How to Avoid Spiritual Starvation

Recently I had one of those 24-hour stomach viruses, my digestive system was entirely disabled.  Not only could I not keep anything down, the idea of eating or drinking…impossible.  Even  drinking water was forced.  Needless to say I quickly lost strength, I also lost all interest in reading, writing, working at my job or in spending time with wife and kids, in fact all I could do was sleep.

The next day I knew I was recovering because my appetite returned, I wanted to eat and drink again and with that eating and drinking my physical strength returned and with that strength returned my interest in work, in productivity, in reading, in writing and in spending time with family.

After this stomach virus episode it occurred to me that physical principles can mirror spiritual principles.  Jesus used the metaphor of eating food and drinking water to teach about spiritual life.

Our physical lives, mental lives, and their resulting creativity and productivity are fueled by food and drink and their nourishment.

Life needs nourishment and water to thrive!

“If you knew the gift of God, and who it is who says to you ‘Give Me a drink.’ you would have asked Him, and He would have given you living water.” – Jesus Christ

Being a follower of Christ is not a religious status we achieve, but it is a restoration of spiritual life, we become alive to Christ (Rom 6:11, 1 Cor 15:22), he literally imparts his own life into his children (1 Peter 3:18).  We who are alive in Christ have spiritual life imparted from above and this life needs nourishment and water like all life.

At one point in the gospels the disciples told Jesus that he needed to eat, Jesus responded that he had food that they knew nothing about (John 4:31-32) a verse or two later Jesus said his food was ‘to do the will of his father and to accomplish his work’ (John 4:34).

banana-bread-2

Two chapters later Jesus said that we are to eat and drink of himself, I don’t believe this was just a command to take communion, the taking of communion is a reminder (Luke 22:19), a symbol of real eating and the real drinking of Jesus Christ our ‘bread of life’ and our ‘living water’.  Jesus intended for his people to daily “eat and drink” of him.

We eat and drink of the Lord Jesus by doing his will (John 4), by seeking him first every day (Matt 6:31), by gathering around him with others, by sharing his life and by displaying him.

Not regularly eating our real food ‘the bread of life’ and our ‘living water’ Jesus Christ; has a disabling effect on our spiritual lives.  What the stomach virus did to me physically; not eating the bread of life does to us spiritually.

When Christians feel dissatisfied or lonely or depressed or discontent often this is due to not eating and drinking of the Lord Jesus.  Perhaps its time we consider that it is spiritual starvation which is causing our sadness, our loneliness, our lack of joy and inability to thrive spiritually.  We sense deep within that something is lacking, sometimes we try to alleviate our spiritual hunger pains with religious tradition or with dutiful tasks never commanded by the Lord.

Often we don’t know how or have never been taught how to consume the “bread of life” and the “living water” which satisfies daily.  We don’t know how to partake of him.  We don’t know how to draw from the river of living water that is found within his life.   We don’t know how to live by God’s life, instead we try to live for him by our own discipline or brilliance or zeal.

We grow to know him only 2nd hand, or as others speak about him, with all or most of our spiritual “nourishment” dependent on the guy in the pulpit.  IF he knows the Lord and knows how to share him, we get to eat, just a little, about 45 minutes worth.  So we grow to depend on his sermons.  But if he is not feeding Jesus we starve while being religiously entertained.

The truth is, every morning we are to go out and harvest our own “manna” (Exodus 16), and eat our own “bread of life” (John 4:36, John 6:27), we are to drink for ourselves the “living water” (John 4:10) we are to personally seek him first (Matt 6:31) in everything, we all take his yoke upon us (Matt 11:29-30), we make only him Lord, we learn how to live by his life, we do the work of God of believing on him (John 6:29).  We do not live as a Christian by living by our own gifted-greatness and personal discipline.   Jesus is more than enough to sustain us, he satisfies, he nourishes and he energizes us deep within like nothing else.

I know by experience, if we are not eating and drinking on our own we starve spiritually and we begin wilt on the vine (John 15:5-6).  Jesus intended us to feed ourselves, to gather around him, to learn of him, to come to know him and the magnitude of who he is, then we display him and can feed one another, and his lost sheep around us.

Are you eating and drinking of starving and malnourished?

 

I am writing a book and there is a chapter about Jesus as the ‘bread of life’ that goes with this post.  This book is going to an editor this month.  My goal is to have this published soon thereafter. 

To be notified when this book is available please share your email address below.

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Five Questions to Ask Yourself When Choosing Ministry

Some times I wonder if certain super-active, preaching Christians I know had no ministry platform or career to maintain would they even seek the Lord.  I believe that we should always question those whom we receive ministry.

