2nd Opinion: Demystifying the ministerial calling

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“I am working in the field of adoption. I wasn’t able to find a church position after I finished seminary.”

“I oversee the freshmen dorms at a state university. You would not believe what comes through my door, but I am not sure this qualifies as Christian vocation.”

molly marshall200Molly MarshallThese comments came from two 30-somethings, concerned about their fidelity to a call from God. I visited a sister seminary recently and listened to these graduates describe their work, both feeling as if they were not really in ministry.

It is time to demystify our language about what it means to be “called” and how we exercise our giftedness. This will grow increasingly important as we realize guaranteed lifetime employment in a congregational setting most likely will become less of an option for seminary graduates. Rather than relegating people who serve in other contexts to a differing status, it is important to rethink our theology of vocation.

Rather than the old language of “full-time Christian vocation,” which meant paid pastoral staff work or long-term missionary appointment, our day requires a more comprehensive and imaginative description.

Some of the most important ministry will occur beyond the walls of the church. Those not considered religious “professionals” will offer much of it.

Educators, engineers, endocrinologists, essayists, entrepreneurs and entertainers—to just name a few “e” professions—have distinctive contributions to make, and they can be expressions of gifted Christian vocation.

What makes a gift ‘spiritual’?

Are the gifts we use in the service of the church different from the gifts we use in our other work? What makes a gift “spiritual?”


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Jürgen Moltmann helps correct some misconceptions about the nature of spiritual gifts by linking call and endowment. Instead of opposing natural gifts to spiritual gifts, he sees that when people are called (1 Corinthians 7:17), God “puts their whole life at the service of the coming kingdom, which renews the world.”

When offered to Christ, all gifts become charges, and nothing can be called unclean. Powers and energies a person might regard as mundane can become instruments of the Spirit.

New thinking about vocation can assist in bridging the secular-sacred divide that has long plagued Christian thinking. Emergent Christianity finds these categories a false dichotomy and strives for a porous interface.

Anything labeled “secular” seems of negligent concern to God—or Christians, for that matter. Cultural and civic life matter, and Christian witness in them must be strengthened. Indeed, there are many channels for God’s work in the world, and divine power enlists human agency wherever possible.

Serving the common good

As a person engaged in theological education, I care deeply about preparing people for certain leadership roles for congregations, but I do not see our school’s mission as confined to that. We are preparing people to serve the common good in myriad ways.

There is a mission to humanity more encompassing than churches often envision. Our graduates exercise their callings through social services, public policy, collegiate ministries, health care, teaching in public schools, journalism, sustainable farming, hospice and counseling. All are contexts for transformative investment.

And all are worthy of being considered Christian vocation. Even as we encourage churches to “cultivate a culture of calling” so new generations of pastors will emerge, we must not neglect a wider vision of vocation for the whole people of God.

I had an opportunity to speak again with these capable Christian ministers, and I inquired whether the lectures I presented affirmed what they are doing is truly Christian vocation.

They said they sensed a new dignity in their professions and they had not “left ministry.” I commended them for their remarkable work. They have opportunity to be the hands and feet, indeed the very presence, of Christ with those whose lives they intersect.

Molly T. Marshall is president and professor of theology and spiritual formation at Central Baptist Theological Seminary. Her “Thinking Theologically” column appears biweekly at ABPnews.com. Her weekly blog “Trinitarian Soundings” can be found at www.cbts.edu.

 


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