About Me

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I long to see Christ formed in me and in those around me. Spiritual formation is my passion. My training was under Dallas Willard at the Renovare Spiritual Formation Institute. One of my regular prayers is this: "This day be within and without me, lowly and meek, yet all powerful. Be in the heart of each to whom I speak, and in the mouth of each who speaks unto me."

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Friday, December 16, 2011

A Brother in Another Time

Confessions, Augustine
You stir man to take pleasure in praising you, because you have made us for yourself, and our heart is restless until it rests in you.
Most high, utterly good, utterly powerful, most omnipotent, most merciful and most just, deeply hidden yet most intimately present, perfection of both beauty and strength, stable and incomprehensible, immutable and yet changing all things, never new, never old, making everything new and ‘leading’ the proud ‘to be old without their knowledge’ (Job 9: 5, Old Latin version); always active, always in repose, gathering to yourself but not in need, supporting and filling and protecting, creating and nurturing and bringing to maturity, searching even though to you nothing is lacking: you love without burning, you are jealous in a way that is free of anxiety, you ‘repent’ (Gen. 6: 6) without the pain of regret, you are wrathful and remain tranquil. You .will a change without any change in your design. You recover what you find, yet have never lost. Never in any need, you rejoice in your gains (Luke 15: 7); you are never avaricious, yet you require interest (Matt. 25: 27). We pay you more than you require so as to make you our debtor, yet who has anything which does not belong to you? (1 Cor. 4: 7). You pay off debts, though owing nothing to anyone; you cancel debts and incur no loss. But in these words what have I said, my God, my life, my holy sweetness? What has anyone achieved in words when he speaks about you? Yet woe to those who are silent about you because, though loquacious with verbosity, they have nothing to say.
The house of my soul is too small for you to come to it. May it be enlarged by you. It is in ruins: restore it.
For you were always with me, mercifully punishing me, touching with a bitter taste all my illicit pleasures. Your intention was that I should seek delights unspoilt by disgust and that, in my quest where I could achieve this, I should discover it to be in nothing except you Lord, nothing but you.
Pride imitates what is lofty; but you alone are God most high above all things.
When I hear this or that brother Christian, who is ignorant of these matters and thinks one thing the case when another is correct, with patience I contemplate the man expressing his opinion. I do not see it is any obstacle to him if perhaps he is ignorant of the position and nature of a physical creature, provided that he does not believe something unworthy of you, Lord, the Creator of all things (1 Macc. 1: 24). But it becomes an obstacle if he thinks his view of nature belongs to the very form of orthodox doctrine, and dares obstinately to affirm something he does not understand. But such an infirmity in the cradle of faith is sustained by mother charity, until the new man ‘grows up into a mature man and is no longer carried about by any wind of doctrine’ (Eph. 4: 13).
My ears were already satiated with this kind of talk, which did not seem better to me because more elegantly expressed. Fine style does not make something true, nor has a man a wise soul because he has a handsome face and well-chosen eloquence. They who had promised that he would be so good were not good judges. He seemed to them prudent and wise because he charmed them by the way he talked.
That ‘man of God’ (2 Kgs. 1: 9) received me like a father and expressed pleasure at my coming with a kindness most fitting in a bishop. I began to like him, at first indeed not as a teacher of the truth, for I had absolutely no confidence in your Church, but as a human being who was kind to me.
My belief in this was sometimes stronger, sometimes weaker. But at least I always retained belief both that you are and that you care for us, even if I did not know what to think about your substantial nature or what way would lead, or lead me back, to you.
The authority of the Bible seemed the more to be venerated and more worthy of a holy faith on the ground that it was open to everyone to read, while keeping the dignity of its secret meaning for a profounder interpretation.
Praise to you, glory to you, fount of mercies! As I became unhappier, you came closer
It was obvious to me that things which are liable to corruption are good. If they were the supreme goods, or if they were not good at all, they could not be corrupted. For if they were supreme goods, they would be incorruptible. If there were no good in them, there would be nothing capable of being corrupted. Corruption does harm and unless it diminishes the good, no harm would be done. Therefore either corruption does not harm, which cannot be the case, or (which is wholly certain) all things that are corrupted suffer privation of some good. If they were to be deprived of all good, they would not exist at all. If they were to exist and to be immune from corruption, they would be superior because they would be permanently incorruptible.
I inquired what wickedness is; and I did not find a substance but a perversity of will twisted away from the highest substance, you O God, towards inferior things, rejecting its own inner life (Ecclus. 10) and swelling with external matter.
The consequence of a distorted will is passion. By servitude to passion, habit is formed, and habit to which there is no resistance becomes necessity.
As I was saying this and weeping in the bitter agony of my heart, suddenly I heard a voice from the nearby house chanting as if it might be a boy or a girl (I do not know which), saying and repeating over and over again ‘Pick up and read, pick up and read.’ At once my countenance changed, and I began to think intently whether there might be some sort of children’s game in which such a chant is used. But I could not remember having heard of one. I checked the flood of tears and stood up. I interpreted it solely as a divine command to me to open the book and read the first chapter might find.
The examples given by your servants whom you had transformed from black to shining white and from death to life, crowded in upon my thoughts. They burnt away and destroyed my heavy sluggishness, preventing me from being dragged down to low things. They set me on fire with such force that every breath of opposition from any ‘deceitful tongue’ (Ps. 119: 2 f.) had the power not to dampen my zeal but to inflame it the more.
I trembled with fear and at the same time burned with hope and exultation at your mercy, Father (Ps. 30: 7–8).
