the Hebrews were getting too numerous and powerful.  Moses survived because his mother put him in a basket in the river, and Pharaoh’s daughter found him and raised him as her own.  When Moses grew up, he saw one day how badly the Egyptians were treating the Hebrews, and he got angry. He killed an Egyptian.  Someone saw this and told Pharaoh, and Moses fled into the wilderness where he remained for 40 years.  He was out in the desert herding sheep when God called to him from the burning bush.

How did Moses answer?  As we heard several times in the piece that the choir just sang,[2] when Moses hears God’s plan to send him back to Egypt to talk to pharaoh, he says, “Not me, Lord.”  We only read about one of Moses’ objections in the passage we read this morning, but if we were to keep reading in chapters 3 and 4, we would see that Moses has a list of reasons why he doubts his ability to challenge Pharaoh and lead the Israelites out of Egypt.

Moses’ first objection is, “Who am I that I should go do this?” (Ex 3:11).  God doesn’t exactly answer that.  Instead God says, “I will be with you.” 
So Moses asks another question.  “Who shall I say has sent me?” (v13).  God replies, “I AM who I AM.  Tell them that I AM has sent you” (v14). “I AM who I AM” means God was and is and always will be God.  The divine name Yahweh means “He is.”[3]  God is.  God exists.  God is here, and always has been and always will be. This is, I think, the most important part.  God doesn’t send Moses to go alone.  God goes with Moses.

Notice that God doesn’t get into all the reasons that Moses is the one God chooses to send.  Instead God shows Moses that God will be with him and working through him.  Basically God is saying, “Trust me, and do and say what I tell you.” The reason Moses will succeed is that God is with him, but Moses is uniquely suited to the task for several reasons. 
  • Moses was raised in Pharaoh’s courts by Pharaoh’s daughter.  He knows his way around Pharaoh’s household.  He knows how to talk to the Egyptians.
  • Moses is a Hebrew and he’s already demonstrated that he is concerned about the cruel treatment the Hebrews have been receiving.  He saw an Egyptian guard beating one of the Hebrews and he got angry and killed the guard.  Not maybe the best response, but a passionate one.  Moses has a heart for this call.
  • Moses doesn’t shy away from talking to God.  He has a conversation with God about this initial call, and then he continues to converse with God.

Moses says, “Not me, Lord,” but really we can see that Moses is exactly the right guy for the job, not just because of his history, but also because, as we see in what happens in the rest of the story, Moses keeps talking to God.  “Not me, Lord” is the beginning of a conversation that goes on the rest of his life.

In our reading from Matthew for today, we see another response to God.  Peter says to Jesus, “Not you, Lord.”  Jesus has just told the disciples what’s going to happen – that he’s going to suffer and be killed and on the third day raised from the dead.  But Peter doesn’t understand.
o   One reason Peter can’t understand is that Jesus is God.  Jesus has insight that a human being won’t be able to have.  That’s why Proverbs 3:5 advises us to “Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding.”
o   The other reason is that Peter’s idea of Jesus’ call is all about worldly success and politics. Maybe Peter also didn’t think God would let Jesus be killed.  Peter has a vision, but it’s not God’s vision, so Jesus chastises Peter because he doesn’t have in mind the things of God.

Moses says, “Not me, Lord.”
Peter says, “Not you, Lord.” 
The prophet Samuel says, “Not him, Lord.”

God sends Samuel to anoint the person who is going to replace Saul as king of Israel.  Samuel goes where God leads him and thinks he’s found the next king when he sees big, strong men that look well equipped to lead.  But God says, “No, not them.  Keep looking.”  When Samuel finally finds the one that God wants him to anoint, he’s a young, scrawny shepherd.  Samuel can’t see why the youngest smallest kid is the one to anoint, but he obeys God anyway, and anoints David the shepherd boy who would go on to be the greatest king Israel ever had, the one by whom all other kings are measured. The one whom God called, “A man after my own heart.”

We see in these stories, that God’s call is unexpected.
o   God calls unexpected people
o   God calls in unexpected ways
o   God calls in unexpected places
o   God’s call is to an unexpected future.

What could possibly be next?  For Moses? For Peter? For Jesus?                                         For you?  For me?  For us?
What is God calling us to be and do?

We are uniquely suited – individually & together. Come join us on the evening of September 17 when we’ll be working on answering these questions together.  That evening we’ll be spending some time identifying our assets and gifts and connections and opportunities…trying to discern God’s will for us together.

