“God told me to.”
Have you ever heard those four words offered in response to the question, “Why did you do that?”
If you have heard someone say that before, tell me honestly: what were the first thoughts that popped into your head?
Did you think, “Well, good for you! Follow courageously where He leads!”?
Or was your response more along the lines of, “Hmmmm. Interesting. Tell me more.”?
Maybe you even went with something like, “OK then… And did God also reveal the Seventh Sign of the Apocalypse to you personally and tell you to be sure and make yourself a tin-foil hat to protect yourself from solar radiation?”
I have to confess… I have probably reacted by saying all three of those things at some point or other. And the response I gave probably had a lot to do with the identity of the person telling me that God told them to do something.
I suppose when we hear someone say that God told them to do such-and-such we flash back to memories of the mother who heard God tell her to drown her five kids… or the brutal dictators and cult leaders who said they were following God’s direct commandment in committing their own atrocities.
So I can’t help but wonder: what have people thought when they heard ME use that very meaningful, yet also very loaded phrase?
“God told me to” is the essence of my answer when anyone asks why I decided to go into the ministry.
It is usually the answer at the heart of why I might decide to preach on Topic A instead of Topic B on a given Sunday.
I am sure it is the explanation behind those times when I get a sudden, inexplicable urge to pick up the phone and call someone… and then listen as they say, “Wow! It is so weird that you would call just now…” and then listen as they tell me about an event or a dilemma that has arisen recently in their life.
But where do we finally choose to come down on this question; does God communicate directly to us? Or does God not?
And if our answer is “YES,” how do we sift and sort between the random murmurings of an active imagination and The Voice of the Divine?
Personally, I am not sure I have a good answer to that question. My own history is littered with miscalculations on the topic of “the will of God” – in both directions.
But I found something in this morning’s devotion that might shed helpful light. It is from Mother Teresa’s book, My Life for the Poor, written in 1985. She says:
Once I asked my confessor for advice about my vocation. I asked, “How can I know if God is calling me and for what he is calling me?”
He answered, “You will know by your happiness. If you are happy with the idea that God calls you to serve him and your neighbor, this will be the proof of your vocation. Profound joy of the heart is like a magnet that indicates the path of life. One has to follow it, even though one enters into a way full of difficulties.”
I like that.
I like the fact that her confessor talks about happiness as a signpost for discerning that it is actually God’s voice we are hearing. It affirms the essential notion that God – rather than being the nasty, punitive tyrant some paint God to be – is actually in favor of our happiness.
But I also like the idea here that says our path to happiness can take us through places of great difficulty. The confessor is telling Mother Teresa that HAPPINESS does NOT equal PROBLEMLESSNESS… that it is possible to experience profound joy in life and still encounter adversity.
How easily we forget this…
Yes, God does still speak. Sadly (for me) God does not use billboards, TV commercials or skywriting to communicate his messages.
God speaks most often in the stillness and devoted times of silence when we make LISTENING a priority.
Listen! Did you hear that?
It was God saying, “I love you and want you to be happy.”
– Abundant blessings;
God told me to read your posting. Thanks!