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For the Christian, heaven is not a goal; it is a destination.
The goal is that "Christ be formed in you," to use
the words of the apostle Paul (Gal. 4:19; all passages quoted
are from the NRSV unless otherwise noted." To the Romans,
he declares, "Those whom [God] foreknew he also predestined
to be conformed to the image of his son" (8:29). And
to the Corinthians, he says, "All of us, with unveiled faces,
seeing the glory of the Lord as though reflected in a mirror,
are being transformed into the same image" (2 Cor.
3:18; emphasis added in all three). Thus the daring goal of
the Christian life could be summarized as our being formed,
conformed, and transformed into the image of Jesus Christ.
And the wonder in all this is that Jesus Christ has come among
his people as our everliving Savior, Teacher, Lord, and Friend.
He who
is the Way shows us the way to live so that we increasingly
come to share his love, hope, feelings, and habits. He agrees
to be yoked to us, as we are yoked to him, and to train us
in how to live our lives as he would live them if he were
in our place.
Now,
we must insist that this way of life is reliably sustained
in the context of a like-minded fellowship. Essential to our
growth in grace is a community life where there is loving,
nurturing accountability. Christlikeness is not merely the
work of the individual; rather, it grows out of the matrix
of a loving fellowship. We are the body of Christ together,
called to watch over one another in love. Unfortunately, in
our day there is an abysmal ignorance of how we as individuals
and as a community of faith actually move forward into Christlikeness.
We today
lack a theology of growth. And so we need to learn how we
"grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus
Christ" (2 Pet. 3:18). In particular, we need to learn how
we cooperate with "the means of grace" that God has ordained
for the transformation of the human personality. Our participation
in these God-ordained "means" will enable us increasingly
to take into ourselves Christ's character and manner of life.
What
are these "means of grace"? And how can disciples of Jesus
Christ cooperate with them so they are changed into Christlikeness?
FORMED
BY EXPERIENTIAL MEANS
God works
first through the ordinary experiences of daily life to form
the character of Christ in us. Through these experiences we
come to know on the deepest levels that Jesus is with us always,
that he never leaves us nor forsakes us, and that we can cast
all our care upon him. In addition, we learn that ordinary
life is sacramental, and that divine guidance is given primarily
in these common junctures of life.
Work
as sacrament. The most foundational of these character-formation
experiences is found in our work. Work places us into the
stream of divine action. We are "subcreators," as J. R. R.
Tolkien reminds us. In saying this, I am not referring to
sharing our faith at work or praying throughout our work.
Both of these are good, to be sure; but I am referring to
the sacredness of the work itself. As you and I care for our
daily tasks, we are glorifying God in the work itself. When
Martin Luther gave us his revolutionary teaching about the
priesthood of all believers, he was referring not just to
the fact that the plowboy and the milkmaid could do priestly
or liturgical work, but that the plowing and the milking themselves
were priestly work.
If we
are working to "the audience of One," we will find Jesus to
be our constant companion and friend-though our work be so
mundane as picking up sticks. We will grow in intimacy with
God and patience with others. And we will experience divine
care and supernatural guidance in the most ordinary circumstances-like
discovering the problem with the washing machine or finding
the right words for a difficult conversation.
Jesus,
we must remember, spent most of his earthly life in what we
today call a blue-collar job. He did not wait until his baptism
in the Jordan to discover God. Far from it! Jesus validated
the reality of God in the carpentry shop over and over before
speaking of the reality of God in his ministry as a rabbi.
"So, whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do," says Paul,
"do everything for the glory of God" (1 Cor. 10:31).
Trials
that produce endurance. Another experiential means
of grace for the formation of the human personality is found
in the various trials, tribulations, and difficulties through
which we go. The apostle James reminds us, "Whenever you face
trials of any kind, consider it nothing but joy, because you
know that the testing of your faith produces endurance" (James
1:2-3). This "endurance" is what the old moral philosophers
called "fortitude," and they viewed it as one of the foundational
virtues that was essential for a good life. James adds, "And
let endurance have its full effect, so that you may be mature
and complete, lacking in nothing" (1:4).
At times,
these adversities are tragic in the extreme. The company you
worked for your entire life goes belly-up and you are left
without a job. Your only daughter dies suddenly and needlessly
in a car accident. A tiny error at the hospital renders you
permanently blind. These are the sorrows that are written
across the face of humanity.
But most
often, the trials we face are of the gar- ' den variety rather
than heroic. Your superior at the office makes a mistake that
places you in an awkward position. Your son puts a nice round
hole in the neighbor's window with his new BB gun. You are
embroiled in ongoing tension with someone who used to be your
best friend.