Our most basic need is to know God in Jesus– to know the work and fruit of the Holy Spirit living in us, and working among us.  To know that joy.

Do you know God & have a relationship with him?  If not, start there.

Has God given you eyes to see a particular need? 

This past week we saw people answering the call to help with an urgent need in response to Hurricane Harvey.
  • A furniture store became a shelter for people who had been flooded out of their homes.
  • A family that came to visit their cousins for a relaxing vacation ended up being evacuated when the water started rising, then got stranded in their car for a time.  They could have stayed in the shelter once they got there, but instead they went back out and helped rescue people and pets. 
In both instances, people used their unique situations to serve people in need.
Jesus calls us to “take up our cross and follow” him.  For Jesus, the cross is the willingness to do God’s will even to the point of giving up his life, to be the once-and-for-all sacrifice so that we might be forgiven.

The cross is for us all a crossroads, a deciding point.  We keep on carrying that cross because throughout our lives we will have many decision points.  Some will be large and some will be small.  Some we won’t even think much about or maybe even realize we’ve made.

Our lives are full of crossroads – points at which we will have the opportunity to say yes or no to God.

I had a friend years ago who was anticipating God’s call.  He didn’t know what it would be or when it would come, but he decided he would make sure he was ready to say yes.  He sold his house and moved into a smaller one so that he could be putting money away so that he could leave his job, if that’s what was needed.  He watched for opportunities to learn new skills, so that he would be prepared to use them in God’s service.  Instead of saying, “Not me, Lord, I have plans already,” he was saying, “Here I am, Lord, show me what you want me to do.”

Instead of making our own plans, we say yes to God when we look for ways to be a part of God’s plan.

We can say to God, “I’m not strong enough or smart enough or rich enough,” or we can trust God’s promise that he will equip us with whatever we need to do whatever he is calling us to.

We can pray and ask God to bless our plans, or we can pray to ask God to show us His plans.

Instead of asking, “How can we get people to come to church?”
…we can ask,
“How can we make sure that when people come here they meet Jesus and know how much he loves them?”

When I was a young adult thinking about what I wanted to do in my career life, I said I never wanted to own my own business because
  • I wanted a job with finite boundaries,
  • a job from which I could go home and not keep working,
  • a job that didn’t require long hours or weekends. 
Now, here I am, a pastor, a job which is all the things I said I didn’t want, because I have since discovered that I’d rather be a part of God’s plans, and help people know how much God loves them. All the jobs I had before this one were preparing me for this one.

We are each uniquely qualified for the plan God has for us. Our church is uniquely qualified to do the work that God has for us to do.
It may not look like we think it’s going to look or happen in the way that we expect it to happen, but if we’re willing to say yes to God, we will find those opportunities for which we have been prepared.

How is God calling you? 
How is God calling us? 
What is God’s plan for our community?





[2] Ken Medema, Moses, 1973, 1974 Word Music, LLC. Listen here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3uyfW1opFEk  Read lyrics here: http://www.sing-and-pray.de/texte/moses.html
[3] Van Gemeren, The New International Dictionary of the Old Testament - Divine Name with explanation—treats the first ehyeh as a divine name followed by the explanation “because I am.”  Although the name he declares to Moses means “I am,” mortal humanity is to call him Yahweh “he is.”  This divine name and its explanation “My name shall be ehyeh (I AM) because I am” emphasize the reality of God’s active and helpful presence in the form of a statement of confidence about the present and future.

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

Ever Get That Sinking Feeling?

This is a sermon that was preached on Sunday, August 13, 2017 at United Presbyterian Church, Sterling KS. Listen to the sermon here.
Read Matthew 14:22-33 and Psalm 119:30-39 here.

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A boy had grown up hearing the stories from his grandmother about an amazing family tradition.  His father, grandfather and great-grandfather had all been able to walk on water on their 18th birthday, and on that day they’d each walked across the lake.  So on the boy’s 18th birthday, he and his friends went out on the lake in a boat, and when they got to the middle, the boy carefully stood up and stepped over the side of the boat….and sank into the water.  His friends quickly pulled him to safety.  Furious and confused, he went to see his grandmother. 
“Grandma, it’s my 18th birthday.  Why can’t I walk across the lake like my dad, and his dad, and his dad?” 
Grandma looked deep into his troubled eyes and said, “Because you were born in August. Your dad, and grandfather and great-grandfather were all born in January.”

