Biblical
EQ
A
Christian Handbook For Emotional Transformation
© Copyright, John
Edmiston, 2001
Table Of Contents
How To Understand And Use This Book - 4
PART 1 – Jesus As
Our Model Of How Our Emotions Work - 5
Commencing The Journey - 6
Common
Questions About Emotions - 9
Can Jesus
Be Our Model For Biblical EQ? - 14
The Holy
Spirit And The Emotional Life of Jesus -21
The
Emotional Life Of The Apostles, Prophets and Great Christian Leaders - 30
The
Emotional Life of Carnal Christians -37
PART 2 – The
Inner self and Our Emotional World - 42
Perception
- 43
Perception
In and By The Spirit - 56
The
Thoughts and Intentions Of The Heart - 73
The
Learning Organization - 84
Emotions
And Our Physiology - 92
PART 3 – Practical
Techniques For Emotional Self-Mastery And Expression - 104
The
Masterful Mind - 105
Getting A
Handle On Our Emotions - 118
Acting On
And Reacting To Our Strong Emotions - 124
Recognizing
And Understanding Emotions In Others - 133
The
Appropriate Expression of Emotions - 143
Love Is A
Many Splendoured Thing - 149
Index -
159
Appendix 1
– Teacher’s Guide - 164
Further
References - 165
About the
Author - 168
How To Understand and Use This
Book
This is a Christian handbook on emotional transformation. Biblical EQ is about emotional competence, about being able to handle and discern emotions and express them wisely. The emphasis of the book is ongoing growth rather than healing. The book does not assume that the reader has emotional “problems” that need to be “fixed”. This is not a book for people with high levels of emotional pain to read to get better – though it may achieve that. Biblical EQ is a fitness manual rather than a diagnostic manual. Its focus is strength, health and maturity.
The aim of this book is to equip Christians, especially those in the ministry, by putting them in touch with the ground of their emotional being, getting them to commit to become emotionally mature and Christ-like, and helping with the correction of areas of imbalance and immaturity, then finally showing them how to express emotions with clarity, integrity and sensitivity in the context they are in. That’s a lot for one book and so Biblical EQ starts with some pretty solid foundations and build upwards because we are not tackling one emotion at a time here but actually trying to rebuild the Christian’s entire understanding of the emotional life of the believer from the ground up.
The first section, on Jesus as our model, deals with some of the basic overall biblical theology of emotions and is foundational to the rest of the book. It is written from an evangelical viewpoint and at a level that should suit most committed Christians. Its central premise is that Jesus Christ is the model for our emotional life and that the sanctification of our emotions is a work of grace involving the power of the Holy Spirit working in the committed Christian. Its pictures the ideal Christian as having grand and powerful emotions that are holy and good and which are wisely and appropriately expressed in God’s timing for His glory.
The second section, on the inner self and our emotional world, is perhaps the part of the book that has the most new teaching for many readers. It spends a lot of time looking at how emotions arise in our spirit, in our soul and from our body and how these complex interactions create our emotions and our character. It draws together many counseling techniques and Scriptural insights. It should lead the reader to a deep understanding of self and of how others arrive at the place they are emotionally. It is founded on a very literal and exhaustive treatment of the Scriptures and tries to work from the biblical data and carefully build an adequate understanding of the human person. Its central premise is that our inner self is not constant and fixed but is “being renewed day by day” and that we can be co-workers with God in this process of inner renewal.
The practical section is grounded in Proverbs-like general wisdom and common sense and much will be familiar territory to some readers, however it is useful to “be stirred up by way of reminder”. It deals with our experience of self-mastery, emotions and issues of emotional regulation, how we can read other people’s emotions and how to express those emotions appropriately in love. It also deals with how to tap into God’s love so we can minister to others. Its central premise is that God links to us through faith, which works through love, which employs specific focused wisdom and knowledge, to do good deeds and that on our side of the equation we facilitate this process by fixing our minds firmly on Christ and mastering our personal responses.
This book tries to give you both the relationship aspects and the specific focused wisdom and knowledge aspects of biblical EQ. References for further reading, a teachers guide and an exhaustive index has been provided for those who want to dip into the book to research a particular issue. A seminar manual is also available as a separate publication.
Part One
Jesus As Our Model
Commencing
the Journey
(Proverbs 4:23 NKJV) Keep your heart with all diligence, For out
of it spring the issues of life.
Good emotional
management is a highly needed commodity in Christian work. Without it we can
unintentionally make a complete mess out of our service for God. One emotional
explosion at the wrong moment can be held against us for a long time to come
and we are often judged by others on how we handle our emotions. Many very
productive Christian workers have had to leave the ministry because they just
could not manage their emotions well and this marred all their relationships.
So we need to do something – but what can we do? The good secular materials
available do not draw on the resources that the Holy Spirit can
bring to emotional transformation and few good Christian resources exist that
combine biblical insights with good clinical data. This book is an attempt to
do that.
In order to do
this I have had to start with first principles and work out a sort of biblical
paradigm with Jesus at its center and the emotional life of Jesus as our model.
The Holy Spirit is seen as the main power behind emotional transformation. Also
tips and techniques from secular authors as well as their data has been
incorporated where this material is “Christian-compatible” so to speak. So this
book is divided into three sections, the biblical basics, discussion of the
inner self and our emotions, and practical tips on self-mastery and emotional
expression. Each of these sections has five or six chapters each. The biblical
section discusses some foundational teaching about the Christian emotional life,
the “inner self” section looks at how emotions arise in our spirit and soul and
are influenced by our body and how our inner emotional life is formed, finally
the practical section looks at our experience and understanding of emotions and
how they should be best expressed.
What is EQ?
Emotional
intelligence is the term we use to describe
a complex set of human abilities related to emotional management. The four key
aspects of emotional intelligence as described by Mayer and Salovey (the
pioneer researchers in the area) are:
1.
Emotional identification, perception and expression
2.
Emotional facilitation of thought
3.
Emotional understanding
4.
Emotional management
Various
other researchers, most notably Daniel Goleman, have broken these into various
sub-factors which are continually being reviewed. Recent findings in neurology
have contributed greatly to our understanding of where emotions arise in the
brain. The field is fluid and a final decision on what finally constitutes EQ
has not been entirely reached yet and there are two or three main schools.
However much is coming out of these studies that is very interesting from a
Christian perspective, as we shall see as we go along.
What Is
Biblical EQ?
This
is the biblical perspective on the above four key skill areas. It doesn't
neglect the findings of neuroscience but it adds in the transforming power of
the Holy Spirit and the wisdom of Proverbs. It
has as its model the emotional life of Jesus Christ with His personal presence,
self-control, emotional expressiveness and discernment of situations. Thus it
has a clear pattern, a master plan that can be used to analyse theories and to
determine what is true and false, wise and unwise. Secular theories have no
"ideal person" to point to - they merely assemble ideals from their
own theories and worldview. In Jesus we have a model , a guide, a point to aim
our teaching towards and this is invaluable.
The
Christian believer is to aspire to have the emotional life of Christ Jesus for
that is very much part of being "in His image". Above all Biblical EQ
is biblical - founded on faith in the
inspired, inerrant and authoritative Scriptures.
The Failure Of
The Secular Models of EQ
After
reading various EQ books you know that emotions are important, that you should
handle them better and a lot about how they arose within you, but you are not
shown how to conquer them. In fact many of the EQ programs based on this kind
of research have had fairly middling results. The corporate sector is pulling
back from them, partly because of recession but partly because they are not
delivering as expected. Why is this so? Why has the secular approach to emotional intelligence
fizzled?
Firstly
they have a philosophical underpinning that has no definite direction. There is
nothing intrinsic to the theory that tells them what to aim for when helping a
person achieve a higher level of emotional intelligence. Apart from being in
touch with ones emotions and being able to express them accurately,
appropriately and responsibly there is no “big picture” of what the emotionally
intelligent person should turn out like. People end up confused and perplexed.
Theories seem at variance with each other and the result is that some
practitioners are almost Zen Buddhists while others are extremely businesslike,
manipulative and pragmatic. Without any agreement on what an ideal person is
they cannot make much real progress.
Secondly
much of the work of Goleman and others involves a model steeped in a medical
and neurological framework that sees our responses as entirely conditioned by
biology, genetics and environment. Alteration of responses is through
medication, education and behavior modification. After a while people start to
feel depersonalized by this approach, and react against the diminution of human
responsibility that seems to be the outcome. It is so reductionistic and
materialistic that after some initial enthusiasm people are repelled.
Thirdly
prayer and spiritual disciplines are marginalized in the literature despite
their utility. For instance on page 75 of Goleman's first book Emotional
Intelligence he says "Finally, at least some people are able
to find relief from their melancholy in turning to a transcendent power. Tice
(a researcher into depression) told me "Praying, if you are very
religious, works for all moods, especially depression". Despite this obvious therapeutic value for prayer
it is never again referred to in Goleman's book. People know religion works -
they are just refusing to admit it much in print.
Should
we then throw out their work entirely? Not at all. Truth is truth and
measurements are measurements. There is an enormous amount of good work and
wise information in the current EQ literature. It can be, and is, very helpful
in giving us understanding of how our emotions work. However it does not give
us a whole lot of power to transform them. The power to defeat deep and
difficult emotions comes from God and involves the human spirit coming into contact with God's
Spirit. So in this book we shall tend to turn to secular sources to explain much of the
physiology and the mechanisms of emotion and to Christian sources for the power
to deal with them.
To
get answers that genuinely help people we need two things, a clear destination,
and the power to get there in a reasonable amount of time. Our destination is
the image of Christ Jesus, our power to get there is the infilling with and
transforming work of the Holy Spirit. These are just the some of the great advantages of the gospel, we
have hope, and we have lots of hope!
Thus
the central premise of the book is that Christians can have their emotional life
redeemed so that it is transformed to mirror the emotional life of Jesus Christ
and that the Holy Spirit’s power and grace is the key to this process. This
involves renewing seven key aspects which will be discussed in
detail as we move along:
1.
Renewing
our basic perceptions of reality and our perspective on life.
2.
Renewing
our individual belief system.
3.
Renewing
the purposes and intents of our heart.
4.
Renewing
our physical bodies and their influence on our emotions.
5.
Renewing
our ability to be aware of and to understand our own emotions.
6.
Renewing
our ability to understand the emotions of other people.
7.
Renewing
our ability to appropriately express emotion according to the desire of the
Holy Spirit.
The
first few of these are a very deep work. It takes effort, courage and time to
change one’s perspective on life or to review and change core beliefs, thoughts
and intentions. However unless this is done the foundations are not strong and any
positive emotional changes will be temporary at best. Thus it is important that
you work through the foundational chapters and understand them. They are the
chapters which will give you the deepest wisdom to assist you with your
emotional growth. Before we go much further we need to answer a few of the
common questions about emotions and that is the topic of the next chapter .
.
(Proverbs
29:11 NKJV) A fool vents all his
feelings, But a wise man holds them back.
While God is emotional there are some emotions that God
never has. God is never envious, lustful, greedy, bitter with selfish ambition,
small-minded, or petty. Neither is he anxious or fretful but dwells in perfect
peace. His emotions are positive, holy, noble and appropriate. God is light and
in Him there is no darkness at all. Since we are called to be “in the image of
God”, then whatever else that means, it means that at the end of our Christian
maturity, our emotions should in some measure share these divine qualities. We
should be “walking in the light”.
Thus godliness
means forsaking some emotions and embracing others. We should be utterly free
from unholy and fleshly emotions and moving toward mature and holy emotional
responses. The mature saint of God is
filled with love and utterly free from bitter envy and selfish ambition. (James
3:15-18). Petty covetous worldly longings are replaced by the love of the
Father (1 John 2:15-17) and perfect love casts our fear so that we dwell in
quietness, peace and confidence (1 John 4:18, Isaiah 26:3). Holy people do not
easily fly into rages or engage in back-biting and quarrelling rather they are
centred people full of love, joy and peace (Galatians 5:19-23). There is thus a
grand and holy emotional authenticity that
accompanies maturity in Christ.
As a rough guide
our emotions can be broken down into three classes:
Holy emotions – those experienced by God such as compassion, joy,
and holy indignation and those that accompany life in the Spirit such as
praise, worship and adoration. These emotions are derived from the kingdom of
light and the Sprit (Ephesians 5:18-21, Colossians 3:16-17, Galatians 5:22,23)
and are in agreement with true wisdom
(James 3:17,18) They are the emotions of Christ in us. They are not necessarily
religious or pious emotions. Admiring a flower or delighting in beautiful music
or focussing on the beautiful and the good can be just as holy as going to
church. (Philippians 4:8)
Human emotions – based in our
human situation and the created order and shared by Jesus during His time on
earth. This includes emotions such as grief, pain, fear, abandonment, sadness
and sorrow, anxiety, stress, anguish and vulnerability. These emotions are well chronicled in the
Psalms. For the Christian they are temporary and in eternity there shall be no
more crying or sadness or pain (Revelation 21:4). While these emotions may feel
bad they are not evil or toxic. They can be painful but they are not poisonous.
Fleshly emotions – are poisonous and destructive and include toxic
emotions such as malice, envy, selfish ambition, sensuality, bitterness,
overpowering lusts and murderous hatred. They are closely tied up with the
works of the flesh and with evil deeds. Their outcome is spiritual death. These
emotions were not part of mankind at Creation and are not “natural human
reactions” (For instance grief is a natural human reaction but bitterness is
fleshly. One can have “good grief” without a trace of bitterness. Bitterness is
not natural to the human condition.) Rather these emotions are derived from the
kingdom of darkness and have their source in a dark wisdom (James 3:14-16).
This
classification helps us see the relative value of our emotional responses and
to use the techniques described in the succeeding chapters to assist with our
sanctification. It also puts the lie to the old humanist rubric “there are no
right or wrong emotions.” All emotions
are not equal. Some are of much higher value than others and some emotions and
impulses are positively wrong. This classification also goes a bit beyond the
black and white classification of emotions as ‘spiritual” or “unspiritual” that
causes so much pain in traditional missionary circles. When pain and
disappointment are
seen as “unspiritual” we simply add to the burden the person is carrying. Hurt,
disappointment, pain and frustration are valid human emotions stemming from our
creatureliness encountering a fallen world. Human beings were created good but
mortal and it is as we explore this mortality that we find out many useful
things about ourselves. The above simple classification also saves us from the
error of stopping there with our human emotions and being content simply to
explore ourselves at that level. It tells us there is something higher,
something beyond our mortality and that it is as we focus on our immortality in
Christ that we develop the highest and noblest parts of our being.
We are thus called
to participate in the holy emotions so that they transcend the human emotions
and overcome the fleshly emotions. By this I mean that we must choose our
emotional level and which emotions we will be gripped by. When disappointment strikes we can choose to respond with holy emotions and pray
through until we trust God and can praise Him as the Psalmist did or we can
respond at the human level and sit down
disconsolate in human misery and gradually see it through or we can respond
from fleshly emotions and lash out in anger, bitterness, distrust and revenge.
