Rest and War: A Field Guide for the Spiritual Lifeنموونە

Rest and War: A Field Guide for the Spiritual Life

DAY 2 OF 6

The spiritual life is a movement away from ways of thinking and ways of living that promote isolation from intimacy with God, and it’s to promote ways of thinking and ways of living that promote intimacy with God—movement away from some things and towards others. Do you see it?

Paul said it this way in 2 Timothy 2:22: “Flee from youthful lusts and pursue righteousness, faith, love, and peace with those who call on the Lord from a pure heart” (NASB). Do you hear the two parts in that? I flee some things, and I pursue other things. It’s one movement but two parts.

Old school theologians had a word for each of these parts. The movement away they called mortification. There are certain ways of thinking and ways of living that I now mortify; I kill. They are not meant to be part of my life anymore. And there are other ways of thinking and ways of living that I’m meant to vivify. They called this vivification. There are other ways of living I want to cultivate; I want to help bring to life. There are things I want to kill, and there are things I want to revive and allow to flourish: away and towards.

If we were going to use gardening imagery, we would say this is the pulling up of weeds; this is the planting of grass. If we were to use dating imagery, we would say vivification is taking my wife on dates, sharing with her my heart, and listening to her heart, pursuing intimacy together. Mortification would be I don’t yell at her, I don’t date other women—there are certain things I don’t do.

Now, let me clarify in this moment. What I’m not saying is, “Well, the devil is over here, and God’s over here, so get on the God side, folks.” That’s not what I’m saying. That makes it sound like God is waiting over here for you to get your act together. But that’s not the gospel. When you come to Christ, God says, “I will never leave you. I will never forsake you” (see Hebrews 13:5). He will always be near you.

And yet you can feel far away. My wife will never leave me, and yet there are moments where—if I have not done the work to cultivate intimacy with her—though we are physically close, we can feel far away. And this is the spiritual life for the Christian. God is with you. But now, we must work to uproot ways of thinking and ways of living that just don’t fit into our lives anymore—they isolate us from intimacy with God. And it’s to cultivate, to move towards, ways of thinking and ways of living that promote the intimacy with God we were made to enjoy. This is the movement.

  1. What are some things you are putting to death as you follow Christ? What are some things that you are bringing to life as you grow in Christ?
  2. How does the truth that God is always near you encourage you to pursue intimacy with him—even when you feel far away?
  3. How can God’s Word and his people help you move towards godly ways of thinking and living?
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About this Plan

Rest and War: A Field Guide for the Spiritual Life

The spiritual life is a struggle. We can learn to struggle well by pursuing intimacy with God in the context of adversity. Struggling well will lead to progress in resisting temptation and standing strong with the Holy Spirit’s help as warriors of Christ united with other believers in our purpose to defeat evil and share Christ with the world. Based on Ben Stuart’s Rest & War video Bible study.

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