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I talked recently with an ELCA college
president and commented that our colleges and universities are seeking to
strengthen ties with the church. He responded, “Of course, but it’s not just
about connections. The colleges see that Lutheran doctrine has great value
for their own work.” He named the concept of Christian vocation as a prime
example of this usefulness. It opens windows on meaning and purpose for
students and educators.
In many settings, Lutherans are showing
renewed enthusiasm for the pragmatic value of Martin Luther’s insights into
the callings of every Christian. These are useful truths. People recognize
opportunities, make plans, and even face hardships more effectively and
faithfully when they realize that God is calling them to service in that
situation.
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Congregations can use the concept of vocation to
affirm and support people as they explore Christ's purpose in their own
lives and make practical plans, week after week, for serving the world. |
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The
ministry in daily life movement is strong and growing in the ELCA. When the
gracious call of God to witness and to service is proclaimed, people get it.
Christian life makes more sense with this insight — for rostered leaders and
for all God’s people.
Primary Callings
The doctrine of Christian vocation explicates our primary daily roles. If
you are a pastor, deaconess, associate in ministry, or diaconal minister,
you routinely acknowledge that you are called. An assembled part of the
church took action to assert its confidence that God called you to a
particular place of service. Our grammar points to the Christian meaning of
a called identity: Keisha is a deaconess. Louise is a pastor. Craig
is a
diaconal minister. Jim is an associate in ministry.
A recognition of vocation is similarly useful
for every Christian. Most have a primary role accepted from God for the good
of the whole. Again, note the grammar: Jeff is a farmer. Jose is a
professor. Andy is a regular hospice volunteer. Tu is a full time parent.
Martha is a police officer. Seth is retired. An understanding of vocation
allows these people to know that God calls them to these roles. These
callings are their prime places for giving public definition to what it
means to be Christian. There is affirmation and satisfaction in knowing one
is called by God to the work that fills one’s days.
Truth Speaking
The concept of vocation is useful when we consider the church as steward and
proclaimer of truth. At ordination, consecration or commissioning, and at
each installation to a ministerial office, pastors and rostered lay leaders
commit themselves to fulfill their public ministries in accordance with
Scripture and the Lutheran Confessions. These are our standards of truth,
but this commitment is not about getting the words right for the words’
sake. Rather, the commitment acknowledges that one is called to know and
speak the truth for the sake of God’s people.
Scripture and Confessions have a precisely
parallel function for all Christians, rostered and not rostered. Every
Christian is called to know the truth, not for the sake of knowledge but
because true understanding and true speech serve God’s purposes. Each
Christian is called to reflect on life through faith’s normative historical
expressions so that his or her words and work will be toward the heart of
(“in accordance with”) God’s work.
Witness in the World
It is useful for all the baptized to recognize that God’s call is always for
the sake of the world. Each Christian holds many offices in the realms of
faith, nature, and society–member of a family, friend, citizen, member of a
congregation, physical and emotional being, sexual being, witness, earth
dweller, neighbor. The multiplicity of roles is bewildering, but centering
on call can bring clarity. In each of our many roles we act at the call of
God and for the world. Even when life feels most fractured, God renews our
focus by pointing us toward the world.
The ELCA’s vision and expectations for its
rostered leaders are that each aspect of their lives will enhance the
clarity of the gospel — for the world’s sake. This church has the same
vision and expectations for every member — that they will live to enhance
the clarity of the gospel — for the world’s sake. That goal focuses,
unifies, and clarifies one’s many callings.
The colleges and universities featured in
this issue illustrate the utility of the doctrine of vocation. The schools
are laboratories where students and teachers explore the world and myriad
ways to serve the world. Similarly, congregations can use the concept of
vocation to affirm and support people as they explore Christ’s purposes in
their own lives and make practical plans, week after week, for serving the
world.
The Lutheran understanding of vocation is a
useful tool, an essential one in the church’s workshop.
Resources for Faith and Life
Congregations can help members of all ages use Luther’s insights on
vocation to experience the unity of faith and life. One of the best
approaches is the four-unit, small-group resource Connections: Faith
and Life, ELCA, 1997, available from Augsburg Fortress.
Three new resources are great for
individual reading or group discussion:
- D. Michael Bennethum, Listen! God
is Calling! Luther Speaks of Vocation, Faith and Work, Augsburg
Fortress (Lutheran Voices), 2003;
- Marc Kolden, The Christian’s
Calling in the World, Centered Life (Luther Seminary), 2002; and
- Mark Greene, Supporting
Christians at Work: a Practical Guide for Busy Clergy, ELCA,
2003.
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Stanley N. Olson is the executive
director of the Division for Ministry, ELCA, Chicago, Illinois |