E.A. Johnston teaches that a genuine call from God transforms a believer into a faithful servant through faith, obedience, development, testing, and often suffering, exemplified by biblical figures like Abraham.
In this biographical sermon, E.A. Johnston explores the profound process by which God calls and prepares a man for His service. Drawing from the lives of biblical figures like Abraham and historical preachers such as Whitefield and Spurgeon, Johnston emphasizes the importance of a genuine divine call, faith, obedience, and the refining power of trials and suffering. He challenges listeners to seek God's clear call and to embrace the responsibilities and holiness required for fruitful ministry.
Full Transcript
It has always been a matter of great importance to me to study upon the subject of how God calls a man for His use. As a Christian biographer, I have spent countless hours in deep meditation on what occurs when God calls a person and sets that person apart for His use. I often look for common denominators between men of God whom God has used in former times.
When I conducted my laborious research on the life of George Whitefield, for instance, it was greatly useful to me personally to see how God built Whitefield from the ground up, so to speak, and that indeed is what God does with every one of us who desires to be used of Him for His great glory. He builds us up from the ground up. And when I study Bible characters such as Moses and Abraham and Joseph and David, I see common denominators between them which run like a heavenly thread throughout their lives as they serve their God.
When God calls a man into His service and sets that man apart, you better be sure that God will never give up on that man. Yes, we can hinder God's activity and blessings in our lives through willful sin. We can suffer the consequences of those grievous sins.
But God will never give up on a man He has chosen to perform a specific task in His grand plan in the redemption of men. My message this evening is entitled, A God Called Man, and our text for our study tonight is Genesis chapter 12. We will be in verses 1 through 8. Before I read our passage from the Word of God, I want to state clearly and emphatically to those who wish to be more useful to God in their generation that God will issue you a call to join Him in His work.
It will be a clear call from heaven and unmistakable. I will relate to you of which I am speaking from my own personal experience with the Almighty. When God calls a man to preach, He will set that man on fire.
I see that in the life of Moody, Edwards, Whitfield, and Spurgeon. There are many capable pastors who can run a church and teach the Bible and keep it all together. But there are few men friends who occupy our pulpits with the direct call of God on their life.
That's the great difference between power in the pulpit and just personality. I had been trained to preach by one of the greatest preachers who ever stood in the pulpit, the late Dr. Stephen F. Oldford. I was in the first graduating class of his school of preachers.
Dr. Oldford commissioned me to preach. But although I had graduated from his school of expository preaching and I had graduated from two different seminaries, I had yet to receive a genuine call on my life to preach. I cannot emphasize the importance of this enough.
I fear there are many who occupy our pulpits today. They are good men with sincere hearts, with degrees and experience to back them. But they've never ever received a call from God to preach.
Now I might have a fight on my hands with that one. But as true friends, how many preachers, how many preachers have you heard who when they preach, you are confronted with eternity and there is a God consciousness which pervades the atmosphere? Let me get back to my own story. I had preached, so to speak, in pastimes at various churches and conferences without a genuine call of God on my life to preach.
The effects of my preaching were not worth mentioning. There was absolutely nothing which stood out from my attempts at preaching. People were pleased, yes, and appreciative for my efforts.
But with the exception of a couple of times, there was no great stir. Then one day, when I was alone in my Bible, God gave me a specific call to preach. I was reading Luke's Gospel in chapter 14.
I will never forget it. It occurred on the 22nd of May one year, actually the anniversary of this very year today. I was reading the following verse which states, And the Lord said unto the servant, Go out into the highways and hedges, and compel them to come in, that my house may be filled.
I became quite startled and alarmed. God was speaking directly to me from his written word. He wanted me, of all people, to be his preacher.
From that point on, my preaching took on a different dimension altogether. I cannot stress the importance of a genuine call of God on a person's life. Oh, what heartache, friend, you will encounter if you try to serve in the ministry without a genuine call from God.
Ministry is the most demanding work in the world, for it can impact a person's eternal destiny for heaven or hell, as souls are at stake. Any other occupation may involve a number of different things, but there is nothing in this world more important than reaching a person with the gospel of the Son of God. I feel sorry for the congregation whose pulpit committee selected their pastor based on his ability to grow a church because of his winning personality over a God-called man who has a prayer life that can move the heart of the Almighty and through whose preaching the Almighty can move the hearts of men.
Surely, this aspect of a genuine call of God on a life can alter much in our churches today. We need more God-called men in our pulpits today, friends, not entertainers. You may turn in your Bibles to Genesis chapter 12.
