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DiscipleshipSpiritual Health

Before the Storm

By July 28, 20116 Comments

This summer I’ve had the real pleasure of leading a book club at my church in which we are reading Shauna Niequist’s Bittersweet. Each session, I kick off the evening with a little bit of teaching before the women are dismissed into smaller discussion groups. During our last meeting, we focused on the “bitter” part of “bittersweet,” reflecting on the Christian response to suffering. This week we lightened things up a bit and turned to the “sweet,” discussing how to be purposeful in our faith when life is good.

After delivering my lesson on the sweet seasons of life, I realized there was a particular concept I have never written about here. It concerns the necessity of using the sweet, peaceful, joyful or restful times in life as opportunities for spiritual preparation. I won’t share the whole of my talk now, but there is one nugget that I believe to be especially important. So here it is!…

When dealing with hardship or catastrophe in life, many Christians take a triage approach. We handle obstacles as they come, in order of urgency, and rarely take the time to plan ahead. Of course, this approach is not limited to spiritual matters. Our present economic situation is evidence of that same mentality. In the years prior to the Great Recession, we enjoyed great financial prosperity in which Americans were free to make risky investments without much fear. We saved little and accrued a lot of debt.

Then the economy took a turn for the worse and everything changed. Americans are saving again. They are being more financially conservative. Even highly qualified  loan applicants are having trouble getting money from the bank. In short, Americans are now engaging in the kinds of practices that we should have been doing all along. It might not have prevented the present disaster, but it certainly would have blunted the impact for some people. Unfortunately, many of us simply weren’t prepared.

Returning to my original point, our current economic predicament has a spiritual parallel. When things are good, we become complacent. It is not until disaster hits that we batten down the hatches and get ourselves in gear. From a faith perspective, this complacency manifests itself in the neglect of prayer and reading the Bible. We know that God will always be there when we need Him, so it’s tempting to maintain a minimal connection when the sailing is smooth.

However, the point I made at church this week and the point I want to emphasize now, is that spiritual preparedness for the storms of life has nothing to do with whether or not God is available. He is always available. Spiritual unpreparedness is instead about your ability to hear Him. Do you remember the sound of God’s voice? Can you recall the shape of His character? If you have not been spending consistent, intimate time with God, the answer may be no.

Just like any other discipline that you learn, following God actually requires practice. In the same way that one learns an instrument or a foreign language through time and commitment, one must learn and grow into Christian discipleship gradually and diligently. The longer you follow God, the more you form habits of self.

On the other hand, if you stop practicing a musical instrument for several years and then suddenly pick it up again, you are likely to make mistakes. You will play clumsily as you remember the finger positions and notes. Likewise, spiritual neglect results in clumsy discipleship. We may turn to God when times are bad, but we might also find ourselves demanding things of God, becoming impatient with Him or others, caving into fear, and lashing out at loved ones in the process. The relationship will be unfamiliar to us.

Intimacy with God is not a switch we can just turn on or off. What’s more, the substance of one’s connection to God is not to be found in the simple act of prayer or reading one’s Bible. Those practices are certainly important, but the ability to seek and hear God is an entire posture of the soul, and it cannot be formed in a day.

Knowing this about discipleship, it is important to develop spiritual consistency between the good times and the bad. Rather than take a triage approach to faith, look to Paul’s example in Philippians 4:11-12, who possessed an intimacy with Christ no matter his circumstances. Although seasons of sweetness are great opportunities to rest and breathe, they are also opportunities to be diligent and prepare. So seek God now. Pray continually. Cling to His Word. Because even when the sailing is smooth, the call of the Christian life is still upon us.

6 Comments

  • Emily Gidcumb says:

    Hey Sharon, what does this part mean exactly ? “Spiritual unpreparedness is instead about your ability to hear Him. Do you remember the sound of God’s voice? “

  • Sharon says:

    Emily, thanks for asking that question. It’s a good one. By “the sound of God’s voice” I don’t necessarily mean that God is audibly talking to you (although it can mean that!). I was instead using that term more figuratively, referring to the ability to sense God’s leading and his guiding truth. I think sometimes we want to know God’s will at key moments in life, but we neglect to build that relationship and that ability to hear on a daily basis, so we don’t even know how to sense it. Discerning God’s voice can take multiple forms, from recognizing His wisdom through the words of a friend, to being in such intimate communication with Him that you can follow Him like a sixth sense. Does that make sense?

  • Emily Gidcumb says:

    What you are saying makes sense. I think I cannot fully understand what it means to sense God’s leading, how to build a relationship with God, and being able to follow Him outside of what is specifically in the Bible. Not that I can’t logically understand the concepts, but I don’t understand them from a real-life experience context. So I always feel like I need detailed specifics when people talk about God talking to them, being led by God, etc. That is why your blog about not “feeling” God really helped me, because I felt like not understanding these things were okay as long as you believe in Christ.

  • Sharon says:

    You know it’s tough to dissect because I think there’s a real mystery to the art of sensing God’s leading, but I think a lot of it can be boiled down to intimacy. In the same way that you can anticipate your husband’s character, desires and patterns of behavior the more you get to know him, I think understanding God and how we should follow Him is the same. We are led by a knowledge of who He is and how He works, and some of that knowledge comes from experience, some from Scripture, and some from the Holy Spirit.

  • Joanna says:

    God has been convicting me on the same kinda thing lately. I recently went through an unexpected emotionally painful stretch. I realised how much the pain improved the quantity and quality of my prayers and worship! I would rather God did not have to drag me through such experiences for me to get things together when it comes to spiritual disciplines so I’m working on greater consistency when things are good.

  • Emily says:

    Great post!!!! It’s funny how we get lackadaisical when life seems to be “smooth sailing”… as if we can be confident in our ever-changing circumstances. My, how quickly we forget! How grateful I am that we serve a God who knows the wanderings of my heart and pursues me anyway. Love this lyric, “Prone to wander, Lord I feel it. Prone to leave the God I love. Here’s my heart, Lord. Take and seal it for thy courts above.” Anyway, this post is a great reminder that we need to be diligent and disciplined in abiding in Christ no matter our present circumstances.

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