November 30, 2006 By Vicki Brown
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – Ordained clergy told their personal stories of answering
God's call to 525 young people attending EXPLORATION 2006. The
annual event, sponsored by the United Methodist Board of Higher Education and
Ministry, invites young people to explore whether God is calling them to ordained
ministry in the United Methodist Church. More than 300
high school seniors and young adults from 42 states stepped forward Nov. 18 to
pray with elders, deacons, local pastors, chaplains, and campus ministers in a
commitment service. At the end of the night, 198 youth and young adults signed
commitment cards indicating their definite interest in ordained ministry. "It's
New Year's Eve at Times Square for the United Methodist Church," said the Rev.
Peggy Johnson, pastor of Christ United Methodist Church of the Deaf in Baltimore.
Johnson, one of two American Sign Language interpreters, said EXPLORATION is about
the future of the church and she would not miss it. "I would crawl on glass across
England to be here." The Rev. Jerome King Del Pino, top
executive of the Board of Higher Education and Ministry, welcomed young people
to the Nov. 17-19 event, telling them they are already considered leaders in the
church. "You are here to struggle with the idea that
you might someday speak for God. You are here to dive in and make waves as you
endeavor to discern, ‘What is my path? What am I to do with my life?'" Del Pino
said. The Rev. Telley Gadson spoke of hearing God's call
as a teenager. "But I was going to law school. I advised God of my plan to preach
during the weekend and be a lawyer during the week," she said. "God laughs when
you tell God you have a plan." Then, Gadson heard the
late Bishop Cornelius Henderson preach at an EXPLORATION event. "It was as if
God was asking me, ‘Is my calling nothing to you?'" she said. After
that, Gadson said she got the "true wireless communication," the one that "takes
you by hand and calls you by name." "This wireless communication
that offers the best plan – you don't have to wait until 7 p.m. to talk for free.
You've got to listen above the noise, listen above the clutter that would prevent
you from hearing God. I can hear him now," said Gadson, pastor of St. Mark United
Methodist Church in Sumter, S.C. ‘More of a realization'
Young people attending the event, high school seniors
to age 24, said hearing the stories, both in the main worship and plenary session
and during workshops and small group sessions, was helpful in clarifying what
God was telling them to do. Matt Benton of Springfield,
Va., was struck by how the call stories he heard never started with a single moment.
"They started with background. The calls weren't really a burning bush, but more
of a realization. That kind of made me start to look back at my own life." "When
they started their stories, it sounded like they were talking about me. They were
active in youth group ... had spoken in church a few times. That's what I did.
They felt at home in the church and were called to seek a vocation in church.
When I meditate on that, I felt the same way," Benton said. The
Rev. Meg Lassiat, the board's director of student ministries, vocation, and enlistment,
said people trying to discern God's call often find it is hard to meet others
struggling with the same questions. "EXPLORATION gives
youth and young adults the opportunity to meet others who are listening for how
God is calling and how they can respond to that call," she said. "Knowing
that there are young adults from around the country and meeting people who are
willing to support young people in their discernment process is very empowering
for those who want to say ‘yes' to God's call," Lassiat said. "The connections
made at EXPLORATION can provide strength and support throughout a young person's
discernment and candidacy process." She stressed the
crucial need for young clergy in the United Methodist Church. "For youth and young
adults to gather together for one purpose and for the rest of the denomination
to witness these participants' commitment shows us that there is excitement in
today's church and much anticipation about the next generation of deacons and
elders. I look forward to seeing how these students develop over the next few
years," Lassiat said. God kept calling The
Rev. John Miyahara, an elder in the Rocky Mountain Annual Conference and campus
minister at United Methodist-related Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa., spoke of
fighting the call for nine years. "God just kept calling,"
he said. First, Miyahara told how as a child he was watching
an episode of the television series "Mission Impossible" in which one of the main
characters thought a room was bugged. "I thought maybe
the KGB (Soviet secret police) were bugging my room, so I wandered around tapping
the walls. Then, just to make sure, I picked up a hammer and smashed a hole in
that wall," Miyahara said. About that time, he realized no one had bugged the
room, and his parents were not going to be happy about the hole in the wall. "I
had this leaflet from our church with Scripture that was just the right size,
so I taped it over the hole. Then God used that Scripture to teach me," he said.
God called again when his grandfather told Miyahara how
he wanted to become a preacher, but felt he couldn't do it because he had a family
and it was during the Depression. Later, a camp counselor asked Miyahara if God
might be calling him to ministry. "It freaked me out,"
Miyahara said. He said he wanted to go to Stanford and make a lot of money and
buy a BMW. "I finished college and applied to seminary and withdrew." Finally,
he was driving down the highway one day and could resist the call no longer. "OK,
God, I'll do this, but you have to do it with me," he said. "All
of our calls are different; all of our calls are important," he said. He described
how his own ministry has included urban churches, military chaplaincy, and now
campus ministry. "We are making waves around the world
for his kingdom," he said. "Is God calling you? What steps are you taking? Tonight
we challenge you to take that call seriously, to listen. If you are called, step
out on faith." United Methodist News Service Vicki
Brown is an associate editor and writer in the Office of Interpretation, United
Methodist Board of Higher Education and Ministry. |