Well, today is my birthday, and as is typical on birthdays,
I am another year older. I’m 31. And, really, I’m ok with 31. I have the most amazing husband. I have the most amazing children. And as I think on my life, I really love the
station that I am in. Wouldn’t change a
thing about it…except for maybe my 2 year old jumping on the big boy potty
training wagon a little easier!!! (But,
he’ll get it! No pressure!)
But this morning in my quiet time, I was asking God that I
would live my life with greater passion for Him in my 31st year,
that my choices and desires would be a pure reflection of my love for Him. I want to see things the way He sees
things. And I want to love the way He loves. And I want to say what He says. I just want to be all that He has created me
to be, living life in Him to the fullest!
And then I was sort of struck with a strange idea: what if all Christians lived like that? What if all of us (believers, that is) loved
Jesus passionately…completely abandoning the love of self, money, status,
[insert a jillion other options]…what if?
And then it hits me…the question should not be “what if,” it
ought to be “why isn’t it?” Why isn’t
this true of believers? Why is it that I
get so distracted by things all around me…mundane things…that I fail to live
like He has called me to live. I don’t
mean that I’m out doing huge, wild, crazy sinful things (I’m just trying to do
the laundry), but the horrid news flash to my heart is that “whatever is not of
faith is sin” (Rom. 14:23). How many
things each day do I do that are of Jane, not of faith in Him? My reality is way too many.
The truth is, I’ve been saved long enough that I can produce
lots of shiny, lovely, godly looking choices.
I can choose things that would never allow you to see that, at times,
the only change happening is external change, not internal. I can change my behavior, and I can fool
you…easily. I can volunteer for things
at church, I can make food for someone in need, I can buy groceries for the
food pantry, I can write a note to a friend, I can tell you that I’ll pray for
you, I can toss out well-known and often misused Scripture, I can even share
Christian blogs on Facebook. But none of
that means anything. A lost person could
do all of that stuff. But somehow in
America, all of those holy duties are the very things we’re expecting our
fellow believers to do! Those are the
things “good Christians” will do.
But the real key here is not behavior modification. It’s heart modification. That is always the answer. The Christian life isn’t about doing one
thing and not doing another. The
Christian life is meant to be all about being.
It’s about what you are. Yes,
there is a turn from sin (i.e. behavior), but that turn originates in the
heart. When we get saved, it’s not that
our behavior changes…I mean, it will and does, but only as a result of our
having been changed into something new.
We, at salvation, become an entirely new creature…the old passes away
and the new comes (2 Cor. 5:17). Jesus
replaces the dead heart of stone and gives us a heart of flesh that His law is
written on (Ezek. 36:26; Jer. 31:33)!
Hence, the change in our state of being dead to a state of being alive
in Him produces godly behavior, but it’s not the other way around.
So often, I see blog posts shared on Facebook that talk
purely about behavior change as if that’s going to make people truly whole and
better and right and pure and holy and like Jesus. However, things like not watching Downton
Abbey, or not ever having a drop of alcohol, or refraining from ever entering a
Starbucks again are not the solution for Christians seeking to live more like
Jesus. Walking by faith isn’t about avoiding
sinners; it’s about being light in the darkness. And any faithful behavior we “do,” is to
immediately draw attention to Christ, not us.
When our hearts’ eyes are truly fixed on Jesus (Heb. 12:2),
He allows us to see our own sinful selves and our own inability to pull off the
Christian life. And, the best part, is
that He shows us all of His ability and sufficiency. He is enough.
I’m not. The rest of that verse
about fixing our eyes on Jesus, mentions that He is the Author and Perfector of
our faith. He begins it all in us, and
then He’s the One Who sees it through.
God is big enough and capable enough to handle all the behavior
modification necessary in me and you and everybody else in the world. God doesn’t need me to blog or share blogs.
He doesn’t need me to help Him point out sin in every Facebook member. Folks, people are vulnerable enough to read
every single “Christian” post shared and then to try to pull off some major
changes in their life. And that’s not
how either conviction or sanctification work. God doesn’t need me or my help or
my good intentions at all. But He chose
me to love Him. And He loves me. I don’t deserve it even a little. The only good I produce ever on my own is
filthy rags…it’s all got to be about faith in Him. The world doesn’t need more rules. The world needs to know it can’t keep any
rules ever. And the biggest shocker of
all: the world doesn’t need to know more
about Jesus. The world needs to know
Jesus. We have to stop screaming rules
at everybody, and just lift up Jesus.
He’s it, y’all. He has to be the
love of our lives, so people can see HIM in us.
Before you get mad and rake me over the coals about people’s
blogs or Christian service, let me say a couple of things. One, I know I’m writing a blog, and I am not
always opposed to them. Here’s why: I’m all for believers equipping other
believers to live in a way that most glorifies God. I’m all for accountability. I’m all for encouragement of the saints. But, I am completely against Christians
trying to take on the role of the Holy Spirit in each other’s lives. That’s not our job. The Holy Spirit does His job well and
successfully. Also, to make massive
statements like “don’t watch a certain tv show” and trying to make it
applicable to all Christians is out of line, I believe. Again, the Holy Spirit is great at convicting
each believer specifically. What may be
sin to one is not necessarily sin to another, and it’s His place to lay all
that out, not ours. (The exception here
is if it is something specifically mentioned in Scripture…say drunkenness or
adultery or something like that. There
is a time, a place, a way for sin to be confronted in a brother, and it isn’t Facebook. God’s Word lays out how to approach a brother
in sin. See Matt. 18:15-17.) And two, I am in no way trying to say that
Christians don’t have things to do…we do!!!
Scripture is very clear about lots of things for believers to act out. God has specific works that He has planned
for each of His children to do.
Ephesians 2:10 says, “For we are His workmanship, created in Christ
Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand so that we would walk in
them.” So, let’s get busy with that
stuff for sure!!!!
So, what’s my point?
Love Jesus. Live to love Him
more. And when you love Him more, you’re
gonna keep His commandments, not out of compulsion or guilt, but out of love,
out of a complete life-changing heart transplant. Faith without works really is dead (see James
2:17). But works without faith is just
busy-ness.
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