I’m so pleased to be writing for
Spotlight once again. I have been ask to do a piece on ‘being a
Reader’, of course the brief was a lot more detailed than that, so
I’ll start with the calling. Many of you will have heard some or
all of this story before.
It starts way back in ’92 in
earnest, although it goes back further than that really. That was
the year I started the Reader training course, after having finished
the Course in Christian Studies (CCS). I had attended a vocation
day, seen the vocations advisor and even had a talk with the Bishop,
who rather reluctantly agreed that I could go forward for training.
The following year my Dad died, and I withdrew from training. There
followed a few years not really knowing what to do. Then I was
asked to run help in Explorers. Well, teaching had always been my
aim, but not children that young.
It turned out to be great, and I
also enjoyed leading Pathfinders for a few years, until Paul Hinckley
suggested I got on with Reader training. I took a while to decide
that it was still the right thing to do. Then I started training –
through CCS once again, through vocations and selection interviews
again, and finally starting, and this time completing two tears
training.
I was licensed in October 2007.
Then the real work began. Reader ministry is a preaching and
teaching ministry. I had been preaching occasionally for a long
while under Paul’s leadership, but now I had been trained, and in
training a full text is required, so I had become used to having the
full text in front of me, I still do, although I don’t always
follow it and occasionally get lost! Now it is quite formal, I am on
the rota and have a working agreement which indicates how much I
should do.
Being a Reader is not about being on
the rota though. It means that I have the privilege and
responsibility of sharing God’s word with all the congregation. It
means I have to have a sense of what God is saying to the church,
sometimes that is obvious through the reading, more rarely it is part
of a planned series, almost always it is a combination of prayer and
study.
It’s a privilege because you sit
patiently and listen to me. There are not many, if any, other places
where a person can speak, and not be subject to questions, either
immediately, or later. When I listen to a sermon I am trying hard to
pay attention, and sometimes making notes, but generally I take very
little of it away with me. Occasionally something important is said,
as sticks with me while I work it through with God. I know from
conversations that I’ve had that this is also true for my hearers.
That’s OK, I understand that a sermon is not primarily about
teaching the facts and beliefs that are in the Bible, but helping
people to live them. That is a kind of teaching too.
It’s a responsibility for two
reasons. Most importantly because it’s God’s word, and James
warns us that teachers will be judged more strictly (James 3:1). God
doesn’t want his word corrupted, so we who present it have the
responsibility to present it as accurately and as truthfully as we
can.
It’s a responsibility also because
it is my calling, so I want to be as true to it as I can be. That
means not just presenting accurately and truthfully, but in a way
that communicates what is being said and engages the listeners. I’m
still learning, and occasionally experimenting!
Jesus said “make disciples”
(Matthew 28:19), he didn’t say “make converts” – which is
great for me, because I’m not good at making converts. I can help
those converts to grow, and as I learnt leading the young people,
watching people grow into true disciples is a marvellous thing.
I seem to say quite a lot “There’s
always more with God”, so when I asked Him during New Wine a couple
of years ago, “What now?” I not should have been expecting the
answer “just get on with being a Reader”. Instead I thought he
said “Something big is coming”. I didn’t understand, perhaps
it related to retirement – I’m almost old enough. Earlier this
year there was a general request for Readers to help with CCS. When
I saw that I was pretty sure that I now knew what God was meaning.
It’s big (for me) – a lot of work, but so far I’m enjoying it.
If you don’t see me on Wednesday evenings – that’s where I am.
That’s a part of me trying to be
true to following Jesus wherever he takes me. A question I got asked
a lot was about ordination, but that’s not something that I have
been called to. At least not yet.
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