In the narrative of which these words
form part, we have a remarkable instance of a Divine
call, and the manner in which it is our duty to meet
it. Samuel was from a child brought to the house
of the Lord; and in due time he was called to a sacred
office, and made a prophet. He was called, and
he forthwith answered the call. God said, “Samuel,
Samuel.” He did not understand at first
who called, and what was meant; but on going to Eli
he learned who spoke, and what his answer should be.
So when God called again, he said, “Speak, Lord,
for Thy servant heareth.” Here is prompt
obedience.
Very different in its circumstances
was St. Paul’s call, but resembling Samuel’s
in this respect, that, when God called, he, too, promptly
obeyed. When St. Paul heard the voice from heaven,
he said at once, trembling and astonished, “Lord,
what wilt Thou have me to do?” This same
obedient temper of his is stated or implied in the
two accounts which he himself gives of his miraculous
conversion. In the 22nd chapter he says, “And
I said, What shall I do, Lord?” And in the
26th, after telling King Agrippa what the Divine Speaker
said to him, he adds what comes to the same thing,
“Whereupon, O King Agrippa, I was not disobedient
unto the heavenly vision.” Such is the
account given us in St. Paul’s case of that
first step in God’s gracious dealings with him,
which ended in his eternal salvation. “Whom
He did foreknow, He also did predestinate;” “whom
He did predestinate, them He also called” here
was the first act which took place in time “and
whom He called, them He also justified, and whom He
justified, them He also glorified.” Such
is the Divine series of mercies; and you see that
it was prompt obedience on St. Paul’s part which
carried on the first act of Divine grace into the second,
which knit together the first mercy to the second.
“Whom He called, them He also justified.”
St. Paul was called when Christ appeared to him in
the way; he was justified when Ananias came to baptize
him: and it was prompt obedience which led him
from his call to his baptism. “Lord, what
wilt Thou have me to do?” The answer was, “Arise,
and go into Damascus; and there it shall be told thee
of all things which are appointed for thee to do.”
And when he came to Damascus, Ananias was sent to
him by the same Lord who had appeared to him; and he
reminded St. Paul of this when he came to him.
The Lord had appeared for his call; the Lord appeared
for his justification.
This, then, is the lesson taught us
by St. Paul’s conversion, promptly to obey the
call. If we do obey it, to God be the glory,
for He it is works in us. If we do not obey,
to ourselves be all the shame, for sin and unbelief
work in us. Such being the state of the case,
let us take care to act accordingly, being
exceedingly alarmed lest we should not obey God’s
voice when He calls us, yet not taking praise or credit
to ourselves if we do obey it. This has been
the temper of all saints from the beginning working
out their salvation with fear and trembling, yet ascribing
the work to Him who wrought in them to will and do
of His good pleasure; obeying the call, and giving
thanks to Him who calls, to Him who fulfils in them
their calling. So much on the pattern afforded
us by St. Paul.
Very different in its circumstances
was Samuel’s call, when a child in the temple,
yet resembling St. Paul’s in this particular, that
for our instruction the circumstance of his obedience
to it is brought out prominently even in the words
put into his mouth by Eli in the text. Eli taught
him what to say, when called by the Divine voice.
Accordingly, when “the Lord came, and stood,
and called as at other times, Samuel, Samuel.
Then Samuel answered, Speak, Lord, for Thy servant
heareth.”
Such, again, is the temper of mind
expressed by holy David in the 27th Psalm, “When
Thou saidst, Seek ye My face, my heart said unto Thee,
Thy face, Lord, will I seek.”
And this temper, which in the above
instances is illustrated in words spoken, is in the
case of many other Saints in Scripture shown in word
and deed; and, on the other hand, is illustrated negatively
by being neglected in the case of others therein mentioned,
who might have entered into life, and did not.
For instance, we read of the Apostles,
that “Jesus, walking by the sea of Galilee,
saw two brethren, Simon called Peter, and Andrew his
brother, casting a net into the sea, for they were
fishers. And He saith unto them, Follow Me,
and I will make you fishers of men. And they straightway
left their nets and followed Him.” Again;
when He saw James and John with their father Zebedee,
“He called them; and they immediately
left the ship, and their father, and followed
Him.” And so of St. Matthew at the receipt
of custom, “He said unto him, Follow Me, and
he left all, rose up, and followed Him.”
Again, we are told in St. John’s
Gospel, “Jesus would go forth into Galilee,
and findeth Philip, and saith unto Him, Follow
Me.” Again, “Philip findeth Nathanael,”
and in like manner says to him, “Come and see.”
“Jesus saw Nathanael coming unto Him, and saith
of him, Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom is no
guile.”