The boy looked puzzled. “Why does that matter?”

“Because, my dear, in January the lake is frozen.”[1]
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You’d think the kid might have figured this one out and known not to even try.  We might expect Peter would have known better than to try.  Then again, Peter and the disciples have just seen Jesus feed 20,000 people with two fish and five loaves of bread, so it was natural for Peter to be ready to try something big.  But soon Peter got that sinking feeling.

So let’s look at what was happening.

It is evening.  Jesus has fed the crowd and they’ve collected the twelve baskets of leftovers.  Jesus tells the disciples to take the boat and head across the lake to their next stop.  He sends the crowd away, and heads up the mountain to pray.
Out on the lake, the wind and waves became rough and the boat was being battered by the waves.  They were going against the wind.

This reminds me of kayaking in Morro Bay, going against the tide. The tide is strong in the harbor there as it flows in and out of the estuary. I think I spent the entire time rowing and rowing and rowing and rowing.  I thought I’d never get anywhere. By the time I finally got back to the dock, I was exhausted.  Maybe the disciples felt like that.

Jesus comes to the rescue.  He comes walking across the lake looking like a ghost upon the water.

This reminds me of Genesis 1 which says the Spirit of God was hovering over the waters of creation.  When we talked about God’s work in Genesis a couple of months ago, we talked about how God was organizing.  He was making order out of chaos.  God separated the water from the sky, and separated the water from the land.  In Proverbs 8:29 it says that God set the boundaries for the water. Water is like chaos. God is Lord of the chaos.

Then Peter bravely steps out on water. How amazing is that?  I wonder how that felt?  I wonder if, before he got scared by the wind and waves, he had a moment to appreciate how it felt to be standing on top of the water?  

Speaking of wind and waves….
What did one ocean say to the other ocean?
 . . . Nothing, it just waved.[2]
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One thing that has been bugging me about this scripture all week...
Why does Peter need Jesus to tell him to come? 
He says to Jesus, “If it is you, tell me to come to you on the water.”
If it is you…”
Matthew tells us that the disciples thought what they were seeing was a ghost.  The disciples were terrified and cried out in fear.  Jesus immediately calms their fears and encourages them by identifying himself.  “It’s me!”

The words he used may have triggered memories for the disciples of the scene in Exodus when God speaks to Moses.  When Moses asks God, “How will I tell them who sent me?” God says, “Tell them I AM has sent you.” (Ex. 3:13-15) Those words in Greek are the same as what Jesus says.  Eigo EimiIt is I. 

But even if those words don’t help the disciples recognize that Jesus is God in the flesh, the fact that he’s walking on water should. 
  • God created the world and is the one who told the waters where to go. 
  • God parted the waters of the Red Sea for Israel to escape from Egypt. 
  • God parted the water again when Israel crossed the Jordan River to go into the Promised Land.

Maybe Peter IS remembering all of this when he says, “If it is you, command me to come to you on the water.”

Peter is asking for proof

This is reminiscent of Gideon putting out the fleece and asking God to make it wet, another event in which we see God’s power over water. (Judges 6)

Moses also asked to see proof.  In Exodus 33 & 34, God tells Moses to keep heading for the promised land, but Moses is tired.  He’s been leading the people through the desert for a while.  Things keep going wrong, and in anger he’s smashed the ten commandments.  God’s giving him a new set, but Moses still needs assurance that God’s going to be with them as they go forward.  God promises that he will go with them (Ex 33:14), but Moses still has that sinking feeling.  He needs something more, so he asks God to show him God’s glory.  God does, and Moses goes back to the people encouraged and ready to keep walking forward.

The disciples probably needed some encouragement, too.  They’d only recently learned that Herod had killed John the Baptist.  They were probably sad and afraid.  Might Jesus be next?  What would happen to them?  Jesus had sent them away on this boat, and all night long they’d dealt with the wind and waves.  Now it’s early in the morning, just before dawn.  They haven’t slept.  They’re tired.  They’re pretty sure they’re seeing things.

So Peter asks.  Knowing Peter as we do from other stories in the gospels, this is another example of Peter being impulsive.  Peter is the one who blurts things out.  He makes a logical request, though.

If this is Jesus, and if Jesus is the Son of God, and he isn’t just a ghost and we aren’t imagining this, then he is Lord of all creation and has the ability to make a path on the water, just like he made a path through the water for Israel.