Consider Paul in jail in Philippi in Acts 16. He praised God, sang psalms and
rejoiced thus transcending the human emotions of pain and discomfort and
effectively banishing any fleshly emotions such as bitterness or desire for
revenge. Thus Paul participated in holy emotions so that they transcended the
human emotions and overcame the fleshly emotions. The human emotions are not
denied or seen as wrong rather they are acknowledged but not focussed on. They
are transcended. The saint focuses on and deliberately chooses to move toward
the holy emotions. Prayer, fasting, praise and worship, reading Scripture,
meditating on good teaching and doing good works are all helpful in this
process. However above and beyond these things we need the work of the Holy
Spirit.
The Holy Spirit responds differently to each of theses three categories of emotion. The Holy Spirit rejoices and assists us when we engage in holy responses. He produces them within us so they can justly be called “the fruit of the Spirit”. (Romans chapters 8 & 12, and Galatians 5) On the other hand the Holy Spirit comforts us when the human emotions such as grief overwhelm us (see 2 Corinthians 1). Finally He is determined to break the grip of fleshly emotions such as hatred, lust and revenge. In fact the Spirit wars against such impulses so that we cannot fully give way to our worst desires (Galatians 5:16-18). Thus the Holy Spirit produces holy emotions, comforts overwhelming human emotions and wars against fleshly emotions. However we have a choice in the matter. We can take heed of the Spirit’s promptings or we can discard them in fleshly rebellion. This leads Paul to say that the mind set on the flesh and its fractious emotions “is death” but the mind set on the Spirit with His holy emotions is “life and peace”(Romans 8:5,6).
As we will see in other chapters, the Spirit renews the mind with its personal perspective and belief structure. The renewed mind becomes centred on God and can be validly called “the mind of Christ” (1 Corinthians 2:14-16). Thus as the mind is redeemed and renewed and set on the Spirit life and peace result. This life and peace that results from a well disciplined and renewed mind is the aim of this book. This simple classification of emotions will be vastly expanded as the complexities and subtleties of the emotional life of the Christian life are explored. Our emotions need redemption if they are to become holy and the focus of all redemption is Jesus Christ who will be our model and pattern for biblical EQ.
How Come
Christians Seem To Stop Changing Emotionally After A Few Years?
Massive
early transformation followed by accommodation to religious sub-cultural norms
is a fairly common pattern among Christians from emotionally damaging
childhoods. Church life provides many little nooks and crannies where we can
hide from the Holy Spirit and the hard work of emotional
transformation. In many cases painful emotions are not understood by the clergy
and even by some Christian counselors and damage is done. This book will seek
to bring wisdom and balance to the Christian handling of emotions. However all
is not the fault of the clergy, church culture or inadequate theological and
counseling training. Much is our own fault. Each of us has defense mechanisms
against change such as rationalization, projection, and denial. We dodge
dealing with God and we duck change.
Yet
I believe one of the greatest obstacles to emotional health in Christian
circles is that we simply don't understand our emotions or we lack proper
mechanisms for dealing with them. Many Christians are ignorant of Scriptural
teaching on emotional life and so are left stranded with a few basic techniques
that barely scratch the surface of the problem. In a puzzling , almost
paradoxical way, we also take our
emotions too seriously and make them the source of our spiritual self-esteem. When we feel holy and good and positive we judge ourselves as being
"up" spiritually and when we are feeling distant or depressed we
judge ourselves as being "down" spiritually. In fact the connection between emotions and
spirituality is fairly loose. Some very happy optimistic people are carnal and
worldly, while some serious gloomy types are deeply spiritual - and the reverse
applies as well. While it is certainly preferable to feel good and to
"rejoice in the Lord always" even the apostle Paul admits to times of
intense pressure and discouragement. We see this particularly in his letters to
the Corinthians. And, of course, Jesus was known as " a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief..". Even
tempting emotions need not be sinful. Jesus was "tempted in all things as
we are, yet without sin". Yet there is indeed a deep connection between
our emotions and our character.
The common observation of
philosophers and theologians as diverse as Aristotle and C.S.Lewis has been
that right affections and emotions form the basis for right morality.
If we love the good and abhor the evil we are far more likely to be good. And
if we hate bribes and value integrity we are far more likely to be honest.
Ethics is not a purely intellectual exercise. From
antiquity it has involved feeling,
thinking and acting rightly. True agape love has emotions that are ethical. “Love
does not rejoice in iniquity but rejoices in the truth” (1 Corinthians 13:6).
Being horrified by certain sins is a good and moral thing. Rejoicing in the
truth is a right emotional response for the disciple. Our emotional valuation
of life should be in agreement with our ethical stance. In biblical terms the
person who is right emotionally loves good and hates evil. In their emotions
they value what God values. The emotionally perfected Christian is not just
“together” or integrated in the secular sense rather they are righteous and
just and holy and perfectly loving. Their emotions agree with their ethics
which agree with the Scriptures which agree with God.
What we like and dislike
gradually shapes the course of our life and character. This is why TV and advertising can have such
a profound effect. It teaches us to like a certain lifestyle filled with
material things and to value being sexy and attractive. It teaches us, ever so
gradually not to dislike fornication and adultery. Rarely does it blatantly say
“adultery is good” – it just teaches people to like the idea of being
attractive to many people and to be quietly thrilled by the notion of perhaps
having many sexual partners. Thus, over time their ethical resolve is weakened,
the emotions that drive holiness are eroded and thousands of Christians fall
into sin they would not have contemplated too many years ago. What we like and
dislike, what we value and esteem, is critical to what we will
eventually become.
Unfortunately we have
divorced emotions from ethics. We see ethics as “our opinion” about things
not our reaction to things. At times we
even train ourselves to think one way and feel another. We ask people to be
righteous and biblical yet feel embarrassed at our fellow Christian who get
genuinely get angry over sin and moral decay. By doing this we say its Ok to
just have notions not emotions. That Christianity is best kept in the head not
in the heart. Then we wonder why they do not give and why they do not commit to
discipleship! We teach Christian young people to be sexy, sophisticated and
emotionally unshockable then expect them to value chastity. We are asking the
impossible.
Our emotions reflect what
we value and cherish, admire and love and they also reflect what we dislike
loath and reject. Our emotions undergird our choices and our choices form the
foundations for our character and destiny. If our emotions are askew our
choices and destiny will surely follow suite. During my university years I
often tutored high school students in calculus. The biggest obstacle was nearly
always emotional rather than intellectual. It was moving the student past
emotional valuations such as “I hate
maths” and “homework is horrible”. Because they had been taught by parents and
peers that mathematics was odious and loathsome and homework was dull they were
not doing their work. Because they were not doing their work they were failing
mathematics. If they failed mathematics they would not get into university in
Australia or into a decent career. Their emotional attitude, learned from others,
was affecting their entire future.
The ability to delay
gratification is fundamental to the development of good
character. An experiment was set up where small children were given a choice:
one marshmallow now, or two in ten minutes time. To get two marshmallows they
had to delay gratification - a basic skill in managing and discipling their
emotions. When the children were then followed up in a longitudinal study the
difference between the “grabbers” and the “patient” was incredible. The most
impatient and impulsive achieved less and got into trouble more while the most
patient were more successful in practically every sphere of life. In fact this
test proved more predictive of success at school and in life than IQ tests or
any other social variable. This simple act of emotional management was a key to
later success in life.
Thus right emotions are an important part of right character and right ethics and right emotions undergird right choices and right destiny. To emotionally rejoice in truth, to celebrate justice, to delight in noble actions and to embrace compassion and mercy is to have emotions that complement our faith. On the other hand confused emotions can destabilise us and create conflicts. Finally the presence of strong lustful and evil emotions can drive us to sin and blind us to truth. Thus sorting ourselves out emotionally is much more than just getting our act together. It is getting our heart in line with our faith and with our God. But which way is up? How can we know which emotions are right, which are wrong and which are neutral? How can we get an idea of what an emotionally together and righteous and holy Christian looks like? As in everything else Jesus is our model and that is the subject of the next chapter
Can Jesus Be Our Model For Biblical EQ?
(Hebrews 12:1-2 NKJV) Therefore we also, since we are surrounded
by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight, and the sin
which so easily ensnares us, and let us run with endurance the race that is set
before us, {2} looking unto Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith, who
for the joy that was set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame, and
has sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.
It
is one of the key teachings of Christianity that our Master and Model is Jesus
Christ and we are to be conformed into His image and be like Him in all
respects. Lets look at two well-known verses in this regard:
(Romans 8:29 NASB) For whom He foreknew, He also predestined to
become conformed to the image of His Son, that He might be the first-born among
many brethren;
(Ephesians 4:15 NASB) but speaking the truth in love, we are to grow up in all aspects into Him, who is the head, even Christ,
God's
plan for our lives is that we become conformed to the image of His Son. Now to
"grow up in all aspects into Him" includes the emotional aspects of
the nature of Jesus Christ. Becoming emotionally mature and skilled is part of
our sanctification - but it is only a part. There are many other aspects of
sanctification as well such as faith, knowledge and purity. Growing up
emotionally is important and it’s the part of sanctification that this book
will focus on but please don't get the impression that I think Biblical EQ is all
there is to sanctification.
Is Jesus
Christ An Appropriate Model For Emotional Maturity?
There
are a number of objections that people might think of against using Jesus Christ as our Model of EQ:
1.
The
standard's too high, the idea is terrifying, it just gives me a panic attack to
think of it. I can never be like that.
2.
He
was God and sinless, I'm neither. He had an unfair advantage. What's possible
for him is just not possible for me.
3.
There
isn't enough information in Scripture to make a judgment. Its an argument from
silence. You can just make Jesus into whatever you want Him to be to suit your
purposes.
4.
He
was Jewish and lived in the Third World 2000 years ago and just ambled around
the place healing lepers. What would He know about the pressures of corporate
life and the emotional jungle that my office is? OR I'm a woman, He was a man and totally different emotionally. Its
just silly to ask me to be like Jesus.
5.
Jesus
was a prophet and had the emotions of a prophet. I could never be that
confrontational - its not my spiritual gift.
6.
Jesus?
High EQ? Kind of lacking in social skills if you ask me! I'm much more tactful
and artful that that. Don't ask me to act in ways that get you nailed to a lump
of wood.
Well
lets look at some ways we can answer those objections and the assumptions that
underlie them.
Objection 1: The Standard Is Too High
Solution: Jumping Off Jacob's Ladder - Getting Rid Of Legalism Over Emotions
Many evangelicals have a "Jacob's Ladder" view of the spiritual life with Jesus at the top and host of angels in-between and Christians
climbing up rung by painful rung. The idea is to ascend to perfection, to
strive to arrive. One slip and you tumble to the bottom to start all over
again. Those that adhere to this view of spirituality are always envying those
ahead of them, clinging on to the ladder for dear life, and having not too much
to do with those “below” lest they get dragged down.
This view of the Christian life is thoroughly
unbiblical. Ephesians 2:6 tells us that all those who are in Christ are already
seated with Him in heavenly realms and Hebrews 12 tells us that we have
come (past tense) to the Heavenly Zion. In Christ we have already arrived
in terms of spiritual status. There is no ladder and if there is all born-again
Christians are standing shoulder to shoulder on the top rung as brothers of
Jesus Christ (Hebrews 2:10-15). We have
been saved by grace and not by our own spiritual strivings (Eph 2:8-10) and
there is no condemnation for those in Christ Jesus (Romans 8:1) including
condemnation about our emotional life.
Aspiring to be like Jesus is not a matter of status
or spiritual ascent. It’s a journey, a destination, a joyous arriving. It was
what we were made to be like from all eternity. If we view our emotional life
as an indicator of spiritual status then it will be utterly terrifying to think
of Jesus as our model. Every emotional insecurity will seem a "sin"
and every lustful thought a pathway to Hell. If we judge ourselves and rate our
spiritual life by the difference between our
emotional life and the emotional life of Christ, by how far we have yet to go
on our imaginary Jacob's ladder, then all we will feel is endless guilt and
insecurity. By trying to go up, you will go under.
If you recognize yourself as being on an imaginary
Jacob's Ladder - then its time to "jump off". To let go of striving
and relentless self-assessment. To stop comparing yourself to those around you.
To let the strain of sanctification go and to instead to learn how to receive
grace so that you grow far more quickly than you can in your own strength.
When I am saying "lets consider Jesus as our
model for the emotional life of the Christian" I am NOT setting a new
standard to be "lived up to" by discipline and self-control. Your
discipline and self-control will run out long before you reach that standard!
Being like Jesus is our vision and our destination. We fix our eyes on Jesus,
we seek to grow up into Him, we pattern ourselves after Him. It becomes an
exploration and an adventure, a time of growing and learning, a receiving of
grace upon grace as we learn to be like Him. It is a gracious growing - not a
terrifying ascent.
Objection 2 - He was God and
that's cheating!
Solution: He was also fully human. Jesus was the prototype of the perfect
Christian, the elder brother among many brethren. We are of the same kind as
Him.
Jesus was not some aloof divine maharaja floating
six inches above the ground, another category of being entirely from you and I.
Jesus is God yet He was also fully human and tempted in every point as we are
and still retains that humanity in Heaven as our faithful high priest.
(Hebrews 2:10-18 NASB) For it was fitting for Him, for whom are all
things, and through whom are all things, in bringing many sons to glory, to
perfect the author of their salvation through sufferings. {11} For both He who
sanctifies and those who are sanctified are all from one Father; for which
reason He is not ashamed to call them brethren, {12} saying, "I WILL
PROCLAIM THY NAME TO MY BRETHREN, IN THE MIDST OF THE CONGREGATION I WILL SING
THY PRAISE." {13} And again, "I WILL PUT MY TRUST IN HIM." And
again, "BEHOLD, I AND THE CHILDREN WHOM GOD HAS GIVEN ME." {14} Since
then the children share in flesh and blood, He Himself likewise also partook of
the same, that through death He might render powerless him who had the power of
death, that is, the devil; {15} and might deliver those who through fear of
death were subject to slavery all their lives. {16} For assuredly He does not
give help to angels, but He gives help to the descendant of Abraham. {17}
Therefore, He had to be made like His brethren in all things, that He might
become a merciful and faithful high priest in things pertaining to God, to make
propitiation for the sins of the people. {18} For since He Himself was tempted
in that which He has suffered, He is able to come to the aid of those who are
tempted.
This passage and others like it in Hebrews (4:14-16,
5:7-10) emphasize that life or Jesus was difficult. It was so difficult that it
was quite rightly described as suffering and had all the emotional hallmarks of
suffering. It was no light suffering for it was to have the effect of
perfecting Him! It was a suffering that matured His obedience by testing it
under very stressful conditions. As we shall see Jesus was pressed again and
again to almost breaking point but He never sinned. Though He was God He laid
aside those privileges (Philippians 2:5-11) to become fully human and a servant
and was "made like His brethren in
all things that He might become a merciful and faithful High Priest".
