TruthFilledНамуна
Paul’s Pattern: Indicatives Versus Imperatives
Have you ever started doing things or buying things in winter in hopes that spring will come more quickly—like when I walk into The Home Depot® and involuntarily reach for all the tiny tomato plants and cucumbers even when snow is still falling?
The other day I saw a huge indoor pot of lettuces growing—and naturally believed I needed to buy a pretty container of lettuce—because what could be more spring-welcoming than snip lettuce that’s growing up from dirt? (I act as if growing veggies on my windowsill will cause snow to melt.)
My boys have their version of this. (You may know that I’m a mom to six boys!) They have a habit of putting on sandals and shorts any time the sun is out and the temp reaches above forty degrees Fahrenheit. They start pulling out their summer clothes, bike helmets, and swim trunks. They are ready to be summer people—to do summery things. But the truth is, no matter how diligent they are to wear sandals or how many garden plants I’m ready to plant, we won’t be involved with the affairs of summer until the snow melts away and the true changes of the season occur.
You see, the truth is: True change only happens after our state of being changes.
Just like putting on sandals in snow or snipping lettuce from a container in your kitchen has no power to bring on spring, neither does our striving change our hearts apart from gospel transformation.
If you’re like me, sometimes it’s tempting to want to jump straight into the dos and don’ts of how we should live and skip over the reminders of who God is and who we are in Christ. (Do you sometimes think it is repetitive and maybe even a little boring?)
Read Colossians 3:1-2.
I’m tempted to focus on how I must set my mind on things above and dismiss the reminder that the power to do so comes from being raised with Christ as a born-again believer.
A fancy word for right conduct or practice is the word orthopraxy. 1—ortho meaning straight, 2 praxy meaning practice, 3 (or imperatives). Orthopraxy is what we do because of our faith, and orthodoxy (or indicatives) is what we believe. 4 Orthodoxy tells us what is straight; orthopraxy tells us how to walk along that straight line.
Without the indicatives—or what is true about who God is and what He’s done—the imperatives would be basically impossible. Attempting to do great things for God without trusting in the great things He’s already done for us will always lead to either a whole lot of self-righteousness or total despair and distance from God, fearing that you’ve failed Him.
Right believing leads to right living, so let’s grow in the practice of believing and preaching the truth of God’s Word to ourselves, together.
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About this Plan
“Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly” (Col. 3:16a). Join Ruth Chou Simons in this study of the Book of Colossians as she leads us through a practice of preaching gospel truth to ourselves by studying Paul’s example. In every changing season of life, we can rest in God’s character, rehearse our identity in Christ, respond in faith, and remember God’s provision for us.
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