Jesus says, “Come!”  And Peter does it.  Peter walks on water.

But then Peter gets inside his own head.  He starts thinking too much about what’s actually happening.  He looks at the wind and the waves and he gets scared.  And he sinks. 

Anxiety sets in.  Along with the literal feeling of sinking down into the water, he may also have the funny feeling in his stomach that we describe as a sinking feeling.

Peter realizes he’s out of control of this situation, and focuses on that instead of focusing on the one who is in control.

Thinking too much gets us in trouble, too.

Take playing music, for instance.  There’s a lot of practicing involved to learn how to play, to learn a particular technique or piece of music, and that involves lots of thinking.  But when it comes to performing that piece, all that thinking will get in the way.

This is also true for Samurai fighters.  There’s a scene in the 2003 movie The Last Samurai in which Tom Cruise is being trained to be a Samurai fighter.  He’s having trouble, and the trainer tells him he’s got “too much mind.”  He’s thinking too much about what he’s doing, instead of letting things happen naturally.[3]

We’ve been watching a show on the Food Network called Food Network Star.  The contestants on this show compete to demonstrate their abilities as chefs and as on-air personalities.  The winner will get their own show.  One problem they all have to work to overcome is thinking too much when they’re on camera.  The coaches want them to respond naturally to what’s happening in the moment.  If they “get in their heads” and start thinking too much, they get hung up and can’t speak, or sound too stiff.

This is like what happens to Peter.  At first he’s fine, but then he gets to thinking too much and he can’t do it anymore.  He sinks.

Peter’s response to sinking, though, is just right.  He cries out to Jesus.  “Lord, save me!”

And immediately Jesus reaches out and pulls him up out of the water.

Then Jesus asks Peter, “You of little faith, why did you doubt?”

Peter DID have faith – enough to get him out of the boat in the first place.  And as Jesus himself has pointed out, it only takes faith the size of a little mustard seed to do great things, like walking on water.
But Peter did what we all do sometimes – we get distracted by the difficulties and we start to question. 
  • · Maybe I shouldn’t have tried this.
  • · Maybe I didn’t hear God right.
  • · Maybe this is too hard for me.
  • · Maybe I’m not strong enough, smart enough, good enough.

What we forget in those moments, like Peter did, is that it never was about our capabilities, it was about God.  God is strong enough, smart enough, wise enough. 

That doesn’t mean it’s going to be easy, and sometimes we think that because it’s not easy, then we must be doing the wrong thing.  God doesn’t promise us that it’s going to be easy.  In fact, he tells us quite the opposite.  Jesus says in John 16:33, “In this world you will have trouble, but take heart, for I have overcome the world.”


What about you?  In what ways have you been stepping out in faith? 
  • · Maybe you’re about to start a new job, a new school, and new project. 
  • · Maybe you’ve made a big move. 
  • · Maybe you’re running into challenges, or you’re starting to think about the potential for challenges.


If we look at the difficulties and the challenges, we will lose heart.  The wind and the waves are scary.  We will get discouraged.

I’m here to tell you to be encouraged.  God has promised us his presence and his strength.


So many scriptures tell us about this.  I like how Paul says in Romans 11:33: 
Oh the depths of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God!  How unsearchable his judgements and his paths beyond tracing out!
That morning on the lake, Peter was ready to let go of control and let God lead him, and then he started thinking too much, trying to regain control, and that’s when he lost it.

The problem is that when we’re looking at ourselves or our situations, we’re focusing on the trouble. 

But when we’re looking at God and remembering his strength and his promises, then we can put things in perspective.

How do we keep looking at God?  How do we keep our eyes fixed on Jesus instead of the wind and waves?

One way is prayer.  Like Peter, don’t hesitate to call out for help.  We may not always see how God responds to this right away.  Looking back often we can see that God did help us.

Another way is to keep reading the Bible and being reminded of God’s ways.  Next week during our Sunday school kick-off, we’re going to have an opportunity to share favorite verses from the Bible.  I’m betting that many of us will share verses or stories that have encouraged us in times of trouble, and helped us to remember God’s nearness and God’s strength.

One of the best way to keep our eyes on God is to worship.  That’s what the disciples do at the end of today’s story.  How could they not after all they’ve seen?  They worship Jesus and say, “Truly you are Son of God!”  It’s the first time in Matthew that they say something like this.[4]

When we worship God, we acknowledge God’s presence and God’s greatness.  We remember God’s promises.  We renew our trust and commitment.

