Spirituality and the Body
 As a seminary student I was given the assignment to read a book on
Christian spirituality called the Spirit of the Disciplines
by Dallas Willard.{1} I obediently read the book and either wrote
a paper on it or took a test that covered the material (I can't
recall which), but the book didn't have a major impact on my life
at that time. Recently, over a decade later, I have gone back to
the book and found it to be a jewel that I should have spent more
time with. In the book, Willard speaks to one of the most important
issues facing individual Christians and churches in our time: "How
does one live the Spirit-filled life promised in the New
Testament?" How does the believer experience the promise that
Jesus made in Matthew 11:29-30: "Take my yoke upon you and learn
from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find
rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is
light"?
Willard argues that modernity has given us a culture that offers a
flood of self-fulfillment programs in the form of political,
scientific, and even psychological revolutions. All promise to
promote personal peace and affluence, and yet we suffer from an
"epidemic of depression, suicide, personal emptiness, and escapism
through drugs and alcohol, cultic obsession, consumerism, and sex
and violence . . . ."{2} Most Christians would agree that the
Christian faith offers a model for human transformation that far
exceeds the promises of modern scientific programs, but when it
comes to delineating the methods of such a transformation there is
often confusion or silence.
Christians frequently seek spiritual maturity in all the wrong
places. Some submit themselves to abusive churches that equate
busyness and unquestioning subservience with Christ-likeness.
Others look for spirituality through syncretism, borrowing the
spiritualism of Eastern religions or Gnosticism and covering it
with a Christian veneer.
According to Willard, Christians often hope to find Christ's power
for living in ways that seem appropriate but miss the mark; for
example, through a "sense of forgiveness and love for God" or
through the acquisition of propositional truth. Some "seek it
through special experiences or the infusion of the Spirit," or by
way of "the presence of Christ in the inner life." Others argue
that it is only through the "power of ritual and liturgy or the
preaching of the Word," or "through the communion of the saints."
All of these have value in the Christian life but do not "reliably
produce large numbers of people who really are like Christ."{3}
We evangelicals have a natural tendency to avoid anything that
hints of meritorious works, works that might somehow justify us
before a holy God. As a result, we reduce faith to an entirely
mental affair, cutting off the body from the process of living the
Christian life.
In this article we will consider a New Testament theology of human
transformation in order to better understand what it means to
become a living sacrifice to God.
A Model for Transformation
Faith in Jesus Christ brings instant forgiveness along with the
promise of eventual glorification and spending eternity with God.
However, in between the believer experiences something called
sanctification, the process of being set apart for good works.
Something that is sanctified is holy, so it makes sense that the
process of sanctification is to make us more like Christ.
Even though the Bible talks much of spiritual power and becoming
like Christ, many believers find this process of sanctification to
be a mystery. Since the Enlightenment, there has been a slow
removal from our language of acceptable ways to talk about the
spiritual realm. Being rooted in this age of science and
materialism, the language of spiritual growth sounds alien and a
bit threatening to our ears, but if we want to experience the life
that Jesus promised, a life of spiritual strength, we need to
understand how to appropriate God's Spirit into our lives.
According to Willard, "A 'spiritual life' consists in that range of
activities in which people cooperatively interact with God--and
with the spiritual order deriving from God's personality and
action. And what is the result? A new overall quality of human
existence with corresponding new powers."{4} To be spiritual is to
be dominated by the Spirit of God. Willard adds that spirituality
is another reality, not just a "commitment" or "life-style." It
may result in personal and social change, but the ultimate goal is
to become like Christ and to further His Kingdom, not just to be a
better person or to make America a better place to live.
The Bible teaches that to become a spiritual person one must employ
the disciplines of spirituality. "The disciplines are
activities of mind and body purposefully undertaken to bring our
personality and total being into effective cooperation with the
divine order."{5} Paul wrote in Romans 6:13 that the goal of being
spiritual is to offer our body to God as instruments of
righteousness in order to be of use for His Kingdom. Moving towards
this state of usefulness to God and His Kingdom depends on the
actions of individual believers.
