Sermon
(January 15) – “When God Calls Your Name”
I
Samuel 3:1-10
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At
one time, I & II Samuel was one book instead of two. They were separated in the development of the
Greek translation of the Hebrew scriptures.
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I
Samuel is the first of four books which tell the story of Israel’s monarchy.
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Young
Samuel was 12 years old at the time of his calling, the same age of Jesus when
he stayed behind in Jerusalem which is an interesting parallel.
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The
danger of this story is to see it as a cute story of how God called him. But look what God is calling Samuel to
do. See Verses 11-14.
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Verse
2 – The reference to Eli’s eyesight might also serve as a metaphor for his and
Israel’s blindness to seeing how God is at work. In what ways are we blind to God’s presence
and work in our lives?
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Verse
7 – Samuel did not yet “know” the Lord.
Question: How could this be?
Didn’t Eli teach him about God and serve as a mentor for him? Or was it normal to not have a sense of God
prior to age 12? What are your earliest
memories of God as a child? What age
were you?
John
1:43-51
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The
Gospel is John is not part of the synoptic gospels (Matthew, Mark, &
Luke.) It uses a lot of separate stories
about Jesus and is commonly believed to have been written a little later after
the synoptic gospels.
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Verse
38 – Jesus asks, “What are you looking for?”
That’s a good question. What are
you looking for when you seek out Jesus?
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Verse
39 – Jesus says, “Come and see.” For
John, this means, come and believe. What
a great way to invite people into a faith journey by simply saying, “Come and
see.”
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Verses
46 – 47 – I see this in a humorous way.
Nathaniel is kind of poking fun at people who are from Nazareth. Notice how Phillip uses Jesus’ phrase of
“Come and see.” To continue the humor,
Jesus pays Nathaniel who he has yet to meet, a compliment by saying that he is
without fault. Was Jesus aware of how
Nathaniel was prejudging Jesus with his Nazareth comment?
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Verse
50 – Jesus raises expectations by telling Nathaniel that he will see greater
things than just being able to know of Nathaniel before meeting him. This raises the question: Do we have high
expectations for our church and for our future or do we just accept the status
quo?
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Verse
49 – When Nathaniel identifies Jesus as the Son of God and the King of Israel,
he isn’t necessarily referring to Jesus as part of the Trinity. His belief is that Jesus is the long awaited
King who might finally kick out the Romans and restore Israel to independence
which was the common expectation for the Messiah in the 1st
century. Throughout his ministry and
especially through his death on the cross, Jesus will demonstrate a different
understanding of what it means to be the King and the Son of God.
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