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DEEPER TRUTHS OF THE DEEPER LIFE
Deeper Truths in a Day of Shallow Spirituality

 

1. FISHERS OF MEN

 

Christ taught the crowd gathered on the shore from the shallow shoals, but demanded that His true disciples, whom He called to be “fishers of men,” leave the shallows and launch out into the deep (Luke 5:1-11). Like the gathered crowd on this occasion in our Lord's life, today's typical church crowd, especially those gathering at contemporary church services, have never left the spiritual shoreline. They too must be taught from the shallow spiritual shoals. Few of them will ever dare to launch out into the deep, as Christ demands of all true disciples, since they are completely content docked in the shallow slough of contemporary Christianity.

 

All of this explains the empty nets of today’s "fishers of men." While the contemporary church is proficient at persuading people to make decisions for Christ, it is pitiful at making disciples of Christ. As the deeper truths of this incident in the life of our Lord teach us, only Christ-called “fishers of men” who are willing: to go deeper (v. 4), to confess their inability (v. 5) and iniquity (v. 8), to forsake all and to faithfully follow Christ regardless of cost or consequence (v. 11), can expect a net-breaking, miraculous catch of eternal “keepers.”

 

2.  In Exodus 33:15, Moses refuses to go on without God. Andrew Murray once wrote: “God has a plan for His Church upon earth. But alas! we too often make our plan, and we think that we know what ought to be done. We ask God to bless our feeble efforts, instead of absolutely refusing to go unless God goes before us.” The only place we can go without God in the here-and-now is to the middle of nowhere! And the only place we can go without God in the hereafter is to hell, which is hell because God isn't there!

 

3. DAY BY DAY

 

Like the name of a beloved hymn, the Christian’s philosophy for living should be “Day by Day.” It is not only the right philosophy for living in the here-and-now, as Jesus taught in Matthew 6:25-34, but the right philosophy for living in the hereafter, since it will prove to be one endless day without any night (Revelation 21:25; 22:5).

 

Yesterday is a memory. Tomorrow is but a hope. Today is all the life we have. 

 

God has promised us sufficient grace to bear up under today’s burdens and sufficient provisions for today’s needs. Therefore, we should not worry about tomorrow’s troubles with today’s grace nor tomorrow’s needs with today’s provisions. If tomorrow’s troubles are greater God will grant us more grace and if tomorrow’s needs are greater God will grant us more provisions. Worrying today can neither alter tomorrow nor assure you of it. Thus, there is no greater way to waste time today than by worrying about tomorrow!


 

4. SPIRITUAL BABY FORMULAS

 

There are no magic formulas for the Christian life or its spiritual disciplines. Take prayer for instance, the scriptural formula for prayer is quite simple. We are to simply “pray in the Spirit” (Ephesians 6:18). In other words, we are to pray as God burdens us to pray, we are to pray as the still, small voice of the Spirit instructs us to pray, and we are to pray with whatever spirit of prayer and supplication we are graciously granted.

Sometimes the spirit of prayer will rush in like a flood. At other times, it will be more like a trickle. And, unfortunately, there are those times when we will feel like we’re kneeling in a dry riverbed. Still, prayer is like everything else in the Christian life, it will prove ineffectual and fruitless without the Spirit.

Though once most fond of formulas, I’ve grown in my Christian life to be most wary of them. They tend to rob the Christian life of heart and turn its disciplines into mere habits, which inevitably end up in ruts void of spontaneity and the life-giving breath of the Spirit. I’ve learned over time the invaluable lesson that the Christian symphony cannot be played by rote, but only by ear.

Now, I’m not saying that formulas cannot serve as spiritual sustenance to the bottle-fed babe in Christ. They can prove helpful during the fledgling days of the life of faith, helping new converts to establish their spiritual disciplines. Yet, just as natural newborns should not remain on formula past the first fews months of their natural lives, neither should spiritual newborns remain on formulas past the first few months of their spiritual lives. To do so is to stunt one’s spiritual growth, with the resulting consequences of one becoming spiritually malnourished, weak and sickly.

In Hebrews 5:12-6:3, the author of Hebrews speaks of this formulas phenomenon among Christians. According to him, many spiritual elders are still formula babies, despite the fact that they should have matured past the need for formulas a long time ago. Rather than being spiritually mature and ministering to the spiritually immature, they still require being spiritually bottle-fed themselves. They can’t digest sound doctrine, but are still in need of spiritual Pabulum.

Does this not explain why the contemporary church is always looking for formulas? We look for a formula to enable us to live a successful Christian life. We look for a formula to follow in everything from our home lives to church growth. And all the while we are continuously confronted with incontrovertible evidence that proves beyond doubt the futility of formulas. For instance, the Crystal Cathedral, the house that “possibility thinking” built, goes bankrupt and Bruce Wilkinson, the author of The Prayer of Jabez, resigns from his ministry in Africa over his prayer not being answered.

Today’s obsession with formulas is an indictment against the contemporary church. It serves as proof positive of our spiritual shallowness and immaturity. We don’t want deep doctrinal studies, long hours in our prayer closets wrestling with God, or heavy crosses to bear in our self-sacrificial service of Christ. We want quick fixes and magic formulas, despite the fact that they are illusionary and nonexistent.

Every great composer or virtuoso must begin by learning the musical scale. Likewise, all great authors and poets must begin by learning the alphabet. Afterward, the great composers, virtuosos, writers and poets go on to use the basics as wings with which to soar, not as a cage within which to confine themselves for the rest of their lives. There are too many caged Christians in today’s church! Are you one of them, a spiritual captive in a formula-lined caged?

 

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