“The Species With a Call”
In recent days I’ve been reading a new book authored by Drexel Rayford. Drexel has been a dear friend for about thirty years. You may recall that a few months ago I shared some things from one of his blogs with you on this site. His new book is called The Species with a Call and I highly recommend it to you. I recommend it not only because of my friendship with Drexel but due to the book’s subject matter. It certainly dovetails with the themes of Seeing Creation.
The Species with a Call is primarily a book about vocation. I can assure you that Drexel’s understanding of vocation is likely different than that espoused by most people today. At the end of one chapter he writes, “All of Creation is a conversation between the Person and Creation, including humans spoken into existence. That’s why vocation lies at the center of our being. God’s voice, God’s call, God’s invitation to participate with God in the ongoing process of tending to and caring for Creation is woven into the very fabric of our humanity. We share this vocation, all of us.” Most people tend to equate their vocation with their job. Using the Scriptures as a guide Drexel argues that the two are not necessarily the same thing. He believes we all share a common vocation or “calling” even though there are multitudinous careers from which to choose. These careers, whatever they happen to be, should help us fulfill our common vocation.
I appreciate the book’s emphasis on the communal nature of vocation over and against an individualistic understanding. As Drexel points out, “Our common humanity involves a larger purpose than a single human life, and when we make this truth our own, we become less self-centered, better self-defined, more courageous, creative, caring, peaceful, and purposeful. We share the same vocation for the sake of a huge and marvelous Creation. When we grasp this truth, we move more resolutely toward authenticity in our individual lives.”
Drexel sees our failure to understand our true vocation as a source of many of our societal ills and most certainly our environmental crisis. He points back to the story of “the Fall” in Genesis 3 and says “the snake’s concept of the human’s purpose was to consume the fruit. God’s concept for humans was to tend to, care for, and produce more fruit. While God called Adam and Eve to be creative producers, the snake wanted to make Eve and Adam into consumers. According to the snake, the creation was there for the humans to consume. On the other hand, God called humans to serve creation and be productive within certain constraints.” He follows this up by adding, “We have the capacity to discern how we can be stewards of the resources creation offers us along with the ability to restrain our consumption so that it doesn’t become destructive. Eve’s failure, aided and abetted by Adam, was to succumb to the snake’s clever marketing campaign to cast off all restraint. When they cast off their restraint, forgetting their call to be stewards with the power to say ‘no’ to certain forms of consumption, they also cast aside their authentic vocation.”
There’s plenty more I could share with you from Drexel’s book but my main point in passing on what I have is to encourage you to give further thought to your own vocation. Do you agree that we all share a common vocation and that this vocation includes partnering with God in caring for and tending to Creation? As a long-time student of the Scriptures I cannot help but affirm that Drexel is on target and that many of our problems globally, societally and personally are due, at least in part, to our failure to accept and act on these elementary but profound truths. But Drexel’s book doesn’t just point us to the problems, it also directs us to the solution. The solution comes when “the species with a call” acts appropriately upon that call. May God help us do just that!
–Chuck
(For a number of years Drexel and I served churches about five miles apart in Meade County, Kentucky. The images I’ve used today are some I took in that area. And just in case you may be interested, and I hope you will, Drexel’s book, The Species with a Call, can be purchased at Amazon.com.)