He was made like us in our experiences of hunger, thirst, tiredness, frustration, misunderstanding, betrayal and even of unjust treatment by others. Even a cursory reading of the gospels will tell you that He did not just cruise through these experiences. He wept, He rebuked, He cried out, He rejoiced, He got angry, He became "troubled in spirit", He groaned in anguish and sweated drops of blood. Life for Jesus was difficult and it was often emotionally intense. This has made Him merciful in His role as high priest for He has fully been where we are.
In fact the reason we can be like Jesus is because
became very much like us. In fact He calls us "brethren" (Hebrews
2:11 ) which means that we are enough alike Him to
be considered family and to bear a close “genetic relationship” that has some
sort of equality about it. The Scriptures also say that we share the heavenly
realms with Christ Jesus, and are members of Heavenly Zion (Ephesians
2:6, Hebrews 12:22-24). Therefore we are literally “in the same realm” as Christ Jesus. Romans
8:29 tells us that we will be conformed to His image almost like someone
pressed into a mould. Our shape will be the same as His shape. We will be like
Him. There will be a resemblance. We can resemble Him because he chose to
resemble us. Finally Ephesians 4:15, which I quote often in this book ,says we
are to be made like Him “in all respects”.
That’s a very close likeness.
To dramatize this with a touch of humour- imagine I
was to compare a trout with a horse using these same criteria. Can a trout
occupy the same realms a horse? No, a trout swims in the river and a horse
gallops on land.. Can a trout be called a brother of a horse in any genetic
likeness? Not at all.! Can a trout be made into the image of a horse or expect
to be made like a horse in all things? Its ridiculous. In order to occupy the
same realms, be brothers and be able to transformed into Christ Jesus we must
be very much LIKE Jesus. In fact we are like Jesus because we are fully human
and He became fully human. He became like us so that we could become like Him.
Jesus took on our emotional life so that it may be redeemed and become like His
emotional life.
Finally we share a common destiny with Jesus Christ
and a common home.
(John 14:1-4 NKJV) "Let not your heart be troubled; you believe in God, believe
also in Me. {2} "In My Father's house are many mansions; if it were not
so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you. {3} "And if I
go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and receive you to Myself;
that where I am, there you may be also. {4} "And where I go you know, and
the way you know."
"That where I am you may be also". This is
not just the offer of streets of gold. It’s the offer of an elder brother to
His younger brethren. Its fellowship, its love and its family. We shall be
enough like Jesus to be considered family. He as the Son of God and we as sons
of God. When we are made in all aspects like Him and conformed to His image we
will share His habitations and have meaningful fellowship with our Lord and
God. Going back to our trout and our horse - there is no possibility of
meaningful fellowship there. It is only in likeness and communication that
there can be fellowship with God. Jesus is not alien to us but in fellowship
with us and we can be like Him. Our emotions, in the end, will be fitted for
life in eternity with God. The goal of biblical EQ is thus not commercial
success or social popularity but fellowship with God and harmony in Heaven.
Objection 3: There isn't enough information
about His emotional life to base an EQ theory on.
Solution: There is enough to give us key reference points so we can gain a
reasonable impression of what it means to have a redeemed and Christ-like
emotional life.
The information about the emotional life of Jesus is
contained both in direct references to His humanity such as "Jesus
wept" in John 11 and in broader more theological references that imply His
full humanity and complete goodness. For instance John calls Him “the light of
life” and states that darkness had no place in Him and could not overpower Him.
To have no "darkness" in one's spirit is to have emotions that are
never deceitful, false, envious, spiteful, grumbling or small-minded. All his
emotions were "light" not in the sense of light-hearted but as in the
sense of positive, true and illuminating, righteous, appropriate and genuine.
There was never a snicker or a snarl, never a dark brooding, violent emotion.
Whether in tears or triumph the emotions of Jesus were noble, wise, good and
perfectly righteous. Then there are the direct references.
A survey of any good systematic theology such as
Erickson or Grudem will find a wealth of information under the heading
"the humanity of Jesus" as well as a good discussion of the
complexities this entails (such as how the divine and the human were combined
in one person). I will leave these intricacies to the theologians and will just
list some of the biblical references which show how complete His humanity and
emotional life was: Jesus experienced hunger (Matt 4:2, 21:18), thirst (Jn
19:28) , fatigue (Jn 4:6) , He rejoiced at the end of
the sending out of the seventy-two (Luke 10:21), marveled at the faith of
the centurion (Matthew 8:10) and felt love for the rich, young ruler (Mark
10:21) . His
most frequent emotion is compassion which is recorded 11 times in the gospels (eg
Matthew 9:36).
Anger was part of life for Jesus such as when He became angry at the Pharisees
for their hardened cruelty (Mark 3:5) . Zeal for God's honor caused Him to cleanse
the temple (John 2:17) . He grew in stature and in wisdom and in favor
with God and man (Luke 2:52) was subjected to high-powered temptation (Matthew
4:1-11) , and
learned obedience without sinning (Hebrews 5:8-9) . He had some of life's
more painful emotions as well. For instance He wept (Luke
19:41, John 11:35)
, His soul was troubled (John 12:27) and a while later He was "troubled in
spirit" (John 13:21) . He underwent extreme emotional distress to the
point of death (Matthew 26:36-41) and prayed with loud cries and tears (Hebrews
5:7) . Finally
of course he experienced an agonizing death on a cross. (Matthew
27:34-54) with
its attendant feelings of abandonment (Matthew 27:46) .
The way Jesus processed His emotional life can also
be deduced from some of the incidents in His life. For instance He was
extraordinarily calm in the face of storms and authoritative even in the face
of arrest. He was an accessible person who was a "friend of sinners"
and seemed to enjoy a reasonable social life with stable friendships with His
disciples and with the household of Lazarus, Mary and Martha at Bethany. He had
an inner circle of Peter, James and John and the apostle John seems to have
been a true friend and was known as "the disciple whom Jesus loved".
Thus there is sufficient evidence from direct references, incidents in the
gospels and proper theological inference to construct a reasonable portrait of
the emotional life of Jesus - at least one that can inform our discussion of
biblical EQ.
Objection 4: Jesus is not a culturally relevant or gender relevant model for the
emotional life I lead. To ask me to model my emotional life on His is inappropriate.
Solution: The cultural details of
Jesus life are scant. God seems to have mainly preserved only those details
about Jesus that are relevant for all places and times.
The core message of who Jesus is has been perceived
by Jew and Gentile, slave and free, male and female down the centuries. We will
find out that Jesus shows us how to cope with pressure, express anger, set
limits and boundaries, participate in grief and feel for the lost, the sick and
the downtrodden. No one argues that Jesus shows us how to have compassion and
love as our primary emotional realities. These are the sort of principles that
survive cultural and gender differences. Each of the EQ skills that Jesus
displayed is written into Scripture for our instruction. Much about His
personality is left out - even such vital details as His age or His personal
preferences. This means that those details that are in there (e.g. He is
recorded 9 times as saying thanks at meals) are ones that the Holy Spirit wanted to draw attention to and
are largely personality independent. [ In the case of “saying grace” it is the value of being thankful and cultivating
a life of gratitude for daily provision.] Millions of people in dozens of
cultures find the gospel accounts of Jesus highly relevant to their situation.
Using Jesus as our model means following what Scripture says not what medieval
paintings portray. There is no indication that Jesus had a beard or long hair
or was slightly effeminate looking. All these cultural details are absent from
the gospels. What is present is the account of a person with a remarkable
understanding of humanity and an enormous desire to heal it and redeem it. If
we mould our passions on His passions we will be highly relevant people in a
very needy world.
Objection 5: Jesus had a totally different spiritual gifting. I could never be as
assertive, confident or confrontational as He comes across as in the gospel
narratives.
Solution: Becoming like Jesus is
not about becoming a clone of a prophet but is a unique journey of self-discovery.
God does make us each very different and He certainly does not ask us all to be evangelists or prophets. In fact it is quite clear that there is no one "right" Christian personality. Some are like Peter or Paul, while others resemble Moses, Daniel, Barnabas or Elijah. Yet as different as each of these people are or were, each of them was Christ-like. There is almost a trick to this. If I imitate another human e.g. Billy Graham, I end up not being myself in the end yet if I imitate Jesus the reverse happens – I find myself. This is because Jesus is the center of humanity and the crown of humanity and we were all created by Him and for Him and in him everything holds together, including our personalities (Colossians 1:15-20). Thus becoming like Jesus is like a journey to the center of the Universe, full of adventures and surprises where we end up back where we began but marvelously transformed. When the timid person decides to become like Jesus he finds new boldness. When the sarcastic wit decides to become like Jesus she finds new gentleness and tact. When the messed up and confused person decides to become like Jesus, clarity appears as if from nowhere. The gospels talk about losing yourself in order to find yourself and indeed we do. One person sets out, another returns who is somewhat similar but entirely different. The timid person loses their fear that they have harbored for so long, the sarcastic person loses their cruelty, the disordered person loses their freedom to be foolish. No-one becoming like Jesus becomes a clone. Its not a journey to a single point, a “dot” we must all approximate. We don’t all end up in Jerusalem wearing sandals. Maybe it’s a bit like a spiritual black hole in which we seem to vanish but actually end up on a journey in another Universe traveling faster than the speed of light .
Objection 6: Jesus was tactless and His
"high EQ" just got Him crucified. That is not something ordinary
people should imitate. They should be tactful and careful.
Solution: Jesus was not tactless, He was an effective agent of change and a
brilliant communicator who was steadfastly opposed. His EQ skills made Him
effective and powerful and thus are worth imitating.
The ministry of Jesus and His EQ skills seem to have gone through three stages:
Favor: First Jesus grew in favor with God and man (Luke
2:52). Secondly His early ministry was characterized by people being astonished
at the gracious
words that fell from His lips. (Luke 4:22). At this stage His EQ skills
make Him perceptive, gracious and tactful.
Effectiveness: Where He taught with authority and
challenged the teachings of the scribes and the Pharisees. Some opposed, many
listened, His following grew. His opponents were infuriated by Him, but at this
stage they were not yet afraid of him. At this stage His EQ skills make Him
authoritative and effective as a public speaker and prophetic teacher
Power: Jesus eventually became a national political and
religious figure that many people wanted to see become King. He was able to
challenge the highest authorities in the land and to create genuine fear in His
opponents. His enemies were now truly afraid of Him and plotted His death like
that of any political enemy. At this stage His EQ skills make Him a skilful
leader of a mass movement and also someone able to withstand enormous pressure
and persecution.
For Christians the development of a high biblical EQ goes through these same
three stages of favor, effectiveness and power . Stage One is "growing in
favor" where EQ skills are honed and refined and poor strategies are
discarded. Stage Two is effectiveness where EQ skills are honed in one's own
home town and district and an effective and authoritative ministry develops.
Stage Three is power when EQ skills are used to effect large scale change in
one's community such as being a community organizer, politician, writer, moral
crusader, preacher or evangelist.
These latter stages generally provoke a reaction
from the Evil One who launches his attacks against the now highly effective
Christian. Two Scriptures are relevant here:
(2 Timothy 3:12
NKJV) Yes, and all who desire to live
godly in Christ Jesus will suffer persecution.
(Matthew 16:24-28
NKJV) Then Jesus said to His disciples,
"If anyone desires to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his
cross, and follow Me. {25} "For whoever desires to save his life will lose
it, but whoever loses his life for My sake will find it. {26} "For what
profit is it to a man if he gains the whole world, and loses his own soul? Or
what will a man give in exchange for his soul? {27} "For the Son of Man
will come in the glory of His Father with His angels, and then He will reward
each according to his works.
Godliness will attract the scorn of some and the
hatred of a few. If those few occupy places of power than the persecution can
be trying indeed. Nevertheless we are called to be lights in the midst of
darkness and sheep in the midst of wolves; as wise as serpents and as innocent
as doves. A high EQ will enable you to skillfully handle high level social and
political issues and be a real influence for good in your society. However this
will attract attention, envy, rivalry, and in some cases ridicule, scorn and
hatred.
The prophet Daniel is a prime example of this. His
high biblical EQ , wisdom and maturity made him effective and influential but
made others envious and landed him in the lions den amongst other places. But
God delivered him! My experience of Christian political involvement is that the
persecution is always more than I wanted but always far less than I feared. If
you strive to attain the EQ of Jesus Christ you will eventually become so
gracious, poised, and authoritative that you will have a real presence that
makes a difference at national and international levels. Unfortunately you will
also have real enemies opposing the righteous changes that you are seeking to
bring about. Then its time to take up your cross and follow Him!
So we see that Jesus is indeed a very adequate, and in fact ideal model for the development of the Christian’s emotional life. This is a high calling and in some ways a daunting one. How did Jesus cope? What gave Him the strength? Or as His neighbors in Nazareth said when He returned from the wilderness “Where did He get this wisdom from?” From the Holy Spirit! And the work of the Holy Spirit in the life of Jesus – particularly in His emotions, soul and spirit, is the subject of the next fascinating chapter.
The Holy Spirit, The Emotional Life of Jesus,
And The Emotional Life Of The Spirit-Filled Believer.
(Isaiah
11:1-2 NKJV) There shall come forth a
Rod from the stem of Jesse, And a Branch shall grow out of his roots. {2} The
Spirit of the LORD shall rest upon Him, The Spirit of wisdom and understanding,
The Spirit of counsel and might, The Spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the
LORD.
The central teaching of this book is that as part of their redemption Christians are to take on the emotional life of their Saviour and that this occurs as a result of the power of the Holy Spirit who transforms us into the image of the Son of God. If the Holy Spirit is indeed the divine dynamic and the agent of deep emotional transformation then we should see some evidence of that in His work in the life of Jesus. Obvious questions arise that we will investigate such as: Did His baptism and empowerment with the Holy Spirit change Him or did He remain just the same? Are there any hints that the Holy Ghost lay behind the impressiveness of His personality? Can we appropriate some of the same power that moved Jesus ?
The Baptism of Jesus and His
EQ
While
Jesus grew in wisdom and stature and in favor with God and man there was
also a sudden break in His life, a radical change in His emotions and personal
authority so that those who knew Him said "where did He get this wisdom
from…."
(Matthew 13:54-58
NKJV) And when He had come to His own
country, He taught them in their synagogue, so that they were astonished and
said, "Where did this Man get this wisdom and these mighty works? {55}
"Is this not the carpenter's son? Is not His mother called Mary? And His
brothers James, Joses, Simon, and Judas? {56} "And His sisters, are they
not all with us? Where then did this Man get all these things?" {57} So
they were offended at Him. But Jesus said to them, "A prophet is not
without honor except in his own country and in his own house." {58} Now He
did not do many mighty works there because of their unbelief.