Many of us have been taught that this action consists primarily in
attending church or giving towards its programs. As important as
these are, they fail to address the need for a radical inner change
that must take place in our hearts to be of significant use to God.
The teaching of Scripture and specifically the life of Christ tells
us that the deep changes that must occur in our lives will only be
accomplished via the disciplines of abstinence such as fasting,
solitude, silence, and chastity, and the disciplines of engagement
such as study, worship, service, prayer, and confession. These
disciplines, along with others, will result in being conformed to
the person of Christ, the desire of everyone born of His Spirit.
Salvation and Life
When I first read in the Bible that Jesus offered a more abundant
life to those who followed Him, I thought that He was primarily
describing a life filled with more happiness and purpose. It does
include these things, but I now believe that it includes much more.
Salvation in Christ promises to radically change the nature of life
itself. It is not just a promise that sometime in the far distant
future we will experience a resurrected body and see a new heaven
and new earth. Salvation in Christ promises a life characterized by
the highest ideals of thought and actions as epitomized by the life
of Christ Himself.
Although there is no program or classroom course that can guarantee
to give us this new life in Christ, it can be argued that in order
to live a life like Jesus we need to do the things that Jesus did.
If Jesus had to "learn obedience through the things which he
suffered" (Hebrew 5:8 KJV), are we to expect to act Christ-like
without the benefit of engaging in the disciplines that Jesus
did?
In The Spirit of the Disciplines, Willard argues that there
is a direct connection between practicing the spiritual disciplines
and experiencing the salvation that is promised in Christ. Jesus
prayed, fasted, and practiced solitude "not because He was sinful
and in need of redemption, as we are, but because he had a body
just as we do."{6} The center of every human being's existence is
his or her body. We are neither to be neo-Platonic nor Gnostic in
our approach to the spiritual life. Both of these traditions play
down the importance of the physical universe, arguing that it is
either evil or simply inferior to the spiritual domain. But as
Willard argues, "to withhold our bodies from religion is to exclude
religion from our lives."
Although our spiritual dimension may be invisible, it is not
separate from our bodily existence. Spirituality, according
to Willard, is "a relationship of our embodied selves to God that
has the natural and irrepressible effect of making us alive to the
Kingdom of God--here and now in the material world."{7} By
separating our Christian life from our bodies we create an
unnecessary sacred/secular gulf for Christians that often alienates
us from the world and people around us.
The Christian faith offers more than just the forgiveness of sins;
it promises to transform individuals to live in such a way that
responding to events as Jesus did becomes second nature. What are
these spiritual disciplines, and how do they transform the very
quality of life we experience as followers of Jesus Christ?
The Disciplines of Abstinence
Although many of us have heard horror stories of how spiritual
disciplines have been abused and misused in the past, Willard
believes that "A discipline for the spiritual life is, when the
dust of history is blown away, nothing but an activity undertaken
to bring us into more effective cooperation with Christ and his
Kingdom."{8} He reminds us that we discipline ourselves throughout
life in order to accomplish a wide variety of tasks or functions.
We utilize discipline when we study an academic or professional
field; athletes must be disciplined in order to run a marathon or
bench press 300 lbs. Why, then, are we surprised to learn that we
must discipline ourselves to be useful to God?
Willard divides the disciplines into two categories: disciplines of
abstinence, and disciplines of engagement. Depending on our
lifestyle and past personal experiences, we will each find
different disciplines helpful in accomplishing the goal of living
as a new creature in Christ. Solitude, silence, fasting, frugality,
chastity, secrecy, and sacrifice are disciplines of abstinence.
Given our highly materialistic culture, these might be the most
difficult and most beneficial to many of us. We are more familiar
with the disciplines of engagement, including study, worship,
celebration, service, prayer, and fellowship. However, two others
mentioned by Willard might be less familiar: confession and
submission.
