We Are Called
A Consolidated Study on the Callings of the Believer
From the opening pages of Genesis—where God called light into existence and called Adam by name—to the closing chapters of Revelation—where the Spirit and the Bride call out “Come!”—Scripture reveals a God who calls. He is not distant or passive. He initiates. He summons. He invites. And when He calls, everything changes.
As believers, we are not simply people who decided to follow God; we are people who were called by God. That distinction matters deeply. Our identity, our purpose, and our daily living all flow from the reality that the Creator of the universe has personally summoned us into relationship and mission.
Paul opens his letter to the Romans by identifying himself as “called as an apostle” (klētos apostolos, Romans 1:1), then addresses the believers as “called of Jesus Christ” (klētoi Iēsou Christou, Romans 1:6) and “called as saints” (klētoi hagioi, Romans 1:7). Romans 8:28 anchors it beautifully: those who love God are “called according to His purpose” (klētoi kata prothesin). The calling is not random. It is purposeful, intentional, and woven into God’s eternal plan.
Called to Be Salt
The Greek Behind the Text
Understanding the Metaphor
In first-century Palestine, salt served multiple critical functions. It preserved food from decay in a world without refrigeration. It enhanced flavor. It was used in covenant ceremonies—a “covenant of salt” (Numbers 18:19; 2 Chronicles 13:5) represented an unbreakable agreement. And it was rubbed into the soil in measured amounts to promote fertility.
When Jesus declared “You are the salt of the earth,” He was not giving a suggestion—He was making a declaration of identity. The Greek is emphatic: Hymeis este to halas tēs gēs. “You—YOU—are the salt.” The pronoun is front-loaded for emphasis. There is no ambiguity. If believers are not fulfilling this role, no one else will.
The salt of the ancient world (often sourced from the Dead Sea region) was not the pure sodium chloride we know today. It was mixed with other minerals, and if exposed to moisture or weather, the actual salt could leach out, leaving behind a white powder that looked like salt but had no preserving or flavoring power. It was literally “good for nothing.”
Cross-References
✎ Life Application
- Preservation: Are you actively resisting moral and cultural decay in your sphere of influence—not through judgment, but through the quiet, consistent testimony of a holy life?
- Flavor: Does your presence add something distinctly good to the environments you enter—your workplace, your neighborhood, your family? Or have you become indistinguishable from the world around you?
- Covenant Faithfulness: Salt represented covenant loyalty. Are you living as a person of your word, reflecting God’s faithfulness in your commitments?
- Seasoned Speech: Colossians 4:6 ties salt directly to our words. Is your conversation marked by grace, wisdom, and the kind of depth that makes people thirsty for the living water?
In what specific areas of my life has my “salt” lost its distinctive flavor? What steps can I take this week to restore it?
Called to Be Light
The Greek Behind the Text
Understanding the Metaphor
The progression from salt to light in the Sermon on the Mount is intentional. Salt works invisibly—mixed into food, rubbed into soil, dissolved into preservation. Light works visibly—it is seen, it exposes, it guides. Together, they represent the full scope of Christian influence: the hidden work of character and the visible testimony of good works.
Notice that Jesus does not say “You should try to be light.” He says “You ARE the light of the world” (Hymeis este to phōs tou kosmou). It is a statement of fact, not an aspiration. The only question is whether we will let that light shine or hide it under a basket (modios—a measuring container of about 8 liters, used for grain).
The purpose of the light is crucial: “so that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father who is in heaven.” The light is never meant to draw attention to ourselves. It is meant to illuminate the goodness of God.
Cross-References
✎ Life Application
- Visibility: Faith was never meant to be a private, hidden affair. Are you living your faith openly—not obnoxiously, but authentically—in a way that people can see?
- Good Works: The light Jesus describes is not abstract. It is demonstrated through tangible acts of love, generosity, justice, and mercy. What “good works” are people seeing in your life this week?
- Directing Glory: The temptation is always to let the light shine on us rather than through us. Are your good deeds pointing people to God, or to your own reputation?
- Dispelling Darkness: Light doesn’t fight darkness—it simply shows up, and the darkness flees. Are you bringing truth, hope, and clarity into the dark places of your community?