But through
the operations of grace, even these work endurance in us,
and we learn something of the cosmic patience of God. We come
to see God's timing and God's ways as altogether good. We
become what George Fox called "established" men and women.
Trials,
tribulations, persecutions-these we should expect. They are
part of life. Even more important, they are part of our discipleship
to Christ-"Indeed, all who want to live a godly life in Christ
Jesus will be persecuted" (2 Tim. 3:12). The key is how we
are shaped and formed ever more fully into the way of Christ
through the process of these experiences.
Movings
of the Spirit. Still another form of the experiential
means of God's grace comes through our interaction with the
movings of the Holy Spirit upon our hearts. Have you ever
felt the drawing and encouraging of the Spirit? You probably
did not hear an audible voice-though we must never rule out
that possibility. But more likely you sensed the weight and
authority that comes with divine communication. The clarity
of the Word of Truth was unmistakable. And it coincided with
God's revealed truth in Scripture, for the same Spirit who
inspired Scripture is at work within you.
Often
the Spirit comes to us as Teacher. Perhaps we receive a simple
word of assurance and care: "You are loved in ways you never
dared hope." Maybe there are blind spots that need his tender
scrutiny. Perhaps there is instruction in truth. The key lies
in our reaction to and interaction with God's grace-filled
teaching.
We may
harden our hearts and turn away from the light. But God's
patience and love overcomes us, and we repent and turn into
the light. We may argue, debate, question. Back and forth
we go until we come to see the goodness of rightness. Throughout,
God is molding, shaping, forming us into creatures that can
bear the beams of his overcoming love; creatures that can
contain God's goodness without being completely done in by
it.
At other
times, the Spirit comes as counselor and guide. Perhaps we
are given prophetic words to share, and so with fear and trembling
we speak out in the gathered meeting for worship. The experience
is so exhilarating, however, that we forget ourselves and
speak beyond our leading. Soon sensible of our error, we grieve
over our disobedience, knowing that words once spoken cannot
be retrieved. All the time we are learning to distinguish
the life-giving words of the Spirit from the death-giving
words of the flesh. We see that our humanly initiated words
vanish into thin air, and that only the debar Yhwh,
the word of the Lord, endures, and we come to treasure these
wonderful words of life.
All these
experiences, as varied and diverse as life itself, are meant
to draw us deeper in and higher up into Christlikeness. And
so they do when we are docile of heart. God takes the dynamic
give and take of our interaction with himself and plants within
us deep-rooted habits of the heart-habits of joyful allegiance
and glad surrender, habits of faithful obedience and patient
endurance.
CONFORMED
BY FORMAL MEANS
The formal
means of grace refers to well-recognized disciplines of the
spiritual life: disciplines like prayer, study, fasting, solitude,
simplicity, confession, celebration, and the like. I call
these "formal" means because they involve formal ways of arranging
our lives for training in the spiritual life. We simply must
understand that we will never grow in Christlike habits and
disposition without intense, well-informed action on our part.
Now
it must be said with vigor that these acts do not make us
acceptable to God. Our acceptance is by grace alone, and our
justification is by grace alone. The disciplines make up the
ground of this action. They are spiritual exercises through
which we bring our little individualized "power pack"-we call
it the human body-and present it to God as a living sacrifice
(Rom. 12:1).
Athletes
of God. But these spiritual disciplines do train the
body, mind, and spirit for the things of God. "Train yourself
in godliness," says Paul (1 Tim. 4:7). The background to Paul's
call is the Greek gymnasium where athletes trained to participate
in the games. And Christians from the earliest centuries spoke
of themselves as the athletae Dei, the athletes of
God.
We have
embedded in our bodies and our minds habits of evil that permeate
all human life. And our bodies and minds need proper discipline
to be freed from these destructive habits so that they can
be brought into a working harmony with our spirit.
Now,
it is important to distinguish "training" from "trying." I
might try very hard to win 'a marathon race, but if I have
not trained, I will not even finish, not to mention win. Without
training, the resources simply are not in my muscles, they
are not in the ingrained habit structures of my body. On the
day of the race, no amount of trying will make up for the
failure to train. It is the training that will enable me to
participate effectively in the race. The same is true in the
spiritual life. Training builds interior habits within us,
"holy habits."
Conquering
pride. Suppose I am longing to win the battle over
pride. (I know that today people are not much concerned about
pride, but the devotional masters always saw it as among the
most destructive sins.) I can never defeat pride by "trying."
Direct assault against pride will only make me proud of my
humility! No, I must train. But what do I do?
Well,
as I read the great writers on the soul—Saint Benedict's "Twelve
Steps of Humility," for example—I discover that they call
me to deal with pride by training in service. Why?
