Monday, September 26, 2011
The Call: The Haunting Question
I'm blogging some of my favorite quotes from The Call by Os Guinness. These come from chapter 3, The Haunting Question.
Part of our contemporary crisis of identity can be summed up by saying that modern people are haunted by an inescapable question of biography: Who am I?
Many of the categories people offer to explain or heal us today are too general.Who am I? Why am I alive? Being general, the categories never address us as individuals. At best our individuality is lost in the generality. At worst, it is contradicted and denied. All attempts to explain human individuality in general terms can be summed up as varieties of being "constrained to be."
A second and opposite position has equally obvious weaknesses - varies of "the courage of be." We can actually, we are told, "invent ourselves." The absurdity of this position is obvious to all but the rich, the strong, the wealthy, the young, and the fanatical. For one thing, even if we can do what we want, the question remains: What do we want? The near-omnipotence of our means of freedom doubles back to join hands with the near-emptiness of our ends. We do not have a purpose to match our technique. So ironically, we have the greatest capacity when we have the least clue what it is for.
The third perspective views individuality as a matter of being "constituted to be." From our very birth, we are told, we bear the seeds of our eventual character; we carry the script of our life stories.
Humanness is a response to God's calling. Responding to the call means rising to the challenge, but in conversation and in partnership - and in an intimate relationship between the called and the Caller.
Only when we respond to Christ and follow his call do we become our real selves and come to have personalities of our own. So when it comes to identity, modern people have things completely back to front: Professing to be unsure of God, they pretend to be sure of themselves. Followers of Christ put things the other way around: Unsure of ourselves, we are sure of God.
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