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Tag Archives: Fruit of the Spirit

The One Thing You Must Know To Be A Mature Christian

I’m not a botanist (though I enjoyed the recent movie that starred a guy who played one – The Martian), but I know something about plants and trees: I know how to tell when they are mature. This past weekend, for instance, we went apple-picking at the Little Farmer north of Fond du Lac, and I know the trees were mature because I picked and ate their fruit. That’s maturity. When a tree bears fruit, it’s mature.

And so it is with Christians. The Christian who is mature is the one who bears fruit.

Now, this fruit can be of the character variety – of course, I’m thinking of the fruit of the Spirit (Galatians 5:22, 23 – love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, etc.), or it can be of the service variety (evangelism, discipleship – i.e. using your spiritual gift). But you can tell the mature Christian when both of these are happening.

But how do you become a mature Christian? Well, here is where many Christians go afoul, because many don’t realize that the first step to maturity is understanding something. In other words, you have to know something if you want to be mature. It’s a fact that you must grasp, and not just in your head, but also in your heart.  Now, of course, the key to bearing fruit is abiding in Christ, but that’s not the fact I’m talking about. Many Christians know that they must abide in Christ, spending time in His Word and prayer, meditating on the gospel, church attendance, fellowship, etc., but they have trouble doing it.

Many Christians know they must abide in Christ but they don’t do it, and the reason is that they are missing a foundational truth. Consider this…

Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit by itself, unless it abides in the vine, neither can you, unless you abide in me. I am the vine; you are the branches. Whoever abides in me and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit, for apart from me you can do nothing. John 15:4-5 (ESV)

How much can you do apart from Christ? Nothing…not a thing.

Here’s the point – if you are not convinced of this one truth, that apart from Christ you can do nothing, then you will not pray, or read His word, or preach the gospel to yourself or go to church regularly. Of course, you will try to do these things, and you will make commitments and New Year’s resolutions, but it will all end in failure because you are not convinced…that you must.

You don’t know that you can’t.

This is why so many Christians fail to abide, because in the end, they just don’t think they need to. Thus they fail to bear real fruit and thus they fail to become mature,  So here is the greatest truth a Christian can know: You are absolutely unable. Meditate on that for a month and see what happens. Really. After all, you had to know this to become a Christian, that you were unable to qualify for heaven on your own. And now, not surprisingly, you have to know this to live the Christian life.

Apart from Jesus…you can do nothing.

For Monday, October 26th: John 16

 
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Posted by on October 23, 2015 in Uncategorized

 

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A Highly Motivating and Not-Often Considered Reason to Read and Meditate on Scripture Regularly

IMG_0234There are so many reasons to read and meditate on the Bible, but one that I had not much considered came clear to me some years ago when I was reading a book of essays called, Renewing Your Mind in a Secular World, edited by John Woodbridge.

The chapter in the book which grabbed my attention was written by the noted Psychiatrist Paul Meier and entitled Spiritual and Mental Health in the Balance.

As a budding psychiatrist, Meier was interested in the question of what makes someone mentally healthy. In other words, from a scientific point of view, what is it that contributes to emotional maturity, joy and peace, or, in other words, low levels of anxiety, bitterness and depression? To answer his questions, Meier did a research study of seminary students using a well-known psychological test called the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) and an extensive spiritual life questionnaire.

From the MMPI, Meier could tell who was mentally and emotionally healthy, and he divided them into three groups:

Group A: Those with exceptionally good mental health and a high level of maturity

Group B: Those with apparently normal mental health and maturity

Group C: Those with statistically significant psychological conflict and emotional pain

After this, he did statistical analyses with the spiritual life questionnaire. He describes his findings:

“When the results came in, initially I was surprised and disappointed. Those seminary students who had been Christians for many years were only slightly healthier and happier than those who had accepted Christ in the past one or two years. The difference was not even statistically significant. However, my disappointment turned to joy. I learned one of the most valuable lessons of my life when I found the factor that made the difference. That factor was Scripture meditation. Students who practiced almost daily Scripture meditation for three years or longer were significantly healthier and happier than students who did not meditate on Scripture daily. Also, they were significantly healthier and happier than students who had meditated on Scripture daily for less than three years.”

He summarizes what the research taught him:

  1. Even though trusting Christ is all that is needed to obtain eternal life, experiencing the abundant life Christ promised (John 10:10) and experiencing the fruit of the Spirit (love, joy, peace) rather than bitterness, depression and anxiety are dependent upon a renewing of the mind.
  2. Renewing of the mind can come from various sources, such as confrontation by loving friends about personal blind-spots, therapy with a Christian professional counselor, conviction from the Holy Spirit, confrontation with scriptural principles in sermons or seminars, and daily meditation on Scripture.
  3. Renewing of the mind is a continual process, a progressive sanctification requiring continual, preferably daily, input from God’s Word.
  4. Daily meditation on Scripture, with personal application, is the most effective means of obtaining personal joy, peace, and emotional maturity.
  5. On the average, it takes about three years of daily Scripture meditation to bring about enough change in a person’s thought patterns and behavior to produce statistically superior mental health and happiness.
  6. None of the students in Group C (those with statistically significant psychological conflicts) were presently meditating on Scripture daily, although some were reading their Bibles regularly as a textbook for their classes.
  7. All of the students who had meditated on Scripture daily, or almost daily, for three years or longer were in Group A or Group B, with most being in Group A (superior in mental health, happiness, and maturity).

I guess all this shouldn’t be a surprise, as Psalm 1 and Joshua 1 tell us of the blessings that come on the person who meditates on the Word of God, but I hope a little science will also move you to give yourself to regular meditation on the Book of books.  In fact, consider joining us at Edgewood Community Church as we read through the New Testament in 2015.  We start in Matthew and will read a chapter each weekday (260 chapters in the New Testament, 261 weekdays in 2015) I’ll be posting a devotional of the chapter we’re reading each day, and I hope you’ll both read the chapter of the day and stop by the blog to meditate a little further.

Happy New Year everyone!

 

 

 
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Posted by on December 30, 2014 in Uncategorized

 

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