I will begin reading in verse 1. Now the Lord had said unto Abram, Get thee out of thy country, and from thy kindred, and from thy father's house, unto a land that I will show thee, and I will make of thee a great nation, and I will bless thee, and make thy name great, and thou shalt be a blessing. And I will bless them that bless thee, and curse him that curseth thee, and in thee shall all families of the earth be blessed. So Abram departed as the Lord had spoken unto him, and Lot went with him.
And Abram was seventy and five years old when he departed out of Haran. And Abram took Sarah his wife, and Lot his brother's son, and all their substance that they had gathered, and the souls that they had gotten in Haran. And they went forth to go into the land of Canaan, and into the land of Canaan they came.
And Abram passed through the land into the place of Shechem, unto the plain of Morah, and the Canaanite was then in the land. And the Lord appeared unto Abram, and said, Unto thy seed, who will I give this land? And there he built an altar unto the Lord, who appeared unto him. I will stop there.
Well, we see this man Abraham. He's an old man in a childless marriage, which I'm sure was a constant grievance to him throughout his life, in a society of a day where children were looked upon as great blessings. Here is a man who hears from God.
He does not question it. He believes God. He acts on the belief through faith.
He steps out in faith, so to speak, and God looks at this man Abram, Abraham, and is pleased. Abraham was called the friend of God. Abraham is a God-called man whom is set apart to carry out a great purpose in the redemption of mankind.
Jesus often referred to Abraham. When Jesus called Zacchaeus, he said, This day is salvation come to this house for so much as he also is a son of Abraham. Notice how God initiates the relationship between he and Abraham.
Is that not so with us as well, friends, in our salvation? We love him because he first loved us. But God must try this man Abraham through various trials. We see in our 12th chapter here in verse 10 that there comes a famine in the land and Abraham went down into Egypt.
And then he fails the test and falters in his faith by denying his wife and pretending she was his sister. I love what Matthew Henry, the great Bible commentator, says of this incident. The grace Abraham was most eminent for was faith.
And yet he does fail through unbelief and trust of the divine providence, even after God had appeared to him twice. Alas, what will become of the willows when the cedars are thus shaken? So we see God initiate a relationship with this man Abraham. God speaks to him in a call on his life regarding the divine purpose, which would be carried out through that life.
And as we study the book of Genesis, we see how God builds this man Abraham, how he tests him. God sets him apart for a unique purpose and gives Abraham an opportunity to demonstrate his faith by offering his son Isaac as a sacrifice. Abraham's faith is tried and he passes that test of faith by his obedience to the command of God to offer up his son Isaac.
Now notice, friends, how Abraham exercises both obedience and faith. Is that not our Christian walk? Obedience and faith on a daily basis. God will test our faith, try our obedience.
He will place us in adversity to purge us of our dross and things which hinder him. He will place us in trials and great difficulties to prune us for further usefulness and further fruitfulness. Oh, the ways of God are in the deep.
But take notice of what God tells Abraham in answer to offering up Isaac. I will read us from Genesis 22, 16 through 18, which states, By myself have I sworn, saith the Lord, for because thou hast done this thing and hast not withheld thy son, thine only son, that in blessing I will bless thee, and in multiplying I will multiply thy seed as the stars of the heaven and as the sand which is upon the seashore. And thy seed shall possess the gate of his enemies, and in thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed, because thou hast obeyed my voice.
I wonder, friends, how many opportunities we have missed in our lives by not obeying God. How many blessings have been withheld from our families from our lack of faith and our lack of obedience. Let me ask you, friend, can God say of you, thou hast obeyed my voice? What a challenge this man Abraham is to us today.
Now there are several aspects to this matter of how God calls a person and sets them apart, which I now wish to dwell upon. You may wish to write these down as they are taken from my own personal experience. God has seemed pleased to place me in various trials during my life.
Some of my trials have been at times overwhelming. The recent death of my wife has been one of those times. There are certain seasons, friends, when all you can do is stand on his word and lean on him.
But I can say this, that through the midst of my sufferings and adversity, I saw the hand of God time and time again as he carried out his promises to me. He is faithful even when I am not. How can a willow stand amidst such storms of life? It is only by his grace that I am even here to speak with you this evening.
I am surprised I am still alive. I recall a certain year in my life where I was in a deep depression. Things were so bad.
I was up in the middle of the night. I felt as if I was dying. My breathing was heavy and I could not sleep.
I went into my study and sat at my desk before my open Bible. I was under my juniper tree. I told the Lord I was ready to come home to be with him.
