[This semester, I am taking a class called Vocational Discernment for a Sustained Life of Ministry.  Our first assignment was to write a creative conversation in which we discuss our call to ministry with another person.  This is my paper.] 
I have been going on a lot of dates lately and inevitably at some point 
during the date, the conversation turns to how I am in seminary and that
 I am a Quaker.  Here is an only slightly exaggerated version of how 
those conversations go.
DATE:  So, you’re in seminary.  Does that mean you want to be a minister?
ME:  Actually, I already am a minister.  I was recorded as a minister by my Quaker meeting last June.
DATE:  Recorded?  What does that mean?
ME:
  Quakers do not have ordination―we believe that only God can ordain 
ministers.  Instead, Friends observe and record the gifts of ministry. 
 My meeting observed my gifts of minister over several years, then I 
went through a recording process, and the meeting recorded me as a 
minister in a special business meeting.
DATE:  I don’t really know much about Quakers.  How are they different from other denominations?
ME:
  Quakers believe that everyone has direct access to God.  Instead of 
looking outside ourselves for guidance, we turn to the inward Christ, or
 the light of God that we believe is inside of each of us to guide us.
DATE:  If we all have God inside of us, why do Quakers need to get together in groups?  Can’t you just turn inward?
ME:
  A couple reasons.  One is that we are not always good at discerning 
what is coming from God and what is coming from us.  Our Quaker meetings
 help us to tell the difference.  Also, we believe that God can speak to
 us through anyone, so during our meetings, we wait in silence to see if
 anyone will feel led by God to speak.
DATE:  Wait, do you hear God talking to you?
ME:
  Yes, I believe I do.  I hear God in the things that other people say 
to me, and in the things they do without speaking.  I also hear God in 
messages in meeting, and in nudges that I feel throughout the day to do 
or not do something, or to hold someone in prayer.
DATE:  But have you ever heard God speak to you directly, with words?
ME:  Yes.  That doesn’t happen very often, but I have experienced it.
DATE:  Can you tell me about a time when it happened?
ME:  A good example is the story that I consider my call to ministry. 
It
 was in 2008, at the Pacific Northwest Quaker Women’s Theology 
Conference.  I enjoyed the conference very much, but by the end of it, I
 felt exhausted and very ready to go home.  I had agreed to be co-clerk 
of the planning committee for the next conference, and I was feeling 
overwhelmed because I had never done anything like that before.
I was sitting in our final worship for the conference when I 
heard God say to me, “It’s not always going to be this easy.”
I said, “What?”  Of all the words I could think of to describe my experience at the conference, “easy” was not one of them.
God responded, “Yes, this is the easy part.  It is going to be a lot harder after this.  But I will be there too.”
DATE:  Wow.  That sounds intense.
ME:  It was.
DATE:  Has it been hard?
ME:
  Yes, sometimes ministry has been very hard.  I tend to resist 
God―mostly out of fear―making it harder for myself.  But I have always 
had the sense that God is with me.
DATE:  I get the sense that for you, ministry means something different from being a pastor of a church.  Is that right?
ME:
  Being a pastor is one form of ministry, but I do not feel called to 
pastoral ministry right now.  My ministry has taken lots of forms: I 
have done traveling ministry among different branches of Friends, I lead
 workshops and preach, and I do quite a bit of writing.  I try to stay 
open to what I feel God is calling me to do.
DATE:  But what about seminary?  Why go to seminary if you are already a minister?
ME: 
 One reason is that I carry a concern for supporting 
leaders in the Religious Society of Friends.  We don’t always do a good 
job of supporting leaders, and I wanted to go to a school that was clear
 in its support of leadership and bring what I learned there back to my 
denomination.  
I was also hoping that seminary would help me learn how 
to have a sustained life of ministry.  Burnout is far too common, and I 
would like to be able to do this for as long as I feel God is calling 
me.
DATE:  I know that you are also a lawyer.  Are you planning to continue practicing law?
ME:
  I am doing some legal work while I am in seminary to help pay the 
bills, but I am hoping to transition to full-time ministry over the next
 few years.
DATE:  And you’re from Alaska?  Are you planning on going back there after you finish seminary?  Or back to Oregon?
ME:  Probably not.  I love the Pacific Northwest, but I will probably go wherever I find a job.
DATE:  It sounds like you are going through a lot of changes in your life right now!
ME:  Indeed.  How about you?  Let’s talk about you for a while!
Hey, *I'd* ask you out again. ;)
ReplyDeleteAw, thanks!
DeleteI imagine two possible outcomes from this: Either the date ends with a polite "I'll call you..." or they fall deeply in love with your sincerity and intensity. This conversation (which reminds me of many of the conversations Mark & I had when we were still just friends) sure beats the usual date small talk about TV shows and sports teams!
ReplyDeletewith love,
Mary Linda
Funny, Mary Linda! I was never very interested in small talk.
Delete