1
Samuel 15:34-16:13
Seeing
as God Sees
James
Sledge June
17, 2012
Let’s
be honest. Unlike Samuel, most of us would have gone ahead and anointed Eliab.
I know that I would. If I had somehow been paying enough attention that I heard
God in the first place and went to Bethlehem looking for a new king, I’m pretty
sure that Eliab would have seemed an answer to prayer. Here’s the one! Pour the
oil on his head. Glad that’s over. Can’t believe we found a new king so
quickly.
We
Presbyterians have our own version of Samuel.
Because we’re big on representative government, Samuel is not one person
but rather a committee – a nominating committee to be precise. We have
nominating committees charged to find those called to be deacons and ruling
elders, and we have pastor nominating committees to find the person God is
calling to be a teaching elder or pastor. Like Samuel, these committees are
charged to find the one or ones that God already has in mind, and we use fancy
words like discernment to make clear
that the task is to hear and sense the Spirit guiding us to the one God has
already chosen.
Now
clearly I’ve had some recent experience with this congregation’s pastor
nominating committee, although I did not see how they went about discerning and
deciding. I’ve not been here long enough to see an officer nominating committee
at work. However I have seen them in a
number of other congregations, and I’ve talked with enough pastors about how it
works in their churches to have some sense of what is typical.
The
stereotypical officer nominating committee works like this. A group of folks,
including representatives from Deacons and Session, are cajoled into this task.
Often people are chosen to represent some of the different groups and interests
in the congregation. It is common to have someone from Presbyterian Women, someone
from the youth, and so on. Then this
group is “elected” at congregational meeting.
Then
comes the hard work. A first meeting is set, and nominating committee members
arrive with pictorial directories in hand.