Spiritual Growth By Pete BriscoeНамуна
How can you pause growth?
What if we could just push the pause button on growth? Would you choose to stay 16 forever? How about 39? Would you press pause at 60?
Aging is a grace we can’t stop. But maturity? Maturity is a different story. We can continue to live and behave with the same understanding at 40 that we had at 14. It’s awkward for those watching us, but we can do it.
This pause button is available in our spiritual lives too. Think back to when you became a believer – perhaps it was while you were in college. During that time you probably dove into God’s Word and really grew. But after graduation, it’s likely that your career, marriage, and family seemed to consume more hours than the day held. Somewhere on your journey, you pushed the pause button on spiritual growth. There were those four solid years during college, but not much growth since then – which means you’re about a 4-year-old spiritually.
Perhaps you’ve pushed the pause button on spiritual growth at various times during your life. Depending on the various demands for your time and emotional resources, you’ve turned spiritual growth on and off like a switch. And if we were to combine all of the “on” years, you’d be about 12, give or take a year.
No wonder life can be so difficult! How can a 4-year-old navigate the world of business? How is a 12-year-old supposed to manage retirement from life’s work? Acknowledging our spiritual age enables us to realize just how vulnerable we are.
The author of Hebrews feels the agony of arrested development. But there is good news: He also gives us a standard of measurement regarding growth and maturity.
Anyone who lives on milk, being still an infant, is not acquainted with the teaching about righteousness. (Hebrews 5:13)
Is there much to be understood in our life in Christ? Yes. Definitely. Will it require a higher level of maturity to enter that understanding? Yes. Definitely.
And you’re ready for those deeper things if you understand the New Testament teaching on righteousness.
Lord, as I reflect upon our journey together, help me recall the times I’ve pressed that pause button on spiritual growth. More than that, duct tape the “resume” button for me so it remains on! I invite Your Spirit to wean me from milk and introduce me to the meat of righteousness. Amen.
Scripture
About this Plan
Are you an infant or a senior citizen? Something in-between? God calls us as believers to move from infancy into adulthood. But why do so many of us stay infants? In this 5-day reading plan, Pete Briscoe challenges us to move on from the milk of infancy and to feast on the real meat of Spiritual maturity.
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