Stories of Discernment: Casey Clough

19Sep
My experience of God is that God is always right there, present and paying attention, if I can only slow down and quiet myself enough to listen.

How did you feel called to action? How did you discern God’s will? 

The word “discernment” has taken up a lot of room in my life for the past several years.

I came to St. David’s in the summer of 2020 during the stay-at-home orders, at the recommendation of a friend. While at home by myself for months, baking mediocre sourdough and spending more time than was healthy on epidemiologist blogs, I felt the stirring of something that I thought was in my past - a persistent feeling that I might be called to ordained ministry. I’ve felt this sense of call since I was a teenager, a lifetime and another world ago, but for most of my life I never believed that God would really call me, certainly God could clearly see that my life was anything but tidy and that I was far from holy, but the tugging feeling never fully went away. I would find myself staring into the dark at three in the morning, once again grappling with the feeling that God was asking something of me. In 2020, with nothing to distract me and nowhere for me to go, it was time to finally engage that feeling of call seriously. I can’t imagine a better place than St. David’s to go through discernment. The clergy and staff, my discernment committee, and my fellow parishioners have been supportive while asking the necessary hard questions, and they’ve walked with me through what is a stressful, vulnerable time. I’ve been encouraged to lead discussion groups, to explore various lay ministries in the church, to grow, and to ask all kinds of questions.


was there a moment or sign when you knew the voice of god was present?

My experience of God is that God is always right there, present and paying attention, if I can only slow down and quiet myself enough to listen. I’ve learned that if there is something God wants from me, God will place it in my path for me to trip over as many times as it takes for me to take heed (which is many, many times). I’m not the quickest to hear God’s voice, and I can be quite stubborn about listening once I do hear it. I need to actively create quiet time for contemplative prayer, and I need to talk about what I hear with others.

what is your continuing discernment practice?

I practice cultivating space to better listen by praying Morning Prayer and Evening Prayer in the Daily Office, which grounds me in scripture. I have found that writing first thing in the morning before I am fully awake - a practice I learned from Julia Cameron in her book The Artist’s Way - is a powerful way to notice more regularly what God might be asking me to do. I will never enjoy writing morning pages, because I really like sleep in the morning, but I cannot deny how valuable sitting down and putting pen to paper before my defenses wake up for the day, and I become preoccupied with my to-do lists and the places I need to go. I pray a shortened version of Compline with my Anglican rosary at night in bed, and I often fall asleep partway through. I used to worry that falling asleep meant that I wasn’t praying correctly, but I’ve come to take comfort in the sense of safety that falling asleep in prayer brings, and also that there’s no wrong way to pray. I can bring my whole self; my pettiness, my churlishness, my fear, my joys, all of me, because God already knows me. I don’t have to fear being known.
My favorite way to feel God’s presence is through the Eucharist on Sundays. When we sing The Lord’s Prayer, everything in me goes still, and I can feel the Holy Spirit stirring amongst us. It reminds me every time of the gifts we have been given by God, and how amazing God’s invitation into relationship is.
As I begin seminary this Fall, I carry St. David’s with me in my heart. I’m forever grateful to this beautiful church and community. My thanks to all of you.

STORIES OF DISCERNMENT
These Stories of Discernment came out of our 2024 year-long focus on discernment as a parish. Throughout the summer, we will share these stories to inspire our community to continue to explore ways to listen to God’s call in our lives as individuals and as a parish.

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