The
following Comments come from my favorite new blogsite, http://www.patheos.com/blogs/jesuscreed
. I hope you
find them as interesting and challenging as I did!!!!!!
“Imagine
gathering a group of friends who are committed to following Jesus, that is, who
desire “to live the way Jesus would live if he were in their bodies.”
That’s a John
Ortberg phrase. Imagine you take the Gospel of Luke and you study it
together in a specific way. The group is assigned to note every verb in
the Gospel of Luke of which Jesus is the subject. You observe simple
things like “Jesus said,” “Jesus went,” and “Jesus walked.” You also
observe other realities like “Jesus touched,” “Jesus prayed,” “Jesus
taught,” and “Jesus rebuked the wind.”
Your
band of disciples now seek to categorize all the actions of Jesus. Some are
unique to Jesus alone like “…he breathed his last” [breath on the cross
accomplishing atonement]. Other actions are common to all human beings whether
they are Jesus’ disciples or not (he ate, he said, he fell asleep).
The
final goal is to define all the actions of Jesus which we, his disciples, can
imitate. As John the Apostle wrote, “Whoever claims to live in him must walk
as Jesus did” (1
John 2:6). With the verb “walk,” John is using a metaphor that means
“to live the way Jesus lived.” 1
John 2:6 lays down an obligatory call to Christian discipleship.
I
actually did this project in Luke’s Gospel with a company of eager
Jesus-followers. What the group finally “panned out” (as in sifting for gold
nuggets) were 19 clusters of behaviors that we concluded were worthy of being
lived out by Christian disciples today. We felt we had discovered “the Jesus
Way” in Luke’s Gospel. We were stoked! The 19 clusters of behaviors in
no particular order are:
1)
praying (all kinds of prayers),
2) practicing solitude and silence,
3) fasting,
4) touching, laying hands on others and healing them,
5) demonstrating humility before God and others,
6) living the faith fearlessly,
7) mentoring/training others,
8) telling vivid stories,
9) capturing “the teachable moment,” 10) practicing interactive communication,
11) engaging in spiritual warfare,
12) demonstrating a Spirit-dependent life,
13) empowering others for ministry,
14) expecting God to work in startling ways,
15) accepting spiritual growth as a process,
16) violating religious customs at the risk of being viewed as a rebel (wow!),
17) demonstrating vulnerability,
18) resolutely living a God-given, Scripture-based personal mission, and
19) living life as a servant.
2) practicing solitude and silence,
3) fasting,
4) touching, laying hands on others and healing them,
5) demonstrating humility before God and others,
6) living the faith fearlessly,
7) mentoring/training others,
8) telling vivid stories,
9) capturing “the teachable moment,” 10) practicing interactive communication,
11) engaging in spiritual warfare,
12) demonstrating a Spirit-dependent life,
13) empowering others for ministry,
14) expecting God to work in startling ways,
15) accepting spiritual growth as a process,
16) violating religious customs at the risk of being viewed as a rebel (wow!),
17) demonstrating vulnerability,
18) resolutely living a God-given, Scripture-based personal mission, and
19) living life as a servant.
What
do you observe about these 19 behaviors? They have become through history the
basis for the classical spiritual disciplines. They are the verbs giving shape
to the practices, behaviors and relationships deeply energizing to Christian
formation. We recognized, of course, that there are many more spiritual
disciplines not in the 19 clustered behaviors. To name just a few:
journaling, corporate worshiping, and “slowing and practicing secrecy” (as John
Ortberg defines them). Still, we defined the core behaviors that have
gripped the church as a template for being “Christian.”
The
purpose of informing you of this is to encourage you, especially pastors, to
think about taking on a similar project with a group in your church. I can hear
someone say, “Why can’t we just buy Ortberg’s book or Ruth
Haley Barton’s or Richard
Foster’s? Why all the fuss with a Gospel?” Here is my answer, my
witness: When you see a group of ordinary people in your church, having surveyed
for themselves all the Gospel-recorded ways Jesus lived, light up as they
define a template to guide their own lives in spiritual formation, books by
others about the spiritual disciplines become “the icing on the cake.” The
group in your church will have baked the cake. Plus, it’s a lot of fun.
Thank you for sharing not just your insight, but your passion for the Gospel message. It is so important to remember that, while reading books that help in the spiritual walk, without the base-line of the Word, the "icing" has no support structure.
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