Summary: Ordination sermon, involving a play on the names of Samson in the Bible and Sampson, the ordinand, an entertainer, puppeteer, and beauty pageant winner. The whole secret of strength is in using the gifts God has given for ministry and not for one’s self.

The world didn’t give it, and the world can’t take it away.

Isn’t that what we sing. I’m not so sure. What do you think?

The world didn’t give it? I agree. That’s true. But the world

can’t take it away? I am not at all sure.

We are here today because Yolanda Sampson has heard

the call of God, has pursued a course of study, and has now

come to the house of the Lord to receive a mandate to serve

the Kingdom. We rejoice in all of that, but at the same time,

there are some dangers in it. There are some new

problems, now that the rigors of Hebrew and the finer points

of Greek are behind, now that we have learned the

difference between homoousion and homoiousion, now that

we have navigated the shoals of Freudian theory and

Rogerian counseling practice. There are still some issues to

be resolved. We are here today because Yolanda Sampson

has heard the call of God and has come to receive her

mandate to serve the Kingdom. If our candidate is to live out

that mandate, it will take strength. A great deal of strength.

Where will that strength come from? What is the secret of

such strength?

Let me put this into perspective. We do not come here today

to anoint a fleeting romantic fantasy. No; we are here today

to set aside a lifetime of service. This is not about today’s

notion, which tomorrow is cast aside for something else more

interesting. No, this is about an identity. Nor do we come

here today to center on a young woman’s talents and gifts,

considerable as they are, but which may decline or become

obsolete in the years to come. No, we are here today to lift

up a whole life, heart and soul and mind and strength, to

serve the Lord. We are not here to award Yolanda Sampson

a spiritual Oscar for being a fresh and vibrant personality.

We are here to call forth the gifts God has given her for all

the challenges to come. And that will take strength, it will

require endurance. What is the source of such strength?

What is its secret?

The whole secret of strength is to use the gifts God gave you

for building up the Kingdom and not yourself. The entire

source and secret of strength, if you intend to be effective, is

to use the gifts God gave you for others and for the

Kingdom, and not to become enamored of them for your own

glory.

For there is a siren song that will be sung in Yolanda

Sampson’s ear. There is a temptation that will be offered her

time and again, and if she succumbs to it, she will be

weakened and destroyed. If she yields to this temptation,

she will not only lose her ministry and damage her reputation,

but she will also destroy others.

It is captured in this poignant public cry, lodged in the middle

of a tragic Biblical account:

And when their hearts were merry, they said, ‘Call Samson, and let

him entertain us.’

With only the slightest of changes, it could just as well read,

“Call Sampson, and let her entertain us.” And therein lies the

problem. Therein is the issue.

A quick summary of the story of this judge in ancient Israel.

Samson had been given a gift of extraordinary strength.

With his powerful arms he had been able to defeat Israel’s

enemies. Samson had a tremendous gift, and it attracted

people. It caught the attention of folks who might otherwise

have given no notice at all to an ordinary man of God.

So the day came when the leaders of the Philistines, that

persistent enemy of Israel, decided that they wanted to know

the source of his strength. They offered Samson’s lover of

the moment some eleven hundred pieces of silver if she

could coax from him the secret of his strength. Miss Delilah

eagerly accepted the bribe and went to work. But Samson

merely teased her with false answers, suggesting something

about bowstrings or ropes, but of course that wasn’t the

truth. Finally she wheedled out of him that his strength was

in his hair. The text says, “when Delilah realized that he had

told her his whole secret ... [she had them] shave off the

seven locks of his head.” And I think you know the rest of

this gloomy story – how the weakened Samson was captured

by the Philistines, was blinded, and was brought to their

Temple. That’s when Samson heard that siren song, “Call

Samson, and let him entertain us.” But all old Samson could

do, with his strength not so much depleted as misdirected,

was to pull down that house and destroy three thousand

souls and himself to boot.

And when that same world sounds its tempting song, “Call

Sampson, and let her entertain us”, she needs to learn from

the ancient strong man the truth about the whole secret of

strength. That the whole secret of strength is in using the

gifts God has given for the building up of His people, and not

for herself.

I

You see, Samson of old had something going for him. His

gifts were so spectacular and so attractive people noticed,

and wanted to know more. They wanted to know where his

extraordinary strength came from. That was Samson’s

opportunity, but he missed it, playing coy and focusing on

himself. He had an opportunity to witness for God, but chose

instead to mess around for his own purposes.

Sister Sampson, the world is attracted to you. You have

been given a personality and skills and talents that the world

finds pleasant. They like to look at you; they enjoy hearing

you; they look forward to what you can do. You entertain

them. But Samson of old never noticed that when they call

for entertainment, there is really something deeper that they

need. There is a heart hunger that they don’t even know

how to express. Yours is the call not merely to entertain, but

to use entertainment to reach hearts for Christ.

Do not hear the siren song that says, “Sampson, how great

she is.” Hear only the deeper heart cry that shouts, “I wish I

knew how to be strong. I wish I knew how to live.” Hear that

deeper cry, and use their call for entertainment to supply that

need.

