Are You Calling Me, Lord?
I was reading about the need for assistants in Chapter 6 of the Acts of the Apostles. There were complaints (against the Apostles) that the widows of the Greek speaking Jews were being neglected. In response to this complaint, the Apostles readily identified “seven reputable men” who would take care of this problem. But here’s what stood out for me . . . “The twelve” were very clear that it was not right for them to “neglect the word of God to serve at table.” In other words, they knew what they were responsible for and didn’t try to do everything themselves. The distribution of labor, if you will, quickly became a necessity in the early church. That is true for us today. I talk a lot about evangelization, sharing your faith and speaking the name of Jesus in this increasingly non-Christian world. However, each one of us is called according to his vocation and not one of us has to do it all. Some of us are called to be pray-ers. Some preachers, writers and worker b