On the other hand, the young ruler
shrunk from the call, and found it a hard saying,
“If thou wilt be perfect, go and sell that thou
hast, and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure
in heaven; and come, and follow Me. But when
the young man heard that saying, he went away sorrowful,
for he had great possessions.” Others
who seemed to waver, or rather who asked for some
little delay from human feeling, were rebuked for
want of promptitude in their obedience; for
time stays for no one; the word of call is spoken
and is gone; if we do not seize the moment, it is
lost. Christ was on His road heavenward.
He walked by the sea of Galilee; He “passed
forth;” He “passed by;” He
did not stop; all men must join Him, or He would be
calling on others beyond them. “He
said to another, Follow Me. But he said, Lord,
suffer me first to go and bury my father. Jesus
said unto him, Let the dead bury their dead:
but go thou and preach the kingdom of God. And
another also said, Lord, I will follow Thee: but
let me first go bid them farewell, which are at home
at my house. And Jesus said unto him, No man,
having put his hand to the plough, and looking back,
is fit for the kingdom of God.”
Not unlike these last instances are
the circumstances of the call of the great prophet
Elisha, though he does not seem to have incurred blame
from Elijah for his lingering on the thoughts of what
he was leaving. “He found Elisha, the
son of Shaphat, who was ploughing . . . Elijah
passed by him, and cast his mantle over him.”
He did not stay; he passed on, and Elisha was obliged
to run after him. “And he left the oxen,
and ran after Elijah, and said, Let me, I pray thee,
kiss my father and my mother, and then I will follow
thee.” This the prophet allowed him to
do, and after that “he arose and followed Elijah,
and ministered unto him.”
Or once more consider the circumstances
of the call of Abraham, the father of all who believe.
He was called from his father’s house, but
was not told whither. St. Paul was bid go to
Damascus, and there he was to receive further directions.
In like manner Abraham left his home for a land “that
I will show thee,” says Almighty God.
Accordingly he went out, “not knowing whither
he went.” “Abram departed as the Lord had spoken
unto him.”
Such are the instances of Divine calls
in Scripture, and their characteristic is this; to
require instant obedience, and next to call us we
know not to what; to call us on in the darkness.
Faith alone can obey them. But it may be urged,
How does this concern us now? We were all called
to serve God in infancy, before we could obey or disobey;
we found ourselves called when reason began to dawn;
we have been called to a state of salvation, we have
been living as God’s servants and children,
all through our time of trial, having been brought
into it in infancy through Holy Baptism, by the act
of our parents. Calling is not a thing future
with us, but a thing past.
This is true in a very sufficient
sense; and yet it is true also that the passages of
Scripture which I have been quoting do apply to us
still, do concern us, and may warn and guide
us in many important ways; as a few words will show.
For in truth we are not called once
only, but many times; all through our life Christ
is calling us. He called us first in Baptism;
but afterwards also; whether we obey His voice or
not, He graciously calls us still. If we fall
from our Baptism, He calls us to repent; if we are
striving to fulfil our calling, He calls us on from
grace to grace, and from holiness to holiness, while
life is given us. Abraham was called from his
home, Peter from his nets, Matthew from his office,
Elisha from his farm, Nathanael from his retreat; we
are all in course of calling, on and on, from one
thing to another, having no resting-place, but mounting
towards our eternal rest, and obeying one command
only to have another put upon us. He calls us
again and again, in order to justify us again and
again, and again and again, and more and
more, to sanctify and glorify us.
It were well if we understood this;
but we are slow to master the great truth, that Christ
is, as it were, walking among us, and by His hand,
or eye, or voice, bidding us follow Him. We do
not understand that His call is a thing which takes
place now. We think it took place in the Apostles’
days; but we do not believe in it, we do not look out
for it in our own case. We have not eyes to
see the Lord; far different from the beloved Apostle,
who knew Christ even when the rest of the disciples
knew Him not. When He stood on the shore after
His resurrection, and bade them cast the net into
the sea, “that disciple whom Jesus loved saith
unto Peter, It is the Lord.”
Now what I mean is this: that
they who are living religiously, have from time to
time truths they did not know before, or had no need
to consider, brought before them forcibly; truths
which involve duties, which are in fact precepts,
and claim obedience. In this and such-like ways
Christ calls us now. There is nothing miraculous
or extraordinary in His dealings with us. He
works through our natural faculties and circumstances
of life. Still what happens to us in providence
is in all essential respects what His voice was to
those whom He addressed when on earth: whether
He commands by a visible presence, or by a voice,
or by our consciences, it matters not, so that we feel
it to be a command. If it is a command, it may
be obeyed or disobeyed; it may be accepted as Samuel
or St. Paul accepted it, or put aside after the manner
of the young man who had great possessions.
