1 Samuel 16:1-13 · Samuel Anoints David
When C Is Not Average
1 Samuel 16:1-13
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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This world is governed by "C" people - not "the best and the brightest" only, but the committed, the consecrated, and the compassionate. In scriptures you find over and over again that "C" people also prevail. Indeed, God chooses ordinary people to achieve extraordinary tasks. The things we say we'll never do - "It's not in me" - become the very things God's grace leads us into. God gives us the resources we need at the time we need them.

One of the greatest pressures we all operate under is the imperative to succeed. Parents no longer just worry about their children getting into a good college; they worry about them getting into a good pre-school. Increasingly a B.A. or B.S. degree only qualifies its recipient to work at a McDonald's.

Throughout the Excessive Eighties and into the New-Age Nineties, we are possessed with a drive to "stand head and shoulders above everyone else," either through our looks, our wealth, our success, or even our silliness. (The new "Candid Camera" clones like "America's Funniest Home Videos" offer a $10,000 reward to the most ridiculous video of the week.) Today's cultural standards decry the mean, avoiding averages in favor of extremes at all costs. Dazzling successes, or even splashy failures, are our heroes. Average is to be avoided at all costs.

The problem with this attitude is that it is neither scripturally true nor sociologically accurate. Any high school reunion confirms the fact that the inconspicuous "C" student often blossoms into the civic leader, the backbone of the community. And the Bible over and over again tells how God can use ordinary people to do extraordinary things. This is what so astonished the people of Jesus' day. Here was an ordinary carpenter, a typical resident from a side street in Nazareth. He was not a scholar or a rabbi, just a semi-skilled craftsman making his living with his hands. How could he be the son of God? As Nathaniel said, "Can anything good come out of Nazareth?" Paul said in 1 Corinthians 1:26 that the first Christians counted "not many ... (who) were wise according to worldly standards, not many (who) were powerful, not many (who) were of noble birth."

But look how God used these average people to do wondrous and mighty things. Ordinary people like Moses, who couldn't talk before people; ordinary people like Isaac, who was an honest man, a good man, but boasted nothing special about himself; ordinary people like the twelve disciples, none of them rich, or famous, or studied - just twelve common men with uncommon faith. And if you read the Bible with an eye toward whom God chooses, you will see over and over again that God has let the gospel hang by a thread, committing the future to insignificant people, unnamed and unknown in many cases, but ordinary, not outlandish, in their talents. Look at the young David, a scrawny adolescent chosen to replace the handsome and charismatic Saul. But David's obedience to God's word, his faith in God's presence in his life, and his humility before God when he failed, established him as Israel's greatest ruler.

Look at the resurrection account in Luke 24:18. Here is the most incredible event in all of history - the rejected, crucified Jesus is, by the power of God, raised from the dead, transformed, redeemed, glorified, given a new body of glory. And what happens? According to Luke, one of his first appearances is to a person, unnamed and unknown, and to a man named Cleopas, who after his witness to the remaining disciples is never heard from again.

Psychologist Eugene Kennedy is famous for talking about "the wonder of the ordinary." He observes that "when persons suffer mental illness, they lose something of their individuality, they exhibit common kinds of behavior that we call 'symptoms.' Because of the similarity of their symptoms, people can be classified as having the same kind of illness." But that is not the way with ordinary persons. Healthy people cannot be put into categories for a startlingly simple reason. They are all different from one another. Nobody exhibits the same, predictable, patterned responses. In other words, the wonder of the ordinary is that we are all extraordinary.

How often do we fail to see in life the wonder and mystery that is there because we do not appreciate the ordinary. How often do we reject the good news because its music is not as obvious as a marching band. Some people seem to expect that God's presence in the world should be a march orchestrated by John Philip Sousa. They think that God's presence should be like the Statue of Liberty, its torch lighting the darkness for miles around. Else God simply does not exist. Do not miss the wonder because of the average. Do not let the miraculous skip you by because of the common. Subtlety and restraint are signs of good taste, and God has good taste. For God has put wonder in the ordinary.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Works, by Leonard Sweet