Called to Dream
A sermon given by Rev. Jonathan Scanlon
Genesis Presbyterian Church
January 18, 2015 - The 2nd Sunday of Ordinary
Time
1 Samuel, chapter 3,
begins very poetically with the words, “the word of the Lord was rare in those
days; visions were not widespread.” The Hebrew word translated as “rare” means
not only uncommon, but also precious. And God chooses Samuel to tell this rare
and precious word to the people. If God’s word was considered rare in those
days, do we question if it is borderline absent from the world today? Do we
know what is it like to live in a world where hearing the word of the Lord is
rare?
This was a time of
spiritual desolation, religious corruption, political unrest and social
upheaval. In other words, bad things were
happening at the time the
young boy Samuel came on the scene
in the Bible.
It is Samuel who will be tapped as the prophet to make room for and identify the
King both Saul
and David. The people did not have a vision of how they were to live together and dreams of building the kingdom of God because they were not being lead. The leadership over ancient Israel was corrupt,
and not doing their job. Of course,
Israel cannot see God in and among the community
if Eli, the main priest of the day, remains too blind to see how his sons are abusing power.
Eli's sons have been using their political status as priests
to satisfy their own desires. They were considered scoundrels who had no regard
for the Lord or for their duties
to the people as priests. Israel cannot listen to God when the priests
are using their positions of privilege to satisfy and fatten themselves. When
the religious and political leaders
of the day are blind to sin, the word of the Lord becomes more difficult for the people to hear and apply.
It was a time for a change. This priestly family
of Eli's could no longer call all the shots and their poor choices
were guiding the people farther and farther away from God. God chose to intervene and to look within the body of people for new leadership to preserve God's presence with the chosen community. The Lord took a woman named Hannah
who could not have children and blessed her with a son who she named Samuel because
God had heard her prayers
asking for a child.
Hannah allowed her son to study with Eli the priest because
she was so grateful to God for giving her a child.
Samuel's call to be a prophet
came one night when he was
sleeping in the temple. This is a story of delayed recognition of God's call. Though he worked alongside
Eli in the house of the Lord doing priestly
things for the people of Israel, the scripture
is quick to mention that Samuel did not yet know the LORD,
and the word of the LORD had not yet been revealed to him.
Faith is not something we do but rather it is what calls and redirects our life to live for God. Working
with a priest, working in the church and doing church
work out in the community
does not instill faith in us.
We may come to know more about ourselves; we may come to grow in our understanding of God, growing
in our faith through working with others, but it must begin with a belief in a God who
calls us to live for something greater
than ourselves and to find our place
in building the Kingdom to come. We must first respond to God's call in faith for direction in our lives.
To be called by God means that God knows one's name
and, in knowing one's name, exercises a more personal and powerful
influence on the person. Samuel could not hear and understand God's call
for his life by himself, and needed Eli's help to listen
and discern. Listening to God's call for our lives requires both the age and wisdom of
Eli supporting the eager youth and energy of Samuel.
Without Eli's priestly expertise
and years of personal experience with God, Samuel would not have come to know God and hear the Word of the Lord to share with the people of Israel.
Ours is a God who knows us each individually and wants to be made known to us. Earlier we
heard the reading of one of my favorite of Psalms,
number 139, which reminds us what it
is like to be in relationship with God. The Psalmist describes what is like to know God and to understand how we are known by God.
It is only because God is universally present, ultimately powerful,
and all-knowing that provides for such a profound
sense of an immediate and deeply personal
relationship with God our creator. God is our most constant
companion with us at
every moment. Transcendent enough to overcome any earthly
power, immanent enough to be present in the midst of whatever
happens, and gracious
enough to care about the destiny of each
of God's creatures.
God instructs
Samuel first to listen. We all need some
lessons in listening, and a prophet cannot
speak for God unless he first takes time to be attentive
and hear what he is to say. The name
Sam-U-el literally means "God
has heard".
God has heard the cries of Israel and is ready to respond
with a new direction in leadership.
This narrative is full of symbolism like the mention of the lamp of God that had not yet gone out.
