It seems to be a trend lately that
the Sunday sermons correlate quite nicely with something I’m reading. After
hearing “Jesus Calls Ordinary People,” I read the following from J.I. Packer in
Never Beyond Hope:
“God, we
realize, can get on very well without any of us. So it should give us an
overwhelming sense of privilege that not only has he made us, loved and saved
us but also he takes us as his working partners for advancing his plans. Thus
Paul can call his colleagues and himself ‘Christ’s ambassadors’ and ‘God’s
fellow workers’ (2 Cor. 3:20; 6:1), and tell us all to see ourselves in our own
sphere as servants, ministers and workmen of God... And none of us is excluded,
for Scripture shows God using the oddest, rawest, most lopsided and flawed of
his children to further his work, at the same time as he carries on his
sanctifying strategy for getting them into better moral and spiritual shape.
This is a fact of enormous encouragement to sensitive souls who feel they are
not fit to serve him” (18).
It
does make you wonder why! When God is all-powerful, why does He enlist the help
of failures and bumblers, the naïve and idiotic, self-centered and sinful
people He created? I just happened to think of the Island of Misfit toys in the
TV story of Rudolph. We’re all a bunch of misfits and nitwits, but for some
reason God calls us to follow Him and to join Him in the work He is doing.
Perhaps the deeper question is this—knowing that we would all be so flawed, why
did He create us to begin with? Elyse Fitzpatrick comments,
“There,
in time, before time began, the Trinity existed in perfect happiness within his
person. He was not lonely; he never needed anything... But then, in overflowing
love, grace, and mercy, God chose to make a covenant within himself... In love
God made mankind, knowing what it would cost him, knowing all about Bethlehem
and Calvary and all our sins before they even existed” (Found in Him,
30-31).
He created us in love. He redeemed
us in love. He called us in love. And He gives us the ministry of loving one
another. “He chose us in Him before the foundation of the world, that we should
be holy and blameless before Him. In love He predestined us for adoption as
sons through Jesus Christ, according to the purpose of His will... as a plan
for the fullness of time, to unite all things in Him, things in heaven and
things on earth” (Ephesians 1:4-5,10 ESV). So God’s grand plan, cooked up
before time began, was that He would create people who would one day be united
with Him in love, even though it takes a rather convoluted path to get us
there.
J.I. Packer is right that this
should be an encouraging truth for us. It should also be astounding, humbling, empowering,
and perhaps even a little frightening to realize that the Creator of the
universe created us, loved us, and then called us to follow Him. It’s a
distinct privilege, but it’s also an enormous responsibility—one that we would
have no hope of fulfilling if it weren’t for the power of God made available to
us and through us. On our own we could never please God, but because He has
called us, He has also made possible the work He calls us to do. (See Hebrews
13:21.)
I like the prayer with which Packer
closes his chapter on Samson (35):
“Holy Father, you know us, you have loved us and redeemed
us through the blood-shedding of your Son, and exalted us to the glorious
dignity of being your children and heirs. Keep us mindful of our privileged
identity, and teach us to live lives that are Christlike in their maturity of
faith and hope, their consistency in aiming to please you, and their humility
in looking to you for the help we need at all times. Make us honest in
recognizing our weaknesses of character and conduct, and in repenting of our
sins. Lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil. So may we follow
your servant Samson in contending for the welfare of your people, and by your
grace go beyond him in self-denial and purity of heart and life. Through Jesus
Christ, our Savior and our Lord. Amen.”