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In Hebrew scriptures, the great patriarchs and prophets usually struggle to recognize God's call. A student-teacher relationship is often the vital key to discerning vocation. The relationship between Eli, the temple priest at Shiloh in the eleventh century B.C.E.., and his young ward Samuel, who assisted in worship, illustrates this important spiritual idea. [1] In 1 Samuel, God calls Samuel audibly three times, but Samuel (who is possibly still just a boy at this time) doesn't recognize God's voice. He instead responds instead to Eli the priest--his elder, mentor, supervisor, and co-habitant. "Samuel did not yet know the LORD, and the word of the LORD had not yet been revealed to him." [2] It was Eli, his mentor, who finally realized God was calling Samuel and told him how to respond. The fourth time, obeying Eli's advice, Samuel asked God to speak and then listened while God gave him a prophetic message for Eli. [3] Just as Eli had helped Samuel discern his call and vocation, young Samuel then helped his mentor Eli understand God's will and work in Eli's life.
Another example of this kind of relationship is that between the prophet Elijah and his young successor Elisha. God tells Elijah, a nomadic prophet, to anoint Elisha to be prophet in his place. He found Elisha and put his own mantle on him, explaining that although he could indeed go kiss his parents goodbye as he'd requested, Elijah had just done something very important to him. [4] Elisha initially followed and served Elijah, but as Elisha began his political and prophet work with the future king of Syria, Elijah recognizes the fulfillment of his own prophetic understanding and career. [5] When Elijah asks what he can do for Elisha before being take up, and Elisha asks for the wisdom and discernment of his mentor: "I pray you, let me inherit a double share of your spirit." [6]
Because of the resistance to women's ministry and leadership in many spiritual communities, their experiences of call often follow this model as well. Nearly all of the women clergy interviewed by Fulbright scholar and graduate student in sociology Annette McCabe felt a distinct and specific call, usually at a young age, to give herself over to full-time Christian service. One woman described having an "almost audible" "Samuel-type experience": "I just kept hearing my name, 'Would you preach for me, would you teach for me?'" One clergywoman described her whole process, fairly typical both of the biblical accounts of call and of women interviewed: "I feel it ...