Abstinence requires that we give up something that is perfectly
normal--something that is not wrong in and of itself, such as food
or sex--because it has gotten in the way of our walking with God,
or because by leaving these things aside we might be able to focus
more closely on God for a period of time. As one writer tells us,
"Solitude is a terrible trial, for it serves to crack open and
burst apart the shell of our superficial securities. It opens out
to us the unknown abyss that we all carry within us . . ."{9}
Busyness and superficial activities hide us from the fact that we
have little or no inward experience with God. Solitude frees us
from social conformity, from being conformed to the patterns of
this world that Paul warns us about in Romans 12.
Solitude goes hand in hand with silence. The power of the tongue
and the damage it can do is taken very seriously in the Bible.
There is a quiet inner strength and confidence that exudes from
people who are great listeners, who are able to be silent and to be
slow to speak.
The Disciplines of Engagement
Thus, the disciplines of abstinence help us diminish improper
entanglements with the world. What about the disciplines of
engagement?
Although study is not often thought of as a spiritual discipline,
it is the key to a balanced Christian walk. Calvin Miller writes,
"Mystics without study are only spiritual romantics who want
relationship without effort."{10} Study involves reading,
memorizing, and meditation on God's Word. It takes effort and time,
and there are no shortcuts. It includes learning from great
Christian minds that have gone before us and those who, by their
walk and example, can teach much about the power available to
believers who seek to experience the light burden that abiding in
Jesus offers.
Few Christians deny the need for worship in their weekly routines,
even though what constitutes worship has caused considerable
controversy. Worship ascribes great worth to God. It is seeing God
as He truly is. Willard argues that we should focus our worship
through Jesus Christ to the Father. He writes, "When we worship, we
fill our minds and hearts with wonder at him--the detailed actions
and words of his earthly life, his trial and death on the cross,
his resurrection reality, and his work as ascended
intercessor."{11}
The discipline of celebration is unfamiliar to most of us, yet
Willard argues that it is one of the most important forms of
engagement with God. He writes that "We engage in celebration when
we enjoy ourselves, our life, our world, in conjunction with our
faith and confidence in God's greatness, beauty, and goodness. We
concentrate on our life and world as God's work and as God's gift
to us."{12} Although much of the scriptural argument for holy
celebration is found in the festivals of the Old Testament and the
book of Ecclesiastes, Jesus was accused of being a glutton and a
drunkard because he chose to dine and celebrate with sinners.
Christian fellowship and confession go hand in hand. It is within
the context of fellowship that Christians build up and encourage
one-another with the gifts that God has given to us. It is also in
this context that we practice confession with trusted believers who
know both our strengths and weaknesses. This level of transparency
and openness is essential for the church to become the healing
place of deep intimacy that people are so hungry for.
Walking with Jesus doesn't mean just knowing things about Him; it
means living as He lived. This includes practicing the spiritual
disciplines that Jesus practiced. As we do, we will be changed
through the Spirit to be more like Him and experience the rest that
He has offered to us.
Notes
1. Dallas Willard, The Spirit of the Disciplines, (New York: HarperCollins, 1991).
2. Ibid., viii.
3. Ibid., x.
4. Ibid., 67.
5. Ibid., 68.
6. Ibid., 29.
7. Ibid., 31.
8. Ibid., 156.
9. Ibid., 161.
10. Ibid., 176.
11. Ibid., 178.
12. Ibid., 179. © 2004 Probe Ministries
About the Author Don Closson received the B.S. in education from Southern Illinois University, the M.S. in educational administration from Illinois State University, and the M.A. in Biblical Studies from Dallas Theological Seminary. He served as a public school teacher and administrator before joining Probe Ministries as a research associate in the field of education. He is the general editor of Kids, Classrooms, and Contemporary Education.
What is Probe? Probe Ministries is a non-profit ministry whose mission is to assist the church in renewing the minds of believers with a Christian worldview and to equip the church to engage the world for Christ. Probe fulfills this mission through our Mind Games conferences for youth and adults, our 3-minute daily radio program, and our extensive Web site at www.probe.org. Further information about Probe's materials and ministry may be obtained by contacting us at: Probe Ministries 1900 Firman Drive, Suite 100 Richardson, TX 75081 (972) 480-0240 FAX (972) 644-9664
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