Saturday, May 24, 2008

Avoiding Human Obstacles

Col 2:18-19
18Let no one who delights in humility and the worship of angels cheat you out of the prize by rejoicing about what he has seen. Such a person is puffed up for no reason by his carnal mind. 19He does not hold on to the head, from whom the whole body, which is nourished and held together by its joints and ligaments, grows as God enables it.

Paul was very concerned about the recruitment of new Christians and the unity of those already in the fold. Throughout his letters, Paul meticulously upbraids wayward disciples who seek personal satisfaction instead of peace in the congregation.

The ones who caused the most disention were often ones who presented themselves as the most pious. Taking on extra discipline, they eschewed followers whose religiosity paled next to their own. Paul had absolutely no patience for such self-righteousness...even (and especially) when it was disguised as simply doing the will of God.

In his letter to the Colossians, Paul warns his followers about such people, who trumpet the unmerited Grace in one sentence, and immediately follow with all of the conditions for real acceptance. In the church of Colossi, that included diet; as several who followed the kosher laws considered themselves more devout than those who did not. It also included those who had perverted humility into a badge of honor for themselves, and would silently lord over those followers who had given up less for the church.

Paul notes that different elements of the body grow at different intervals, by God's good design. He also notes that a focus on the frailties of one particular segment of the body often means that attention is diverted from the head (Christ), where it is rightly focused.

One of the challenges for churches in Midian is truly accepting salvation as a gift of Grace. Some churches require followers to progress through many steps before they can be baptized. Other churches have no such requirements before baptism; but, immediately expect perfect behavior after conversion. A focus on the weakness of other believers is as destructive, in Paul's view, as any sin of the flesh. Helping others to grow does not mean being impatient with weakness; it means providing consistent support and encouragement despite it.

Conversion should turn our attention to the head of the body. We must grow and walk on our journey with Christ in the way that God has put before us. Sometimes that will involve jerks and spurts, other times it will stall. Instead of fbecoming frustrated with our own weaknesses, though, we need to try to keep our focus on the head of the body and have faith in His continuing Grace and work in our lives. One person's walk with God will be different from another's; and that is exactly how God has planned it.

Artificially humble people, who claim to have no weaknesses, are not our friends on this journey; often, they are our greatest obstacles. We can't let their disapproval cause us to despair, or to become bitter. Focusing on the head means walking in love and mercy on our own faith journey...which is also, conveniently, the path of Christian growth.