Resources for learning about a call to the ministry
Many prospective students are uncertain about whether Christ has called them to the ministry. This is a difficult question for many; we would encourage you to pray and talk to your pastor and our Dean of Students about this. There are also a number of publications which have been written on the subject.
Click on the title below to read the article (external links):
"Has God called you to ministry? Though all Christians are called to
serve the cause of Christ, God calls certain persons to serve the
Church as pastors and other ministers. Writing to young Timothy, the
Apostle Paul confirmed that if a man aspires to be a pastor, "it is a
fine work he aspires to do" ( Timothy 3:1, NASB). Likewise, it is a
high honor to be called of God into the ministry of the Church. How do
you know if God is calling you?"
Many dangers lurk before a man when he is willing to accept a call to
the gospel ministry on the basis of subjective experience only.A subjective experience is no sure proof of the Lord's will. The Lord
has nowhere promised to speak to us except through the inspired and
all-adequate Scriptures. When and as soon as we drift away from the
inscripturated Word, then we have no way to know and ascertain the
source of our thoughts and ambitions.For the overseership of a local church is an ambition, a godly
ambition, and one should approach it with fear and trembling. The
pitfalls are many. And the most common is mere subjectivity, what I
think, and that without reference to the Scriptures, to what the church
thinks and everything else.
"How do you know if you're called? It's a tough question. I remember
well a spiritual mentor trying to convince me not to enter the
pre-seminary program in college, believing that if he could dissuade
me, I would not be truly "called." I also know of many others who have
been encouraged, nudged, or even pushed into the ministry against their
wishes. An acquaintance was told by family members since his earliest
remembrance that he was destined for great things in the ministry,
following as he would in the footsteps of his father and grandfather,
both well-known preachers and authors. The poor fellow was trapped. He
left the ministry a broken man only a couple of years after seminary,
unable to handle the pressures in large part because he was overwhelmed
by doubts about his calling."
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