As I continued reading through The Call, I found myself spending less time thinking about the call itself and more time thinking about the One who is doing the calling. That may seem like a small distinction, but I am becoming increasingly convinced that it is one of the most important lessons in the entire book.
When most people think about calling, they naturally gravitate toward questions of direction. What does God want me to do? Where should I go? What decision should I make? What is His plan for my life? I have certainly spent plenty of time asking those questions myself.
But Guinness keeps pulling the reader back to a deeper reality. Before we ask what God is calling us to do, we should spend some time considering who it is that is calling us.
That thought took me back to a difficult season in my own life.
It was November of 2005. Football season had ended earlier than I had hoped, and while coaching disappointment was certainly part of what I was feeling, there were deeper struggles taking place as well. I remember writing a series of blog posts during that period with titles like "Hurt" and "Laboring in Vain." Looking back at those entries now, I can still feel some of the heaviness that surrounded that season.
One prayer from that time captured where I was emotionally:
"I confess to You O Lord that I am powerless to do even one good thing. I cannot change a heart. I cannot build a family or a program. I desperately need You."
The truth is that I felt fruitless. I was working hard, trying to lead well, trying to do what I believed was right, but I could not see much evidence that any of it was making a difference. Anyone who has spent years in education, coaching, ministry, parenting, or leadership probably understands that feeling. There are seasons when effort and results do not seem to be closely connected.
One morning during that stretch I woke up especially discouraged. It was cold, dark, and foggy. I got dressed, climbed into my old Mercedes station wagon, and began the drive to school. My radio was broken, which left me alone with my thoughts, and unfortunately my thoughts were not particularly encouraging that morning.
As I drove through the fog, I finally asked out loud what had been simmering beneath the surface for weeks.
"Father, what are You doing?"
I remember telling Him that I had moved my family, worked as hard as I knew how, tried to be faithful, and yet everything felt confusing and uncertain. More than answers, I remember wanting reassurance.
I needed to know He was there.
When I arrived at the football field house, I pulled up near the weight room, turned off the engine, and sat there for a moment. As I looked toward the stadium fence, I noticed something I had never seen before.
The chain-link fence was covered with spider webs.
Not a few webs. Hundreds of them!
The fog had condensed on the strands in such a way that every web was suddenly visible. What had been invisible the day before was now outlined by thousands of tiny droplets. As I got out of the car and walked closer, I realized that every web seemed perfectly designed. One after another stretched across the fence in intricate patterns. They had likely been there for days or weeks, but I had never noticed them because the conditions had not allowed me to see them.
Standing there in the cold, looking at those webs, I had one of the most profound moments of my Christian life.
Not because God gave me a detailed answer. What impressed itself upon my heart that morning was a simple truth:
"I am here."
The older I get, the more I realize how often I want explanations when what I really need is God's presence.
He reminded me that He was still there, whether I could see Him clearly or not.
That experience has stayed with me for nearly twenty years now. Looking back, I think it connects directly to what Guinness is emphasizing in this chapter. We become consumed with questions about the call, while God continually directs our attention back to the Caller.
One of the reasons books like Knowing God by J. I. Packer had such an impact on me as a young believer is that they focused less on what God could do for me and more on who He is. The God who calls us is not merely a guide helping us navigate life. He is the Creator of all things. He is holy, sovereign, wise, and good. He knows the end from the beginning and never loses sight of His purposes.
If that is true, then the most important aspect of any calling is not the assignment itself.
It is the One who makes the assignment.
The Psalmist could walk through the valley of the shadow of death because God was with him. Abraham could leave his homeland because God was with him. The disciples could leave their nets because Jesus stood before them. Their confidence was never rooted primarily in circumstances. It was rooted in the character of God.
That is why I think Guinness is right to keep bringing us back to this point. The ultimate blessing of Christianity is not that God gives us purpose, direction, meaning, or even eternal life.
The ultimate blessing is that we get God Himself.
And sometimes, when life is foggy and confusing and we cannot see very far down the road, that truth is enough.
Song Link: Little Things