He
had changed! While Luke shows us that Jesus was a child prodigy (Luke 2:42-50)
no-one expected Him to turn into a miracle working prophet. The transition from
promising youth to powerful prophet seems to have come at His baptism. There
was a massive empowering work of the Holy Spirit that changed Jesus just as
Pentecost changed the disciples.
The highest level
EQ skills such as boldness and courage and skill in healing and proclamation
are Holy Spirit endowed. The early church realized this when they prayed for
boldness and the room shook! (Acts 4:29-31). EQ change empowered by the Holy
Spirit can be remarkable and sudden and leave others astonished. I can testify
personally to a remarkable change in one meeting in September 1978 when I went
from being a timid and secretive Christian to being as bold as a lion and an
ardent evangelist!
The Body of Jesus and The
Holy Spirit
As
we all know our physical state and our emotional state are closely connected.
We are more disposed to get angry when we are tired or hungry. We also seem to
inherit certain emotional dispositions from our parents. We are
"hard-wired" from birth into a certain emotional disposition (however
this can later be altered as we shall see). This can be as toxic as a problem
with rage or as beneficial as the ability to be enraptured by music. The Holy
Spirit set Jesus' genetic structure at conception so that He was
unusually inclined to love righteousness and hate wickedness (Hebrews 1:9). A
passage from Hebrews indicates that His body was prepared for him by God, so
that Jesus would love to do the will of God. (emphasis mine)
(Hebrews 10:5-7 NKJV) Therefore, when He came into the world,
He said: "Sacrifice and offering You did not desire, But a body You have prepared for
Me. {6} In burnt offerings and sacrifices for sin You had no pleasure.
{7} Then I said, 'Behold, I have come; In the volume of the book it is written
of Me; To do Your will, O God.'"
Here
we see that as Jesus came into the world He had a body prepared for Him by the
Father and the express intent of His coming into the world was "to do Your
will O God.." Jesus had a body
that was free from sinful genetic predispositions towards rage, alcoholism,
drug addiction, or whatever other negative traits that can be passed on
genetically. Basically Jesus was born without any sinful dispositions. His body
and nervous system were formed to do the will of God by the creative,
body-renewing and forming work of the Holy Spirit.
If
the creative work of the Holy Spirit was able to make Jesus’ body
such that it was free from sinful tendencies then obviously that power can go
to work in our bodies also. This gives us hope that long standing biological
urges can be erased by the healing and renewing ministry of the Holy
Spirit and countless Christian recovery programs attest that this is the case.
Alcoholics can and do lose the biological desire to drink, homosexuals can and
do have their sexual orientation set right, drug addicts can and do completely
lose their cravings, sex addicts can be and are freed from the torment of 24hr
a day lust. But is this a realistic and a scriptural expectation? Lets look at
Romans 8:11
“But if the Spirit of Him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, He who raised Christ from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through His Spirit who dwells in you.”
The
Holy Spirit can give life to our mortal
bodies – not just our resurrection bodies, but the very bodies we
have now, our mortal bodies. His renewing life can pulse through us and cleanse
us from sins and addictions just as he can heal a person
from illness or disease. Like a divine electrician he can fix the fuse box and
rewire the house so the circuitry functions as it was always meant to – for the
glory of God.
The
biological basis of sin is not separate from the spiritual basis of sin. When
God delivers you from sin He can deliver you from sin in your spirit, sin in
your soul and eventually from the power of sin in your members. He can fix the
physical and medical basis of rage, lust, addictions and anti-social behaviour.
Minimal brain dysfunction, ADHD, post-traumatic stress disorder, and whatever
else may be engraved in our neural tissue - can be healed by the Holy Spirit.
Lets
see how this happened for the Christians at Corinth:
(1 Corinthians 6:9-11
NKJV) Do you not know that the
unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived. Neither
fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor homosexuals, nor sodomites,
{10} nor thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners
will inherit the kingdom of God. {11} And such were some of you. But you were
washed, but you were sanctified, but you were justified in the name of
the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God.
The
Corinthian Christians has come from some pretty terrible backgrounds including
fornication and adultery (sexual addiction), homosexuals and sodomites
(probably pedophiles in this case), and drunkards (alcoholics). These behaviors
are generally acknowledged to have a strong and persistent biological and
neurological component.
However
they are now PAST behaviors, they have been repented of and forsaken and the
Corinthians are now washed and made holy! "Such WERE some of you" -
its over, dealt with, fixed. And this transformation took place "in the
name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God". Paul puts it this
way….
(Romans 8:13 NKJV) For if you live according to the flesh you
will die; but if by the Spirit you put to death the deeds of the body, you will
live.
(Galatians 5:16-18
NKJV) I say then: Walk in the Spirit,
and you shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh. {17} For the flesh lusts
against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh; and these are contrary to
one another, so that you do not do the things that you wish. {18} But if you
are led by the Spirit, you are not under the law.
The
Spirit can deal with the flesh in both its spiritual and biological aspects. We
are not at the mercy of our genetics or our addictions. The Holy Spirit can set us free! What He did in
constructing the body of Jesus so that it was prepared to do God's will can be
done for you as well "for nothing is impossible to him who believes".
The Soul and Spirit of Jesus
Listed
below are all the direct gospel references to the soul and spirit of Jesus
Christ.
(Matthew 26:38 NKJV) Then He said to them, "My soul is
exceedingly sorrowful, even to death. Stay here and watch with Me."
(Matthew 27:50 NKJV) And Jesus cried out again with a loud voice,
and yielded up His spirit.
(Mark 2:8 NKJV) But immediately, when Jesus perceived in His
spirit that they reasoned thus within themselves, He said to them, "Why do
you reason about these things in your hearts?
(Mark 8:12 NKJV) But He sighed deeply in His spirit, and
said, "Why does this generation seek a sign? Assuredly, I say to you, no
sign shall be given to this generation."
(Mark 14:34 NKJV) Then He said to them, "My soul is
exceedingly sorrowful, even to death. Stay here and watch."
(Luke 10:21 NKJV) In that hour Jesus rejoiced in the Spirit
and said, "I thank You, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, that You have
hidden these things from the wise and prudent and revealed them to babes. Even
so, Father, for so it seemed good in Your sight.
(Luke 23:46 NIV) Jesus called out with a loud voice,
"Father, into your hands I commit my spirit." When he had said this,
he breathed his last.
(John 11:33 NKJV) Therefore, when Jesus saw her weeping, and
the Jews who came with her weeping, He groaned in the spirit and was troubled.
(John 12:27 NKJV) "Now My soul is troubled, and what
shall I say? 'Father, save Me from this hour'? But for this purpose I came to
this hour.
(John 13:21 NKJV) When Jesus had said these things, He was
troubled in spirit, and testified and said, "Most assuredly, I say to you,
one of you will betray Me."
(John 19:30 NIV) When he had received the drink, Jesus said,
"It is finished." With that, he bowed his head and gave up his spirit.
Three
things especially stand out:
Ø
That
Jesus perceived life's situations with His Spirit.
Ø
That
Jesus was moved on the basis of those perceptions.
Ø
That
Jesus candidly expressed His emotions to those closest to Him.
[Also
to be noted are His ability to surrender His spirit to God and that with the
surrender of His spirit His life ended.]Note the power and depth of Jesus
reactions. He cries out with a loud voice, is troubled unto death, or rejoices
greatly. His Spirit-filled emotions were powerful and present. He is no
antiseptic, calm beyond belief, purely logical and mental being. The triumphs
and tragedies of faith move Him deeply indeed - as they have moved all great
men and women of God.
In
Mark 2:8 Jesus "perceived in His spirit". The spirit is the true organ for the
perception of reality for Jesus as Isaiah declared in one of the best known
passages in the Bible:
(Isaiah 11:1-5 NKJV) There shall come forth a Rod from the stem
of Jesse, And a Branch shall grow out of his roots. {2} The Spirit of the LORD
shall rest upon Him, The Spirit of wisdom and understanding, The Spirit of
counsel and might, The Spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the LORD. {3} His
delight is in the fear of the LORD, And He shall not judge by the sight of His
eyes, Nor decide by the hearing of His ears; {4} But with righteousness He
shall judge the poor, And decide with equity for the meek of the earth; He
shall strike the earth with the rod of His mouth, And with the breath of His
lips He shall slay the wicked. {5} Righteousness shall be the belt of His
loins, And faithfulness the belt of His waist.
The
presence of the Holy Spirit upon Jesus gave Him
extraordinary knowledge and wisdom so that He judged situations righteously and
truthfully and inwardly. He did not judge situations as they appeared to the
eyes and ears and to sense perception (verse 3 above). Rather He judged life's
situations with a spirit of wisdom and understanding, counsel and knowledge
that saw into the heart of things. This special perception that Jesus had shows
in many of the gospel encounters and is neatly summarized by the apostle John
who writes: (John 2:24 NKJV) But Jesus did
not commit Himself to them, because He knew all men. ( see also Matthew
9:4, 12:25, Mark 5:30, 12:15 Luke 11;17, John 5:6, 6:61, 64 , 13:1-3, 18:4)
Jesus'
perceptions of situations then led to His
emotional reactions to them. On sensing His impending death His soul was
troubled unto death, on seeing the grief at Lazarus's tomb He groaned in spirit
and was troubled, when the disciples returned victorious He rejoiced, when He
perceived the hardness of heart of the Pharisees He became angry, and when He
sees masses of people coming out after healing and teaching He is moved with
compassion. (see
"objection 3 in the previous chapter) . Jesus then expressed these emotions
powerfully but appropriately. There is always great dignity in the reactions of
Jesus Christ. His emotionality was deep and expressive - never trivial,
sentimental or chaotic. This then gives us a process for our own emotionality:
1.
Perceive life spiritually,
righteously, truthfully and with a Kingdom perspective.
2.
React in our soul and spirit. Be
moved by life. Not aloof and detached or cold and hard.
3.
Express those reactions with
dignity, power and poise. Be full-hearted emotionally but also be wise in
expression.
In
the next chapter we will see that the apostles and many great men and women of
God over the centuries have done precisely this - bringing their emotions under
the control and empowerment of the Spirit of God so they reacted to things no
longer from a merely human perspective with its five senses and self-interest but
from a divine perspective with spiritual perception and true Kingdom interests.
This is what makes a good Christian biography so compelling - we sense a
different way of looking at the world -
a heart controlled by God and seeing His interests in all things. In that
chapter I will argue that a Kingdom perspective is not only good for our
sanctification it is also critical for good emotional health and a high EQ.
However I have more to say about the emotional life of Jesus first.
The Beliefs of Jesus Christ
Emotions flow from beliefs. When I was a young boy I was playing by the
local creek when I found a huge lump of iron pyrites (Fool’s Gold) and it was
heavy and soft and looked like gold. I showed my brother Peter and we went home
very secretively so nobody could see us with our important find. We then showed
Dad and said, “We are rich! We are rich! We found this huge lump of gold and
there’s more just down by the creek!” Dad just laughed and explained about
Fool’s Gold. Even though our belief was not a true belief it still made us very
happy while it lasted. We were so excited, not by actually finding gold,
because we didn’t actually find gold, but by the belief that we had found gold.
When this belief was corrected, our emotion of joy was unsupported by an
adequate belief, and it vanished. We went from very excited to being a bit
disappointed. Once the belief vanished, the emotion vanished. Underneath
emotions are beliefs, if you take way the belief the emotion vanishes, if you
change the belief sufficiently, the emotion changes.
How
we believe has a direct affect on how we feel. This applies even in spiritual
things. So if , like Jesus, you think that stealing houses from poor widows is
wrong, you will react to it with the intensity that Jesus did. The difference
between a video camera recording an event and a person seeing the event is that
the person has prior beliefs. These prior beliefs cause the person to react to
what they see. Lets look at three
incidents in the life of Jesus to see how His beliefs informed His emotional
reactions and made them different from those of so called "normal
people". First we will look at His cleansing of the temple:
(Mark 11:15-17 NKJV) So they came to Jerusalem. Then Jesus went
into the temple and began to drive out those who bought and sold in the temple,
and overturned the tables of the money changers and the seats of those who sold
doves. {16} And He would not allow anyone to carry wares through the temple.
{17} Then He taught, saying to them, "Is it not written, 'My house shall
be called a house of prayer for all nations'? But you have made it a 'den of
thieves.'"
(John 2:13-17 NKJV) Now the Passover of the Jews was at hand,
and Jesus went up to Jerusalem. {14} And He found in the temple those who sold
oxen and sheep and doves, and the moneychangers doing business. {15} When He
had made a whip of cords, He drove them all out of the temple, with the sheep
and the oxen, and poured out the changers' money and overturned the tables.
{16} And He said to those who sold doves, "Take these things away! Do not
make My Father's house a house of merchandise!" {17} Then His disciples
remembered that it was written, "Zeal for Your house has eaten Me
up."
What
beliefs of Jesus lay behind the strength of His reaction here? In Mark's gospel
we see that Jesus believed :
a)
That the purpose of the Temple was to be a house of prayer for all
nations.
b)
But that it had become a robbers den.
In John's gospel Jesus is shown believing
that it is :
c)
My Father's house
b)
But instead it had become a house of merchandise (with the implication that it
was dishonest trade.
[The
accounts are not contradictory they just report slightly different samples of
Jesus reactions at the time. It is probable that he said many other things as
well while He was overturning the tables.]
Lets
look at the sequence of events. Jesus believes it should be A but perceives it
is in fact B this leads to emotional reaction C which is expressed in verbal
and physical behaviour D. For Jesus His beliefs included the honor due to His
Father , the fact that the right use of the temple was prayer and that all
nations should have access to it. They also included the belief that trade,
especially dishonest trade was inappropriate in such a location. These were not
widely and strongly held beliefs in His time otherwise the traders would not
have been there in the first place. His unique beliefs led to His unique
emotional reaction based on His spiritual perception of the nature of the situation.
Lets
move on and look at another of Jesus' puzzling reactions - during a fierce storm on the lake of Galilee.
(Matthew 8:24-26
NKJV) And suddenly a great tempest
arose on the sea, so that the boat was covered with the waves. But He was
asleep. {25} Then His disciples came to Him and awoke Him, saying, "Lord,
save us! We are perishing!" {26} But He said to them, "Why are you
fearful, O you of little faith?" Then He arose and rebuked the winds and
the sea, and there was a great calm.
Here
Jesus' belief seems to have been that He was absolutely safe and that nothing
could touch Him because His Father was protecting Him and the disciples. His
belief also included the fact that it
was a sane and reasonable thing for Him to speak to waves and wind and
expect that they would obey Him. Furthermore He seems to believe that the
disciples ought to share these beliefs and were quite unjustified in being
fearful in the midst of such a storm.