Where in my life am I hiding my light under a basket? What “basket”—fear, comfort, apathy—needs to be removed?
Called to Be Ambassadors
The Greek Behind the Text
Understanding the Metaphor
Paul’s use of ambassador language would have been immediately powerful to his readers. The Roman Empire operated a vast diplomatic network. An ambassador (presbeutēs) carried the authority and message of Caesar himself. To dishonor an ambassador was to dishonor the emperor.
Paul is saying that every believer has been given a diplomatic post in foreign territory. This world is not our final home (Philippians 3:20, “Our citizenship is in heaven”), and we have been stationed here to represent the King and deliver His message of reconciliation.
The phrase “God making His appeal through us” is staggering in its implications. The God who spoke galaxies into existence has chosen to make His appeal to a lost world through human voices—through our voices.
Cross-References
✎ Life Application
- Representing the King: An ambassador’s behavior reflects directly on the one who sent them. Does your conduct—at work, online, in traffic, in conflict—accurately represent the character of Christ?
- Delivering the Message: Ambassadors don’t create their own message; they faithfully deliver the King’s message. Are you sharing the gospel as God has revealed it, or editing it to be more comfortable?
- Foreign Territory Mindset: An ambassador lives in a country that is not their home. This frees us from clinging too tightly to worldly comforts, knowing our true citizenship is elsewhere.
- Boldness with Grace: Paul asked for prayer to speak boldly even while in chains (Ephesians 6:20). Ambassadorship requires courage married to the gentleness of Christ.
If someone evaluated my “diplomacy” this past week, what message would they think I’m delivering—and for whom?
Called to Be Witnesses
The Greek Behind the Text
Understanding the Calling
The courtroom imagery is deliberate. A witness in a legal setting has one job: to tell the truth about what they have experienced. They don’t argue the case (that’s the advocate’s role). They don’t render the verdict (that’s the judge’s role). They simply testify.
Jesus calls us to be witnesses—people who testify to the reality of who He is and what He has done in our lives. This takes the pressure off. You don’t need a seminary degree to be a witness. You need an experience with the living God and the willingness to talk about it.
The geographic expansion in Acts 1:8 is also significant: Jerusalem (your immediate community), Judea (your broader region), Samaria (the places and people outside your comfort zone), and the ends of the earth (the global mission).
Cross-References
✎ Life Application
- Personal Testimony: Your story of encountering Christ is one of the most powerful tools you carry. Can you articulate it clearly? Practice sharing your testimony in 2–3 minutes.
- Everyday Witness: Witnessing is not only an event—it’s a lifestyle. Every conversation, every act of integrity, every moment of peace in chaos testifies to the reality of God in your life.
- Empowered by the Spirit: Acts 1:8 connects the witness to the Holy Spirit’s power. This is not about human persuasion—it’s about supernatural empowerment.
- Courage unto Death: The word martys eventually became “martyr.” Am I living with the kind of conviction that would hold firm even under pressure or persecution?
What has God done in my life that I should be testifying about more openly? Who in my “Jerusalem” needs to hear it?
Called to Be Disciples
The Greek Behind the Text
Understanding the Calling
The call to discipleship is the most foundational of all the callings. Before Jesus called anyone to be salt, light, or an ambassador, He called them to follow Him. “Follow me” (akolouthei moi) was the invitation that launched everything. Peter and Andrew left their nets. Matthew left his tax booth. The Twelve left their old lives behind.
In the first-century rabbinic world, students did not choose their rabbi—the rabbi chose his students. Jesus did not set up a school and wait for applicants. He walked to the shore, to the tax booth, to the tree where Zacchaeus sat, and He called. His criteria were not academic brilliance or religious pedigree—He chose fishermen, tax collectors, zealots, and doubters.
But Jesus was also startlingly honest about the cost. Luke 14:25–33 contains some of His hardest words about discipleship. He speaks of bearing one’s own cross (an image of public shame and death) and renouncing all that one has. The call is free—but the commitment costs everything.
The goal of discipleship is transformation. “A disciple is not above his teacher, but everyone when he is fully trained will be like his teacher” (Luke 6:40). The Great Commission (Matthew 28:19–20) commands us to go and make disciples of all nations—to reproduce in others what Christ is producing in us.
