Growing the Garden of your Soul

I planted the tomatoes from seed because I was hungry.  I could not wait until that juicy fruit was hanging on the vines. I impatiently longed to slice that tomato, smell the grilled burgers and take that first delicious bite.  So, I bought the little seedlings some food to hurry things along.  The tomato food was intended for mature plants but I simply could not wait.  When the tiny plants broke through the soil, I buried them in plant food.  They all died.

I sowed new grass in the poor, poor soil in my back yard.  I did give them a little water, but I wanted that grass to grow on its own.  So, I waited and stared menacingly at that grass willing it to grow and thrive, but I did very little to help it grow. It too died.

Then my wife planted grass, in the same place and on the same soil.  She watered it every day, usually when I was in the shower.  She lovingly nurtured that grass every day.  Now, it is healthy and mature and ready for additional fertilizer.  The moral of the story is: I have two green thumbs, but they both belong to my wife.

How do we grow in grace? How do we nurture godliness? How do we grow the garden of our souls?  Should we bury it in fertilizer long before its time?  Should we water it, but only a little and expect it to grow on its own? Who is the real gardener anyway; is it God or is it me?  Yes. We plant and we water but God gives the increase (1 Corinthians 3:6).

Do you bury your heart in soul food, but only once a week?  Do you come to worship but steer clear of any soul-nurturing activity 6 1/2 days a week? There is some truth to the Cherokee legend of two wolves within every human heart.  One is good, and one is evil. “But Grandfather,” the child asks, “which one will win?” “Whichever one you feed.”

There is good seed available, plenty of good soil, the powerful rays of the sun, and an abundance of refreshing water.  We call them the means of grace – the Word, the sacraments, prayer, and fellowship. Be there. Soak them in. Really be there, and your soul will grow.

Pursuing Righteousness

We all pursue righteousness.  We seek to do the right thing; and most times we think that we are righteous in our actions.  Whenever we make a decision, we believe it to be justified, necessary, and proper. We have legitimate reasons that are sufficient for us. And when we convince ourselves that we always do the right thing we begin to reek of self-righteous smugness.

But, what is righteousness? It is being right or meeting a standard. Yes, true, but go a little deeper. Why do we strive to do the proper thing, or meet an expectation? Who are we trying to please? Whose approval or acceptance are we seeking?  As we pursue righteousness we are seeking someone’s approval and acceptance.  We are meeting the standard for them.  It could be a teacher that we need a good grade from, or a peer group that we are seeking to enter, or a boss that hand our a desired promotion. We all seek to be right, or righteous – received, accepted, and approved – by someone.

Well, who are you trying to please? That is the question. Many are seeking acceptance from their parents. Others, friends.  Most in our postmodern meltdown are only seeking to please themselves.  They are ‘god’, sovereign, independent, after all. 

Some are seeking the favor and acceptance of God, and so they strive to be righteous.  They go to church, say the prayers, keep the rules. We think that this is a good thing. In fact, all other religions except Christianity, celebrate and encourage this kind of striving after righteousness.  Do, do, do, and ‘god’, however you understand him, will accept you.  Your righteousness is your ticket to acceptance and approval.

But that is not Christianity. “None is righteous, no, not even one” Romans 3:10.  We are fallen creatures. We cannot keep the law. To seek acceptance with God through our obedience is a recipe for ongoing frustration, deepening disappointment, and eventual despair. So then what is true Christianity? How can I gain God’s approval and acceptance? How can I be righteous before God?  “Seek first the kingdom of God and HIS RIGHTEOUSNESS and all these things will be added to you” Matthew 6:33. Hide yourself in Christ through faith.“The Lord is our righteousness” Jeremiah 23:6, 33:16. Being clothed with Christ’s righteousness is how we are accepted and approved by God. That is Christianity. That is grace. That is how we live the Christian life. We are already fully accepted and greatly loved. When God looks at us He sees the His Son; the one in whom He is well pleased. This gift of righteousness sets you free to glorify and enjoy God; and to pursue righteousness as well.

