I’m
discouraged.
I’m not going to give up, but I am discouraged. Am I struggling
spiritually? Truthfully yes, but it’s not because I’m wallowing in sin
(though I know I
have much room for
improvement).
It’s because the greater majority of the studies, sermons and bulletins
I hear and read are centered upon a seemingly endless stream of
warnings, admonitions, pricking the heart and calls for self
examination, and of a truth, I can’t live on a steady diet of this
stuff.
How
could I possibly be hurt and offended when someone warns me of the
dangers of sin? Don’t I want to avoid sin? Of course I do! I want to be
as good at any aspect of godly service, conduct and living as I can be,
but I’m beginning to doubt my ability to make it. I am fully aware that
the men who teach and preach are trying to help us all aspire to and
maintain a state of righteousness, but I also remember that we are to do
as Paul instructed in
Philippians 2:12
“work out your own
salvation with fear and trembling”. Without a doubt I ultimately
am responsible for my own spirituality, but other influences can make it
more difficult.
You
see, I know myself. I know my struggles, my deficiencies, and my
failures. I know all too well how weak I can be. There are times when
I’ve worked hard to correct some spiritual defect and think I’ve
triumphed over it, only to fail later in that very point, which shames
me deeply. It’s neither the way I want to be spiritually nor the intent
of my heart, but I know I have failed God, so I repent, ask His
forgiveness, pick myself up and move forward until some semblance of
confidence is restored and I feel capable and useful again.
When I
go to church though, a place where I should be strengthened, edified and
be able to experience times of refreshing, I hear a nearly constant
steam of admonitions, warnings, heart pricking and promptings to examine
my spiritual walk, level of faith, commitment, personal nature, whether
or not I’ve given myself to God fully or if I’m focused, centered,
zealous, hungry, diligent, effective, prayerful, humble, and on and on.
Even the bulletins contain nearly the same things, and I wonder if many
who preach and teach see only a great spiritual lacking among the
brethren instead of the potential we represent. My point is this; the
bar of righteousness can be raised so high that it can seem
unattainable, rendering what are meant to be easy yokes and light
burdens into things that are difficult and heavy.
From
the newest Christian to the most experienced elder, everyone has room
for improvement, and any Christian would be wrong to ignore obvious sin
in another. But if someone is found caught up in unrighteousness they
would be better served with individual study than trying to preach them
back into righteousness by constantly tugging at their heart from the
pulpit. I’m not suggesting that preaching be limited to kool-aid and
candy canes, nor that the service be turned into some kind of pep rally.
I’m talking about remembering the rest of the church, and providing the
strong meat of instruction necessary for everyone. A preacher may reason
that everyone can benefit from harsh preaching, but such emphasis
reduces the bible to being used like a rolled up newspaper on an
untrained puppy. “Bad Christians! Bad!!”
Let me
cite this example. One man can preach on David going up against Goliath,
and present it two different ways. One would be to relate the event,
comment on David’s remarkable faith, his disdain for Goliath and his
desire to stand for God. He could then say “Let us be the same way for
God, and go forth as soldiers of righteousness in His holy name, under
whose mighty hand we cannot fail!” This approach provides a bit of real
history, a demonstration of righteous faith, an example of what happens
to Gods opponents and encouragement for us to be brave and stand as
David
did.
He
could also relate the same event and ask “Do we have the same faith as
David? Would we stand for God the same way? Do we demonstrate the same
level of commitment as David did, or are we weak and fearful as was
Israel?” Neither method is wrong when correctly applied, but the
difference is unmistakable. The latter prompts the listener to soul
search, (nothing
wrong with that) and an emphasis on this approach may influence
us to question what we are to God and what He is to us. Too much of this
can actually tear us down. We end up focusing on our deficiencies (real
or imagined) and not on God who can strengthen us.
If we
are to be taught from Gods word, it must be taught in its fullness. All
of it matters, and all of it should be utilized
(2nd
Tim 3:16). If the emphasis of teaching and preaching frequently
excludes history, encouragement, confidence and assurance, and is
limited mostly to our being warned as if we were just a bunch of
misbehaving children who will be in trouble when dad gets home, that’s
how we’ll remain. We’ll always be recruits, never soldiers. We’ll stay
in boot camp, and never even
want to see
frontline service.
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