Cross-References
✎ Life Application
- Daily Following: Discipleship is not a one-time decision—it is a daily practice. Each morning presents a fresh opportunity to choose to follow Jesus.
- Total-Life Learning: A mathētēs learned by living with the rabbi. Are you in His Word consistently, in prayer regularly, in community intentionally?
- Counting the Cost: Where are you holding something back—a relationship, an ambition, a comfort—that He is asking you to lay down?
- Making Disciples: Who are you actively investing in so that they might become more like Christ?
If “discipleship” means becoming like my Teacher in every area of life, where is the biggest gap between who I am and who Jesus is?
Called to Be Servants
The Greek Behind the Text
Understanding the Metaphor
Jesus’ teaching on servanthood was radically countercultural. In the Greco-Roman world, greatness was measured by how many people served you. Jesus inverted the entire system: greatness is measured by how many people you serve.
James and John had just asked for positions of honor—seats at His right and left hand. Jesus responded not with rebuke but with redefinition. He didn’t say greatness doesn’t exist; He said it looks completely different than the world imagines.
And then He modeled it. The ultimate servant act in human history was the cross—where the King of all creation laid down His life for His creatures.
Cross-References
✎ Life Application
- Humility in Action: Look for opportunities this week to serve someone in a way that is inconvenient, unnoticed, or beneath your “status.”
- The Towel and the Basin: Jesus washed feet—the lowest task. What is the “foot-washing” equivalent in your context?
- Freedom to Serve: We are free FROM sin so that we are free TO serve. Serving is the highest expression of freedom in Christ.
- Doulos Mindset: Where do you need to surrender your agenda, comfort, and preferences to the will of the Master?
Am I pursuing positions of influence for the purpose of serving others, or for the purpose of being served?
Called to Be Saints
The Greek Behind the Text
Understanding the Calling
In modern usage, “saint” often conjures images of haloed figures in stained glass—spiritual superstars far beyond ordinary believers. But in the New Testament, every believer is a hagios. Paul addresses the messy, divided Corinthian church as “called to be saints” (1 Corinthians 1:2).
The phrase klētoi hagioi can also be translated “saints by calling.” You do not become a saint by working your way up; you are declared a saint by God’s call, and you spend your life growing into what you already are.
Your time is set apart. Your relationships are set apart. Your work is set apart. Not removed from the world, but claimed by God for sacred purposes right in the middle of it.
Cross-References
✎ Life Application
- Identity Before Behavior: You are already a saint by God’s call. Let this identity shape your behavior rather than trying to earn the title.
- Set Apart, Not Withdrawn: Holiness means living distinctly in the midst of everyday life—with an awareness that you belong to God.
- Growing Into Your Calling: Sanctification is the lifelong process of becoming who you already are in Christ.
- Community of Saints: Paul always uses hagios in the plural. You were not called to be holy alone.
How would my daily choices change if I truly believed I am already set apart for God’s sacred purposes?
Called to Be Children of God
The Greek Behind the Text
Understanding the Calling
Of all the callings in this study, this one strikes closest to the heart. God did not merely call us to a task or a character quality. He called us into a family. He called us His children. The relationship is Father-to-child.
John expresses holy astonishment: “See what kind of love the Father has given to us—and so we are!” (1 John 3:1). That final phrase—kai esmen—is John saying, “This is not a metaphor. We really are His children.”
As children of God, we have access to the Father at any time (Hebrews 4:16). We bear the family resemblance (Romans 8:29). We have a secure inheritance that can never perish (1 Peter 1:4). And we have a Father who disciplines us in love because we are truly His (Hebrews 12:5–11).
Cross-References
✎ Life Application
- Identity Over Performance: On your worst day, you are still fully His child. Let this free you from the exhausting cycle of earning God’s approval.
- Abba Intimacy: The Spirit in you cries “Abba!”—let yourself be drawn into childlike trust in prayer.
- Family Resemblance: What characteristics of your heavenly Father are becoming visible in your life?
- Inheritance Mindset: Your ultimate future is secure, glorious, and unshakeable. How should that change how you face today’s anxieties?
- Sibling Responsibility: Every other believer is your brother or sister. Do you treat the family of God with the love that family deserves?
