Some years ago, the Lord quickened Galatians 3:1-3 to me as a
watchword and loving warning when I was helping to begin a prayer ministry.
The Holy Spirit's faithful reminder to me of
this word through the following years in this particular ministry
served us well. In fact, it was a large part of what gave us alertness to
continually change the way we did things and gave me direction when the
day came that I sensed I was to step away entirely from it.
The Message expresses this portion of Galatians 3 as follows:
"Let
me put this question to you: How did your new life begin? Was it by
working your heads off to please God? Or was it by responding to God's
message to you? Are you going to continue this craziness? For only crazy
people would think they could complete by their own efforts what was
begun by God. If you weren't smart enough or strong enough to begin it,
how do you suppose you could perfect it? Did you go through this whole
painful learning process for nothing?"
I was
blessed by a blog post that applies this idea to the
spiritual disciplines; the following is a quote from it:
"One of the things that I’m discovering about spiritual disciplines is
that I often take that which is relational in its very nature and turn
it into something mechanical. Sometimes I find myself thinking: If I carve out time to engage in lectio divina, then God will reveal Christ to me in a way that almost feels tangible. The problem with this approach is it assumes an A + B = C sort of spirituality. If I read the Bible and pray, the formula will yield intimacy with the Spirit of Christ.
So, all week long as I fail to create space for my personal holiness
mechanism, I begin to use words that contaminate any spiritual
vocabulary. The words – fail, success, must, accomplish, achieve, or should
– usually demonstrate that one’s faith journey has moved from
relational to mechanical approaches to God. When we get to this point
we’re basically taking a 'should' on our lives as kingdom people." (Kurt Willems)
Further down in his short post Kurt recommends that we see our walk with God more like being in a sailboat, discerning and catching the ever-changing direction of God's wind and going with Him, rather than as a rowboat
in which we are trying to get somewhere or make something happen
through hard effort. I agree. In our fallenness, we humans are strongly
bent towards mechanizing that which begins organically, and I'm
convinced that only the power of the resurrected life of Jesus can
enable us to continue in the same spirit as we began (be that in our
personal journey with God or in our collective walk and ministry).
It's a great little article that I recommend if this topic is pertinent to you now: Taking a 'Should' on our Spiritual Lives.
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