What has God called you to do?
The Doctrine of Vocation
From The Cranach Institute
When we pray the Lord’s Prayer, observed Luther, we ask God to give us this day our daily bread. And He does give us our daily bread. He does it by means of the farmer who planted and harvested the grain, the baker who made the flour into bread, the person who prepared our meal. We might today add the truck drivers who hauled the produce, the factory workers in the food processing plant, the warehouse men, the wholesale distributors, the stock boys, the lady at the checkout counter. Also playing their part are the bankers, futures investors, advertisers, lawyers, agricultural scientists, mechanical engineers, and every other player in the nation’s economic system. All of these were instrumental in enabling you to eat your morning bread.
Before you ate, you probably gave thanks to God for your food, as is fitting. He is caring for your physical needs, as with every other kind of need you have, preserving your life through His gifts. “He provides food for those who fear him” (Psalm 111:5); also to those who do not fear Him, “to all flesh” (136:25). And He does so by using other human beings. It is still God who is responsible for giving us our daily bread. Though He could give it to us directly, by a miraculous provision, as He once did for the children of Israel when He fed them daily with manna, God has chosen to work through human beings, who, in their different capacities and according to their different talents, serve each other. This is the doctrine of vocation.
- From *God at Work: Your Christian Vocation in All of Life*, by Dr. Gene Edward Veith.
See excerpt of book (and order book) here.Therefore I advise no one to enter any religious order or the priesthood, indeed, I advise everyone against it - unless he is forearmed with this knowledge and understands that the works of monks and priests, however holy and arduous they may be, do not differ one whit in the sight of God from the works of the rustic laborer in the field or the woman going about her household tasks, but that all works are measured before God by faith alone.
- Martin Luther, The Babylonian Captivity of the Church (1520)
Consider the two paragraphs above. Then consider this story, told by Dr. Terry Mattingly at Get Religion:
(This column was syndicated by Scripps Howard News Service on 10/11/2006)
Like millions of other American kids, Alex Kendrick couldn’t believe his eyes the first time he saw “Star Wars.” “I remember sitting in that theater, looking up at that big screen and thinking, ‘I want to do that. I have to do that. If it’s the last thing I ever do, I’m going to make movies,’ ” said Kendrick, the writer, director and actor whose low-budget “Facing the Giants” football flick has made headlines.
The evangelistic indie movie cost $100,000 to make and, showing on 418 screens in faith-friendly smaller markets, has made nearly $3 million at the box office in two weeks. It’s backed by Provident Films, Sony BMG and Samuel Goldwyn films, but the critics have been merciless. The Seattle Post-Intelligencer noted: “It preaches to the converted — literally.” And then there was this Richmond Times-Dispatch love letter to Kendrick: ” ‘Facing the Giants’ may have been made with all the best intentions in the world, but it was also made by writers who can’t write, directors who can’t direct, editors who can’t edit and actors who can’t act. And they’re all the same guy.”
It helps, however, to understand that the Southern Baptist guy at the heart of this movie has had a tough time turning his “Star Wars” epiphany into a career reality. He is learning how to make movies and “Facing the Giants” is only his second try. Kendrick never had a real chance to study screenwriting, editing, directing or acting. When the time came to pick a career, he did what many young media-driven believers end up doing. He entered the ministry. It’s hard to explain to outsiders how this kind of thing happens…. Read the rest…






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