Whenever we get that sinking feeling – whenever the doubts and fears start to take over –
Cry out to Jesus for help.
Reach out to God through his word.
Remember it’s God’s power that has us walking on water.
     God promises that he will never let us down.


[4] A commentary pointed this out, but I don’t remember which one.  I looked it up doing a word search in BibleGateway.com and sure enough, before this point in Matthew only the devil and demons have called Jesus the Son of God.  (Mat. 4:3 “If you are the Son of God, command these stones to become loaves of bread.”  Mat. 8:29 “What have you to do with us, Son of God? Have you come here to torment us before the time?”)

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Destined for Greatness


The Lord replied, “Don’t say, ‘I’m too young,’ for you must go wherever I send you and say whatever I tell you.” –Jeremiah 1:7 NLT

My grace is all you need. My power works best in weakness.” 
 --2 Corinthians 12:9

Do you ever get wrong numbers?  I do.  Apparently my phone number used to belong to Pedro, and Pedro has a lot of friends.  The first year I had this number, I got several calls a day for Pedro.  As I answered Pedro’s calls, I got to know a little bit about him.  For instance, Pedro speaks Spanish. So I learned to say, “Lo siento, esta numero no es Pedro.”  I’m sorry, this isn’t Pedro’s number.  I also learned that Pedro is a mechanic, and based on the number of calls he gets, I’m guessing he’s a good one.
I did my best to be polite and helpful to these callers, but there wasn’t much I could do, because I’m not a mechanic, but especially because I’m not Pedro.  Those calls weren’t for me.

Jeremiah’s response to God reminds me a bit of answering calls for Pedro.  “Are you calling me?  But I’m too young.  Surely you need someone older. You must have the wrong number.”

God doesn’t dial wrong numbers, but sometimes we respond as if he has. “Are you calling me?  But I’m too . . . “  How would you fill in the blank?  I’m too busy, I’m too old, too young, or maybe, I’m not strong enough, smart enough, or healthy enough.
Just like Jeremiah, God knew us before we were born and set us apart to be his people, to be his church, to be his ambassadors (2 Cor 5:20).  He calls us to trust in Jesus, to be transformed by the work of the Holy Spirit in us, and to go and do and say what we might not otherwise go and do and say were it not for the prompting of the Holy Spirit.

God is calling and we need to say yes.

Jeremiah was reluctant to say yes because he was just a teenager, so he said, “I’m too young.”  Moses was also reluctant.  He had a bunch of excuses.  He was already 40.  He’d already killed a man.  He didn’t speak well.  He said, “I’m not good enough.  I don’t know enough.  People won’t believe me.” (Ex 3-4)

The problem with all those excuses is that they are based on the wrong perspective.  Yes, we’re imperfect humans, but God is not calling us to do anything on our own.  God is calling us to work with him.  God is not too young or too old or too weak or unprepared.  God is not limited by our insufficiency.  In fact, God told the apostle Paul that weakness is where God works best.  Paul had a deficit, a problem that he called a thorn in his side.  He asked God to take it away because he thought it was getting in the way.  But God said no, “My grace is sufficient for you.  My power is made great in your weakness.” (2 Cor 12:8-9)

God is calling and we need to say yes because God promises to go with us and to give us his strength.

Maybe our weakness is vision.  We can’t say yes because we can’t see where we’re going if we do.  God doesn’t always show us the whole road.  If God had shown Jeremiah all that was ahead of him, Jeremiah might have gone running in the opposite direction. If you read the rest of Jeremiah, you’ll see that Jeremiah had a rough time.  Maybe he should have run away. That’s what Jonah did.  God told Jonah to go tell the people of Nineveh to repent, and Jonah knew that they would.  Jonah didn’t like those people, so instead he ran the opposite direction.  But God helped him to turn around and go to Nineveh anyway.