And these Divine calls are commonly,
from the nature of the case, sudden now, and as indefinite
and obscure in their consequences as in former times.
The accidents and events of life are, as is obvious,
one special way in which the calls I speak of come
to us; and they, as we all know, are in their very
nature, and as the word accident implies, sudden and
unexpected. A man is going on as usual; he comes
home one day, and finds a letter, or a message, or
a person, whereby a sudden trial comes on him, which,
if met religiously, will be the means of advancing
him to a higher state of religious excellence, which
at present he as little comprehends as the unspeakable
words heard by St. Paul in paradise. By a trial
we commonly mean, a something which if encountered
well, will confirm a man in his present way; but I
am speaking of something more than this; of what will
not only confirm him, but raise him into a high state
of knowledge and holiness. Many persons will
find it very striking on looking back on their past
lives, to observe what different notions they entertained
at different periods, of what Divine truth was, what
was the way of pleasing God, and what things were
allowable or not, what excellence was, and what happiness.
I do not scruple to say, that these differences may
be as great as that which may be supposed to have
existed between St. Peter’s state of mind when
quietly fishing on the lake, or Elisha’s when
driving his oxen, and that new state of mind of each
of them when called to be Apostle or Prophet.
Elisha and St. Peter indeed were also called to a
new mode of life; that I am not speaking of.
I am not speaking of cases when persons change their
condition, their place in society, their pursuit,
and the like; I am supposing them to remain pretty
much the same as before in outward circumstances; but
I say that many a man is conscious to himself of having
undergone inwardly great changes of view as to what
truth is and what happiness. Nor, again, am
I speaking of changes so great, that a man reverses
his former opinions and conduct. He may be able
to see that there is a connexion between the two;
that his former has led to his latter; and yet he may
feel that after all they differ in kind; that he has
got into a new world of thought, and measures things
and persons by a different rule.
Nothing, indeed, is more wonderful
and strange than the different views which different
persons take of the same subject. Take any single
fact, event, or existing thing which meets us in the
world; what various remarks will be made on it by
different persons! For instance, consider the
different lights in which any single action, of a striking
nature, is viewed by different persons; or consider
the view of wealth or a wealthy man, taken by this
or that class in the community; what different feelings
does it excite envy, or respect, or ridicule,
or angry opposition, or indifference, or fear and
compassion; here are states of mind in which different
parties may regard it. These are broad differences;
others are quite as real, though more subtle.
Religion, for instance, may be reverenced by the soldier,
the man of literature, the trader, the statesman,
and the theologian; yet how very distinct their modes
of reverencing it, and how separate the standard which
each sets up in his mind! Well, all these various
modes of viewing things cannot one and all be the
best mode, even were they all good modes; but this
even is not the case. Some are contrary to others;
some are bad. But even of those that are on the
whole good, some are but in part good, some are imperfect,
some have much bad mixed with them; and only one is
best. Only one is the truth and the perfect
truth; and which that is, none know but those who are
in possession of it, if even they. But God knows
which it is; and towards that one and only Truth He
is leading us forward. He is leading forward
His redeemed, He is training His elect, one and all,
to the one perfect knowledge and obedience of Christ;
not, however, without their co-operation, but by means
of calls which they are to obey, and which if they
do not obey, they lose place, and fall behind in their
heavenly course. He leads them forward from
strength to strength, and from glory to glory, up
the steps of the ladder whose top reacheth to heaven.
We pass from one state of knowledge to another; we
are introduced into a higher region from a lower,
by listening to Christ’s call and obeying it.
Perhaps it may be the loss of some
dear friend or relative through which the call comes
to us; which shows us the vanity of things below,
and prompts us to make God our sole stay. We
through grace do so in a way we never did before;
and in the course of years, when we look back on our
life, we find that that sad event has brought us into
a new state of faith and judgment, and that we are
as though other men from what we were. We thought,
before it took place, that we were serving God, and
so we were in a measure; but we find that, whatever
our present infirmities may be, and however far we
be still from the highest state of illumination, then
at least we were serving the world under the show
and the belief of serving God.
Or again, perhaps something occurs
to force us to take a part for God or against Him.
The world requires of us some sacrifice which we see
we ought not to grant to it. Some tempting offer
is made us; or some reproach or discredit threatened
us; or we have to determine and avow what is truth
and what is error. We are enabled to act as God
would have us act; and we do so in much fear and perplexity.