At that time you tortured me with toothache, and when it became so bad that I lost the power to speak, it came into my heart to beg all my friends present to pray for me to you, God of health of both soul and body. I wrote this on a wax tablet and gave it to them to read. As soon as we fell on our knees in the spirit of supplication, the pain vanished. But what agony it was, and how instantly it disappeared! I admit I was terrified, ‘my Lord my God’ (Ps. 37: 23). I had experienced nothing like it in all my life.
When I am evil, making confession to you is simply to be displeased with myself. When I am good, making confession to you is simply to make no claim on my own behalf, for you, Lord, ‘confer blessing on the righteous’ (Ps. 5:13) but only after you have first ‘justified the ungodly’ (Rom. 4: 5).
But when I love you, what do I love? It is not physical beauty nor temporal glory nor the brightness of light dear to earthly eyes, nor the sweet melodies of all kinds of songs, nor the gentle odour of flowers and ointments and perfumes, nor manna or honey, nor limbs welcoming the embraces of the flesh; it is not these I love when I love my God. Yet there is a light I love, and a food, and a kind of embrace when I love my God—a light, voice, odour, food, embrace of my inner man, where my soul is floodlit by light which space cannot contain, where there is sound that time cannot seize, where there is a perfume which no breeze disperses, where there is a taste for food no amount of eating can lessen, and where there is a bond of union that no satiety can part. That is what I love when I love my God.
I have met with many people who wished to deceive, none who wished to be deceived. . . . They love the truth because they have no wish to be deceived, and when they love the happy life (which is none other than joy grounded in truth) they are unquestionably loving the truth.
But why is it that ‘truth engenders hatred’? Why does your man who preaches what is true become to them an enemy (Gal. 4: 16) when they love the happy life which is simply joy grounded on truth? The answer must be this: their love for truth takes the form that they love something else and want this object of their love to be the truth; and because they do not wish to be deceived, they do not wish to be persuaded that they are mistaken. And so they hate the truth for the sake of the object which they love instead of the truth. They love truth for the light it sheds, but hate it when it shows them up as being wrong (John 3: 20; 5: 35). Because they do not wish to be deceived but wish to deceive, they love truth when it shows itself to them but hate it when its evidence goes against them. Retribution will come to them on this principle: those who resist being refuted the truth will make manifest against their will, and yet to them it will not be manifest. Yes indeed: the human mind, so blind and languid, shamefully and dishonourably wishes to hide, and yet does not wish anything to be concealed from itself.
Late have I loved you, beauty so old and so new: late have I loved you. And see, you were within and I was in the external world and sought you there, and in my unlovely state I plunged into those lovely created things which you made. You were with me, and I was not with you.
Although health is the reason for eating and drinking, a dangerous pleasantness joins itself to the process like a companion. Many a time it tries to take first place, so that I am doing for pleasure what I profess or wish to do only for health’s sake. They do not have the same measure: for what is enough for health is too little for pleasure. . . .  It is not the impurity of food I fear but that of uncontrolled desire.
Thus I fluctuate between the danger of pleasure and the experience of the beneficent effect, and I am more led to put forward the opinion (not as an irrevocable view) that the custom of singing in Church is to be approved, so that through the delights of the ear the weaker mind may rise up towards the devotion of worship.
The present considering the past is the memory, the present considering the present is immediate awareness, the present considering the future is expectation. . . .  So it is in you, my mind, that I measure periods of time. . . .  But how does this future, which does not yet exist, diminish or become consumed? Or how does the past, which now has no being, grow, unless there are three processes in the mind which in this is the active agent? For the mind expects and attends and remembers, so that what it expects passes through what has its attention to what it remembers.
The only thing that is not from you is what has no existence. The movement of the will away from you, who are, is movement towards that which has less being.
It is one thing to inquire into the truth about the origin of the creation. It is another to ask what understanding of the words on the part of a reader and hearer was intended by Moses, a distinguished servant of your faith. In the first category I will not be associated with all those who think they know things but are actually wrong. In the second category I will have nothing to do with all those who think Moses could have said anything untrue.
[F]or your truth does not belong to me nor to anyone else, but to us all whom you call to share it as a public possession. With terrifying words you warn against regarding it as a private possession, or we may lose it (Matt. 25: 14–30). Anyone who claims for his own property what you offer for all to enjoy, and wishes to have exclusive rights to what belongs to everyone, is driven from the common truth to his own private ideas, that is from truth to a lie. For ‘he who speaks a lie’ speaks ‘from his own’ (John 8: 44).
If any among them comes to scorn the humble style of biblical language and in proud weakness pushes himself outside the nest in which he was raised, he will fall, poor wretch.
The haughtiness of pride, the pleasure of lust, and the poison of curiosity (1 John 2: 16) are the passions of a dead soul. The soul’s death does not end all movement. Its ‘death’ comes about as it departs from the fount of life, so that it is absorbed by the transitory world and conformed to it.
A gift is the object given by the person who is sharing in these necessaries such as money, food, drink, clothing, a roof, assistance generally. Fruit, however, is the good and right will of the giver. (Augustine, Confessions)
Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things. Whatever you have learned or received or heard from me, or seen in me—put it into practice. And the God of peace will be with you.  (Philippians 4:8-9)
It wouldn't be too long ago that Augustine's thoughts would have been characterized as "counting the number of angels that could fit on the end of a pin"-sort of pondering to me.  It wasn't so much that I thought he was unintelligent, but just out-dated and irrelevant.  I actually thought, What could this guy know about the life I lead?   What could he know about anything really important?


