When called by God, following
God’s call was one of the toughest things I ever had to
do. And what made it especially hard is that the same questions kept coming up
every few years until I’d settled them for
good.
In college I sensed God
calling me to care for the poor, hungry and oppressed in other nations. And
after graduating, I went to do just that, first in Indonesia and later in the
Dominican Republic. Case closed, right?
No, when Karen and I had
three babies in the first five years of marriage, it got confusing. Yes, I had
heard a call, but now I had new responsibilities and new opportunities to make
money. I had to go back to God and pray about it all over again. What to do? It
was a struggle.
How do you know you’re
called by God?
How about you? How do you
know if you’ve been called by God? The first thing I had to
recognize was that we’re all called by God.
Paul writes, encouraging everyone: “I urge you to live a
life worthy of the calling you have received”
(Eph. 4:1). We are all called by God. I could run, but I couldn’t
hide from that call.
Beyond that, I had the
example of God calling people in Scripture. The conversation between Paul and
Jesus as recounted in Acts was especially helpful. Paul shares the story with
King Agrippa. He says, Jesus told me this: “I
have appeared to you to appoint you as a servant and as a witness of what you
have seen of me and what I will show you”
(Acts 26:16).
It’s
a simple sentence, but it has a lot to teach us about the calling of God.
Specifically, we can see six aspects of a call that apply to us.
6 Signs to Know You Are
Called By God
1. Revelation
“I have appeared to you…”
The principle of revelation
is that Jesus has made himself known to you.
Have you had a revelation?
Has Jesus made himself known to you? Think back to the first time you ever came
to grips with the person of Jesus. I was about eight. I remember my mom sharing
the story of how Jesus had been so cruelly tortured. In that moment, Jesus made
himself known to me.
Jesus appeared to Paul in a
dramatic fashion; to others of us he reveals himself in a more subtle way. We
are accountable for the glimpse of Jesus which we have been given. This is the
start of our relationship with him.
If you have not met the
person of Jesus Christ, then you are missing God’s
plan for your life. He may not be as dramatically obvious as he was with the
apostle Paul, but He does desire to appear to you.
This prompts a question: Have
you seen Jesus and responded to him?
2. Role
“…to appoint you…”
God made us with an inbuilt
need for purpose. The principle of appointment is that Jesus wants to give you
a role.
The Bible says that God is
not willing that any should perish and he has enlisted us to make sure that
they don’t. When an army recruit enlists, he is given a rank
and a role. When Jesus appears to us, he not only does so to save us, but to
save the world through us.
Dwight L. Moody said, “For
years Jesus has been leading me where I never could have gone myself.”
Where has he been leading you?
Many of us have never
listened for or responded to Jesus’ appointment. And in
the absence of information, we make assumptions about what we should be doing.
Let me encourage you to block out time in your calendar just to pray and hear
from God about his appointment.
What is the role that he has
given to you?
3. Servanthood
“…to appoint you as a servant…”
The principle is that you are
called first to be a servant.
What does Jesus appoint us to
do? First, he calls us to learn the role of a servant. This may have been
easier to learn in Jesus’ day when class
distinctions and slave status were prevalent.
Too many Christians have
never made Jesus Lord of their lives. He is their savior, but not their master.
We have become a church of takers rather than servants.
Gen. William Booth, founder
of the Salvation Army, said, “The greatness of a
man’s power is the measure of his surrender.”
Have you surrendered your house, your car, your dreams, your family to Jesus?
Only after we take up His agenda can we receive His commission. If you’ve
done so, then, with Paul, you’ve taken on the role
of a servant.
Have you responded to His
call to serve?


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