Based
on these beliefs Jesus perception of the situation seems to have been "Not
a problem!". It just wasn't a big deal. To say that this is
"counter-intuitive" and defies all common sense is no
under-statement. Nevertheless his beliefs were justified for He calmed the
storm with a word. It truly wasn't a problem for Him at all.
People
of great faith have a tremendous poise in crisis situations. In a later chapter
we shall learn how to handle situations we dread from a position of faith and a
sense of mastery. Here Jesus beliefs led to Him having emotions of calm and a sense of
mastery in a crisis situation and enabled Him to take effective action to
remedy the situation.
For
our third illustration of Jesus' belief system we will go a few verses earlier
in Matthew 8 to see the only time Jesus is recorded as "marveling" at something…
(Matthew 8:7-14
NKJV) And Jesus said to him, "I
will come and heal him." {8} The centurion answered and said, "Lord,
I am not worthy that You should come under my roof. But only speak a word, and
my servant will be healed. {9} "For I also am a man under authority,
having soldiers under me. And I say to this one, 'Go,' and he goes; and to
another, 'Come,' and he comes; and to my servant, 'Do this,' and he does
it." {10} When Jesus heard it, He marveled, and said to those who
followed, "Assuredly, I say to you, I have not found such great faith, not
even in Israel! {11} "And I say to you that many will come from east and
west, and sit down with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven.
{12} "But the sons of the kingdom will be cast out into outer darkness.
There will be weeping and gnashing of teeth." {13} Then Jesus said to the
centurion, "Go your way; and as you have believed, so let it be done for
you." And his servant was healed that same hour.
Here
Jesus is marveling at the "great faith" of the Roman centurion. There
are many beliefs of Jesus recorded here such as the hardness of Israel, the
salvation of the Gentiles and the power of His commands to heal the sick but
none of these beliefs are the mainstay of His marveling at the centurion. Jesus
is reacting to the presence of great faith in an unexpected place - a Gentile
and a soldier, a man who was outside of the covenant and whose job was killing
people and who was in part responsible for the occupation of His nation.
This
was the reaction of one belief structure to another belief structure.
The centurion expressed His beliefs about a) his unworthiness as a Gentile
(though a powerful man) to have Jesus visit him and b) His belief in Jesus'
authority and the power of His words of command. As the centurion expressed these
beliefs Jesus in turn resonated with them. Just as the hardness of heart of the
Pharisees enraged Him, just as the littleness of faith of the disciples
disappointed Him, the great faith of the centurion encouraged and astonished Him. It was a "rare find" "Assuredly, I say to you, I have not
found such great faith, not even in Israel! .
So
we see that belief structures react to one another and evaluate one another.
When we find another who is astonishingly full of faith we rejoice. When we
find someone hard and cynical and unbelieving we are discouraged or angered.
Like Jesus we search out those that resonate with us. They are a rare find and
a treasure. The way we interact with others will depend in large measure on
what we believe about what they believe. Much inter-denominational
misunderstanding revolves around "what we believe about what they
believe" and the strong emotional reactions that result. It’s a critical
area for mental health and is why some types of fundamentalism though very sound
in many areas are incredibly damaging psychologically.
Putting It All Together
Earlier we saw that perceptions led to internal emotions which were then
expressed appropriately. Later we have seen that our perceptions work in with
our beliefs to produce astonishing emotional reactions that are unique to the
Christ-like Spirit-filled believer. On top of this we have a physical
predisposition to certain types of emotional reactions and behaviours - covered
in the first part of this chapter. Thus we can say that for Jesus and the
Spirit-filled believer the steps are: 1. Perception of person or situation -
ideally in the Spirit. 2. Interaction
of perception with belief system. 3.
Internal emotion generated. 4.
Interaction of internal emotion with physical predisposition. 5. Expression of emotion outwardly.
You
may be wondering about the title of this chapter "The Holy Spirit And The Emotional Life of
Jesus" where is the Holy Spirit in Jesus’ beliefs, perceptions etc. Lets
see!
(1 Corinthians 2:9-13
NKJV) But as it is written: "Eye
has not seen, nor ear heard, Nor have entered into the heart of man The things
which God has prepared for those who love Him." {10} But God has revealed
them to us through His Spirit. For the Spirit searches all things, yes, the
deep things of God. {11} For what man knows the things of a man except the
spirit of the man which is in him? Even so no one knows the things of God
except the Spirit of God. {12} Now we have received, not the spirit of the
world, but the Spirit who is from God, that we might know the things that have
been freely given to us by God. {13} These things we also speak, not in words
which man's wisdom teaches but which the Holy Spirit teaches, comparing spiritual things with
spiritual.
Thus
verse 13 is the culmination of a long sequence. Firstly truth which eye cannot
see and ear cannot hear is revealed to us through the Holy Spirit (verses 9-11). Then we receive
them through the Holy Spirit who teaches us and works them into our belief
system. This is freely and graciously given (verse 12). Finally we speak and we
speak not human, but divine wisdom and not in human words and categories but in
words the Holy Spirit gives us.
Thus
Scripture is not just God's Word in human words; rather it is God's Word in the
Spirit's Words. Lets see how this worked for Jesus:
(John 8:28 NKJV) Then Jesus said to them, "When you lift
up the Son of Man, then you will know that I am He, and that I do nothing of
Myself; but as My Father taught Me, I speak these things. {29}
"And He who sent Me is with Me. The Father has not left Me alone, for I
always do those things that please Him ."
The
responses, reactions, words and expressions are taught to us by God and are in
spiritual categories "comparing spiritual with spiritual.”
That leads on to the last section of this
chapter - symbols, metaphors, and archetypes - how the Spirit teaches us to
express spiritual things - including our emotions.
The Language Of The Spirit and The Emotional Realm -
Symbols, Metaphors and Archetypes.
As
I am writing this "Just As I Am" is playing on the stereo in the
background and the choir is singing "O Lamb Of God I come..". This is
the language of the Spirit that makes no sense to the carnal man but which
abounds in Scripture and in the great moments of the Christian faith including
the hymns that lift us to God. To take up where we left off in the passage1
Corinthians:
(1 Corinthians 2:13-16
NKJV) These things we also speak, not
in words which man's wisdom teaches but which the Holy Spirit teaches, comparing spiritual things with
spiritual. {14} But the natural man does not receive the things of the Spirit
of God, for they are foolishness to him; nor can he know them, because they are
spiritually discerned. {15} But he who is spiritual judges all things, yet he
himself is rightly judged by no one. {16} For "who has known the mind of
the LORD that he may instruct Him?" But we have the mind of Christ.
There
is something called "the mind of Christ" which enables the believer
to make sense of symbolic language such as "the Lamb of God that takes
away the sin of the world" and to quickly grasp the meaning of parables
and to feel the wonder of the scenes in Revelation. The Holy Spirit enables us to perceive and
believe correctly thus renewing our mind into the mind of Christ . He is our
Teacher and instructor and does so in the language of the spiritual realm -
dreams, visions, symbols, parables and metaphors - using analogues of the faith
to explain it as well as more straightforward language such as that of the book
of Romans.
In
the language of the Spirit beasts with seven heads and ten horns are juxtaposed
with scarlet women and numinous symbols such as the Throne of God. These can be
visual as well as verbal symbols and realities angels, demons, cherubim and
seraphim are seen by the seers and
prophets. To the purely material and "scientific" mind this is all
quite offensive and many liberal theologians have stumbled over it. The more we
think of the power of our own intellect
the less we think of God's Word and the more we think of God's Word the less we
think of the power of our own intellect!
Jesus
was supremely taught of God and a master of the symbolic realm so the He
expressed Himself skillfully in parables, aphorisms, sermons and stories. His
teaching was unlike that of the scribes and Pharisees for He taught with
authority and in such a way that those truly seeking God understood Him while
those who were just curious walked away puzzled and frustrated with His
teaching. The language of the Spirit is not "plain language" but is
strangely numinous and symbolic. If you have seen some the "New Age
advertising" around that taps into these common and universal symbols of
the emotional world you will know what I mean.
These
symbols or archetypes such as a woman dressed in a flowing white robe holding a torch
aloft, or a dove against a clear blue sky, or a rainbow or a man on a white
horse dressed for war or a shining sword or a red dragon. These symbols have universal
emotional content almost independent of culture. The psychologist Carl Jung
spent His life exploring them and Hitler was a master at exploiting them.
Transpersonal psychology and various schools of psychoanalysis take them very
seriously indeed. Myth, saga, music, song and poetry all tap into this treasure
trove of emotional and spiritual symbols as do fables and stories and most
national anthems.
We
interact with spiritual language either totally or not at all. The phrase
"the Lamb of God" either has immense meaning or is a total enigma. It
is an almost binary form of communication that literally "separates the
sheep from the goats" and believers from unbelievers.
(John 10:25-27 NKJV) Jesus answered them, "I told you, and
you do not believe. The works that I do in My Father's name, they bear witness
of Me. {26} "But you do not believe, because you are not of My sheep, as I
said to you. {27} "My sheep hear My voice, and I know them, and they
follow Me.
In
a startling statement Jesus said "but you do not believe because you are
not of my sheep". In other words you have to be one of God's people to
understand His teaching! It’s the other side of the more usual "because
you do not believe you are not God's". Here its "because you are not
God's - you d o not believe." Some eagerly believe and can understand the
language of the Spirit while others are just further hardened by it. (John
12:40).
Thus
the spiritual person understand the things of the Spirit including symbols,
parables and dreams; is taught spiritual things by God, has a deep emotional
response to them which in turn finds its deepest expression in the language of
the Spirit speaking spiritual truths in words taught by God comparing spiritual
with spiritual.
Summary
For
Jesus and ideally for the Christ-like Spirit-filled believer the model of the
process for the development of the emotional life is as follows:
1.
Things
are perceived in and by the spirit by believers with the mind of Christ and a
lucid grasp of symbol and metaphor. These believers see life as being in a
Kingdom framework.
2.
This
perception is then passed through a grid of beliefs taught to the believer by
God.
3.
This
results in a godly internal emotional state in the believer - of rejoicing,
awe, wonder, repentance, burdens for the lost
etc.
4.
This
is then mediated through the renewed life-filled temple of the Holy Spirit that is the believers body and
translated through his or her natural God-given temperament.
5.
Finally
the emotional response is expressed in words taught by the Spirit bringing
edification to the body of Christ and reflecting the mind of Christ on the
matter.
This
should result in a deep, powerful resonant emotional life that is totally in
tune with Kingdom realities and which can express matters of justice and truth
as well as care and compassion. This Holy Spirit produced emotional life should
weep for the lost, ache for the poor and celebrate the repentance of a single
sinner. Like Jesus we should have a Holy Spirit given courage that enables us
to speak God’s truth in God’s words at God’s moment. Like Jesus the Holy Spirit
in us should make us radiant with a healing and gracious personality so that
people sense the love and peace that is in us and know that in our earthen vessels
dwells a priceless treasure.
The
next two chapters will test the above five step theory before we put it into
practice on ourselves. Firstly we will look at the emotional life of apostles, prophets and great Christian leaders. Then we shall examine the
dreadful emotional life of carnal Christians. On the way we shall see if the
model we have developed works.
The Emotional
Life Of The Apostles, Prophets and Great Christian Leaders
(Acts 13:22 NKJV) "…. 'I have found David the son of
Jesse, a man after My own heart, who will do all My will.'
If
the previous chapter summary of the emotional life of the Christ-like Christian
is correct, then it will predict the lives of the most Christ-like people - and
will also predict, in a negative way,
the lives of the most carnal people.
In
this chapter will check if the theory of biblical EQ has predictive validity
when applied to the lives of the great Christian leaders and in the
next chapter we will check to see if it also predicts the emotional lives of
carnal Christians.
According
to our model the following twelve things should be true of the apostles and prophets and great
Christian leaders.
Perception
1.
They
should see the world differently from the rest of us. For them the Kingdom
perspective will be the only true
perspective.
2.
They
should be able from time to time to see into the hearts of men and women and to
speak accurately to their condition.
3.
They
should be conversant with dreams, visions and symbolic language. They should
readily grasp the prophetic and be excited by the Scriptures.
Beliefs
4.
They
should have beliefs that the surrounding culture has not taught them or which
it opposes vehemently, beliefs that only God can have taught them.
5.
Those
beliefs should give them a sense of what is righteous and what is unrighteous
like Jesus had when He cleansed the temple and create an unusual zeal within
them that consumes them.
6.
Those
beliefs should give them unusual poise and power in crisis situations like
Jesus in the storm.
7.
As
a result of those beliefs they should resonate with and be emotionally drawn to
others who are of great faith, like Jesus resonated with the Roman centurion.
Emotions
8.
They
should have deep and vivid emotions like those of Jesus Christ.
9.
They
should have a sense of their emotions
being God's emotions and be aware of what they are feeling and able to name it
clearly as Jesus did with His emotions. They should be people of authentic and
powerful emotional expression - groans, tears, crying, and rejoicing.
Physical Nature
10.
They
should demonstrate victory over addictions and sexual temptations and have
a renewed physical nature whereby they were able to express their emotions in
godly ways through their physical bodies.
Emotional Expression
11.
These
righteous emotions should lead to righteous actions such as when Jesus'
compassion moved Him to act. Their emotionality should be an integral part of
being a righteous person. Not detached from life like the emotions of an actor
or a hypocrite.
12.
The
course of their lives should demonstrate an ever-increasing wisdom in emotional
expression as if they were being taught by God in how to say things.
Do
these twelve predictions pass the test of Scripture and of the testimony of the
saints down the ages? Are great men and women of God people of deep and vivid
emotionality? Do they demonstrate an unusual sense of righteousness? Do they
indeed see life differently? Do they hold counter-cultural beliefs or have an
unusual power and poise in crisis situations? The answer is Yes! In fact great
men and women of God are so vivid emotionally that they are often accused of
being overly emotional - from Jeremiah with his tears to John Wesley with his preaching. Luther saw
life so differently that he threw his ink-pot at the Devil! Isaiah was so
counter-cultural that he went around for three years with his buttocks
uncovered! (Isaiah 20:1-3).
Lets
test our predictions on the spiritual heroes of Hebrews 11. I will go paragraph by paragraph commenting on how these heroes
perceived, believed, felt and reacted differently. The bible version is the New
King James Version.
(Hebrews 11 NKJV)
Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things
not seen. {2} For by it the elders obtained a good testimony. {3} By faith we
understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God, so that the things
which are seen were not made of things which are visible.
These
heroes of faith saw a different
reality to others they had evidence of things not seen and understood that the
visible world was predicated on perception of an invisible spiritual world.
