If the knowledge of Christ is the preeminent quest in the believer’s
life, why do we spend so much time on tertiary issues that have no impact or
effect on salvation or a greater understanding of Him? It’s a fair question.
Uncomfortable, but fair.
If some of us spent as much time studying the words of Jesus
as we do aliens, giants, runes, temples, and whom the antichrist will end up
being, we’d be so much further along in our spiritual awareness, maturity, and
strength. The presence of Christ feeds the spiritual man. When fed, the
spiritual man grows strong and bold, useful for the kingdom of God.
What your spiritual diet consists of matters because it will
determine whether or not you are growing in God. It will also determine whether
or not you are easily swayed by the enemy’s attempts at shipwrecking your
faith.
1 Peter 2:1-3, “Therefore, laying aside all malice, all
deceit, hypocrisy, envy, and all evil speaking, as newborn babes, desire the
pure milk of the word, that you may grow thereby if indeed you have tasted that
the Lord is gracious.”
Why should you desire the pure milk of the word instead of
fanciful stories and fables? Because only the pure milk of the word can make
you grow. The math is simple. In order to grow in God, you must consume His
word. Peter wasn’t the only one to point out the necessity of consistent
spiritual nourishment, but he did it in the nicest fashion.
Hebrews 5:12-14, “For though by this time you ought to be
teachers, you need someone to teach you again the first principles of the
oracles of God; you have come to need milk and not solid food. For everyone who
partakes only of milk is unskilled in the word of righteousness, for he is a
babe. But solid food belongs to those who are of full age, that is, those who
by reason of use have their senses exercised to discern both good and evil.”
Lack of spiritual food impedes timely maturity. The author of
Hebrews laments that by this stage, they ought to have been teachers, but for
whatever reason, they stagnated in their growth to the point of needing milk
anew and not solid food. The problem with a perpetual milk diet is that one is
not skilled in the word of righteousness nor in discerning good and evil. They
are babes, and so their abilities are stunted. They cannot perform the tasks
that one who is full of age can.
Spiritual growth is healthy and necessary. If you find
yourself stagnant, in the same spot for weeks, months, or years as far as
spiritual maturity is concerned, if you find yourself making excuses for the
lack of progress or growth, know that you are not where you’re supposed to be,
or where God expects you to be.
The quandary the modern church faces is that individuals who
haven’t even bothered with the milk insist that they’re eating steak medium
rare and offering to teach others to do the same. They’re talking about things
like deliverance and casting out demons when they haven’t clarified the basics
of holiness, repentance, or sanctification.
If you’re going around insisting that deliverance is
necessary for believers yet never once insisting that repentance and holiness
unto the Lord are, you’re pretending to be a carnivore while you haven’t even
sampled milk yet.
While we’re on the subject, the Bible talks extensively about
repentance and sanctification, not so much about deliverance for believers.
Whether or not true believers need deliverance is a discussion for another day,
but why are we so quick to embrace something the Bible does not refer to while
putting the things it insists upon on the back burner?
It sheds a whole new light on those who will insist they
performed wonders in His name. “Lord, we did all these things!”
“You may have, but it’s not what I told you to do.”
Neither of my daughters like doing the dishes. It is a family
contribution that everyone must tackle once a week, and there are no
substitutions. They found that out the hard way when after being told that
their contribution for the day was for one of them to set up the table and the
other to do the dishes after dinner, Victoria, my eldest, came up to me and
said, “Daddy, I folded the laundry, my contribution is done.”
“Is that what Mom asked you to do?” I asked, already knowing
what her answer would be.
After mumbling a dejected no, I told her that although I
appreciated her folding the laundry, she still had to wash the dishes since her
sister had set up the table earlier in the evening.
Just because we choose to focus on something other than what
Jesus commanded doesn’t mean we’re no longer required to do what He commanded.
There are no substitutions for repentance, holiness, or sanctification. There
just aren’t.
You can cast generational demons out of your neighbor’s labradoodle until you’re blue in the face. It still doesn’t nullify the other things God commanded you to do via His Word. Substitutionary obedience really isn’t. I didn’t do what You told me, but I did something else, and that should suffice. Why can’t You appreciate the effort I put into doing this other thing? Because the other thing isn’t the thing He commanded you to do.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
1 comment:
Over time I have come to understand that many Christians only go so far in their maturity gain because, as you grow, you find yourself more and more of an outcast. It's like speaking a foreign language that no one understands so some fear the possibility of more isolation. A.W. Tozer wrote about this experience in his essay about the Lonely Christian. I get it, I do. The day comes when you realize you have no one to talk to about what you have learned because all you will get back is blank stares. I equate it to trying to explain quantum physics to kindergarteners. The good news is that, eventually, if you keep going, in spite of being ignored and rejected, you finally step over another threshold where you come into a place of comfort. You realize it is way better to be accepted by God than by humans.
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