I can recall what he told me to this day. It was about 3 a.m. in the wee hours of the morning and a voice spoke to my heart. It said, you understand what an investment is, do you not? I nodded.
The voice then said, I have an investment in you and I will receive the dividends from my investment. Well, when I heard that, I suddenly felt better and went back to bed. Like Charles Wesley, I can say I am immortal until my work is done.
Let me now go over these aspects of how God calls a person into usefulness to him. Here they are. You may wish to jot them down, friends.
Number one, he will speak through his written word. His voice will be clearly heard through his word. You may have been over a passage of scripture time and time again and it was impersonal before, but now suddenly it comes alive and it drives a dagger into your heart or it's a bright light shining upon the page.
This may occur while you are meditating on a certain passage or it may occur while you are listening to the preached word. Either way, God will speak clearly to you personally through his word and it will be confirmed by his spirit. It will be unquestionably his voice spoken to you directly.
When Moses was keeping his father-in-law's flock and he saw the bush burn with fire, he turned to approach it and the text in Exodus reads, And when the Lord saw that he turned aside to see, God called unto him out of the midst of the bush and said, Moses, Moses. And he said, Here I am. When God called Samuel, the text in 1 Samuel reads, And the Lord came and stood and called us at other times, Samuel, Samuel.
Then Samuel answered, Speak, for thy servant heareth. When God calls you, friend, you will know it, his voice will be unmistakable. When I was doing my research on my biography on J. Sidlow Baxter, I soon learned that God often spoke to Dr. Baxter by saying, Sid, Sid.
A God-called man will recognize his call. Number two, when God calls a person, there is often a prolonged time of development. Moses spent 40 years in Egypt before he fled to the backside of Midian in the desert.
And it took God 40 years to get Egypt out of Moses before God could use Moses. Listen, friends, it took God 20 years before he could use me. I was so full of myself, I was not yet ready to preach to Christ who emptied himself.
God took me through a long period of development. First, God gifts a person with abilities, and then God develops those abilities to bring him glory. We have to be made dependable to God by being made willing to be expendable.
There is a cross in the middle of service to the king. The self-life must go the way of the cross. One must be placed into the school of Christ, and the lessons learned there will be gained through much difficulty.
So when God calls a man, he then takes time to develop him for usefulness to him. Number three, there would then be a time of testing. The man will be tried time and time again to see if obedience and faith is exercised.
Many failures, many disappointments will be encountered. The slower the learner, the longer the process of trial. Some are more resistant to the will of God in their lives, others are more pliable.
God does not use the same means with everyone. Each man needs different instruction from the master teacher. The testing will come in different seasons of life and through various means.
But the end purpose is to discover our hearts, learn our weaknesses, and learn to lean only upon Christ Jesus. A self-reliant man will never do in ministry. He must be a God-reliant man to be a God-called man.
Number four, trial and adversity makes the man. I remember Stephen Offord sharing a story with me as I was sitting with him in his study one day. He said a pastor friend of his invited him to go hear a young preacher who was making a lot of noise within Southern Baptist circles.
So this pastor and Dr. Offord got in the car and traveled to hear this young man preach. On the drive home, the pastor asked Stephen Offord what he thought of the young preacher. Dr. Offord replied, yes, he is a very fine preacher indeed, but he hasn't suffered enough.
When I heard Dr. Offord relate that story to me, at the time I did not understand it, but now I do. Some of the best preachers I know have been great sufferers. I was sitting in Adrian Rogers' office with him one day and I looked him in the eye and I said, Dr. Rogers, tell me, what was the turning point in your ministry? He looked down at the ground and then after a pause he looked thoughtfully at me and replied, it was after the death of my baby boy.
When I study David Brainerd, Spurgeon, Whitfield, I see a common thread which runs throughout their lives, and that thread is great suffering. The divine pruning knife in the master's hand cuts deep, but it cuts for the specific purpose of producing more fruit. Few want to yield to that divine pruning knife, friends.
I recall preaching to a group of pastors one evening on this very subject of the divine pruning knife, and God seemed to bless the message that evening for there was a great solemnity in the air while I preached from John chapter 15. When I was through, an elderly saint approached me and hugged me and he said, I have been a pastor for 50 years, I want you to know, but tonight I'm going home and when I get there, I'm going to kneel by my bed and I'm going to ask God to get out his pruning knife on me and my ministry. But few want that pain, friends, but usefulness and suffering go hand in hand.
I remember a story about Helen Rosevere, which has stayed with me. She was a missionary to the Congo who was greatly used of God. When she was young, she was a member of a church that Graham Scroggie was the pastor.