I have to admit that I still didn't find Confessions enjoyable by and large.  I felt bogged down in a number of places and confused in other ones.  I wondered, What is he trying to get at?

I decided to come to Augustine with more openness than before.  His Confessions are recognized widely as "great."  Furthermore, I was given them to read as an assignment (at least part of them).  I thought I would try to find what I could in his writing.

I found that Augustine had a deep love for God.  His yearning after God is often quoted.  "Restless until I find rest in you," "my God, my life, my holy sweetness,"  "late have I loved you, beauty so old and so new" are a few phrases that show that Augustine was anything but stilted and merely ritualistic in his faith.  He longed after God with a love that is seldom seen.

I found that Augustine pondered God and his ways deeply.  He was not able to merely accept things without wrestling with them first.  His conversion experience spanned more than a decade as he struggled to come to God and escape from the world and his own desires.  He understood how difficult it can be to come to God when he wrote: "The consequence of a distorted will is passion. By servitude to passion, habit is formed, and habit to which there is no resistance becomes necessity."  At the same time he saw how faithful God is and how easily he could come to him: "Praise to you, glory to you, fount of mercies! As I became unhappier, you came closer."  His struggle was real and within each part of him, from desires to intellect, from personal relationships to public image.  Augustine captured so much of the struggle to coming to God.

