Author: art rogers
Blogging the Spirtual Disciplines
Tuesday, July 17th, 2007 @ 5:00 am
Joe Kennedy sent me an invitation to join a group of bloggers that were going to be blogging the spiritual disciplines on Tuesdays starting today with introductions.
First, I won’t be blogging all of the disciplines, but Joe will be posting a weekly rundown on those who are posting every Tuesday for a few months.
Here’s the list:
Introduction
Meditation
Prayer
Fasting
Study
Journaling
Simplicity
Silence
Solitude
Submission
Service
Confession
Worship
Guidance
Celebration
Conclusion
Pretty long, huh? 16 weeks of hardcore spiritual challenges.
Truth is, I may need this more for myself than anyone that benefits from what I write. I used to be very disciplined, spiritually. I carved out time for God every day, no matter what, but that was the beginning. It got much deeper than that for me.
As time passed, my life started catching up with me. I got married, had kids, started full time staff ministry instead of the flexible stuff I had done for a while, like Youth Evangelism. Now I’m a pastor with a special prayer study built in my church’s facility - albeit without reasonable air conditioning - and I am so busy I can’t get in there.
It is past time for me to start saying “no” to some things and start saying “yes” to my growth in God.
There was a time when a man told me something that shaped me spiritually. Although I have not lived up to this as well as I could lately, it is still my heart’s desire and the mental picture of myself when I am spiritually healthy. He told me that if I would take care of the depth of my life, God would take care of the breadth of my life. That is to say, focus on growing in God, and God will handle all of the things that clamor for your attention, but that you can’t possibly cover in total.
I spend all my time trying to keep up with things I can’t possibly catch and time to grow spiritually slips away.
Well, back to it, then.
Let me say one profound thing, before taking off for Youth Camp on Monday. (I am writing this on Friday night and setting it to drop on Tuesday morning.)
The disciplines are about true rest. If you are truly participating in the disciplines listed above, you will find yourself rested in ways that you would never have guessed.
When we say we want to rest, what we really do is substitute things that do not refresh for what truly refreshes. Now, I know I am about to start sounding like John Piper here, so don’t think I am plagiarizing. I give him credit for shaping me through “Desiring God.”
The reward of finding God that comes from the pursuit of God is that which truly satisfies. The poor substitutes are the obvious: tv, xbox, surfing the blogs, golf, guitar, photography or whatever happens to be your hobby of the moment. Whatever burns your time with “no real demands on you.” Boy, is that a foolish standard. You seek rest in something that promises not to tax you further. The tragedy is that it so often does.
The next group is slightly more stealthy: vacations, weekends, fellowships at church, supper with friends. These things actually tend to offer something restorative, but when you are done, aren’t you always more tired than when you started?
The final group is the ultimate deception: Quiet Times, Worship services, Sunday School, Bible Studies, Devotional Books, Theological Books, Books and more Books - or audio/video sermons by preachers of whom you think highly. These actually rob you when you 1) approach them legalistically or 2) view them as an ends in themselves instead of means to an end. In other words, their potential benefit is short-circuited.
Obviously, legalism is something that hollows you out, spiritually. Scripture is replete with its exposure as a robber of goodness. In itself, it views the disciplines as means to an end - that end being worldly prominence among spiritual people. Wrong end.
The end in itself view fails to see a personal interaction with God as the ultimate end. How is this not legalism? It is mere shortsightedness.
When I was a young man, I loved God with everything I had. I just didn’t have much and wasn’t getting much. Nevertheless, I did spend time with Him, but because I was supposed to, not because I loved being with God and He restored my soul in that time. It was time with God, but it was out of a sense of “rightness.” I didn’t think I “had” to do it. I didn’t think I would impress God and didn’t really know enough to realize that I might try to impress others with a false depth. Rather, I read the Word and thought about God and then moved on.
This is where the 5 minute “Quiet Times” come in. You can have a QT for 5 mins if you aren’t pursuing God, but are “simply” doing what you should.
Think I’m splitting hairs?
Maybe I am, but I see a difference in the motivation and expectation of the one over the other.
Obviously, spiritual growth, or depth, is refreshing on levels that can’t be measured in any other qualitative way than for the child of God to know peace. Peace that passes understanding. Peace that comes from a sense of His presence.
Real peace. Real renewal. Real rest. Real discipline.
Posts with related content
Church, General Christian, Spiritual Disciplines



July 17th, 2007 at 2:59 pm
No, you’re not splitting hairs. I agree with your assessment. I think all too often we look at that “quiet time” as just something else we supposed to do, something we check off our list. If we haven’t done it and trouble comes, we think it’s because we aren’t “spending time with the Lord” or “in His Word”. So we suddenly start pouring ourselves into a daily quiet time. But rarely do we, in the midst of it, really connect with God; we just read, pray, and check it off the list. It’s kind of like eating penut butter without any jelly. Fine in occasional fingerfuls, but ultimately rather dry, and if done in longer doses it leaves us thirstier than when we started. Does that make sense?
I was the same. Not until I really started journaling what I heard God saying within the passage I was reading, or started asking Him to help me understand the meaning and listening for His explanation — asking Him to talk to me, with me — did I start really connecting with Him. For all the wrong roads Gwen Shamblin has taken over the last decade, this is one thing she used to teach in her Weigh Down Workshop tapes/cds, etc that was vital to my spiritual growth. To listen for God.
It seems that this is the “year of the disciplines” for me. I started the year reading Foster’s book while also coaching/mentoring a couple of college girls reading it as well. About the time we finished, our pastor started a teaching series of these disciplines on Sundays (we’re at “Worship” now). And now ya’ll are starting to go through them. Goodness!
Maybe God’s trying to get something through my think skull…
July 17th, 2007 at 10:26 pm
your skull and mine, lu.