Do I relate to God primarily as a servant relates to a master, or as a child relates to a father?
Called to Freedom
The Greek Behind the Text
Understanding the Calling
Paul’s letter to the Galatians is a passionate defense of the freedom Christ provides. The Galatian believers were being pressured to add works of the Law to their faith—essentially returning to a system of earning God’s favor. Paul sees this as abandoning the gospel.
The freedom we are called to is not license. Paul immediately clarifies: “do not use your freedom as an opportunity for the flesh, but through love serve one another” (Galatians 5:13). True freedom is the power to do what is right, to love without compulsion, and to serve without resentment.
Romans 8:1–2 declares “there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus” and “the law of the Spirit of life has set you free.” The freedom is comprehensive: from guilt, from the power of sin, and ultimately, from death itself.
Cross-References
✎ Life Application
- Freedom from Condemnation: Do you live under the weight of guilt and shame, or in the lightness of grace?
- Freedom from Legalism: Are you adding requirements to the gospel that God has not added?
- Freedom for Love: How are you using your freedom to actively love the people around you?
- Standing Firm: What habits, relationships, or thought patterns threaten to pull you back into bondage?
What “yoke of slavery”—guilt, legalism, people-pleasing, fear—am I most tempted to pick back up?
Called to Love
The Greek Behind the Text
Understanding the Calling
When a Pharisee asked Jesus which commandment was greatest, Jesus went straight to the heart: love God with everything you have, and love your neighbor as yourself. Then He added, “On these two commandments depend all the Law and the Prophets” (Matthew 22:40). Every other command is a footnote to these two. Love is not one calling among many—it is the calling that undergirds them all.
Jesus raises the standard even further in John 13: “as I have loved you.” The standard is no longer self-love; it is Christ’s sacrificial, cross-shaped love. And this love will be the identifying mark of His disciples.
Paul expands this in 1 Corinthians 13: patient, kind, not envious or boastful, not arrogant or rude, not insisting on its own way, not irritable or resentful. Romans 13:8–10 summarizes the entire Law in the command to love. Ephesians 5:1–2 says to “walk in love, as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us.”
Cross-References
✎ Life Application
- The Greatest Commandment: Love for God and love for neighbor are inseparable. You cannot truly love God and be indifferent to the people He has placed around you.
- Love as Obedience: Choosing to love, especially when it’s difficult, is a direct act of obedience to Jesus.
- The Standard is Christ: Measure your love not against cultural norms but against the self-giving love of Jesus.
- Love as Evangelism: Before people listen to our message, they need to see our love.
- Love in the Mundane: Agapē is patient with the slow coworker, kind to the grumpy neighbor, not irritable with the toddler for the hundredth time.
- Heart, Soul, and Mind: The greatest commandment engages every dimension of who we are. Which area is least engaged in your love for God?
If “love one another as I have loved you” is the mark of a disciple, how visible is that mark in my life right now?
Conclusion: Walking Worthy of the Call
Each of these ten callings—salt, light, ambassador, witness, disciple, servant, saint, child of God, free person, lover—is not a separate program to implement. They are facets of one integrated life lived in response to one magnificent God. When you preserve and flavor the world around you, you are being salt. When you live openly and point people to the Father, you are being light. When you deliver the message of reconciliation, you are an ambassador. When you testify from your own experience, you are a witness. When you follow Jesus in daily obedience and reproduce His character in others, you are a disciple. When you humble yourself to serve, you are following your Master’s example. When you live set apart for God’s purposes, you are the saint He has already declared you to be. When you draw near to your heavenly Father with childlike trust, you are living as His beloved child. When you rest in grace rather than strive in guilt, you walk in freedom. And through it all, love—for God with all your heart, soul, and mind, and for your neighbor as yourself—is the golden thread that holds every calling together.
Paul’s exhortation is to “walk worthy” of this calling. The Greek word for “worthy” is axiōs (αξιως)—it carries the idea of balance, of living in a way that is equal in weight to what you have received. You have received an incalculable gift. Now live a life that matches the gravity of that gift.
This is not a burden. It is an invitation. The God who calls you also equips you, sustains you, forgives you when you fall, and walks with you every step of the journey. You are not doing this alone. You are called—and the One who called you is faithful.