The next time you have to make a decision about a ministry or a minister why not first ask one or all of the following questions:

  1. Would they still study that theological topic with any of that same zeal and intensity if they didn’t have to preach about it?
  2. Would they still exalt Jesus Christ if they didn’t have a microphone in front of them or the demands of the congregation?
  3. Would they still proclaim Jesus if they were in total obscurity?
  4. If they weren’t preparing to preach or go on a missions trip or gain the favor of the denomination or from their pastor would they even seek the Lord at all?
  5. if they had no ministry at all would they be about the Lord’s business? for that matter are they even about his business now or about their own and is Jesus merely a mascot for their ministry?

…the former proclaim Christ out of selfish ambition rather than from pure motives, thinking to cause me distress in my imprisonment. – The Apostle Paul

Of course these are questions of motives and no one can judge the motives of individual hearts with certainty except for God.  But knowing human nature and some of the motives for ministry I have observed and experienced I can’t help but wonder some times, what is driving this guy, is he a wolf…or a shepherd?

Gray Wolf (Canis lupus) group in snow, Norway

Gray Wolf (Canis lupus) group in snow, Norway

 

I do try to place a higher regard on teachings or writings from a Christian who is not gathering a crowd or building and defending a name of a ministry or a church.  I look with suspect ministry from people trying to meet the expectations of a demanding congregation.  I make more effort to listen and share contributions from a Christian who, out of sheer passion and love for the Lord, tries to share and reveal Christ for no other motivation than love of and cooperation with the Spirit.

There is very often a necessary shallowness to those who preach week in week out for years. Because to really dig deep in the depths of any issue around the Lord it requires extreme amounts of time and study, preferably with multiple people cooperating and contributing together. 

Multi-week sermon series from one, broadcast to multitudes of consuming and mostly idle congregants are necessary to keep congregations engaged.  They are needed to keep crowd entertained with short attention spans and desire for eloquence, but to really dig deep in the spiritual depths of topic concerning the Lord and to gain spiritual understanding it takes as long as it takes, sometimes years.

Topical studies often hop around and change monthly and leave a person with a broad but extremely shallow knowledge of scripture.  But for example, exegesis on a certain epistle from the New Testament, if done well, should take months of meetings with several contributors and teachers.

So next time you decide to receive the ministry from someone ask yourself one of the questions above or better yet ask them directly, what is your motive in this? Their heart just might be revealed to you.

Knowing Him is Knowing His Church

thechurchAt the start of 2015 I set out to seek the Lord Jesus in a much greater and more organized way.  I did this by answering 7 questions about him and categorizing the endless answers.  I have two 40,000+ word documents still growing and I feel like I’ve only just scratched the surface about the Lord Jesus Christ.

I think when anyone sets out to study him they are naturally moved to study the church, it is a natural and unavoidable progression.  This is because Jesus Christ is attached to his church, we are his body on earth.  Christ in us and we in him, a mutual outpouring.  Any comprehensive study of Jesus Christ inevitably leads to a study of his church, theologians call this ‘ecclesiology’.  Similarly, as we grow in understanding of him we naturally must grow in understanding of the church.  Jesus Christ is inseparable from his people, we are inside of him.  We are not his fan base, we are not his groupies, we are not those who simply study him as a topic.  We are his members, we are inside of him and he inside of us.

Christ in you the hope of glory. (Col 1:27)

For you have died and your life is hidden with Christ in God (Col 3:3)

When Christ, who is our life, is revealed, then you also will be revealed with him in glory. (Col 3:4)

…he gave him as head over all things to the church, which is his body, the fullness of Him who fills all in all (Eph 1:22-23)

For many, study of the practices, tactics and philosophies seen in most modern churches leads to difficult conclusions. It forces one to come face to face with some difficult realities.  Realities which can provoke one to speak out and want to call people out.   It is one thing to know about the problems of the church as if it were just an intellectual topic, it is another thing to emotionally react to them to share the Lord’s heart on the matter.  It is convenient to not care and call it unity, it is difficult however to deeply care with the Spirit and try to effect change.

I find studies of Jesus Christ to be wonderful, fulfilling, deeply and inexplicably satisfying.  However when I study the church, (both what Jesus and the apostles set up and openly taught) and I compare this to what we do in church meetings, what we as a people demand from our pastors, it quickly becomes frustrating and painful.

Painful because I see traditions built around something pure and holy and flawless which misrepresent the Lord to the world, painful also because the idea of changing the mindset of people appears almost impossible.  It’s difficult for me to not become openly cynical and critical about the status quo.  Critical about the places Christians are led and about the lack of spiritual preparation for what may be coming.  However, critical cynicism helps no one and changes nothing.

Jesus himself does not react to us with critical cynicism so why should we?

Jesus is building his church, Jesus is cleansing his bride, Jesus is forgiving anyone who comes to him, Jesus acts merciful to his people while he corrects and molds.  So for those in whom he dwells (like myself) there is no other reaction to have but his reaction.

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