{4} By faith Abel offered to God a more
excellent sacrifice than Cain, through which he obtained witness that he was
righteous, God testifying of his gifts; and through it he being dead still
speaks. {5} By faith Enoch was taken away so that he did not see death,
"and was not found, because God had taken him"; for before he was
taken he had this testimony, that he pleased God. {6} But without faith it is
impossible to please Him, for he who comes to God must believe that He is, and
that He is a rewarder of those who diligently seek Him.
The
belief system of these people was different from and more excellent than that
of their contemporaries and was grounded in the invisible spiritual reality
that they perceived.
{7} By faith Noah, being divinely warned of
things not yet seen, moved with godly fear, prepared an ark for the saving of
his household, by which he condemned the world and became heir of the
righteousness which is according to faith.
{8} By faith Abraham obeyed when he was
called to go out to the place which he would receive as an inheritance. And he
went out, not knowing where he was going. {9} By faith he dwelt in the land of
promise as in a foreign country, dwelling in tents with Isaac and Jacob, the
heirs with him of the same promise; {10} for he waited for the city which has
foundations, whose builder and maker is God. {11} By faith Sarah herself also
received strength to conceive seed, and she bore a child when she was past the
age, because she judged Him faithful who had promised. {12} Therefore from one
man, and him as good as dead, were born as many as the stars of the sky in
multitude; innumerable as the sand which is by the seashore.
{13} These all died in faith, not having
received the promises, but having seen them afar off were assured of them,
embraced them and confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims on the earth.
{14} For those who say such things declare plainly that they seek a homeland.
{15} And truly if they had called to mind that country from which they had come
out, they would have had opportunity to return. {16} But now they desire a
better, that is, a heavenly country. Therefore God is not ashamed to be called
their God, for He has prepared a city for them.
These
great men and women of God had beliefs that gave them an unusual sense of
righteousness which condemned their generation e.g Noah. Their beliefs gave
them the courage to be counter-cultural to seek a heavenly country and to see
life from a Kingdom perspective.
{17} By faith Abraham, when he was tested,
offered up Isaac, and he who had received the promises offered up his only
begotten son, {18} of whom it was said, "In Isaac your seed shall be
called," {19} concluding that God was able to raise him up, even from the
dead, from which he also received him in a figurative sense. {20} By faith
Isaac blessed Jacob and Esau concerning things to come. {21} By faith Jacob,
when he was dying, blessed each of the sons of Joseph, and worshiped, leaning
on the top of his staff. {22} By faith Joseph, when he was dying, made mention
of the departure of the children of Israel, and gave instructions concerning
his bones. {23} By faith Moses, when he was born,
was hidden three months by his parents, because they saw he was a beautiful
child; and they were not afraid of the king's command. {24} By faith Moses,
when he became of age, refused to be called the son of Pharaoh's daughter, {25}
choosing rather to suffer affliction with the people of God than to enjoy the
passing pleasures of sin, {26} esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches
than the treasures in Egypt; for he looked to the reward. {27} By faith he
forsook Egypt, not fearing the wrath of the king; for he endured as seeing Him
who is invisible. {28} By faith he kept the Passover and the sprinkling of
blood, lest he who destroyed the firstborn should touch them. {29} By faith
they passed through the Red Sea as by dry land, whereas the Egyptians,
attempting to do so, were drowned.
Their
unique beliefs led to godly emotions such as Jacob worshipping on
the top of his staff . It led to unusual poise and courage in the face of
enraged Pharaoh. It led to the ability to go against normal human emotions in
the case of Abraham sacrificing Isaac.
{30} By faith the walls of Jericho fell down
after they were encircled for seven days. {31} By faith the harlot Rahab did
not perish with those who did not believe, when she had received the spies with
peace. {32} And what more shall I say? For the time would fail me to tell of
Gideon and Barak and Samson and Jephthah, also of David and Samuel and the
prophets: {33} who through faith subdued kingdoms, worked righteousness,
obtained promises, stopped the mouths of lions, {34} quenched the violence of
fire, escaped the edge of the sword, out of weakness were made strong, became
valiant in battle, turned to flight the armies of the aliens. {35} Women
received their dead raised to life again. And others were tortured, not
accepting deliverance, that they might obtain a better resurrection. {36} Still others
had trial of mockings and scourgings, yes, and of chains and imprisonment. {37}
They were stoned, they were sawn in two, were tempted, were slain with the
sword. They wandered about in sheepskins and goatskins, being destitute,
afflicted, tormented; {38} of whom the world was not worthy. They wandered in
deserts and mountains, in dens and caves of the earth. {39} And all these,
having obtained a good testimony through faith, did not receive the promise,
{40} God having provided something better for us, that they should not be made
perfect apart from us.
Finally
we see such great emotional mastery and Kingdom perspective that men and women of faith
were enduring torture in the hope of a better resurrection! Poise, power and peace and a
most unusual set of emotions characterised these heroes of faith. Their emotions moved
them to righteous lives and actions. They were not subject to cravings or
addictions or impulses of the flesh, rather they had the steady strong
enduring emotions that were part of the life of Jesus Christ.
What’s The Difference
Between Overly-Emotional People And The Vivid Emotions Of Jesus And The Prophets?
Good
question! Lets start this investigation by taking a look at that chronicler of
the emotional life - David the Psalmist. I have just picked a Psalm "at
random" - Psalm 30.
(Psalms 30 NKJV) I will extol You, O LORD, for You have
lifted me up, And have not let my foes rejoice over me. {2} O LORD my God, I
cried out to You, And You healed me. {3} O LORD, You brought my soul up
from the grave; You have kept me alive, that I should not go down to the pit.
{4} Sing
praise to the LORD, You saints of His, And give thanks at the
remembrance of His holy name. {5} For His anger is but for a moment, His favor
is for life; Weeping may endure for a night, But joy comes in the
morning. {6} Now in my prosperity I said, "I shall never be moved."
{7} LORD, by Your favor You have made my mountain stand strong; You hid Your
face, and I was troubled. {8} I cried out to You, O LORD; And to
the LORD I made supplication: {9} "What profit is there in my
blood, When I go down to the pit? Will the dust praise You? Will it declare
Your truth? {10} Hear, O LORD, and have mercy on me; LORD, be my helper!"
{11} You have turned for me my mourning into dancing; You have put off
my sackcloth and clothed me with gladness, {12} To the end that my
glory may sing praise to You and not be silent. O LORD my God, I will
give
thanks to You forever.
These
twelve short verses give us a good sample of David's emotional life. What is
the difference between David’s emotional life and the emotional roller-coaster
of some Christians?
·
The
negative emotions are temporary "weeping may last for a night but joy
comes in the morning".
·
There
is a righteous resolution of the emotions, a giving of thanks in the end.
·
The
emotions are primarily directed towards God in a private and appropriate
fashion.
·
There
is a wide range of appropriate emotions from joy to a troubled spirit. The
emotional thermostat is not stuck in just one position e.g. deep gloom or
constant happiness.
·
There
is an ability to see good in God in the midst of it all - to sing praise and
give thanks. The spiritual perspective is not lost.
·
There
is no stifling of emotions, they are expressed in spiritual terms "that my glory may sing praise to You
and not be silent".
·
There
is repentance of false perspectives and beliefs. "Now in my prosperity I
said 'I shall not be moved..". When God challenges this David repents of
his self-sufficiency. People who are
out of balance emotionally do the opposite and cling to their self-defeating
perspectives
·
In
the expression of emotions there is genuine dignity and beauty. This psalm is
poetry!
[If
this area interests you why not take some more of the Psalms and explore their
emotional content. The men and women of God down the centuries have valued them
for the insights they give into the emotional life of the believer.]
So
we se there is a vast difference between the deep, powerful and godly emotions of the saints and the clanging,
shrill emotions of Christian neurotics. The emotions of the saints have God at
the center. The emotions of neurotics have self at the center.
What About The Different
Temperaments?
The
question "which Bible character are you most like?" is an interesting one. I am a
miniature "clone" of Paul the apostle sharing much of his impatience
and his intellectual approach to the faith.
Others say they are like Peter or Moses or David or Jeremiah or Amos.
Tim La Haye made an important contribution with his book Transformed
Temperaments which identified four personality types - Sanguine, Choleric,
Melancholy and Phlegmatic. Those of you familiar with Myers-Briggs personality
tests will know it also has four basic categories divided into sixteen
sub-types. Whatever your schema, one thing is obvious - there is a wide range
of personality types! God uses people of all temperaments in His Kingdom and
designs ministries and places for each of them. He called complex Thomas as
well as straightforward Peter, Simon the Zealot and the sons of Thunder as well
as Matthew the pragmatic tax-collector, sophisticated Daniel was sent to
minister to Nebuchadnezzar while Amos the farmer went to bluntly prophesy to
the northern kingdom. Having a high biblical EQ does not mean that you are the
same as everyone else or that you become a cute, saccharine sweet, always smiling,never-a-hair-out-of-place
believer. There is a vast range for individuality and even for eccentricity
within the Kingdom of God!
Eccentricity? Well the prophets were hardly "normal"! John the Baptist
wearing camel's hair clothes and eating locusts may be viewed as
"eccentric" along with Elijah, Ezekiel and characters such as Samson.
These people were culturally distinct but not the least bit mentally ill - they
just lived by a different and higher reality which consumed them.
Different
temperaments have different uses within the Kingdom of God. Barnabas was a
great encourager of the brethren, Peter's high emotionality made him a master
preacher and evangelist, Paul's razor sharp mind made him a great one for
attending to the operational details and theology of church life, John's
mystical temperament pointed to the deep abiding spiritual realities and
resulted in wonderful teaching on prayer. Titus seems to have been a born
trouble-shooter while Timothy was the sensitive and caring pastor par
excellence.
God
will use your basic temperament that He has built into you - and even some of
your weaknesses for when you are weak then you are strong! Your basic
God-created and renewed self is OK! God can and will use it and has accepted it in Christ Jesus (Romans
14:7).
Being
accepted does not mean being unchanged. The Holy Spirit will take certain parts of your
basic emotional temperament and refine them into the image of Christ Jesus. Paul
matured in tolerance and love, Peter became stable and reliable, Timothy had to
overcome his timidity and learn to suffer hardship as a good soldier of Christ
Jesus. As the Holy Spirit convicts you and teaches you and ministers to you a
slow but sure transformation will take place that will increase your maturity
in Christ and your usefulness to the Master. I find Hebrews especially
encouraging - the fact that I have a merciful and faithful High Priest in
heaven who understands my weakness and intercedes for me and a throne of grace
that I can go to for strength and help in time of need. (Hebrews 4:12-16).
Emotions In Times of Revival
If
the Holy Spirit acts to redeem our emotions
into those of Christ Jesus what causes the emotional excesses during times of
revival? Does the Holy Spirit, who so desires balance, holiness, wisdom and
truth cause these bizarre manifestations? This is an often discussed question
and in recent years this has become a controversial topic and so I will try to
offer some comment and resolution.
Firstly
emotions DO run high when God moves mightily in times of genuine revival. I recommend the book "The Nature of Revival" a collection
of writings from the journals of John Wesley, Charles Wesley and George Whitfield abridged and put into modern
English by my friend Clare G. Weakley Jnr and published by Bethany House
Publishers. These journal entries give great insight into the emotionality of
these great men of God and the extraordinary events of their times. Here are a few more or less random extracts.
P
84. John Wesley.. "On Friday all
Newgate rang with the cries of those whom the word of God had cut to the heart.
Two of these were filled with joy in a moment, to the astonishment of those who
watched them"
P
85 John Wesley regarding one who opposed the revival: " While reading the last page he changed color, fell off his
chair, and began screaming terribly as he beat himself against the
ground…..between one and two in the morning I came in and found him on the
floor. The room was full of people who his wife tried to keep out. He cried
aloud "No let them all come! Let all the world see the just judgment of
God!". Two or three men were trying to hold him down. He immediately fixed
his eyes on me, stretched out his hand and said "Aye this is he who I said
was a deceiver of the people! But God has overtaken me! I said it was all a
delusion, but this is no delusion!" …(He is eventually released from
torment..)
P
87 "While I was enforcing these words "Be still and know that I am
God" (Ps 46:10), God began to bare His arm, not in private but in the open
air and before more than two thousand witnesses. One then another, and yet another
was struck to the earth, greatly trembling at the presence of God's power.
Others loudly and bitterly cried "What must we do to be saved?"
Few
revivals have been without great emotion and the revivalist Jonathan Edwards wrote a famous treatise on
"Religious Affections.." which established that the emotions were a
by-product of grace not its chief aim. The aim of the godly evangelist is not
an emotional audience but a repentant and believing audience.
If
the emotions expressed so powerfully indicate that repentance is taking place
and that people are meeting with God and having their souls transformed then
that emotion is a good thing. However if it is simply emotionality, hype,
manipulated sentimentality and the like and no work of God is taking place and people are not
truly turning from darkness to light then it is unprofitable.
A
revival in which there is no great
emotion would be like a wedding without joy. Such a momentous thing is
happening to so many people that surely some great expression of emotion must
accompany it. However when the emphasis is on the manifestations - the tears,
the laughter, the falling etc then it has gone off track. The wedding should
focus on the bride and groom and the revival on Christ and on the believer's transformation. The
emotions are just part and parcel of the process and not ends in themselves. In
a later chapter on handling our strong emotions I go into the issue of
discernment at quite some length. However I think we should conclude this brief
section by saying that the powerful and bizarre emotions of revival are a
temporary excess that God permits, but does not encourage. After the emotions
and the changes the person so powerfully affected should go on to lead a
normal, balanced, wise, godly and sanctified life. They should not keep on
having bizarre emotional experiences. That is immature. Mature people display
resonant love and deep wisdom and emotional control.
Christian Maturity and Emotion
I
soon got the impression as a new Christian that my enthusiasm was expected to
wear off and that when I "became mature" I would have rather dull and
respectable emotions that resembled cold porridge poured into a grey flannel
suit. Is this the sort of emotional maturity that Scripture speaks of in
Ephesians?
(Ephesians 4:13-15 NKJV) till we all come to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge
of the Son of God, to a perfect man, to the measure of the stature of the fullness
of Christ; {14} that we should no longer be children, tossed to and fro and
carried about with every wind of doctrine, by the trickery of men, in the
cunning craftiness of deceitful plotting, {15} but, speaking the truth in love,
may grow up in all things into Him who is the head; Christ;
Christian
emotional maturity does involve emotional
stability - we are not "tossed to and fro…by every wind of
doctrine". It also involves
"growing up" in all things and becoming a person participating in the
stature and fullness of Christ. While it involves the stability of Christ it
also involves the passion and zeal of Christ (John 2:17, Titus 2:14) and His
ability to bless and to care. In fact part of the purpose of our redemption is
to become a people “zealous for good deeds”.
(Titus 2:14 NASB) who gave
Himself for us, that He might redeem us from every lawless deed and purify for
Himself a people for His own possession, zealous for good deeds.
Maturity
is not the loss of emotions but the educating of emotions so they are like
those of Jesus Christ and the mature person is both stable and zealous.
