Login / Signup

Free Access

God's Call

Sermon
At a recent seminar on spirituality, we were told (and this was backed up with data) that here in the UK we are not living in a secular age. All the pointers indicate that ours is a very spiritual age, although for most people, spirituality is unconnected with organised religion. There is a huge variety of spiritual expression and of health and well-being in a kind of DIY spirituality, in which people pick and mix to suit themselves.

People who are exploring this kind of spirituality are usually very open to God, who often works quickly within them. Apparently 76% of people claim to have had some sort of spiritual experience, varying from a smell, to a vision, to a feeling, to a ghost.

Some of those people are actually called by God to a different way of life. And some may be called by God without being aware that God has called them. Many people move into a career or a choice of partner because it feels right to them, but perhaps this feeling of rightness is how God calls them.

About six hundred years before Jesus was born, the poet we have come to know as Second Isaiah or Deutero-Isaiah was called by God and our Old Testament reading today is an account of his calling, written in his own poetry.

The complete book of Isaiah had several authors. The first writer - Isaiah himself - was born about eight hundred years before Jesus and a very clear account of his call is given in chapter 6. The second writer, Deutero-Isaiah, was a couple of centuries later and his call came just before the end of the Jewish exile in Babylon. This second writer had seen plenty of suffering in Babylon and struggles to understand the problem of suffering, in relation to God. Why does God allow suffering? What does it all mean? Second Isaiah gives his own observations and theology in his wonderful "Suffering Servant" poems in chapters 42-53, which have since become seen as an amazingly accurate description of Jesus.

When Deutero-Isaiah was called by God, the people had been suffering in exile for years under a foreign power, so Deutero-Isaiah's call is full not of God's warnings and threats, but of comfort and hope. In a hopeless situation, God offers his people hope through their new prophet:
Comfort, O comfort my people, says your God. Speak tenderly to Jerusalem, and cry to her that she has served her term, that her penalty is paid, that she has received from the Lord's hand double for all her sins.

The punishment is over, the price has been paid and it is time now to prepare for the way to recovery. So the call continues:

"In the wilderness prepare the way of the Lord, make straight in the desert a highway for our God. Every valley shall be lifted up, and every mountain and hill be made low; the uneven ground shall become level, and the rough places a plain. Then the glory of the Lord shall be revealed, and all people shall see it together, for the mouth of the Lord has spoken."

Like the Suffering Servant songs, these are well-known words because they have been picked up by the gospel writers and used to refer to John the Baptist. But in the gospels the meaning has been slightly altered to read, "A voice of one crying in the wilderness", since John the Baptist came from the wilderness. In the Isaiah version it's the people who are in the wilderness, so the passage reads, "A voice of one crying, "In the wilderness.."

The Isaiah passage continues, because Isaiah wants God to tell him what he should say to the people:

A voice says, "Cry out!" And I said, "What shall I cry?"

The answer is that he's to tell the people that even though everything on earth eventually fades and dies, including human beings, God always remains steadfast and strong. God will never fade and will never fail. And the final verse is a wonderful description of how God views his people and how he will deal with his people:

He will feed his flock like a shepherd; he will gather the lambs in his arms, and carry them in his bosom, and gently lead the mother sheep.

Perhaps if we look at our own lives we can see a similar pattern to the pattern of Israelite society. Like the Israelites of old, we too have bad times, but during those bad times God tenderly carries us and cares for us. And these bad times are invariably followed by good times. The danger is that like the Ancient Israelites, we tend to forget God during the good times and look for him only when we desperately need him because there is nowhere else to turn.

Our non-churchgoing society has a noticeable spiritual hunger, a hunger which it tries to satisfy through all kinds of pick-and-mix alternatives to organised religion. Just as God called Deutero-Isaiah, perhaps God is calling people now to go out from the Church into society, to tell people about our Suffering Servant Jesus, about how Jesus can still impact on our lives today and to tell people about God's steadfastness and deep love for them.

Are you one of those people? Is God calling you? Have you asked him what you should say?