Because service takes us through the many little deaths of
going beyond ourselves. A father, for example, dies to his
desire to watch Monday-night football in order to play with
his children. Or a husband dies to a promotion that would
mean relocating in order for his wife to advance in her chosen
vocation.
These
are little deaths, to be sure. But each one takes us
beyond ourselves, and God uses these simple acts of service
to work a miracle in us. Through serving others we learn how
precious people are. We come to value them as persons, delighting
even in their idiosyncrasies. All of this places us in a right
relationship to others. "Me" and "mine" give way to "we" and
"ours." We come to see ourselves as part of a whole.
If, in
addition, I read William Law's Serious Call or Saint
Bernard's Twelve Degrees of Humility and Pride, I become
aware of the importance of worship as a discipline for nurturing
humility. As I begin to see God as high and lifted up, to
overhear cherubim and seraphim praising God and all the heavenly
host casting their crowns before the throne, singing, "You
are worthy," I am brought into appropriate perspective with
relation to God (Rev. 4:9-11). I realize that all I am, all
I have, all I do is derived. I am not the captain of my salvation
nor the master of my fate. Far from it. I am utterly, completely,
radically dependent upon a loving Father who brings me rain
and sun as I need them, and in whom I live and move and have
my being. You are, too.
Do you
see what these basic spiritual exercises have done for us?
They have nurtured us into proper perspective toward others—right
horizontal relationships—and into proper perspective toward
God—right vertical relationship. When these things come into
place, we can understand what William Law meant when he spoke
of "the reasonableness of humility."
Now,
these little exercises of service and worship do not make
us righteous. Righteousness is first, foremost, and always
a work of God "by grace through faith." No, these exercises
merely place us before God—the simple offering of a living
sacrifice. But from this small offering God is able to bring
forth far greater good: such as creating in us an interior
disposition of preferring others; such as understanding God
as the creator and sustainer of all things; such as seeing
our efforts as reflex responses to divine urgings; and much
more.
This,
in God's time and in God's way, produces a pleasing balance
in our lives so that humility flows from us as naturally and
as effortlessly as breathing.
A
Menu of Disciplines. I have mentioned the disciplines
of service and worship. There are many others.
Inward
disciplines, like meditation, prayer, fasting, and study,
cultivate our heart and mind toward the way of Christ. Meditation
is the ability to hear God's voice and obey his word. Prayer
is ongoing dialogue with the Father about what we and God
are doing together. Fasting is the voluntary denial of an
otherwise normal function for the sake of intense spiritual
activity. Study is the process through which we bring the
mind to con- form to the order of whatever we are concentrating
upon.
Outward
disciplines, like simplicity, solitude, and submission,
cultivate our appetites toward the way of Christ. Simplicity
is an inward reality of single-eyed focus on God that results
in an outward lifestyle free from "cumber," as William Penn
put it. Solitude involves creating an open, empty space for
God that undercuts all the false support systems we use to
shore up our lives. Submission is the ability to lay down
the everlasting burden of needing to get our own way.
Corporate
disciplines, like confession, guidance, and celebration,
cultivate our affections toward the way of Christ. Confession
is the grace through which the sins and sorrows of the past
are forgiven. Guidance is the experience of knowing the theocratic
rule of God over our lives. Celebration is being, as Augustine
said, "an alleluia from head to foot!"
Now,
I have no exhaustive list of the spiritual disciplines, and
as far as I know, none exists. We are simply finding ways
to place who we are—body, mind, and spirit—before God. All
of this, I must add, flows out of a proper disposition of
the heart: seeking first the kingdom of God, hungering and
thirsting for righteousness, longing to be like Christ.
Doing
these things to be seen by others is a failure to understand
that the disciplines have absolutely no merit in and of themselves.
They do not make us right with God or improve our standing
with God. All the disciplines of the spiritual life do is
place us before God. At this point, they come to the end of
their tether. But it is enough. God takes this simple offering,
imperfect and misguided as it may be, and uses it to build
within us virtues and graces we can hardly imagine—conforming
us, always, to the way of Christ.
TRANSFORMED
BY INSTRUMENTAL MEANS
The instrumental
means of grace refers to the various physical and human instruments
God uses to transform us. God in his great wisdom has freely
chosen to mediate his life to us through visible realities.
This is a great mystery. God, who is pure Spirit, utterly
free of all created limitations, stoops to our weakness and
changes us by physical and visible means.
Many
and varied are the instrumental means of grace. Baptism is
a means of grace whereby we are buried into Christ's death
and raised unto his life. Preaching is a means of grace in
which "the sacrament of the Word" is given to us, and the
ministers of Christ are themselves the living elements in
Christ's hands, broken and poured out in soul. The laying
on of hands is a means of grace through which God imparts
to us what we desire or need, or what God, in his wisdom,
knows is best for us. The anointing with oil is a means of
grace for the healing of the sick. Intercessory prayer is
a means of grace through which God freely uses human instrumentality
to speak forth his will on earth as it is in heaven.