I found in Augustine's questions, both before and after his conversion to Christ, relentless integrity.  He so much wants to bring ideas together with God and his life.  These are not empty questions as I first assumed, but things that really troubled and excited him.  He saw it rightly when he began his Confessions with this thought: "What has anyone achieved in words when he speaks about you? Yet woe to those who are silent about you because, though loquacious with verbosity, they have nothing to say."  Although he may not understand much, there is great joy in knowing even a little about God and his ways.

Perhaps most importantly, I found in Augustine a person like myself.  The events that led up to his conversion were so real to me.  He was exposed to The Life of St. Anthony through a chance meeting with an Egyptian Christian.  He wondered if what happened to Anthony could happen to him.  And it did!  Through the Bible, God also spoke to Augustine.  God also gave him a friend to journey with into his new-found belief.  The story is so beautiful in its reality.  I could see myself as Augustine and with him.

The breadth and depth of a relationship with God in Christ transcends place as I find other people from other places who share the wonder of following Jesus.  In Augustine, I see that it also transcends time.  Through his writings, I can "join together in following [the] example" of those who hunger for Christ.  Such experiences expand my experience and love for God, who continues to embrace so many different people even through the ages.

Lord, I am grateful for your servant Augustine.  He shared about you from his heart.  He questioned you deeply with his mind.  He gave so much in service to you through his body.  May I learn from him and be encouraged by his example and his teaching.  Amen.


I look forward to reading Confessions again a bit more slowly with the goal of walking with a dear brother in Christ.  I hope I will learn how to hear him "in love" as he would want me to.

Thursday, December 15, 2011

The Word Comes to an Honest Heart


Devotional Classics, Watchman Nee,  Excerpts from What Shall This Man Do?
God has made, from His side, a threefold provision for every person in that person’s hour of crisis: Firstly, Jesus has come as the Friend of sinners; secondly, it is He personally (and no intermediary) whom we are called to meet; and thirdly, the Holy Spirit has been poured out on all flesh, to bring to pass in us the initial work of conviction of sin, repentance, and faith, and, of course, all that follows. . . .  We are not required – in the first place – to believe, or to repent, or to be conscious of sin, or even to know that Christ died.  We are required only to approach the Lord with an honest heart.
In the Gospels the Lord Jesus is presented as the Friend of sinners, for historically He was found, first of all, moving among the people as their Friend before He became their Savior.
I met a student who said it was too early for him to come to the Lord. . . .  He said to me, “The thief on the cross was saved, but he had his fling, and it was high time that he repented.  But I – I am young.”
“Well what do you want to do?” I asked him. 
He replied, “I want to wait another forty years and have a good time, and then I will repent.” 
So I said, “Let us pray.”
“Oh, I can’t pray,” he answered.
“Yes, you can,” I said.  “You can tell the Lord all you have told me.  He is the Friend of unrepentant sinners like you.”
“Oh, I can’t say that to Him.”
“Why not?  Whatever is in your heart, you tell it to Him.  He will help you.”  Finally he prayed, and told the Lord that he did not want to repent and be saved, but that he knew he needed a Savior; and he just cried to Him for help.  The Lord worked repentance in him and he got up a saved man.
What is salvation?  Many think that to be saved we must first believe that the Lord Jesus died for us, but it is a strange fact that nowhere in the New Testament does it say precisely that.  We are told to believe in Jesus, or to believe on Him; not to believe that He died for us.  “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved,” were Paul’s words.
The first condition of salvation is not knowledge, but meeting Christ.
For what is it to be reckoned righteous?  It is to touch God.  That is why our first object must be to lead people to meet Him.
[Salvation] is, as we have seen, a question of meeting God – of people coming into first-hand contact with Christ the Savior.  So what, you ask me, is the minimum requirement in a person to make that contact possible?  The basic condition of a sinner’s salvation is not belief or repentance, but just honesty of heart towards God.  God requires nothing of us except that we come in that attitude.
At first, Watchman Nee’s statement about coming to God without repentance or belief seems wrong.  How else could someone come?  Jesus himself said, “Repent!”  Paul speaks of faith as the sole avenue for righteousness from God.  Yet he says we need only meet God with an honest heart.

