The Danger in Spiritual Growth
As we pursue spiritual growth, what if we're missing the most important thing?
I was recommended a little book called Rejoicing in Christ by Michael Reeves. I have to tell you—some passages cause my heart to pound faster— like there’s a little drummer boy inside me, and I have to stop and take a breath.
Reeves has hit upon a nerve, a deep place in which deep calls out to deep. In this post, I want to share his passage and make some critical observations about the danger in spiritual growth.
I have read this passage seven or eight times already, and I haven’t grown tired of it yet. Little Drummer Boy is still drumming.
In talking about the life of Christ, Reeves writes:
Here was a man with towering charisma, running over with life. Health and healing, loaves and fishes, all abounded in his presence. So compelling did people find him that crowds thronged around him. Men, women, children, sick and mad, rich and poor; they found him so magnetic some wanted just to touch his clothes.
Kinder than summer, he befriended the rejects and gave hope to the hopeless. The dirty and despised found they mattered to him. His closest friends found that, as the Son of Man came eating and drinking, being with him was like being with a bridegroom at a wedding…
Yes, he was a man who felt a world of pain, yet who abounded with joy.
Generous and genial, firm and resolute, he was always surprising. Loving but not soppy, his insight unsettled people and his kindness won them. Indeed, he was a man of extraordinary—and extraordinarily appealing—contrasts. You simply couldn’t make him up, for you’d make him only one or the other. He was red-blooded and human, but not rough. Pure, but never dull. Serious with sunbeams of wit.
Sharper than cut glass, he out-argued all comers, but never for the sake of the win. He knew no failings in himself, but was transparently humble. He made the grandest of claims for himself, yet without a whiff of pomposity. He ransacked the temple, spoke of hellfire, called Herod a fox, the Pharisees pimped-up corpses, and yet never do you doubt his love as you read his life.
With a huge heart, he hated evil and felt for the needy. He loved God and he loved people. You look at him and you have to say, “Here is a man truly alive, unwithered in any way, far more vital and vigorous, far more full and complete, for more human than any other.” (p. 53-55)
A few things stand out to me about how Reeves describes Jesus. First, his style is beautiful, powerful, and full of imagery. My response is, “I want to write like that!" Second, he seems to know Jesus so very well. My response is, “I want to know Jesus like that!”
Can we know Jesus like that?
I think so. Jesus is not so exclusive that only a few can know him, and he’s not so elusive that he can’t be known. But how can we know Jesus like Reeves does? Is it a matter of six simple steps or eight ways or three things to do? Yes and no.
"Yes" because the Christian life is very practical—there are steps to take, a walk to walk. But "no" because growth isn't a quick fix; it's a process.
We don’t need another list of things to do. We’ve already got much to do, and I have to say, we may be no closer to Christ because of it. In fact, our to-do lists may be keeping us from Christ.
I think Reeves's explanation of Jesus is so vibrantly fresh because his relationship with Jesus is so vibrantly fresh. He's simply opening up the chambers of his heart for us all to see. And what do we find? A cozy home for Christ.
A cozy home for Christ that makes me go, “I want that!” and perhaps you go, “I want that!” too.
Instead of doing more, we need to relate more to Christ.
Many of us suffer not from a lack of spiritual activities but rather from a lack of relating to Christ. So, we set up Bible reading plans to read about God, but we don’t relate to Christ as we read—the one in whom the fullness of God is fully revealed.
We set up opportunities to serve others, but we don’t relate to Christ during the time of our service—the one in whose name we serve. We sing worship songs about God, but we don’t relate to Christ in our hearts—the one before whom every knee shall bow.
It is possible to do all our spiritual things but miss Christ. When this happens, we’re worse off than before we did them. This is how dead religion is made—how Pharisees become "pimped-up corpses."
Here’s a list of activities for spiritual growth. What if instead of doing them for Christ, we focus on relating to Christ when doing them?
Prayer: What if prayer becomes a time of relationship-building in which you see Jesus in the room with you and listen to him?
Worship: What if during worship, you set Jesus apart as Lord and exalted him for all he is?
Community: What if in community, you resolve to speak about Christ to each other and look for Christ being formed in one another?
Ministry: What if the purpose of ministry is to do the works of Jesus in a way that confirms the word spoken about him?
Spiritual Disciplines: What if pursuing spiritual disciplines like fasting, celebration, and solitude, helps you experience Jesus more?
Trust/Surrender: What if trust and surrender wasn’t as scary because looking into the eyes of Jesus cancels your fear?
Bible Reading: What if reading your Bible becomes a means of knowing Jesus more because you look for Jesus everywhere?
In our pursuit of spiritual growth, let’s not miss Christ. He is ready to be found and wants to be known. The key is to relate to Christ in all things.