UPCOMING WEEKS
In addition to the lectionary resources there are thousands of non-lectionary, scripture based resources...
Signup for FREE!
(No credit card needed.)
Easter 4
28 – Sermons
160+ – Illustrations / Stories
33 – Children's Sermons / Resources
23 – Worship Resources
34 – Commentary / Exegesis
5 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Easter 5
33 – Sermons
140+ – Illustrations / Stories
34 – Children's Sermons / Resources
30 – Worship Resources
35 – Commentary / Exegesis
5 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Easter 6
30 – Sermons
180+ – Illustrations / Stories
32 – Children's Sermons / Resources
23 – Worship Resources
31 – Commentary / Exegesis
5 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Plus thousands of non-lectionary, scripture based resources...
Signup for FREE!
(No credit card needed.)

New & Featured This Week

Emphasis Preaching Journal

David Kalas
In the sometimes-tiresome debate over science and scripture with respect to creation, it’s easy to become distracted. While the argument typically requires a focus on the how, we may lose sight of the what. And so, for just a moment, let me invite us to think for a moment about what God created.
Mark Ellingsen
Frank Ramirez
Bonnie Bates
Bill Thomas
Acts 8:26-40
As a local church pastor, I was often asked if I would baptize a child whose family were not members of the church. Some churches rebelled against this, but I remember this scripture — the hunger for understanding and inclusion of the Eunuch and Philp’s response — to teach and share and baptize in the name of our God. How could we turn anyone away from the rite of baptism?

StoryShare

Peter Andrew Smith
“Dad, I think you worked a miracle.” Rolf slowly walked around the tree. “After that windstorm, I assumed this tree was as good as gone.”

“We just needed to give the branches time to heal and come back,” Michael replied.

 “I know, but so many of them were battered and broken I figured that it couldn’t recover. Now though it looks just like it did before the storm.” Rolf paused. “Do you think it will bear any fruit this summer?”

CSSPlus

John Jamison
Object: A live plant that produces fruit, and a broken branch from that plant. I used a tomato plant from a local greenhouse. Ideally, find a plant with blossoms or small fruit already growing. If you use a different kind of fruit-producing plant, just change the script to fit.

* * *

Hello, everyone! (Let them respond.) Are you ready for our story today? (Let them respond.) Excellent!

The Immediate Word

Christopher Keating
Katy Stenta
Thomas Willadsen
Mary Austin
Elena Delhagen
Dean Feldmeyer
Quantisha Mason-Doll
For April 28, 2024:
  • On The Way To Gaza by Chris Keating based on Acts 8:26-40. On the way to Gaza, Philip discovers the startling ways the Spirit of God moves across borders, boundaries, customs, and traditions.
  • Second Thoughts: Abiding by Katy Stenta based on John 15:1-8.
  • Sermon illustrations by Mary Austin, Tom Willadsen, Elena Delhagen, Dean Feldmeyer.

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
Call to Worship:

Jesus is the vine, we are the branches. In our service today, let us absorb from the vine all the nourishment we need.


Invitation to Confession:

Jesus, sometimes our branches become cut off from the vine.
Lord, have mercy.

Jesus, sometimes our branches are withered.
Christ, have mercy.

Jesus, sometimes we fail to produce good fruit.
Lord, have mercy.

SermonStudio

Stan Purdum
We will meet Psalm 22 in its entirety on Good Friday, but here the lectionary designates just verses 23-31. The lectionary psalms generally illuminate the week's First Lesson, which in this case is about the covenant initiated by God with Abraham and Sarah in Genesis 17. The nine verses from this psalm, while not inappropriate, nonetheless leave us looking for an obvious connection with the First Lesson.

John S. Smylie
I think some people are natural-born gardeners. Our Lord grew up in a society that was familiar with agriculture. The images that he used to explain the ways of his Father in heaven are familiar to his audience. Growing up, my closest experience to agriculture was living in, "the Garden State." Most people, when they pass through New Jersey, are surprised to see that expression on the license plates of vehicles registered in New Jersey. Most folks traveling through New Jersey experience the megalopolis, the corridor between New York City and Washington DC.
Ron Lavin
A pastor in Indiana went to visit an 87-year-old man named Ermil, who was a hospital patient. A member of his church told the pastor about this old man who was an acquaintance. "He's not a believer, but he is really in need," the church member said. "I met him at the county home for the elderly. He's a lonely old man with no family and no money."

Paul E. Robinson
"Love is a many splendored thing...." Or so we heard Don Cornwall and the Four Aces sing time and again. Of course you or I might have other words to describe love, depending on our situation.

Love. "I love you." "I love to play golf." "I just love pistachio lush!" "It's tough to love some people." "Jesus loves me, this I know."

Love.

Special Occasion

Wildcard SSL