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Responding to the Call
based on Jonah 3:1-5, 10; Mark 1:14-20
Rev. Karen A. Goltz

Jonah spoke eight words to the people of Nineveh, and every man, woman, child and animal in that city responded by turning from their evil ways, proclaiming a fast, and putting on sackcloth and ashes as a sign of their repentance. Jesus spoke ten words, and Simon, Andrew, James and John responded by abandoning their livelihoods, the tools of their trade, and their families to embark on a journey of intense discipleship. If I were to split the difference and preach a sermon of nine words, how would you respond?

Some of you might call the bishop and complain; others of you might tell me it’s the best sermon I’ve ever preached, and I should do that more often. (Unfortunately for those of you in the second group, I’ve already spoken over a hundred and twenty five words, and I’m just getting started.) But in either case, it’s unlikely you’d make as dramatic a change as the Ninevites or fishermen did.

Why not? Is there a single statement I could make that would cause you to upend your lives and submit your entire beings to God? Perhaps in the style of Jonah: Forty days more and New Hampshire will be overthrown!

I think most of us would respond to that by asking for more information. Overthrown how? By whom? The entire population, or just the government? Local, state, federal, or all of the above? Will we become part of Vermont? Or worse, Massachusetts? Who are you, and who sent you, and how do you know this?

No, I don’t think the Jonah approach would work here. What about the Jesus approach, more inviting and less threatening? Follow Jesus, and he will make you gather even more people to follow him.

I think we’d question that one, too. Follow Jesus where? Why should we? For how long? What about my job, my house, my family? What’s the point of gathering more people? Why me? No, I don’t think I could get away with the Jesus approach to the single statement sermon, either.

Part of the problem is the messenger. I’m not putting myself down, but I’m not Jesus. I’m not Jonah, either. Or I don’t know, I could be, actually. We don’t really know who Jonah was. We only know what happened to him. God told him to go to Nineveh, and Jonah ran as fast and as far as he could in the opposite direction. God caught up with him and gave him a three-day time-out in the belly of a whale to think about it, and then told him again to go to Nineveh. This time he went.

We laugh at Jonah, and it is kind of funny, but he also deserves some compassion. The impact of what God wants him to do is lost on us, but you’ve got to understand: one of the few things we do know about Jonah is that he’s a Hebrew, and we know that Nineveh is the capital of Assyria. Assyria had conquered and virtually destroyed the northern kingdom of Israel, and then kept the southern kingdom as a tributary for nearly a hundred years. Assyria, including Nineveh, was hated and feared by the Hebrews. God telling Jonah to go to Nineveh is roughly the same as God telling any one of us to go to the Taliban’s compound. How many of you would try to run if God called you to do that? I know I would.

But eventually Jonah goes to this city full of people he hates, and who hate him. Probably expecting to be killed at any moment, he says what God told him to say. “Forty days more, and Nineveh shall be overthrown!” Can you imagine going to the Taliban’s compound and telling the people there that they’ll be overthrown in forty days? Would you live long enough to even utter the statement? And if you did, would you want to try to warn them so that they could be saved? I think most of us would utter that proclamation with glee and expectation, looking forward to their destruction. As did Jonah, who finished his proclamation and then went and made himself comfortable in a place with a good view of the city, to watch its demise.

But the city’s demise didn’t happen. The people of Nineveh believed Jonah, and repented. God changed his mind, and had mercy on them. They got to live.
It wasn’t Jonah’s preaching that did it. The repentance of Nineveh was a miracle that could only be accomplished by God himself. God sent Jonah, not so he could be a prophet to Nineveh, but so he could be a prophet to us. God sent Jonah to witness that God’s love and mercy can and does extend to those outside the covenant, even to those whose destruction we pray for. God sent Jonah so he could see with his own eyes that God’s love and mercy truly has no bounds.

It’s similar with Jesus’ ten words to his new disciples. “Follow me, and I will make you fish for people.” It’s not what was said, but who said it. Jonah was merely a Hebrew prophet, a regular person just like the rest of us. But this, this is Jesus, Son of God, Word of God incarnate. You hear the Word of God from this pulpit every week, but you hear the Word from a person. Simon, Andrew, James and John heard the Word from the Word. Even if they didn’t quite know who was speaking to them, it must have been powerful.
And Jesus didn’t just speak a generic call; he knew who they were, knew their language, and spoke as they could understand. They were working men, and they understood the business of fishing. Jesus called them to do what they’d spent their lives training to do: Jesus called them to fish. Not knowing anything else, they knew they could do that.
‘Call’ seems to be one of those church words that doesn’t get used much outside. Congregations enter a period of discernment in order to extend a call to a pastor, which the pastor, after a period of discernment, will accept or decline. But pastors are not the only ones who are called, and churches are not the only place where calls happen.

We have soldiers in this congregation. You were called to serve and protect this country, and you accepted that call. We have teachers in this congregation. You were called to instruct and nurture our young people, and you accepted that call. We have health workers in this congregation. You were called to provide healing and comfort to the sick, and you accepted that call. We have government employees in this congregation. You were called to be stewards of this nation’s infrastructure, and you accepted that call. We have sales people in this congregation. You were called to help people find the products they need in an ethical way, and you accepted that call. We have homemakers in this congregation. You were called to support your families and provide a loving and safe haven from the troubles of this world, and you accepted that call. We have retired people in this congregation. You were called to encourage the younger generations with your wisdom and experience, and you accepted that call. I could go on and on, naming the students, the business people, the store clerks, the laborers, but the point is that Jesus calls each and every one of us, and he calls us to do what we know.

We’re also called to discipleship. And that means we may be called to do uncomfortable or even unpleasant things, like Jonah. We may be called to forgive someone who has purposely hurt us, even if they don’t seem to want our forgiveness. We may be called to help someone who we know will take advantage of our kindness, but help them anyway because they’re genuinely in need. We may be called to step outside our comfort zone and take on some responsibility for this congregation, even though we don’t feel like good leaders or examples. We may be called to do without something we want, because someone else is lacking something they need. But whatever we’re called to do, we’re called to do it as ourselves, as people who are loved and accepted by Christ, with all our shortcomings and weaknesses, simple fishermen called to do great things with their craft, ultimately becoming the foundation of the church.

I can preach a nine word sermon. I don’t know if it will transform you, or even affect you at all. But all I can do is preach it, and trust that God will work whatever miracles he wants to work with his word. So here goes.

Christ accepts you as you are. Why not follow?