Have you ears to hear, have you eyes to see, have you a heart ready and willing to feel and know the call of God to your life’s work? Read any statistics lately? Is there something you hate?
The town of Wittenberg was being descended on by hundreds of devout people for the feast of All Saints. All Saints was a mass, due to be held the following day, in which particular stress would be laid on praying for the departed. The year was 1517. Tetzel was an experienced vendor of Indulgences. These were written papal pardons issued in exchange for money. Tetzel entered a neighboring town in solemn procession and began his sermon:
Listen to the voices of your dear dead relatives and friends, beseeching you and saying, ‘Pity us, pity us. We are in dire torment from which you can redeem us for a pittance. . .’ Hear the father saying to his son, the mother to her daughter, ‘We bore you, nourished you, brought you up, left you our fortunes, and you are so cruel and hard that now you are not willing for so little so set us free. . .’ Remember that you are able to release them, for
‘As soon as the coin in the coffer rings,
The soul from purgatory springs.’14
The truth, as the monk and lecturer Martin Luther knew full well, was that half the money was going straight into Albert of Brandenburg’s pockets to help pay off the debts he had accumulated through paying for the position of Bishop. The pope, in order to reimburse himself, issued a Bull of Indulgence with the intention that the other half of the money collected would go on the rebuilding of St Peter’s Basilica.
This kind of corruption was already well known to Luther and was an unbearable stench in his nostrils. The arrival of Tetzel and news of the ridiculous sermon he had preached to rouse the faithful, was the last straw. Luther only followed the normal procedure for opening a university debate: he nailed his Ninety-Five Theses to the door of the Castle Church of Wittenberg. Yet, the timing turned out to be crucial. A hundred years earlier and he might have been burned at the stake. Now, the people were ready, and the people were flocking to Wittenberg for All Saints Day. Luther couldn’t have known at the time that he was helping to usher in a new epoch, that, flawed and sinful though he was, he would be a midwife at the birth of the modern era.
It is the profoundest of mysteries that God can put in your heart a very strong objection to something that is so heartfelt that you are unable to speak of it without bursting into tears. Yet, confront me with the very same injustice and, while I see the wrongness of it, the tears do not flow. I haven’t got the call. You have. What will you do with it?
“My food,” said Jesus, “is to do the will of Him who sent me and to finish His work” (John 4:34). It is only in doing what we were sent to do that there is food for our souls. Until we find it, we will be forever trying to fill that hunger with other things. Find your food.
Discussion:
1. Is there something good that you love doing so much that you forget the clock?
2. Is there something, not related to your personal comfort, that you feel so strongly about that you can’t talk about it without feeling like you want to cry?
3. What ordinary incidents have you experienced that have led to an extraordinary outcome?
4. Have you a story of some upsetting event that led to other events that were to be of great benefit to other people?
8. Campbell, Hero with a Thousand Faces, 51.
9. Kirkby, Nevertheless, 30.
10. González-Balado, Always the Poor, 16.
11. Pollock, John Wesley, 92.
12. The visit to Newgate is vividly told in: Hatton, Betsy, 160–163.
13. Pollock, Fistful of Heroes, 31. Altogether, so many died while waiting to disembark, while on board ship, and then while in their first year of work on the plantations that the total death rate was around 50%.
14. Bainton, Here I Stand, 59–60.
1:3. The Reluctant Warrior
When God Has His Way
The Bible is littered with them: Moses, Gideon, Jeremiah, Isaiah. They are people with greatness in them but who can’t see it. Gideon does not recognize the divine portrait of him: “mighty man of valor.” The reluctance of Moses goes far beyond modesty—he is insistent that he is absolutely not the man for the job. The refusal of the call takes place at the point where there is a jarring dissonance between heaven and earth, a clash of perspectives, a collision of narratives. Trouble is, there is one party to the argument that won’t back down. God has never been known to agree to disagree. He is not interested in managing such conflicts towards a mutually agreeable outcome. Or is he?
Perhaps the most celebrated biblical instance of a reluctant recipient of a heavenly summons is Moses. He stands out because he objects to God calling him, not with a single voicing of self-doubt (as in Jeremiah, for instance), but in a succession of five increasingly strident objections. The ludicrous act of trying five times to refuse God is so striking that many Old Testament scholars have put this multiple objection down to the existence of a number of different source documents that are here rather clumsily sewn together resulting in needless repetition. But this negotiation with God is, of course, something that proves entirely characteristic of Moses later on. In Exodus 33–34, Moses is seen bargaining with God in four successive waves, each one succeeding in some way until God, who at the start of the bargaining was ready to destroy Israel and start all over again with Moses, promises first to relent, then to send an angel, then his own presence, and finally to reveal more about this “I AM” name that he gave at the burning bush. It is as though, on that later occasion, Moses wins. But here, on this first encounter with, God must triumph over Moses. Even here, however, there are some gains for Moses:
Moses says, “Who am I to be doing this?” God says, “I will be with you.”
Moses says, “What will I say when they say ‘who sent you?’” Moses says, “Say I AM has sent you.”
Moses says, “But supposing they don’t believe me?” God says, “I will give you these signs.”
Moses says, “But I’m slow of speech (literally ‘heavy of mouth’), God says, “I will be with your mouth.”
Moses says, “Nope. Send someone else.” Angry, God says, “I am sending Aaron to be your spokesman.”
Moses walks away from the encounter with the promise of God’s presence to be with him and help him speak, with the beginnings of a revelation of the name and nature God, the ability to work miraculous signs and the assistance of his brother Aaron.