Growth....
"Sometimes....there are stops on the road of our spiritual walks with God. There are stops to minister and to be ministered unto by others. There is rest or struggle. Sometimes we wait for direction, instruction, or provision. The goal of very stop on the way to Zion prepares us for the next step in the journey. In your spiritual walk is growth the goal of every stop?"As someone who should be famous for his use of 'my time,' there could not have been any more convicting, or true, words for me to read this morning. As I finish up my time in Ken Ulmers book, it's interesting to see how God continues to shape our mindset, our heart and our worldview day by day. It's amazing how things that can seem so elementary and routine to some, can take years for others to get. It's crazy how some days, or some minutes, we can completely have something of God figured out, only to be totally lost the next.
It's kind of embarassing to admit, but until today, I always had a hard time answering the above question with a 'yes.'
In your spiritual walk is growth the goal of every stop?
I guess the problem with the question lies in the semantics of the question. Up until a few years ago I would have had no problem answering this question with a yes. When I did spiritual things it was only with the intent to grow. The breakdown, however, occurs when your view of faith changes as mine did a few years ago. When you want to move from your 'religion, faith or spiritualness' being something you 'do' at certain times and places to living you faith as a way of life. When you are truly trying to live faith as a way a way of life, however, this question becomes much MUCH harder to answer in the affirmative.
Rephrased under the premise that your faith is an integrated part of your way of life (ie faith isn't something you do, faith is something you live out in ALL you do and ALL you are), the question becomes: In your life is spiritual growth the goal of every stop?
Now if you know me at all, you know that question would send of massive sirens, warning bells, prison bars, whatever. Because I rather enjoy the 'my time' as I said earlier. I like the feeling of 'entitlement' that I can take this night off of ministry or spiritual growth. That my rest is 'my time' and that I couldn't possibly grow spiritually in a time of rest.
But that's what God calls us to do. Does that mean we should give up resting, going out for drinks, watching hours of TV or sports, or 'pleasure surfing' on the Internet? No, not at all. But it does mean that we, or specifically I, need to shift my worldview of that 'pleasure time' as much as I have shifted my worldview of other aspects of my life. In those times where we feel like we are 'entitled' to indulge our invidual nature, our need for rest, our need for disengagement, our need to blow off steam after a long week - whatever it may be; God is still with us. So if God is with us and if those thigns are part of our life, and if we are living our faith as a way of life - then logically God is with us and wanting to grow us somehow even through the medium of espn.com or a night on the town. It's how WE respond to Gods leading verses our own impulses, I believe, that ultimately decide whether or not we will respond with integrity (ie, is our faith truly integrated with our life or is it not for that point in time).










