Do You Feel Called by God?
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Description
When Michael Bennett took the first steps towards full-time, ordained Christian ministry, he dreaded being asked whether he 'felt called'. Because in all honesty, he didn't.
Many years later, and after extensive biblical research, he came to the conclusion that the common idea of needing to feel a subjective call from God before entering the ministry is misguided and unbiblical. In Do You Feel Called by God? he shares his story, including the evidence that changed his mind.
Full of wit, personal biography and clear biblical teaching, Do You Feel Called by God? provides an encouraging challenge not only to those considering full-time ministry, but also to all Christians who want to hear and respond to the call of God.
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About the author
Michael Bennett trained as an architect in Brisbane, Australia, before becoming a believing Christian at the age of 24. After training at theological college, he pastored two churches before developing the Christianity Explained evangelistic course—a course that has been effectively used in Australia and overseas for many years.
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Reviews
DDave M.
[Note] This review was transferred from our old online store which did not give ratings. But this new store requires ratings. So in order to transfer them we have tried to give a rating which reflects the content of the review. So you may prefer to ignore the rating and just read the review.
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I think I need to take more plane trips. They're a great way to set aside time for reading. Bit expensive though! This book was started on the trip back from Sydney and finished during chemo this morning. The chemo makes it even more expensive! Having now read Michael Bennett's Do you feel called by God? Rethinking the call to ministry, I'm eager to share what I've discovered. This is a book that mirrors so much of my own experience, addresses so many of the same questions I've asked, and comes to the same conclusions. It's easy to review a book that backs up your own opinions, but I can honestly say that it has also been a long and careful journey for me to be persuaded of these matters and I've never once had a conversation about them with Michael Bennett.We're told from the outset why Michael wrote this book and what conclusions he makes throughout. The book is spent substantiating these conclusions:
The often-ward and almost universally accepted expression 'I feel God is calling me' is totally foreign to the revealed content of both the Old and New Testaments of the Bible. The continued use of this unscriptural pietistic language may be having negative consequences for churches, missionary societies and other Christian organisations in the choosing and training of leaders.
Without denying in any way God's ability to call people by overt and supernatural signs, it is argued here that this is not usually God's method today. The motivation to serve the Lord, particularly in what is called full-time ministry, is a human desire to do so, and not a felt call. However, this human desire, which must spring from one's love for Jesus and the gospel and genuine compassion for people, is not sufficient or valid in itself: it must be rightly motivated and rightly tested. (p6-7)
I suspect by revealing his conclusions at the outset, Michael will lose some readers. 'That's not right. It can't be right. It's not what happened to me… or others I know.' And they'll put the book down. Or because they've read this far in my review, they wont even bother buying it! Oops, sorry! Let me say this would be a huge mistake. Please judge these conclusions on the strength of the arguments, not on whether they confirm or run contrary to your current thinking.
This book is very autobiographical and anecdotal. We get to know Michael Bennett, the rugby player, Christian, Bible college student, and author. We journey with him as his questions and struggles are explored and answered. However, this is not a this happened to me and therefore I am the paradigm for everyone else book. Michael seriously engages with the Scriptures to find the answers. We are able to weigh up his arguments on the lines of whether they faithfully expound the teaching of the Bible.
'Call' and 'calling' are explored in the Old and New Testaments. Michael examines the key people called by God to particular tasks and roles, and how this is specifically described. The observation is made that the word of God comes directly and personally to some people for particular purposes, but that this never resembles a concept of 'feeling called' that is commonly described today.
Close attention is given to examining every reference to 'call' and its cognates in the Greek New Testament. Only after the serious word studies completed and the contexts explored, are conclusions drawn. Seven different uses of the words are identified in the New Testament and the conclusion is reached, after looking at over 300 verses, that God calls all people in two specific ways:
First, we are called to be Christians – to be disciples of Jesus.
Second, we are called to be holy – to grow in Christ-likeness. (p60)
Some of the references that speak of a call to holiness are another way of describing the call to be Christian. Christians are the 'called out', 'set apart', or 'sanctified ones'. They're the saints – not those who gain post humous titles for miracles and deeds done – but those who, because of Christ's work now, belong to God. In 1991, I completed exactly the same comprehensive word studies and came to the same conclusions that this is how the Bible speaks to Christians about the nature of being called by God.
Michael Bennett addressed the potential criticism of simply playing semantics by showing that the implications of using Biblical words and phrases in non-Biblical ways can be dangerous and debilitating. If candidate committees, ministers, theological colleges, and mission organizations are all asking for evidence of a 'calling', when the Bible doesn't make this necessary, then where do people turn? Perhaps they end up deifying their desires to justify their position.
This...
Details
ISBN | 9781921896989 |
Format | Book |
Series | |
Chapters | 12 |
Pages |
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