Oh, they may not pay you 1100 pieces of silver for it. Very

few people get rich doing ministry, and the ones who do are

often on the wrong track. But Sampson, learn from Samson

– that the world wants to know the secret of your strength.

Use that opportunity as a witness for the Kingdom.

II

But then there is a deeper issue. There is the issue of

integrity. Of honesty and of straightforward living. You will

not keep your strength if in fact it becomes nothing more

than a game, messing with the minds of others, rather than a

genuine witness for the Lord. The whole secret of strength

lies in integrity of heart.

Samson of old got into playing games with the secret of his

strength. He found it more fun to dally with Delilah than to

tell the truth about his walk with God. After all, he should

never have been fooling around with this Philistine filly in the

first place. He was a married man, with other commitments,

and with a commitment to the ways of the Lord. But my

guess is that the blandishments of admirers got to him, and

he began to play games designed to build up his own credits

rather than to do what he was called of God to do. So,

instead of going about Kingdom business, Samson fooled

around and let somebody stroke his ego. It took him down.

Ministry, my friend, is seductive. You may not know that yet.

We do know that the entertainment world is seductive; that is

a given. Entertainers live for applause, they crave having

their name in bright lights, and hope that someday there will

be a star in that sidewalk in Hollywood. But make no

mistake. It is just as easy for ministers to live for the amens,

to promote their names around the preaching circuit, and

maybe someday have what we so foolishly describe as “her

own church.” Oh, please! If you are called to serve as a

pastor, it is not your own church. It belongs to Christ first

and to the people second, and never to you. Never.

The issue is that the whole secret of strength lies in integrity

and not in playing games. Delilah found out that Samson’s

strength was not in his arms nor in his hands, nor really even

in his hair. It was in what God gave him, and he could keep

it only so long as he lived in integrity.

They tell the story about the young preacher who wanted so

much to get the same acclaim as his mentor, the great

Gardner Taylor. He went to hear Dr. Taylor preach every

chance he got, and studied every move and mannerism,

trying to mimic them all. But still his congregation didn’t

respond as he wanted. He went to hear Dr. Taylor once

more time, and noticed that Taylor had a habit of keeping his

pulpit robe open, never using the zipper to close up the robe.

And so the young preacher went back to his own pulpit and

stood to preach, this time with an open robe. But down on

the front row, his wife offered up in a stage whisper, “It’s not

about the robe.”

Well, no. The secret is not in the robe. Nor is it in the hair.

Nor is it in the puppets. Nor is it in the Miss Black World title.

Nor is it in all the things you will be tempted to think it’s in.

The whole secret of strength is in the integrity of life and

sincerity of heart that you bring to your task. Be yourself, my

sister. Be what God has gifted you to be. Don’t play coy,

and don’t take yourself too seriously. Just be grateful for

what you have been given, and use it. Use it for the

Kingdom, use it with honesty, and use it not for yourself.

III

Then you will be able to live and die for the right things.

Then you will be able to live and die for something that

matters. Even when you feel weak, you will be strong.

Poor sad Samson. The story ends with his pulling down the

Temple and destroying three thousand souls as well as

himself. Poor tired Samson. That he did not have, as you

have, the benefit of the example of Jesus Christ. He might

have learned from Jesus the real secret of strength.

Samson never knew Jesus, for if he had, he might have

seen that his calling was not to die with the Philistines, but to

live with and to die for those God had called him to serve.

Samson never knew Jesus, for if he had, he might have

found that his strength was not well used in pulling down a

temple, but in building up the house of the Lord. You will be

tempted to be a critic; well and good. The church needs

critics. But your real task is to build and not to tear down.

Samson was on the other side of Calvary, for if he had

known what Sampson knows, he might have been moved

not to get revenge on those who tortured him, but instead to

have given his life as a ransom for many. Your ministries will

not be appreciated by everyone. You cannot try to please

them all. But you can love them all, even the unlovable ones

that God has seen fit to put into every church. And yes,

“every church” does include Takoma!

If Samson had seen what Sampson sees, he would have not

had to fumble in blindness, but would have provided clear

insights to those who turned to him. When you get

preoccupied with yourself, you can no longer see clearly.

Your task is not to defend yourself when you are

misunderstood, but to teach and preach with clarity, and let

the truth come out on its own.

If Samson had found what Sampson has found, he would not

have destroyed three thousand souls with misplaced muscle,

but would have, like the apostles at Pentecost, preached

three thousand souls into salvation. Oh, remember the

mandate, to go into all the world, even the entertainment

world, and bring good news. They will die without that good

news. Be about that and nothing else!

Oh, call Sampson, and let her do much more than entertain

us! Let her use her gifts to touch hearts. Let her live her life

with integrity. Call Sampson, and let her take up her cross

and follow Jesus, losing her life for His sake and the sake of

the gospel, and so finding it.

This gift that she has, this call that she has, the world didn’t

give it, and, in Christ, the world can’t take it away. For the

whole source of strength is to use the gifts God has given

you, with integrity and openness and a glad heart.

Therefore lift your drooping hands and strengthen your weak

knees, and make straight paths for your feet, so that what is lame

may not be put out of joint, but rather be healed.