How do we grow spiritually?
We are each hard-wired to grow best on our most natural spiritual pathway. This could be celebrative worship, spending time in nature, engaging in quietness and contemplation, helping others, or involving yourself in social action activities. There is a plethora of ways that we grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. The main thing is that we never stop growing and maturing.
Here’s one fallacy I have seen that is rampant in Bible-teaching churches. We tend to think that the main way to grow is to acquire more information. More classes, ingesting masses of information, getting new insights into old passages — these are the things that will really make us grow. It’s really a fallacy.
Scripture reminds of this in a number of ways…
A careful study of the New Testament does not devalue knowledge, but actually clarifies the place it fits, the function it fulfills, and the kind of knowledge that is required. For instance, Colossians 2:2:
“…that their hearts may be encouraged, having been knit together in love, and attaining to all the wealth that comes from the full assurance of understanding, resulting in a true knowledge of God’s mystery, that is, Christ Himself.”
This verse helps us to see that love (relationships with one another) is paramount, all in the context of understanding and a “true knowledge” of God. This true knowledge, as described in scripture, is not primarily found through an intellectual pursuit, but by experiences that sink information into your soul. It is the Greek word epignosko – a deep experiential knowledge. It comes through action, assimilation of information, and results in conviction and changes in your life-style.
So here’s the deal — there are so many ways to grow spiritually, but we must be careful to not get stuck in our particular rut. We must each be challenged to “run on a different track” from time to time. If we don’t, we find ourselves doing the same things over and over, feeling pretty good about it, but missing a whole world of growth, understanding, and opportunity that God is waiting to show us. We must make the move into some other forms and disciplines of spiritual growth.
Recent research has shown that once a Christ-follower reaches a certain level of spiritual maturity, the classroom does very little to stimulate greater growth. Serving, new experiences, giving of your life and experiences away to others — these are the things that push us to greater maturity. As Hebrews 6:11-12 reminds us, the interactions and relationships with others is what will keep us on the road to spiritual maturity:
“Our great desire is that you will keep on loving others as long as life lasts, in order to make certain that what you hope for will come true. Then you will not become spiritually dull and indifferent.”
And so — our new model of spiritual growth for Edinbrook people is one that involves a number of disciplines — relationship building, gathering AND assimilating biblical information, applying that information in relevant and Kingdom building endeavors, and sharing our lives with one another.
It sounds pretty biblical to me…