When I read this, I found that Nee had hit on something I learned a while ago, but easily forget.  (Funny how that works. . . .)  I cannot find God without this “honest heart.”  Repentance cannot be a precursor to coming to God because by their very nature, sinners are unrepentant.  Repentance follows conversion.
Similarly if belief is understanding some things about God, a person who does not know God will know very little about him.  This kind of understanding follows coming to God.  Belief as trust is the same.  I cannot trust God before I come to know him.  Somehow, I must touch him, experience him.

My certainty about this only increases as I grow closer to God.  The thing that takes me into the road of religious pride and away from God the quickest is trying to change (repent) or believe (understand or trust) without touching God.  The whole thing becomes powered by my will and guided by my pride.

One of the most tempting ways (maybe the most tempting) of dealing with sins and shortcomings in my life is to bring pride in to beat them into submission.  “You’re better than that!”  “At least I’m not as bad as. . . .”  “I may do this, but at least I don’t do that.”  All these statements and many more of them  come to my mind when I try to resist my faults and sins with pride.  I may see improvement with certain sins, but I exchange them for something far more deadly.

I think this “honest heart” is one way of describing humility.  In the story above, the young student practiced humility through confession.  Confession is not so much admitting I am wrong as being honest before God about where I am at.  Confession is not so much “I’m sorry” as “I’m here.”  Meeting Jesus keeps me from the source of pride: hiding from God.  Hiding means I am trying to take care of it on my own rather than bring it to Jesus for help.

Nee’s three provisions are absolutely necessary to make this kind of “honest heart” effective.  Jesus is my Friend before I repent.  He is on my side.  He wants to be around me and will be, even if I have ambivalent feelings.  Jesus is merciful and forgiving.

Next, this meeting with Jesus is all that is necessary.  He alone stands before me when I am alone in grief or sin or pain.  He alone stands with me when I face what I fear, whether God or people.  He alone is my mediator, not his death or his teaching or his resurrection.  These come with him, but they are not mediators; only Jesus is.  I go to him with an honest heart, not to his teachings or his promises or his achievements.  Jesus himself answers my needs and cries.  He alone is the mediator.

Finally, I meet Jesus through his Spirit.  His Spirit overshadows me and all people, awaiting my cries to him.  He is as close as the cries from my heart.  His presence and power are available immediately when I seek him out apart from my repentance or my belief.  I access Jesus by my heart crying out to him, not my efforts to please him or know him.  This is grace: Jesus’s immediate presence to each person.

Jesus’s grace takes the honest heart and fills it with repentance and belief.  All that matters is how my heart turns to Christ in each moment, whether crisis or peace.  He is my Friend, faithful at all times even when I am not.

Lord, recently I have once again turned to you.  I have seen how pride grows easily in my heart.  I begin to hide.  I grow cold.  I forget your presence beside me.  I try to conjure repentance and create belief.  For you, I let it go today.  They are not worth anything.  I need you and you alone, Jesus, this day and every day.  Let me eyes be on you as I open myself completely before you.  Then I will turn.  Then I will trust.  Amen.

Confession is powerful tool to beat on pride.  Pride thrives in darkness and hiding.  Confession brings light and community.  Pride competes.  Confession brings the knowledge that everything is loss compared to knowing Jesus, my Friend, my Mediator, my Help.