An Encouragement for Disciples to Study

An encouragement for disciples to study? That title is redundant. A ‘mathetes’, the Greek word for a disciple, is a learner. A disciple of Jesus Christ is committed to following him and his teaching. As Christians, we submit to Jesus and the Word that proclaims him. To be a disciple, a ‘mathetes’ is to study, to learn. Jesus in Matthew 11:29 commands us to “take my yoke upon you, and learn from me.” John 6:45 tells, “It is written in the Prophets, ‘And they will all be taught by God.’ Everyone who has heard and learned from the Father comes to me.” To be a disciple is to be a learner, to be a student.

The truth as it is in Jesus has never been more accessible to the church and perhaps never more neglected by the church. Neil Postman writes about the “Low Information – Action Ratio,” or LIAR for short. We are bombarded by so much trivial information that we cannot act on any of it. We are progressively trained not to act on what little we learn.  We can drink from the firehose of knowledge and get very wet but stay very thirsty. The information is out there and the truth of Jesus is available.  But our problem, I think, is the opposite. We are not drinking from a firehose, although it is accessible, we are merely dipping our little toe into the ocean of knowledge.

Do you, as a student, a disciple, have a plan or a purpose in your study of God, his Son, and his Word?  Much of our learning program as Christians, if we have one at all, is rather spontaneous, haphazard, and random. We listen to our pastor once a week, and Christian radio during the week; that is nourishment enough, we think. What is your plan to grow as a disciple, a learner of Jesus?

In seminary, pastors were encouraged to study God’s Word in a devotional manner.  We must feed our own souls first before we could prepare a meal for others.  One student read through bible commentaries for his devotions.  Another pursued Systematic Theologies for fun.  Others devoured technical treatises for their growth in grace.  Now, we are not all pastors or teachers, and I am not encouraging my brothers and sisters to study in that manner.  But there are hundreds of good, godly, and edifying Christian books designed to assist you as a disciple of Christ. Do you read them? any of them? Are you consistently and fruitfully studying the Word of God? Not merely reading it, but studying it, and growing the fruit of the Spirit because of it?

As a young Christian when I read the Bible or other Christian books I would circle the words and concepts that I did not understand.  And then, I would study until I figured it out.  So my encouragement to you, as a fellow disciple of Jesus Christ, is simply this – study to know God better. Find the time. Have a plan. Read the Bible. Begin to chase down the knowledge of God. For some, “have become callous and have given themselves up to sensuality, greedy to practice every kind of impurity. But that is not the way you learned Christ!— assuming that you have heard about him and were taught in him, as the truth is in Jesus (Ephesians 4:19-21).

Don’t know where to begin to be a disciple? Pray. Read the Bible. Start with the Gospel of John.  Need more? Ask your pastor for a book. It will make his day!

Broken Things and God’s Lessons

“What we are all going through right here, right now is a massive, progressive process of values clarification and heart protection. God is daily employing the brokenness of this present world to clarify your values. Why do you need this? You need it because you struggle in this life to remember what is truly important, that is, what God says is important. You and I place much more importance on things than they truly possess, and when we do so, these things begin to claim our heart allegiance. So God ordains for us to experience that physical things get old and break. The people in our lives fail us. Relationships sour and become painful. Our physical bodies weaken. Flowers die and food spoils. All of this is meant to teach us that these things are beautiful and enjoyable, but they cannot give us what we all long for – life.

In this world that is groaning, God is protecting our hearts. He is protecting us from us. Our hearts can be so fickle. We can worship God one day, only to turn and give the worship of our hearts to something else the next. So, in love, God lets pieces of the creation die in our hands so that increasingly we are freed from asking earth to give us what only he can give. He works through loss to protect us from giving our allegiance to things that will never, ever deliver what our hearts seek. This is all designed to deepen our love and worship of him. It is all crafted to propel the joy that we have in him And in so doing, he is preparing us for that moment when we will be freed from this present travail and give all of our being to the worship of him forever and ever.

Your Lord knows that even as his child your heart is still prone to wander, so in tender, patient grace he keeps you in a world that teaches you that he alone is worthy of the deepest, most worshipful allegiance of your heart.”

Paul Tripp