Childish
emotions are OUT for the mature Christian but Christ-like emotions are IN. In
the next chapter we will see what carnal emotions look like, how they are the
reverse of the biblical EQ process and how we can move beyond them and start
the process of "growing up in all things into Him who is the head - even
Christ".
The
Emotional Life Of The Carnal Christian
(1 Corinthians 3:1-5 NKJV) And I, brethren, could not speak to you as to spiritual people
but as to carnal, as to babes in Christ. {2} I fed you with milk and not with
solid food; for until now you were not able to receive it, and even now you are
still not able; {3} for you are still carnal. For where there are envy, strife,
and divisions among you, are you not carnal and behaving like mere men? {4} For
when one says, "I am of Paul," and another, "I am of
Apollos," are you not carnal?
We
just saw how the five-step model of emotions quite accurately predicted the
emotional life of Spirit-filled men and women of God. Now the model has as its
central theme that emotional maturity is arrived at by focusing on Jesus, and
modeling our emotions after Him in the power of the Holy Spirit. It is the Holy
Spirit who renews our perceptions, beliefs, emotions, and physical bodies and
who gives us wisdom in how to express our emotions in ways that are “taught of
God”. We saw a positive correlation between what the theory predicted about the
great saints of God, who cooperated with the Holy Spirit, and how they turned
out emotionally, becoming beings of emotional grandeur. If our model stands the
test, then those who resist the Holy Spirit, those who are unspiritual, should
not be beings of emotional grandeur. Rather they should be emotionally unformed
and immature. If, as our theory predicts, the Holy Spirit is essential for full
emotional formation, then unspiritual Christians should be emotional wrecks, or
at the least quite shallow and indifferent emotionally. These unspiritual
Christians are termed “carnal
Christians” and this chapter will see if our model can predict how they will
turn out and what lessons we can learn from that.
The
carnal Christian is characterized by an
astonishing lack of spiritual maturity to the point where they cannot be
addressed as spiritual people. Carnal Christians behave like "mere
men" and are indistinguishable from the surrounding culture with their
actions and reactions. Using our model we can again make certain predictions
about the emotional life of those who do not give the Holy Spirit full lordship of their lives.
We will just reverse the predictions in the previous chapter.
Perception
1.
They
will see the world in much the same terms as the surrounding culture. For them
the Kingdom perspective will be rare and they will be
mainly self-centred.
2.
They
will be unable to see into the hearts of men and women and even empathy will be
rare. They will not speak accurately to the human condition.
3.
They
will be baffled by dreams, visions and symbolic language. They will be bored by
the prophetic and struggle with the Scriptures.
Beliefs
4.
They
will mainly have beliefs that the surrounding culture has taught them. They
will not hold beliefs that the culture opposes vehemently, and will have few
beliefs that only God could have taught them.
5.
They
will have a very weak sense of what is righteous and what is unrighteous and
rarely react to social evil. They would tolerate the selling of doves in the
Temple. Zeal will be unusual for them
and even undesirable. They will not be consumed by kingdom interests.
6.
They
will not have unusual poise and power in crisis situations like Jesus in the
storm but rather will be prone to anxiety.
7.
They will not resonate with and
be emotionally drawn to those who are of great faith. Rather they will feel more at home with the world and with other carnal Christians.
Emotions
8.
They
will not have deep, vivid and stable emotions like those of Jesus Christ. They
will instead be characterised by shallow sentimental spiritual feelings that
vary with every wind of doctrine.
9.
They
will have little sense of their emotions being God's emotions. They will often
be unaware of what they are feeling and will be unable to name their emotions
clearly. They will not be people of
authentic emotional expression.
Physical Nature
10.
They
will not demonstrate victory over addictions and sexual temptations They
will fail to express their emotions in godly ways through their physical
bodies.
Emotional Expression
11.
Their spiritual emotions will rarely lead to righteous actions.
Compassion for the lost or the poor will rarely be felt and will not move them
to action. Their emotionality will be detached from real life and be like the
emotions of an actor or a hypocrite.
12.
The course of their lives will not demonstrate an ever-increasing
wisdom in emotional expression. They will go from bad to worse and become
increasingly discordant like " a clanging gong and a clashing cymbal"
if they should continue as carnal Christians.
How
does this tally with your experience of carnal Christians? Unfortunately it
tallies very closely with my experience of them! They are not growing and in
fact they are often going backwards spiritually. Lets see what the New
Testament says about them.
In
the quote that opened this chapter we find Paul referring to the church in 1
Corinthians as “carnal” – well what was it like? The carnality of the church is
reflected in a long list of very
serious sins – the first four chapters detail division, intellectual and
spiritual pride, factions, and infighting.
Chapters five and six show they were visiting prostitutes, and engaging
in sexual immorality, and incest, chapter seven discusses marriage, divorce and
the basics of sexually appropriate behavior, chapters eight to eleven correct
gross disorder such as being drunk at the Lord's Supper, not waiting for one
another so one goes hungry while another is full, and participation in feasts
in pagan temples and eating food sacrificed to idols. Chapters 12- 14 reveal a
paganisation of the spiritual gifts and their use in competitive, unloving and
chaotic ways. Chapter 15 finds them denying the resurrection and being in major
error over basic doctrines. The church was a mess but it was still considered a
Christian church. The church James wrote to may have even been worse! There
they murdered one another (James 4:2) and treated the poor with contempt (James
2). Both these churches were considered Christian churches and the recipients
were addressed as believers and referred to as saints or holy ones (1
Corinthians 1:2).
Several
epistles are addressed to churches with a good percentage of carnal Christians
these are : Galatians, 1 & 2 Corinthians , Titus, Hebrews and James. In
these epistles the language is extremely plain and there are many stern
warnings about the consequences of sin and the judgment of God. (e.g. Galatians 5, Hebrews 6, 1 Corinthians
5, 2 Corinthians 12 & 13 etc). In the first six or so chapters of his
epistle the writer to the Hebrews calls his audience in various turns - sluggish, unfruitful, dull of hearing,
immature, like children, and says they were neglectful of their salvation, in
danger of drifting away from the faith and hardening their hearts to God's Word
and on the point of having "evil, unbelieving, hearts" (Heb
3:12). In chapter 10 the writer goes on
to say they are neglecting meeting together and on the verge of giving up the
faith, returning to sin and being judged by the living God. This is a
terrifying picture indeed!
Carnal
Christians are so close to being unbelievers that they are almost
indistinguishable from them. Such Christians are characterised by apathy,
division, ongoing strife and a very low EQ! Carnal Christians "bite and
devour one another" (Galatians 5:15) The carnal Christians needed lengthy
instructions on the basics of human relationships and fortunately the apostolic
response to this need has given rise to some of the finest literature on
relationships in the world including the famous "love chapter" in 1
Corinthians 13. This is in direct contrast with other more Spirit-filled
churches like the one at Thessalonica of whom Paul said :" (1
Thessalonians 4:9 NKJV) But concerning
brotherly love you have no need that I should write to you, for you yourselves are
taught by God to love one another;.".
Where Then Is The Holy
Spirit?
All
truly born-again Christians receive the Holy Spirit as part of the dynamics of
conversion and the formation of the new man in them, which is Christ in them the
hope of glory. So all these Christians
in Corinth, called ‘saints” by Paul, presumably had the Holy Spirit. Yet they
were a mess. Something was dreadfully wrong. There seems to be a breakdown along the
way. Their sanctification was falling to bits; it just wasn’t working. The Holy Spirit in them was not producing
maturity, the fruit of the Spirit were not evident. Was this God’s fault? Had
God given up on them? Surely not! These people were doing something that was
stopping the Holy Spirit from having His way in their lives. They were sinning
against the Spirit’s presence in their lives.
This
raises the question what then happens to the Holy Spirit in born-again
Christians who have become carnal? In tribal cultures they often think that the
Holy Spirit vanishes from you if you sin. That is not New Testament teaching.
The Holy Spirit remains within the believer but is sinned against. Several
terms are used such as: Grieved (Ephesians 4:30), quenched (1 Thessalonians
5:19) lied to (Acts 5:4), put to the test (Acts 5:9), insulted / outraged
(Hebrews 10:29), made jealous (James 4:5), blasphemed (Matthew 12:31) and
resisted (Acts 7:51). In Jude the divisive people are said to be "devoid
of the Spirit" (Jude 1:19). We will very briefly look at each of these
terms to gain some understanding of the spiritual dynamics of sinning against
the Holy Spirit and its effects on the emotional life.
Grieved (Ephesians 4:30) - by
unnecessary and immature interpersonal conflict such as bitterness, wrath,
slander and malice. The Spirit is a Spirit of love and is grieved by that which
is opposed to love. Carnal behavior such as divisiveness and quarreling is
anti-love, and causes grief to the Holy Spirit who is constantly trying to
mature us in love.
Quenched (1 Thessalonians 5:18-21) -
by despising the gifts of the Spirit especially prophesy. It implies that his
fire - His inspirational activity in prophecy and revival is resisted - perhaps in the
name of order, and "cold water" is thrown on attempts to minister in
spiritual power.
Lied To (Acts 5:4): Ananias and
Sapphira conspired in an act of financial deception of the apostles. This was seen as not deceiving men but God and lying to the Holy
Spirit. (Acts 5:4) and resulted in them being carried out dead.
Put To The Test (Acts 5:9): Again refers to
Ananias and Sapphira and refers to their testing the omniscience of the Holy
Spirit by thinking they could deceive those He had filled with power and
anointed.
Made Jealous (James 4:4,5):Adulterers
and adulteresses! Do you not know that friendship with the world is enmity with
God? Whoever therefore wants to be a friend of the world makes himself an enemy
of God. Or do you think that the Scripture says in vain, "The Spirit who
dwells in us yearns jealously"? A difficult verse to translate. Refers to friendship
with the world, which is seen as spiritual adultery and makes the Spirit
jealous. The world system and the Kingdom are opposites. To love one is to make
the other jealous and if we love the world (as in worldliness, not as in John
3:16) we enrage the Holy Spirit. Worldliness is often characteristic of carnal
Christians and does great damage to their relationship with God.
Insulted/Outraged/Do Despite
Unto
(Hebrews 10:29): Refers to someone who turns back from Christianity to Judaism
(or to any other religion) and thus says that the work of the Spirit of grace
in his or her life was of no value to them. These are apostates.
Devoid Of The Spirit (Jude 1:19): Refers to
false teachers who joined into Christian groups and created division leading
people away to their own groups. These are probably not even believers to start
with.
Resisted (Acts 7:51): Refers to the
unbelieving Jews who were stoning Stephen and resisting the clear testimony of
the Holy Spirit. Later God said to one of those resistant Jews "Saul, Saul, it
must be hard for you to kick against the goads..". This term is not used
of believers.
Blasphemed (Matthew 12:31): Is used of
those unbelieving Jews who so deeply resisted the Holy Spirit that they saw the miraculous
ministry of Jesus Christ as the work of the Devil and attributed His power to
Satan. Again it is never used of Christians.
The
emotional consequences of sinning against the Holy Spirit are dire indeed. The more
people sin against the Holy Spirit the nastier they become. In the above verses
we see them pilfering, murdering lying, fighting and quarreling. As the Holy
Spirit is quenched, grieved and resisted His love departs and hatred enters in.
How
does this come about? A love of worldly things, a growing resentment , anger
and malice, a dislike of prophecy and revivals, a little dishonesty with
finances here and there and after a while the activity of the Holy Spirit in the believers life is
reduced to a whisper and as they head out the back door of the faith they
deliver the final insult by rejecting the value of Jesus whom the Spirit bears
witness to.
In
answer to our question, “What is the relationship between the Holy Spirit and
the carnal Christian?” the relationship is one of struggle and pain. The Spirit
is grieved, made jealous, quenched and resisted. He seeks to bring the carnal
believer to a point of repentance and to cooperation with God. However in the
words of the famous Campus Crusade booklet
“How to Be Filled With The Holy Spirit” (which I thoroughly recommend), “self is on the throne”. The carnal
Christian is a “me first” Christian led by their own desires, and seeking their
own interests and having their own agenda. Christ may be in their life but He
is not being allowed to fully direct their lives. The struggle with the Holy
Spirit will only end for them when they abdicate from their throne, and instead
decide to place Christ on the throne, obey His commandments and be led by the
Spirit not by their own desires. If you think that this may apply to you why
don’t you consider praying a prayer somewhat like the following:
“Lord
I am sorry that I have put self on the throne and run my life according to my
own desires rather than according to Your will. I repent of this and ask that
Christ may be on the throne and in the control room of my life, and that I may
be ruled by His desires, and by the Holy Spirit. I ask that You may fill me
with the Holy Spirit and produce in me a soft and obedient heart. In Jesus
name. Amen”.
The Low Biblical EQ Of
Carnal Christians
The
poor control carnal Christians have over their emotional life is due to their
lack of co-operation with the Holy Spirit and can be seen in:
Poor Impulse
Control: Giving in to sexual immorality, drunkenness and even in the disorder of
their worship.
Poor Anger
Management:
Most notably the congregation that James wrote to which were murdering each
other (James 4:2) and the Galatians which were "biting and devouring"
each other. (Galatians 5:15)
Disintegrating
Relationships: Envying, factions, strife and contentions. ( 1 Cor 3:3
Low Levels of
Personal Motivation: They are variously described as evil beasts and lazy gluttons (Titus
1:12-14) , neglectful, dull of hearing, and
in danger of drifting.
Instability: Following after "the
latest" false teachers particularly if they were good talkers and
emotionally persuasive (2 Corinthians 11) and being tossed around by every wind
of doctrine.
Lack Of Basic
Empathy and Compassion: Such as saying to a person who was without food or shelter "be
warm and filled" and not doing anything! Or dishonoring the poor by making
them sit in lowly places in church. (James 2).
A Toxic
Tongue:
Gossip, slander, and the like that proceeds from out of control emotions.
(James 3)
A Poisonous
Personality:
Such people are described as a "root of bitterness that defiles many"
or like the emotionally rigid Diotrephes who "like to put himself
first" and controlled the church (3 John).
The Obvious Conclusion
So
we see that our model for biblical EQ
predicts accurately the disastrous perceptions, beliefs, actions and reactions
of people who are carnal Christians. We
see that the process we have outlined accurately predicts good and holy
emotions for those filled with the Spirit and negative and hateful emotions for
those who resist and grieve the Spirit. This leads to two conclusions. Firstly,
that our model seems to fit the biblical data and probably does describe the
process of emotional development and expression. More importantly it leads to
the conclusion that the single most important factor in a high biblical EQ is
the work of the Holy Spirit in the life of the co-operating
and Spirit-filled believer. Those most full of the Spirit are grand beings of
deep emotional authenticity, Christians that grieve the Spirit are emotional wrecks.
