September 7, 2018

The River by Jim McGuiggan

https://web.archive.org/web/20160424063227/http://jimmcguiggan.com/beginners2.asp?id=49

The River

There’s just too much individualism! We read scripture as if it were written saying to each individual, "Now here's what I want you to do when [so and so says or such and such happens]." That's not the way it's written. The biblical strokes are broader than that and they're affected by the overarching purpose of God for the entire human family. We aren't called to know a billion spiritual ways to react, a jillion responses to make in moral judgment and spiritual development.
Rather than ask, "What is this text saying to me?" it would be enriching and more helpful in the long term to ask, "How does this text fit into God’s grand purpose?" And then, "What kind of life am I to lead in order to tune in with the grand purpose of God?" It's a lifestyle we're to look for rather than a million answers to a million specific questions about this and that.
We aren't forever under God's microscope. We aren’t those brilliant children who are overseen by ever-present teachers and guides who are supremely anxious that we achieve our greatest potential. There is no ceaseless prodding and shaping at the level of specific responses. Such children are robbed of community experience and community dependence because their individuality is taken too seriously. We're not our best and cannot be our best under God if we’re feverishly checking our personal development every thirty minutes by buying one more book, attending one more seminar or reading one more blog. God has made a commitment to the human family of which he has made us a part and it is that that I think we should be stressing.
If the response to all that is that we need personal development and we need people to tell us about personal development well, then, we’re richly blessed because we have plenty of people like that!
It appears we'll never be short of them (not since the Enlightenment). Sometimes I think there’s no other kind of writer or speaker or teacher. I know it isn’t true, but sometimes it seems that everywhere I look everyone is talking about him or herself or talking about each one of us as if we were isolated units. Books by the tens of thousands fill the religious shelves, teaching us how to develop this or that, how to know this or that, how to avoid this or that and how to get this or that. Do we need such instruction? I'm sure we do! But do we need a ceaseless torrent of it? Must leaders turn the church into a gymnasium filled with mirrors and spiritual body-builders that follow personalized programs "created just to suit your individual needs"?
To live in the Spirit must surely involve getting to know where the Spirit is taking the human family in his cosmic enterprise. It must involve praying prayers that bear that in mind, praying prayers that are shaped by thoughts and insights generated by his massive purpose and praying prayers that are assured that he will take us there. It must involve embracing that overarching purpose as our own because it is his.
In praying to be the individuals we believe God wants us to be we need to ask, "Why am I here? What is it that I am serving in?" If we want to develop as individuals as the Spirit sees and thinks of us, then our prayers will be more in tune with the Spirit if we see ourselves as he sees us. If I see myself as a budding piano-player I will discipline myself to that end differently than if I saw myself as a possible weightlifting champion. "Since this is what the Spirit is bringing about, what kind of family members does he need? By his grace I will be that kind." To know the mind of the Spirit will shape our own minds in prayer and we will pray "in the Spirit". To know the mind of the Spirit doesn’t mean we get to know in specific what he would want us to do in every conceivable set of circumstances. That isn't possible; it isn't open for us to know. To know the mind of the Spirit is to know the drift of the whole divine purpose and to offer ourselves in service to that.
It would be something like coming to the bank of a great river and knowing it is flowing to the sea, launching our little boat and getting involved in the adventure. That image will only take us so far but to know the direction the current flows and to give ourselves to it is a major description of what it means to live or pray in the Spirit. We don't need at the point of our commitment to know all the twists and turns or rocks and eddies of the river—that doesn't matter. We jumped into the adventure knowing that whatever we meet on the way, we're still going to the sea. This calls for initial understanding and commitment. That understanding and commitment will grow as we race with the current, tip over on a sandbank or get caught in some whirlpool—whatever.

What we won’t do, is drag our little boats up out of the river and slink back home. And if someone on the bank asks where we're going we'll be able to tell him—to the glorious ocean! And if others on the bank tell us our boat is fragile, that there are rocks and rapids ahead, that we aren't smart or knowledgeable enough, we’ll admit all that and journey on. And if they say that the river comes in the end to nothing but marsh—if they tell us that, we'll tell them it can't be true because this is the river of God that flows out of the garden of God to water the entire earth. We’ll call them to join us in the adventure rather than loaf about, bored and aimless and critical.
Think and wonder in pleasure about the "big picture". Think noble things of God. Commit in gladness to him and his purposes and take what comes as part of the adventure.

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