Unwavering Conformity: A 21-day Study in StewardshipMuestra
Invitation to Obedience
This passage in Matthew is one of the 'hard sayings' of Jesus, sayings that are difficult to understand on the basis of cultural, historical or theological difficulties. In this passage, Jesus is calling a rich young man to discipleship, but the command is confusing, and how does it apply to our present day? Author and speaker Margaret Feinberg wrestles with the issue of obedience in her book The Organic God.
Despite God's wildly infallible nature, I don't always choose to obey him. The book of Matthew tells of a rich young tycoon who approaches Jesus for his perspective. He asks Jesus a simple but penetrating question, 'Teacher, what good thing must I do to get eternal life?'!
Only when the tycoon presses Jesus with deeper questions does he uncover his own heart issue. He loves the goods - his material possessions - more than God.
The tycoon really wanted to know what Jesus thought. He wanted instruction from the rabbi. He wanted his perspective, but he didn't want it bad enough to actually do something with it once he got it.
The Scripture abounds with God's wildly infallible wisdom and insights, and like the tycoon, God wants to answer our questions as we pursue him through study and prayer. Yet it's possible to ask God about an issue that could change us forever, and after receiving the answer, still walk away from the transformation process. That's why Romans 12:2 reminds us to not be conformed to this world but rather be transformed by the renewing of our minds. You can know God's perspective and still not do anything with it. This kind of thinking leads to the worst possible religious life - one that welcomes hypocrisy and self-righteousness.
I wonder how often I am like the tycoon. I pursue God through prayer, asking what's really going on in a situation, but once I uncover the core issue, I move on in a been-there, done-that, non-transformational kind of way. Or worse, I wonder how often I'm like all those who followed Jesus from a distance and never bothered to ask for his perspectives at all!
I'm slowly discovering that God's wild infallibility is actually an invitation to obedience; in fact, his infallibility makes me want to obey him all the more. His perfection exposes my own imperfections, his wisdom uncovers my own foolishness, and his infallibility reminds me of just how fallible I am.
He alone can be trusted. It's the entryway into the best possible and most costly life - the one he designed from the beginning of time. Like the tycoon, we are given insight into what God thinks so that we will think like him. He invites us to action. God's truth, if taken seriously, will not just transform our minds and hearts but also our behavior. It will become action points for obedience.
This passage in Matthew is one of the 'hard sayings' of Jesus, sayings that are difficult to understand on the basis of cultural, historical or theological difficulties. In this passage, Jesus is calling a rich young man to discipleship, but the command is confusing, and how does it apply to our present day? Author and speaker Margaret Feinberg wrestles with the issue of obedience in her book The Organic God.
Despite God's wildly infallible nature, I don't always choose to obey him. The book of Matthew tells of a rich young tycoon who approaches Jesus for his perspective. He asks Jesus a simple but penetrating question, 'Teacher, what good thing must I do to get eternal life?'!
Only when the tycoon presses Jesus with deeper questions does he uncover his own heart issue. He loves the goods - his material possessions - more than God.
The tycoon really wanted to know what Jesus thought. He wanted instruction from the rabbi. He wanted his perspective, but he didn't want it bad enough to actually do something with it once he got it.
The Scripture abounds with God's wildly infallible wisdom and insights, and like the tycoon, God wants to answer our questions as we pursue him through study and prayer. Yet it's possible to ask God about an issue that could change us forever, and after receiving the answer, still walk away from the transformation process. That's why Romans 12:2 reminds us to not be conformed to this world but rather be transformed by the renewing of our minds. You can know God's perspective and still not do anything with it. This kind of thinking leads to the worst possible religious life - one that welcomes hypocrisy and self-righteousness.
I wonder how often I am like the tycoon. I pursue God through prayer, asking what's really going on in a situation, but once I uncover the core issue, I move on in a been-there, done-that, non-transformational kind of way. Or worse, I wonder how often I'm like all those who followed Jesus from a distance and never bothered to ask for his perspectives at all!
I'm slowly discovering that God's wild infallibility is actually an invitation to obedience; in fact, his infallibility makes me want to obey him all the more. His perfection exposes my own imperfections, his wisdom uncovers my own foolishness, and his infallibility reminds me of just how fallible I am.
He alone can be trusted. It's the entryway into the best possible and most costly life - the one he designed from the beginning of time. Like the tycoon, we are given insight into what God thinks so that we will think like him. He invites us to action. God's truth, if taken seriously, will not just transform our minds and hearts but also our behavior. It will become action points for obedience.
Escritura
Acerca de este Plan
As Christ-followers we acknowledge that Jesus is not only our Savior, but also our Lord. We recognize that everything belongs to Him and that we’re only stewards of His good gifts. Through this plan’s devotional content and brief Scripture readings, you’ll discover that being a good steward of those gifts requires that we become more and more like Him—the essence of conformity.
More
We'd like to thank The Stewardship Council, creators of Zondervan's NIV Stewardship Study Bible, for the structure of Unwavering Conformity: A 21-day Study in Stewardship. For more information about this plan, the NIV Stewardship Study Bible, or hundreds of stewardship resources, please visit their site at http://www.stewardshipcouncil.net/