For 150 years, Canadian Baptists have responded to God’s calling to serve Him through faithful witness. Our mission is born out of the fact that there is a caller – God – and that we have been called. Our mission is our act of obedience to the one who has called us.

CalledDr. Harry Gardner
CalledDr. Harry Gardner
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2024 marks the 150th Anniversary of our Canadian Baptist Mission movement! We will have an opportunity to celebrate God’s calling on individuals, churches, women’s organizations, conventions and unions in our country as well as the churches and ministry groups we have partnered with across the world.

In 2007, the Board of Trustees of Acadia Divinity College announced that I had been chosen to serve as President and appointed to the Chair of Church Leadership named after two beloved former Principals, Abner J. Langley and Harold L. Mitton. This call was the culmination of many months of personal and corporate discernment. I had joy and peace in the call, but the demands of leadership caused me to throw myself repeatedly on His enabling power and grace. That deep sense of calling, affirmed by God’s people, sustained me through the nearly twelve years of leadership that followed. I discovered that the presence of a pounding heart and sweaty palms at times could co-exist with this call and a heart of deep shalom. This paradox speaks to whatever romanticism and idealism we may have in considering what it means to be called of God. For individuals and for churches, His call is often well outside our comfort circle.

However, my first Christian calling occurred on my 16th Birthday when I experienced baptism. In this public event, I affirmed that I had entrusted myself to the Lordship of Jesus Christ identifying with His life, death, and resurrection. But much more was happening! I recognized that I was forever joined and bound to His body. Whatever gifts the Spirit had given would be called out by His church in the decades to follow. This is not always understood or experienced by some who may have placed an over emphasis on the individual or personal calling. We are bound to Him and joined in baptism to His body, the Church (1 Cor: 12:12-14). Together, we worship at His feet and walk where He walks, going out with Him to serve His world.

Such individual and corporate calling is seen in John McLaurin, the first Canadian Baptist to be sent out solely by Canadians, who arrived in India in 1874. Together, we have been caught up in Christ’s mission, an integral mission of both word and deed since that time, reflected in the expanding partnerships across the world. Matthew 4:23 indicates that “Jesus went throughout Galilee, teaching in their synagogues, proclaiming the good news of the kingdom and healing every disease and sickness among the people.”

The end of each Gospel and the first chapter of Acts outlines the scope of our appointment by Jesus. This Great Commission to make disciples of all nations is best fulfilled as we seek to live out the Great Commandment given in the parable of the Samaritan (Luke 10:25-37).

We are “to love God with heart, soul, mind and strength, and love neighbor as yourself.”

“Together, we have been caught up in Christ’s mission, an integral mission of both word and deed since that time, reflected in the expanding partnerships across the world.”

Being called requires corporate and careful listening to the Spirit. Sometimes we need to wait before we engage the work, and to worship and pray before we manifest the muscle of our efforts, as good as those efforts might be. Sometimes, it is not only knowing what we are to do, but when and with whom.

Acts 13:1-3 provides helpful insight on being called to mission. The leaders of the church at Antioch worshipped the Lord and fasted. It was in the midst of that, the Holy Spirit spoke, “Set apart for me Barnabas and Saul for the work to which I have called them.” Knowing what we are to do in the broadest sense is clear from scripture, but a particular calling is born from corporate worship, discerning prayer, and fasting.

Reflecting Light DISCUSSION GUIDE
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Contributor

Dr. Harry G. Gardner

President Emeritus of Acadia Divinity College and past CBM board member
Wolfville, NS

Dr. Gardner graduated from Dalhousie University (BA 1974), Acadia Divinity College (MDiv 1977), and Fuller Theological Seminary, California (DMin 1993). He was the minister of the Burlington-Victoria Harbour, Wilmot, and Liverpool-Brooklyn United Baptist Churches.

He served as the Executive Minister for the Canadian Baptists of Atlantic Canada and as a board member of Canadian Baptist Ministries.