God tells Jeremiah, “I will go with you.”  God made the same promise to Abraham and Jacob and Moses and Joshua.  When Joshua was leading the people into the Promised Land, God said, “Be strong and courageous, for the Lord your God is with you wherever you go.” (Josh 1:9)

Joshua couldn’t have led the people all by himself.  We can’t do what God calls us to do alone either.  We need God because he’s the brains and the strength and the heart.  God promises to go with us, too.  We need God’s strength because we’re too much like aluminum.  Aluminum is the most abundant metal on earth and the third most abundant of all the elements.  It has all kinds of wonderful properties.  It’s light. It doesn’t burn easily.  It’s flexible.  We probably all have a roll of aluminum foil in our kitchens.  But except for foil, aluminum is not often used all by itself.  It’s too weak.  So it’s combined with other metals as an alloy.  The strength of these other metals combined with the lightness of aluminum makes it great for cars, airplanes, cooking utensils, and a whole bunch of other things.[1]  Aluminum can do more as an alloy than it can by itself.  And we can do more with God that we can on our own.
We need to say yes to God, and we need to trust in his strength, not our own.
God promises to go with us, and, like he tells Jeremiah, he will give us the words to say.  When Jesus is speaking to the crowd one day, he tells them the same thing.  He says, “When you need to speak, the Holy Spirit will give you the words to say.” (Luke 12:12)

Maybe that’s the thing we wonder about the most.  How does that work?  How does God give us the words to say?   Jesus gives us an answer to that.  He says, “Stay connected to me. Abide in me.”  We have to stay connected to the source of the words.
There’s an episode of I Love Lucy about this.[2]  Ricky’s mother has come to visit.  That by itself might be troubling, but there’s a bigger problem than usual.  Ricky’s mother only speaks Spanish, and Lucy doesn’t know any Spanish.  So, in usual Lucy fashion, she finds a solution.  She hires a man who speaks Spanish to tell her what to say.  The man is hidden in the kitchen and speaks into a radio that only she can hear.  It works great, until the man leaves unexpectedly.  Suddenly Lucy has no idea how to say anything because she’s lost her source.[3]
Like Lucy, we need to stay connected to God, our source.  The easiest, most basic way is through prayer.  In the moment in which we need to speak, we can just say, “God, help me speak.”  When there’s time for a longer prayer, I like to use an adaptation of an old celtic prayer: 
God be in my head and in my thinking, in my mouth and in my speaking,
in my heart and in my feeling, in my hands and in my doing,
in my feet and in my going.
Part of having God’s words is stocking up.  The more we read the Bible, the more those words become part of our thoughts, and the more the Holy Spirit can use them to help us know what to say.
Another way to stock up is to take time to write down the ways that God has helped you.  This helps us be able to remember them later when we face similar situations, or when we have the opportunity to help someone else in the same situation.  For example, those who are recovering from addictions are the best people to help others learn how to fight their addictions because they can tell about how God helped them.
God is calling.  We need to say yes based on his strength, not ours, we need to stay connected to God the source of that strength, and we need to stay ready for whatever God puts in front of us.

I learned this week at the citizen’s police academy about how policemen prepare to be ready.  As part of their training, they get sprayed with pepper spray and have to face an attacker in the midst of that crippling pain.  It sounds pretty awful.  Pepper spray is made out of habanero peppers, one of the hottest peppers.  Over a hundred times hotter than a jalapeƱo.   It makes your skin burn.  The worst part, though, is how it feels in your eyes.  When someone gets sprayed with pepper spray, they instinctively close their eyes to protect them.  But the police trainees have to respond to an attacker after they’ve been sprayed, so they have to open their eyes, even though that is going to make the pain even worse.

They do this for two reasons:  One is so they know what it’s like, but the other is so that they learn to do their jobs despite the difficulty, so they can be prepared to face difficult challenges.

Hopefully we will not have to deal with pepper spray in our faces, but we will face challenges when we say yes to God.  In fact, it’s been said that one way to know we’re on the right track in following God is when we find ourselves in difficult situations, especially if they’re situations we wouldn’t have been in if we weren’t following God.  T.S. Elliot said, “If you aren’t in over your head, how do you know how tall you are?”  If we aren’t in over our heads, how will we know how big God is?
Following God and trusting him in the midst of challenging situations is how we grow.  Being prophets to the world around us, we help others grow by providing God’s perspective about our situation and a word of hope as the antidote to despair.  This is what Jeremiah did for Israel, and what we do for each other when we answer God’s call.

How will you answer God’s call?[4] Sometimes when I don’t recognize the phone number as it rings in on my phone, so I assume it must be another phone call for Pedro, so I don’t answer it.  I just ignore it.  That’s one way to deal with God’s call, too.  We can just ignore it.  But unlike those people calling for Pedro, God’s not going away.  He will keep asking.
Saying yes might not be easy, but the best things in life never are.
God is calling us.  Let’s say yes to him.