She went forward one night in a call to service. Graham Scroggie, in his wisdom, took her Bible and in the margin he wrote Philippians 3.10 and then he looked her in the eye and told her, you have done this already, you know him. I pray that someday you will come to the place of privilege, of knowing the fellowship of his sufferings.
Twenty years later, in 1966, Helen Rosevere was serving as a missionary in Africa in the middle of the uprising in the Congo and she was brutally beaten with a rubber hose and kicked by her attackers. At one point, the pain was so intense, too hard to endure, she almost couldn't take it. But she remembered the words of Graham Scroggie years ago regarding knowing the fellowship of his sufferings and this helped her through that ordeal.
I'm not intimating that to be used of God you must suffer for him, but you must be prepared to suffer if he calls you to that fellowship of his sufferings. So this matter of being a God-called man or a God-called woman is serious business, friends. It comes with great accountability and deep responsibility.
If your prayer is, God use me, be prepared for the answer to that prayer. It may come in ways you never imagined. Finally, a God-called man must be a holy man of God.
You cannot live a life of inconsistency and remain there and expect to have God's smile upon you. Inanus it states, can two walk together unless they be agreed. God is holy and he hates sin.
If you have not mastered sin in your life, then your usefulness to God will be minimized. All the men I know who were greatly used to God were holy men of God. Sidlo Baxter, Adrian Rogers, Stephen Olford, Leonard Ravenhill were each holy men who walked closely with their God.
I recall a story related by Manly Beasley about Stephen Olford. Dr. Olford was to preach in a Dallas area church and the pastor of the church asked a young intern to go and pick up Dr. Olford from the airport. The young man asked to see a photograph of Stephen Olford for he did not know what he looked like.
The pastor replied, no need for that. Just go to the airport terminal and watch the passengers as they deplane and look for a man who has God all over him. That will be Stephen Olford.
The young man went to the airport and carefully observed the passengers as they appeared from the corridor. As soon as Stephen Olford emerged with his coat thrown over his arm and briefcase in hand, he knew it was him because of his holy countenance. Listen friends, when God calls a man, he will make that man holy.
Holy sold out to him in service and holy unto him with his life. There may be bumps along the way and straying footsteps and mud puddles, but the good shepherd will always go fetch us, always clean us up. He'll clean up his straying sheep and sanctify them for more faithful service in the future.
The Christian life is a life like Abraham, of obedience and faith continually fleshed out in our mortal frames. I like the old hymn, trust and obey, for there is no other way to be happy in Jesus than to trust and obey. And it's true friends, it's true.
Well, I hope these observations have been of some help to you as you seek God's best for you with your life. Remember this, when God issues a call, he will see it through to completion. And when God makes a promise to us through his word, you can be sure friend, God keeps his promises.
You can count on him to get you through every obstacle in life for his grace is sufficient. It's sufficient for every hurt. It's sufficient for every pain.
It's sufficient for every trial and it's sufficient for every adversity in life. And his grace is sufficient for the completion of his call on your life friend. Pray that the Lord of the harvest will send more God called men and women into the harvest field in the mid 1800s.
It was a time of missionary enterprise, both in America and Great Britain, but my has the gold damned. Pray for God to raise up God called preachers to reach this generation with the gospel of the son of God. This is the greatest need in our land today.
Sermon Outline
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I. The Nature of a God-Called Man
- God calls men with a clear, unmistakable voice
- A genuine call transforms preaching and ministry effectiveness
- Examples from biblical and historical figures
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II. The Life and Faith of Abraham
- God's call to Abraham initiates a divine purpose
- Faith and obedience demonstrated through trials
- God's blessings contingent on Abraham's obedience
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III. The Process of Development and Testing
- Prolonged periods of preparation and growth
- Trials reveal faith and obedience
- Suffering refines and prepares for fruitful ministry
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IV. The Call to Holiness and Accountability
- A God-called man must live consistently holy
- Ministry carries great responsibility and accountability
- Prayer for usefulness requires readiness for God's answer
Key Quotes
“When God calls a man to preach, He will set that man on fire.” — E.A. Johnston
“God will never give up on a man He has chosen to perform a specific task in His grand plan in the redemption of men.” — E.A. Johnston
“A self-reliant man will never do in ministry. He must be a God-reliant man to be a God-called man.” — E.A. Johnston
Application Points
- Seek and discern God's clear call through His Word and prayer before pursuing ministry.
- Embrace trials and suffering as opportunities for spiritual growth and preparation for service.
- Live a consistent holy life, understanding the great responsibility that comes with being God-called.