In 2007, he was the President of the North American Baptist Fellowship and one of twelve Vice Presidents of the Baptist World Alliance. He currently serves the BWA’s Commissions of Theological Education and Transformational Leadership.

As President of Acadia Divinity College and Dean of Theology of Acadia University (2008-2019), he also occupied the Abner J. Langley and Harold L. Mitton Chair of Church Leadership.

Over the past 150 years Canadian Baptists have had such experiences as God’s people. We celebrate God’s faithfulness. We can point to glimpses and realities of the presence of His Kingdom and His will being done. However, sometimes, things have interrupted what we had discerned and believed to be God’s call. Here we surrender to God the unresolved questions and unrealized expectations, knowing that He will bring hope, healing, and reconciliation in ways we did not expect.

At one point, the apostle Paul believed God had called him specifically to Asia (Acts 16:6-10) but they were prevented by the Spirit of Jesus. Although kept from going to Bithynia, Paul

had a vision in the night of the Macedonian man begging him, “Come over to Macedonia and help us”. This launched a new direction for the mission. He later went to Asia Minor (now known as Anatolia) but not at the time he had originally set his heart to go. In our 150 years of ministry, God has sometimes closed a door we thought would be open only to discover His calling in a new pathway of partnership and mission.

In his book, Ministry in the Image of God, Stephen Seamands says, “The ministry into which we have entered is the ministry of Jesus Christ, the Son, to the Father, through the Holy Spirit, for the sake of the Church and the world.” Jesus indicated that His anointing was to proclaim good news to the poor, freedom for the prisoners, recovery of sight for the blind, setting the oppressed free and proclaiming the year of the Lord’s favor. (Luke 4:18-19).

Canadian Baptists have responded to God’s call to come alongside national and international churches and partners to serve with them. Examples include initiatives of church planting, equipping of pastoral leaders, seeking peace, justice and reconciliation, improving health care, responses to natural disasters and crises, addressing food insecurity, and equipping for community development.

We seek to hear God’s call to join others through their local church and partnerships to engage His mission in this world that the prayer of Jesus could be answered, “may your kingdom come and your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.”

Reflecting Light DISCUSSION GUIDE

Contributor

Dr. Harry G. Gardner

President Emeritus of Acadia Divinity College and past CBM board member
Wolfville, NS

Dr. Gardner graduated from Dalhousie University (BA 1974), Acadia Divinity College (MDiv 1977), and Fuller Theological Seminary, California (DMin 1993). He was the minister of the Burlington-Victoria Harbour, Wilmot, and Liverpool-Brooklyn United Baptist Churches.

He served as the Executive Minister for the Canadian Baptists of Atlantic Canada and as a board member of Canadian Baptist Ministries.

In 2007, he was the President of the North American Baptist Fellowship and one of twelve Vice Presidents of the Baptist World Alliance. He currently serves the BWA’s Commissions of Theological Education and Transformational Leadership.

As President of Acadia Divinity College and Dean of Theology of Acadia University (2008-2019), he also occupied the Abner J. Langley and Harold L. Mitton Chair of Church Leadership.

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Reflections from others

Renee MacVicar

Thanks, Harry for these reflections.
I deeply appreciate your acknowledgment that trembling and peace can co-exist in a calling – for both an individual and a church. As you say, "I discovered that the presence of a pounding heart and sweaty palms at times could co-exist with this call and a heart of deep shalom." This has been my experience too.
It's important to recognize following God's call takes courage and has a cost, even when you have complete peace that it is from God. I fear too many of us expect that God's calling will be easy or that we'll conquer the challenges quickly at every turn. Stepping into God's calling takes courage to be dependent on Him for ongoing faithfulness to the calling and fulfillment of the calling. In the living out of a calling the corporate worship, discerning prayer, and fasting that got you there are the same things needed to sustain you there. They are the same practices that will help you and the church together understand when God "closed a door" only to discover "His calling in a new pathway of partnership and mission." May we, as Canadian Baptists, continue to courageously follow God's call into the world.