Sure,
the actual temple’s candle
may still have been burning
at that moment but, more importantly, this texts reassures us God had not left the temple. God has not left the people to fend for themselves. God only
seems to be sleeping. But God is much more present
than we know. God calls many to speak truth to power and lead communities toward righteousness.
This
weekend we honor the life of Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr. Unlike Samuel, Dr. King did not hear the voice of God call to him in a church,
though God did have a plan for his life that was much different than what he imagined growing
up.
It has been documented that originally Martin Luther King Jr. did not aspire to be a national civil
rights leader. He had gone into the ministry mostly
because his father
was a pastor, and he always did what “Daddy” King wanted
for him to do. Martin
would have preferred a more quiet life as a professor, possibly
aspiring to become President of his beloved
Morehouse College someday.
Through an odd turn of events, as a
young pastor, he was thrust
into the forefront
of the Montgomery bus boycott.
He came home late one night, tired and frightened.
He wasn't in a church,
but rather in his kitchen
when the phone rang. An angry and disgruntled voice on the other end said, "We're gonna get you!”
King stood in his kitchen, frozen
in fear. He wanted to call Daddy
King for reassurance and advice. But Daddy King wasn't there. Then he said it was like he heard a voice say, "Martin, you do what’s right. You stand up for justice. I'll be with you." He had heard his name called. He knew God wanted him to serve.
He knew God wanted him to dream.
His life was forever changed
and through his life, used so well by God, the world was
forever changed.
Like Samuel, we may be set apart for service,
participating in the life of the church and having some years of religious instruction
without really knowing
the Lord in a direct and
personal way. And, like Samuel,
we too may be sleeping.
We do not fully sense the divine all around us. Exhaustion
has so dulled our hearts, minds and souls that we can work all day, even in the temple, but never hear the one God who has heard us. But the voice of God calls our lives to
live for something more and will not allow us to hide.
Like Dr. King we are called to dream.
We are to allow ourselves the time to listen to God's Word for us through scripture,
through prayer, through our worshiping in community and through
what we experience in our broken and fearful
world. We are to speak truth to power and execute the kingdom
and righteousness here on earth. We,
too, are called each in our
own individual way.
We are called to listen for the voice of God and
to hear what disruptive and dangerous direction
God's call may, and
will, lead. God's voice is one
that creates life as well as changes life, forever.
Dr. William
Willimon, a Bishop in the Methodist
church, once received
a phone call while he served as the campus minister at Duke University. An angry father of one of
his students explained how upset he was with Willimon and held him personally responsible for the poor choice the father felt his daughter was about to make in life.
"Me?" Dr. Willimon asked.
As it turns
out the girl's father was upset because
his graduate school bound daughter had just informed
him she planned,
from his perspective, to throw it all away and go live with
Presbyterian missionaries in Haiti. "Isn't that absurd!" the father
shouted over the phone. "She earns a degree
in mechanical engineering from Duke and all she plans to do
with it is to go dig ditches in Haiti."
Willimon quickly
quipped, "Well, I doubt she's received much training in the Engineering Department here at Duke for that kind of work, but she's probably
a fast learner and will get the hang of ditch digging in a few months." This only irritated
the already fuming father even more.
“Look,” he
said, “this is not a laughing matter. You are completely irresponsible to have
encouraged her to do this. I hold you personally responsible.”
As the
conversation progressed, Willimon pointed out that both her well-meaning, but
obviously unprepared, parents were the one who started this ball rolling in
their daughter’s life. They were the ones who had her baptized as an infant,
read Bible stories to her as a child, took her to Sunday school and church, and
let her attend the events of the high school youth group. William Willimon
reminded the father, “You’re the one who introduced her to Jesus, not me.”
The father
meekly responded, “But all we ever wanted her to be was a Presbyterian.”
Where and to
what is God calling you in this world where the word of the Lord is rare? Where
and to what is God calling this church? Do what’s right. You stand up for justice. I'll be with you.
Speak Lord, for your servants are listening. In the name of the Father, and of
the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. May it be so? Amen.