Thursday, December 8, 2011

The Work in the Way

The Pilgrim's Progress, John Bunyan
The Man put his fingers in his ears, and ran on crying, Life!  Life!  Eternal Life!  So he looked not behind him, but fled towards the middle of the Plain.  (4)
Interpreter:  Let this man's Misery be remembered by thee, and be an everlasting Caution to thee.  (33)
Then [Christian] stood still a while to look and wonder; for it was very surprising to him, that the sight of the Cross should thus ease him of his Burden.  He looked therefore, and looked again, even as the springs that were in his head sent waters down his cheeks.  (36)
Formalist and Hypocrisy:  If we get into the Way, what's the matter which way we get in?  If we are in, we are in.
Christian:  You come in by yourselves without his Direction; and you shall go out by yourselves, without his Mercy.  (38, 39)
Prudence: Can you remember by what Means you find your annoyances at times, as if they were vanquished?
Christian: Yes, when I think what I saw at the Cross, that will do it; and when I look upon my 'broidered Coat, that will do it; also when I look into the Roll that I carry in my bosom, that will do it; and when my thoughts wax warm about whither I am going, that will do it.  (51)
Faithful: This Shame tells me what men are; but it tells me nothing what God or the Word of God is.  (79)
Hopeful: Then I said, but Lord, what is Believing?  And then I saw from that saying, [He that cometh to me shall never hunger, and he that believeth on me shall never thirst] that Believing and Coming was all one; and that he that came, that is, ran out in his heart and affections after Salvation by Christ, he indeed believed in Christ. . . .  And now was my heart full of joy, mine eyes full of tears, and mine affections running over with love to the Name, People, and Ways of Jesus Christ. (164, 165)
Now while they were thus drawing towards the Gate, behold a company of the Heavenly Host came out to meet them; to whom it was said by the other two Shining Ones, These are the men that have loved our Lord, when they were in the World, and that have left all for his Holy Name, and he hath sent us to fetch them, and we have brought them thus far on their desired Journey, that they may go in and look their Redeemer in the face with Joy.  (185)
Since I have read The Pilgrim's Progress, I have run into the very characters on my own pilgrimage: Atheist, Temporary, and Ignorance.  I have seen some of the same challenges before me as Christian faced: running for life when others call me back, sinking into despondency, and being persecuted for buying into the vanity of much of this life.  Progress seems slow.  I am slow to learn.

Yet, the cross still relieves my burdens, and the Interpreter reminds me of who I can trust and the dangers before me.  In the house of Prudence, Knowledge, and Charity, I find the faith of those who have gone before me and catch glimpses of the glories to come.  Maybe someday, I will sight the Gates and walk in the Delectable Mountains where joy and peace reign.

This is the delight of Bunyan's allegory.  He has spotted a number of the people I meet, the challenges I face, and the joys I encounter on the way.  How can I bring this together?  I suppose I could say that one of Bunyan's main concerns is for people who get on the path without entering by the Wicket Gate.  Repentance is knocking on the door of God's good will and being let in.  The Gate is not just a moment that comes and goes, but a beginning, like a wedding to a marriage, of a way of life, a pilgrimage.  Those who do not enter by the Gate walk without God's leave and without his mercy.  Like Hypocrisy, they say, "If we are in, we are in," not realizing that the actions without the heart will not carry one to the end of the journey.

Bunyan reminds me that the pilgrimage of this life is full of knocking and seeking.  God's grace is fully available, but not always immediately received.  It is encountered on the way.  Pilgrim has to come a little ways on his journey before his burden falls off.  Hopeful has to pray to receive Christ repeatedly and with faith.  God is not playing with them, but revealing their desire mixed with his mercy which brings them perseverance.  "Ask, seek, knock" are not half-hearted attempted, but ways in which I can love God with all my heart, soul, mind, and strength.  There is no other way to come and I need grace the whole way.  Grace brings perseverance; it doesn't eliminate it.

Bunyan makes clear that this great salvation that I walk is always a gift.  In my natural life, I will do no good, that is, I will not make this journey.  Ignorance cannot accept this fact, but must see that his journey is mostly upon his own shoulders and due to his own innate goodness.  Sharing with Ignorance, I think I am "good enough" and so turn down God's offer for real goodness and even find his offer to be oppressive, since it condemns my goodness as not good enough and show where I fall short.  It hurts and such conviction can make me think that God's call is not really good at all.  Conviction leads to mercy and joy if I can let go of my Self-holiness and embrace God and his goodness.

Bunyan also makes clear that this great salvation is an achievement.  Just because it is a matter of mercy and grace does not mean that I have not share in the work.  God's grace upholds my achievement.  There is no boasting, only gratitude.  Boasting does not come from work and achievement, but only from entitlement.  Effort is expected, as is clear from Christian's whole pilgrimage, even if much of the effort is asking for God's grace to carry me through.

Lord, allow me to walk in the Way.  Keep me from being sidetracked.  Save me from the pitfalls before me.  Bring me into this day's joy.  Let me work be hard and true, especially the work of prayer.  I need your grace to carry me through.  Amen.


I resonate with Christian's cry, "Life!  Life!  Eternal life!" I see how much my devotion needs to be single-minded on the Lord.  It is easy to be divided.  It is at those times that the Way becomes unclear.  Devotion brings me back to the path and keeps me on it.