Nicki wrote:A quote from Jac3510 from the Lordship Salvation thread -
'The more we stop and trust, the more we'll find Christ working in and through us, starting with our salvation and continuing on to bearing fruit through us. But the moment we try to start doing even a little tiny piece of the work, we mess it all up.'
I'm just wondering, for Jac and anyone else to answer, how does that work out? He'd also mentioned needing to get to know God, which definitely seems a good idea overall, but how do you obey God and do good works without actually doing anything? If you decided to help someone would that be wrong because you'd be trying to do something good yourself? Do you just sort of find yourself doing good without really thinking about it? I can't believe I've been a Christian for (ahem) 25 years or so and I'm asking these questions
but I feel I obey God (most of the time) because I want to - I know his way's best, and I believe the Holy Spirit's helping me and has been changing me. Sometimes it's pretty hard though, and sometimes I get it wrong. I've heard before of letting God work through us but how does that actually happen without us doing anything ourselves?
I've spent many, many times with God over the years but I feel as if the most dramatic change in me was straight after I became a Christian at age 12 or so, when I'd spent very little time getting to know God; I changed a couple of aspects of my behaviour which I suddenly felt bad about in a way I hadn't before. I think it was God the Holy Spirit booting me onto the right track, and since then I've been following that path with slight deviations from time to time!
Edit: actually, sometimes not-so-slight deviations. Occasionally I could do with a bit more of that booting
Hi Nicki,
What you are mentioning is what I call reverse guilt, shame, and wrongful accusations.
A person encounters Jesus, becomes born again, changes happen as described in the Testimonies Thread on this forum:
http://discussions.godandscience.org/vi ... f=32&t=589
Such revelation of God's grace changes a person and is God's revelation of grace is omni-personal to each individual. In this way, no person can get the glory, only the Lord.
After this, people report loving God and doing things for him out of a heart born love that makes one obedient to his will. True, we all will not be perfect nor will we perfectly obey 100 percent of the time. Nevertheless, we learn to obey his promptings more and more. One manner of obeying is mentioned in 1 John 1:9 that we all need to do.
Then comes the reverse guilt, shame, and accusatory phase from fellow Christians. If you mention to obey God because you do so out of love because of the revelation that he saved you when you deserved it not, then, one often finds themselves being accused of depending on works, and it is simply forcibly implied that you must cease in doing good because you are depending on works when this is not the case at all.
No amount of explanation can persuade such accusers of the love of God in your heart. One is often labeled a heretic and are demanded that they must cease their works of love, or else for some unexplained reason, God will love you less and even reject you because like to something nice for him. While the believer who is lazy all during life and remains a practicing vile sinner is accepted to heaven and you rejected because you like to obey God and do things to please him as the bible clearly teaches. Makes no sense...
Next, then the brow beating begins... so guilt, shame, and confusion often comes in. What does one do? Obey God. Who saved you? They or the Lord? Who must you love more, they or the Lord?
It is impossible for mortal human being to let the Holy Spirit work through and not do anything. Even when the Holy Spirit says-rest. One rests...is doing something.
I do not know how to explain this any other way other than to use the bible verse as a template which mentions that the Lord sanctify us wholly spirit, soul, and body, 1Th 5:23
If you look at this again you discover the template of learning. Learning rote comes first and helps the soul/mind and body. Our minds are renewed daily by reading the word of God. We learn from him as we read the bible. Insights are revealed. The rote, method of reading, studying the scripture help develop critical thinking and maturity. Your reasoning is exercised. Prayer life develops as well by Rote Learning as well too.
Look at this example, playing the guitar involves the use of he body and mind to know where to place your fingers for chord progressions and scales to make music sound really good. Soon, muscle memory develops and you do not really think about music theory or what note goes with what chord or lead. It comes naturally as though you feel it and naturally flow. That stage is an example of moving from rote learning to learning by the Holy Spirit - you learn to feel and are moved.
First comes the rote phase of learning involving the body and mind learning about the what The Holy Spirit is teaches. Most Christians seem to stay stuck in the rote phase. Always depending on the soul realm of the mind to figure out the deep things of God and stay there, not quite getting it, that there is more the Holy Spirit wants them to learn - to recognize the leading of the Holy Spirit that you become his musician who has learned to trust the leading of the Holy Spirit to play the notes at the right time.
It is those stuck in the rote phase that many have difficulty with as they have not been stretched to the degree to love God because he first loved them and saved them when they deserved it not, Stretched to obey God because they love God enough to walk the 1 John 1:9 way and be changed. Stretched enough to realize that the predestination mentioned by Paul in Eph 1:4,5,13,14 is defined by Paul himself in Romans 8:29. To know that the apostle Paul was a Jewish man who interpreted faith/believe as a 1st century Jew did and not as a western minded renaissance man would.
Stretched to know that we can do things for our heavenly Father because we simply love the Lord and willing to learn what notes to play without being condemned for it. As Jesus said,"
He is is for us is not against us - do not forbid such" - Mark 9:38,39,40,41,42
So I suggest a simple evaluation. How has your rote learning been? Where is the Lord taking it with you? Are you learning to depend on him more? Yes, it is a roller coaster at times but what have you learned. Now after you learning curve, where does it lead you and to whom? You feel a pull to learn more about God, then, study his character attributes in the bible, ask in prayer questions that and will arise from this, wait, learn, practice.
We are mortal beings and need the rote lessons so we learn to discern the Spiritual leading of the Holy Spirit. It is all by grace/simple favor from the Lord God who loves you enough not to leave you as you once were. Here it is; it is by God's grace you and I and all Christians can come into an awareness of God's presence. It is a continuously seeking, asking and knocking for such. By such doing, you learn the rote and awaken to his omnipresence, which is indescribable.
If you play or have played a musical instrument, or even mountain climbed, or run, or do some skill, you learned the rote first before you could fly. When it comes to doing things for the Lord, continue to do so and do not let others dissuade you from your personal trainers introductions.
Not sure this makes sense, or even answers you how you would like. But I hope in some way this helps
Blessings
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