We must clearly understand that there is a rigorous consistency in the human self and its actions. This is one of the things we are most inclined to deceive ourselves about. If I do evil, I am the kind of person who does evil; if I do good, I am the kind of person who does good (1 John 3:7-10). Actions are not impositions on who we are, but are expressions of who we are. They come out of our heart and the inner realities it supervises and interacts with.
Read MoreWillard Wednesdays - The Vision of the Disciple of Jesus
The old adage "what would Jesus do?" is only partly right. It is right in the sense of looking to the way of Jesus and the implications for our life. It is wrong in that it assumes we live the same life as Jesus, but the scriptures do not speak directly of the complexities of life in 2018. There are no texts that discuss internet usage, democracies, genetically modified foods, etc. But this does not leave us without direction. The scriptures do speak, at length, about the kind of person Jesus was, and here is where we find a better question to ask ourselves. As Willard notes, we must subtly re-write the WWJD question as, "What would Jesus do if he were I?" At the other end of this question we begin to wrestle with our own complexities in our own cultural moment. The question for our following of Jesus is not how to do everything Jesus did, but rather, how would Jesus do all the things I have to do if he lived my life. In this way, our apprenticeship is more practically grounded. It becomes a call to embody the everyday practices of Jesus, recognizing that Jesus’ call is to become the kind of person he was. Put another way, to become the kind of person for whom the way of the Kingdom of God is the natural outpouring of our lives, to “learn how to do everything I do in the manner and from the source from which he did all that he did.”
The Slow Work of the Heart - Latest Sermon
Hello Friends -
A few weeks back I was able to share a message I wrote that explores the process by which transformation takes place. For followers of Jesus, we often find ourselves struggling to embody the same ethic, grace, and compassion that Jesus embodied. We struggle, we work, we battle ourselves all in an effort toward Christlikeness. However, in Matthew 11:28 Jesus says, "Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest." How does one find rest in the pursuit of Christlikeness? Dallas Willard says it best...
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