We do not see our way clearly; we do not see what
is to follow from what we have done, and how it bears
upon our general conduct and opinions: yet perhaps
it has the most important bearings. That little
deed, suddenly exacted of us, almost suddenly resolved
on and executed, may be as though a gate into the
second or third heaven an entrance into
a higher state of holiness, and into a truer view
of things than we have hitherto taken.
Or again, we get acquainted with some
one whom God employs to bring before us a number of
truths which were closed on us before; and we but
half understand them, and but half approve of them;
and yet God seems to speak in them, and Scripture
to confirm them. This is a case which not unfrequently
occurs, and it involves a call “to follow on
to know the Lord.”
Or again, we may be in the practice
of reading Scripture carefully, and trying to serve
God, and its sense may, as if suddenly, break upon
us, in a way it never did before. Some thought
may suggest itself to us, which is a key to a great
deal in Scripture, or which suggests a great many
other thoughts. A new light may be thrown on
the precepts of our Lord and His Apostles. We
may be able to enter into the manner of life of the
early Christians, as recorded in Scripture, which before
was hidden from us, and into the simple maxims on
which Scripture bases it. We may be led to understand
that it is very different from the life which men
live now. Now knowledge is a call to action:
an insight into the way of perfection is a call to
perfection.
Once more, it may so happen that we
find ourselves, how or why we cannot tell, much more
able to obey God in certain respects than heretofore.
Our minds are so strangely constituted, it is impossible
to say whether it is from the growth of habit suddenly
showing itself, or from an unusual gift of Divine
grace poured into our hearts, but so it is; let our
temptation be to sloth, or irresolution, or worldly
anxiety, or pride, or to other more base and miserable
sins, we may suddenly find ourselves possessed of
a power of self-command which we had not before.
Or again, we may have a resolution grow on us to serve
God more strictly in His house and in private than
heretofore. This is a call to higher things;
let us beware lest we receive the grace of God in
vain. Let us beware of lapsing back; let us avoid
temptation. Let us strive by quietness and caution
to cherish the feeble flame, and shelter it from the
storms of this world. God may be bringing us
into a higher world of religious truth, let us work
with Him.
To conclude. Nothing is more
certain in matter of fact, than that some men do feel
themselves called to high duties and works, to which
others are not called. Why this is we do not
know, whether it be that those who are not called,
forfeit the call from having failed in former trials,
or have been called and have not followed, or that
though God gives baptismal grace to all, yet He really
does call some men by His free grace to higher things
than others; but so it is; this man sees sights which
that man does not see, has a larger faith, a more ardent
love, and a more spiritual understanding. No
one has any leave to take another’s lower standard
of holiness for his own. It is nothing to us
what others are. If God calls us to greater renunciation
of the world, and exacts a sacrifice of our hopes
and fears, this is our gain, this is a mark of His
love for us, this is a thing to be rejoiced in.
Such thoughts, when properly entertained, have no
tendency to puff us up; for if the prospect is noble,
yet the risk is more fearful. While we pursue
high excellence, we walk among precipices, and a fall
is easy. Hence the Apostle says, “Work
out your own salvation with fear and trembling, for
it is God that worketh in you.” Again,
the more men aim at high things, the more sensitive
perception they have of their own shortcomings; and
this again is adapted to humble them especially.
We need not fear spiritual pride then, in following
Christ’s call, if we follow it as men in earnest.
Earnestness has no time to compare itself with the
state of other men; earnestness has too vivid a feeling
of its own infirmities to be elated at itself.
Earnestness is simply set on doing God’s will.
It simply says, “Speak, Lord, for Thy servant
heareth,” “Lord, what wilt Thou have me
to do?” Oh that we had more of this spirit!
Oh that we could take that simple view of things,
as to feel that the one thing which lies before us
is to please God! What gain is it to please
the world, to please the great, nay, even to please
those whom we love, compared with this? What
gain is it to be applauded, admired, courted, followed,
compared with this one aim, of not being disobedient
to a heavenly vision? What can this world offer
comparable with that insight into spiritual things,
that keen faith, that heavenly peace, that high sanctity,
that everlasting righteousness, that hope of glory,
which they have who in sincerity love and follow our
Lord Jesus Christ?
Let us beg and pray Him day by day
to reveal Himself to our souls more fully, to quicken
our senses; to give us sight and hearing, taste and
touch of the world to come, so to work within us that
we may sincerely say, “Thou shalt guide me with
Thy counsel, and after that receive me to glory.
Whom have I in heaven but Thee? and there is none
upon earth that I desire in comparison of Thee:
my flesh and my heart faileth; but God is the strength
of my heart, and my portion for ever.”