Transformed
by Scripture. There is probably no more transforming
instrumental means of grace than reading, studying, and meditating
upon Scripture. Habitual reading of the Bible touches the
affections; systematic study of the Bible touches the mind;
and sustained meditation upon the Bible touches the soul.
When
we read Scripture, we gain a world-view. We become immersed
into "holy history." In reading about God's interaction with
Abraham and Ruth, Mary and Paul, we understand something of
God's dealing with us. Reading whole sections in a single
setting—Jeremiah, for example, or John or Romans—gives us
the larger sense of the unseen world. With Abram we begin
seeking for a "city that has foundations, whose architect
and builder is God" (Heb. 11:10). With Mary we confess, "Here
am I, the servant of the Lord; let it be with me according
to your word" (Luke 1:38). With Paul we can "press on toward
the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ
Jesus" (Phil. 3:14; RSV).
Through
this process the Bible becomes "all over autobiographic of
you," to use the phrase of Alexander Whyte. As we study Scripture,
we are seeking the intent of the Author, searching for the
meaning of the text. Grammar, history, geography, and critical
research all play a vital part in our inquiry into the Word
of God written. We submit to the results of our study, for
we want what the Bible says more than what we want it to say.
When
studying the Ten Commandments, for example, we discover through
historical research that it parallels closely the form of
the treaties of the ancient Near East in which the suzerain
tells of his great grace and mercy to the vassal, and in gratitude,
the vassal agrees to the stipulations of the covenant in obedience
to the suzerain. Grace comes before obligation! All of a sudden,
the words of God to the people of Israel take on an enlarged
meaning: "I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of the
land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery" (Exod. 20:2).
Study, you see, brings the mind into conformity to the ways
and nature of God.
In meditating
upon Scripture, the heart and the soul are molded ever more
closely to the love of God. "How can young people keep their
way pure?" cries the psalmist, and then he answers his own
question: "By guarding it according to your word" (Ps. 119:9).
Sustained rumination upon Scripture—in this case, Torah—will
keep our way pure, particularly by purifying the aspirations
of the soul.
We are
also given new power. As we meditate, for instance, upon Jesus'
staggering words, "My peace I give to you" (John 14:27), we
are baptized into the reality of which the passage speaks.
We brood on the truth that he is now filling us with his peace.
The soul and spirit are awakened to his inflowing peace. We
feel all motions of fear and anger stilled by "a spirit of
power and of love and of self-discipline" (2 Tim. 1:7). And
the grace-filled result: a heart enlarged to receive the love
of God; "Oh, how I love your law! It is my meditation all
day long. . . . How sweet are your words to my taste, sweeter
than honey to my mouth!" (Ps. 119:97, 103).
The
Lords Supper. An obvious instrumental means of grace
is the bread and the wine of Holy Communion. Regardless of
our particular theological position on the Eucharist, we all
agree that, in ways we cannot fully comprehend, the life of
God is mediated to us through the bread and the wine. We bow
under the wonder of this incarnational reality.
But how
does our participation in the Eucharistic feast work to transform
us into Christlikeness? Well, first of all, nearly every aspect
of heart devotion is found at the Lord's Table—examination,
repentance, petition, forgiveness, contemplation, thanksgiving,
celebration, and more. And genuine heart devotion always produces
character transformation. The Eucharist is the most important
moral action of the church, because its celebration incorporates
us into the ongoing story of God's redemptive work.
Then,
too, the Lord's Supper brings forth inward transformation
in the way in which it forces us to keep coming back to the
Great Sacrifice: Jesus' broken body, his blood poured out.
This is how we live. This is how we are strengthened. This
is how we are empowered. We all come to the Communion service
praying the prayer of the child—the prayer of receiving. We
come with open hands. We also come with empty hands. We have
nothing to give. All we can do is receive. Each and every
one of us approaches the Table declaring, "Just as I am, without
one plea but that Thy blood was shed for me." What happens
then is all of grace and nothing of us. Heart
transformation. Faith. Hope. Love. An amazing simplicity that
is free of manipulating and managing and maneuvering.
And "empty
hands" brings us full circle, back to grace where we started.
And what a transforming grace it is! It is a grace that not
only gets us into heaven when we die but gets heaven into
us here and now. It is a grace that is continuously forming
and conforming and transforming us into the likeness of Christ.
The only adequate response to such "amazing grace" is doxology.
Originally
printed in Christianity Today, 5 February 1996.
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