However
believers do not neatly fall into two camps, one with wonderful emotions and
the other with sharp, brittle and unstable emotions. That is because we start
at different points. Some Spirit-filled believers from emotionally difficult
backgrounds may have a lot of learning and growing to do with respect to their
emotions, but they are going in the right direction. In time, providing they
remain close to God, they will learn and grow and become more Christ-like in
their emotions. This seems to have been very much the case with Paul who went
from being very abrasive in his early years to very gracious in later life. On
the other hand some very worldly and carnal Christians are squandering a
wonderful emotional inheritance from a loving Christian family. They seem
emotionally together but in time, slowly but surely, emotional disintegration
sets in and generally becomes obvious by late middle age.
What About Non-Believers?
What
does our model say about non-believers? Generally non-believers are neither
cooperating with nor resisting the work of the Holy Spirit. Thus the emotional
life of non-believers should be normally distributed (that is “on a bell
curve”) around a central mean that is less than the emotional mean of
Spirit-filled Christians but perhaps not as low as that of truly carnal
Christians. Since the Spirit does not indwell unbelievers, the great inner work
of the Spirit is not there and the upper reaches of the Christian life are
unavailable to them. For instance they are generally not able to love their
enemies. While they may be very decent and loving people they will generally
not have the tremendous power and life, the "zing" that being like
Christ produces. This deep pulsating joy is almost exclusively a work of God in
the regenerate believer. Thus our model is not destroyed by the fact of the
occasional good non-Christian.
It
needs to be also said that God has His prevenient and common grace and the Holy
Spirit will give some external aid to anyone who seeks to live a good, decent
and loving life and encourages Jews, Buddhists, humanists and existentialists
alike to be decent human beings. In such people many Christian values will be
found in the belief system that undergirds their emotional life. Such people
who are seeking good, but have not yet found Christ may well be emotionally
together as they are cooperating with God in a stumbling sort of way. However
the deep transformational power of the Holy Spirit may well be lacking.
The Conclusion So Far
1.
The
five step model accurately predicts the emotional state of both saintly
Christians and carnal Christians.
2.
Emotional
authenticity is entirely a work of the Holy Spirit . However it can occur to some
extent in non-believers who seek it as a work of common grace. More commonly it is found
in Spirit-filled believers who are walking in holiness.
3.
Emotional
functionality and authenticity come about through the person
co-operating with the Holy Spirit as He forms spiritual
perspectives and a Christ-like belief system in the person.
4.
Resisting
this work of the Holy Spirit results in emotional
catastrophe.
5.
Emotionally
undeveloped Christians who remain close to God can grow into emotionally adept
people just as it seems Paul did.
6.
Co-operating
with God means not grieving or quenching the Holy Spirit and being careful to avoid
worldliness.
Is There A Fast Track To A
High Biblical EQ?
Obviously being Spirit-filled and obedient is a great place to start for emotional growth. However Christians can also directly work on their emotions. Information on how to do this has been provided in three ways; firstly God has given His Son to show us what holy and true emotions look like, secondly He has given us the special revelation in the Scriptures and their precise description of the emotional life and the inner man, thirdly He has given His natural revelation to scientists who so assiduously seek the truth about emotional growth. Combining these together we will find out how to directly achieve emotional growth and a high biblical EQ. That takes us to the next section of this book , the section on the inner self which deals with how emotions are formed within us, and what we can do about it. This section will give us the knowledge and tools we need to work on our perceptions of reality and our belief systems and to renew them and to produce Christ-like outcomes and godly emotions.
Part Two
Our Inner Self
And Our
Emotional World
(2
Corinthians 4:16 NASB) Therefore we do
not lose heart, but though our outer man is decaying, yet our inner man is
being renewed day by day.
Perception
(2 Corinthians 5:7 NKJV) For we walk by faith, not by sight.
Perception
is the first of the five stages of Biblical EQ and by far the most complex,
which is why we will spend two whole chapters looking at it. In this chapter we
will look at perception as it flows from our stance toward life, our life
perspective, how we see things and how we explain the world to ourselves. These
perceptions and explanations later become the things out of which we form our
beliefs, and out of those beliefs will flow our emotions. In the next chapter
we will look at perception at its deepest level, in the human spirit, and how
it forms the foundations of and framework for our personality. In logical order
that chapter should precede this chapter but I have chosen to put the simple
material first and move you to the more difficult as a better teaching
strategy. Now read on.
How
would the people of Jesus' day seen Jerusalem? A tourist may have just seen a dusty city
with a beautiful temple in the middle of it. A trader would have seen an
economic opportunity. A priest would have seen the religious community and a
chance for prominence in the Temple service. An anxious mother would see it as
"the big smoke" where her son had gone to find work. Rome saw it as a
trouble spot to be kept under tight control. The disciples at this time saw Jerusalem
as a dangerous city with Herod and others intent on killing them (Luke 13:30,
John 11:16). Jesus saw Jerusalem in terms of its long hostility
towards messengers of God
(Luke 13:34-35 NKJV) "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the one who
kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to her! How often I wanted to
gather your children together, as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, but
you were not willing! {35} "See! Your house is left to you desolate; and
assuredly, I say to you, you shall not see Me until the time comes when you
say, 'Blessed is He who comes in the name of the LORD!'"O Jerusalem,
Jerusalem, the one who kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to her!.
His
unique perspective was one that viewed cities in terms of their spiritual
responsiveness and their attitude to the light
that they received. Jesus, the apostles and the prophets all had a
unique perspective on people, places and events. They saw things differently and
viewed reality in spiritual terms. Instead of the world being a chaotic jumble
of almost random events it is a place planned by a sovereign and just God. For
Jesus the primary reality was not economic but spiritual - how a person, or
even a city relates to God . Spiritual
people see life differently. Spiritual people have deep abiding spiritual
perspectives. The perceive reality through an entirely different set of
glasses. They see the world “right side up”.
When
our perceptions about life are wrong soon all else goes wrong. If we perceive
life to be utterly random - we will be without hope. If we perceive ourselves
to be unlovable - we will live alone in the land. If we perceive others to be
hostile when in fact they are friendly - we will needlessly create enemies. In
this chapter we shall first look at secular material that explains how our
perspective on life is formed. We will also look at some proven secular
techniques for fixing common errors and becoming optimistic and functional.
Then once we have achieved that we shall then look at how to gain a biblical
heavenly perspective and know life and peace.
The
correct perspective on life can calm fears, break us out of depression, give us
peace and stability, bring joy and hope, give us empathy and compassion and
give us the ability to plan wisely and well for our future. First we have to
understand how our perspective is created, then we can look at how it can be
fully redeemed.
A
key element in the creation of our perspective is how we explain reality to
ourselves. Bit by bit these explanations become our story about the world and
how it came to be and why it is the way it is. Soon we start seeing the world
the way we have imagined it to be, through the story we have constructed from
our explanations of the world. The
psychologist Martin E. P. Seligman has done much research on people’s
"explanatory style" and his book
"Learned Optimism" is excellent. Here is
my twelve point summary of its basic teachings:
1. Optimism and Power-fulness are the opposites of Pessimism and Helpless-ness.
2. Optimism and pessimism are learned by experiences in life.
3.
Experiences form beliefs. These beliefs then combine to produce
outlooks on life.
4.
The beliefs which we draw from experiences can be well-founded or
poorly founded depending on how we explained the experience to ourselves.
5.
We can explain things Personally (its always our fault)
or Externally (its something outside)
6.
We can explain things Pervasively (its in everything, everywhere) or
Specifically (this is just one instance).
7.
We can explain things Permanently (it will always be this way) or
Temporarily (its just a glitch).
8.
Personal, Pervasive and Permanent explanatory styles produce
self-defeating beliefs and a negative outlook.
9.
The negative outlook is reflected in negative self-talk.
10.
The self-defeating beliefs we have formed can be reasoned with and our
thoughts (negative self-talk) can be disputed with or distracted.
11.
Marshalling evidence against self-defeating beliefs and attacking them
logically can slowly but surely lead to a more optimistic outlook.
12.
Sometimes
you can “externalize” the belief by writing the thought down on paper or
talking it over with a friend.
Martin
Seligman then goes on to show how we can dispute our wrong perspective and
learn to be optimistic by writing down our thoughts and looking at them
logically and in the light of the three P's - Personal, Pervasive and
Permanent. According to Seligman’s research optimists are healthier and have
better lives than pessimists. But oddly enough pessimists tend to be more
accurate! Pessimists are right in their conclusions but wrong in their living.
They are unhappy, unsuccessful and unhealthy. The three key ways pessimists
defeat themselves is through their explanatory style - see points 5-8 above. For
instance the way we explain things to ourselves will determine how quickly we
recover from minor incidents. If I have an argument with a friend and then
think "I am terrible at relationships, I will always have arguments with
everyone I meet, I'm just a total loser" then I will be unhappy and I may
stay unhappy for a while. On the other hand if after the argument I say "I
think I was overtired, I'll get over this and have a better day tomorrow, I
don't always blow up at people" then I will be much happier and recover
more quickly.
Faith Application
Christians
have explanatory styles too - that determine their faith level, their happiness
and their joy. Explanations can vary from "God is punishing me and will
always punish me because I am so wicked" -to "The Devil made me do
it.." We have a habitual faith perspective on life - and just like the pessimists
in Seligman's research we can be re-educated to a more functional and
liberating explanatory style and faith perspective. This is a three stage process.
Stage
One is acknowledging that our spiritual explanatory style is in need of major repair.
Stage
Two is finding out exactly where it needs to be fixed and
Stage
Three is the job of repairing it.
Is Your Explanatory Style In
Need Of Repair?
Try
the following consciousness raising quiz. Its not a psychological test, just a series of questions to help you become
aware of the way you explain events to yourself. It is just a simple diagnostic
tool to help you realize what you are thinking so you can fix it. Please be
honest.
Answer
the following questions by putting the numbers 0 to 4 in the corresponding boxes as follows:
0 -
never think that way
1-
I
sometimes think that way
2-
I
think that way a fair bit but not often.
3-
I
frequently think like that.
4-
You
got me! I always think like that.
There
are fifty questions in two sections Personal Explanations (20) & Spiritual
Explanations (30) and unlike many tests they are deliberately arranged so as to
make the patterns obvious so you can see how you are thinking. The areas being
examined include the three P's -
permanent, personal and pervasive and a factor called "locus of
control" which looks at who or what you see as being in control -
yourself, God, other people, luck or the Devil. The theological section also
looks at these but adds questions testing our trust in God and our belief in
His goodness and our faith in His Word as part of our spiritual explanatory
style.
Personal Explanations
Permanence
o
After making a
mistake I tend to think "this is the end".
o
I feel as if I will never
change.
o
If you are a success
you stay successful, if you are a failure you are always a loser.
o
Nothing can be done
about society - it is bound to go downhill forever.
o
You never recover
from bankruptcy.
Locus Of Control
o
I believe you need a
lot of luck to succeed in life. Success is mainly random.
o
The world is
unpredictable chaotic and confusing so its not worth trying too hard to do
anything big. It will probably just be messed up.
o
Other people make me
react. My emotions are not under my control.
o
You can't do anything
about the Government.
o
If I have a win at
anything it was because the other people did not try hard.
Pervasive
o
Evil is everywhere
and here to stay. All people and systems are ruined by it.
o
My entire personality
is dysfunctional.
o
I am basically bad
and if people really got to know me they would despise me or hate me.
o
I am frequently
suspicious of other people and their evil motives.
o
All politicians are
corrupt.
Personal
o
I find failure
depressing because it reflects on who I am.
o
The reason I make
mistakes is because I cannot do anything right.
o
When people are late
for an appointment and say it was the traffic they are just lying to me. It
actually means that I am unimportant to them.
o
When some one fails
to return a phone call I think they are rejecting me.
o
If I fail an exam it
means that I am stupid.
Now add up your score
in each section:
Permanence _____ Locus of Control ______ Pervasive ______ Personal ____
Did you notice any
patterns emerging? Where were your highest scores?
Spiritual Explanations
Permanence
o
My habitual sins are
there for life.
o
You can't change the
world. It will always be this way.
o
It is easy to sin or
mistakenly miss God's will and the results are life-long.
o
I am what God has
made me to be and I cannot change.
o
Its all over, I'm
washed up, I've totally failed God. This is the end..
Locus of Control
o
Things go wrong
because God is not really in charge of my life.
o
Satan is very
powerful and in charge of this physical world and much of my circumstances.
o
I must save the
world, the job just cannot be done without me.
o
I am not responsible
for my actions. The Devil makes me sin.
o
Of course I have to
panic in a crisis. Someone has to do
the work and the worrying - namely me!
Pervasive
o
The Universe is
totally polluted by sin and cannot be enjoyed.
o
Even my prayers are
an abomination to God.
o
My life is riddled
with inconsistencies. I am hopeless.
o
All denominations are
filled with greedy clergy.
o
Theological error is
everywhere.
Personal
o
My failure to
memorize bible verses means that I am totally unspiritual.
o
I haven't led anyone
to Jesus so my life has been a total failure.
o
Good events happen to
good people and bad events happen to bad people. When bad things happen to me
it must be my fault.
o
I experience
temptation because I am sinful and wicked.
o
The reason my family
isn't saved is because I have been a poor witness.
Transcendent Spiritual Focus
o
Emotional security
and happiness is almost impossible if I cannot pay the bills.
o
When I talk about
blessing I mainly mean something tangible in this life such as a promotion or a
new car or a good holiday.
o
For me God's approval
of me and the pastor's / Christian community's approval of me is almost
identical.
o
I am easily devastated by criticism at church.
o
It is a long while
since I have prayed fervently and truly expected a major answer.
Goodness of God
o
Bad people get all
the good things.
o
Prayer is for prayer
warriors, average people don't get their prayers answered.
o
My life is miserable
and difficult but I must not strive to change it, I must accept it as
character-building punishment for my sins.
o
I fear that if I obey God
to the maximum He will make me a poverty-stricken missionary in outer
Uzbekistan (or similar).
o
The safest thing to
do as a Christian is not to expect too much from God.
Now
add up your scores in each section:
Permanence
____ Locus of Control _____ Pervasive _____ Personal______
Transcendent
Spiritual Focus ____ Goodness of God ___
Did
you notice any patterns emerging? Where were your highest scores?
NOTE: This is NOT a clinical test and
should not be used as such or employed as a selection tool. This is a
consciousness-raising instrument designed to help individuals become aware of
their explanatory style and to help them surface a few issues regarding it.
Interpreting The Results
If you get 10 or more in any one section then
you may have a problem in that area. This does NOT mean that you are crazy or
dysfunctional. It does mean that like many people it may be worth your while spending
some time looking at that perspective on life and working out what emotions it
is bringing to you. Does your perspective cause you to feel out of control?
Do you have trouble believing in a consistently good God. Just use the
results from the test to alert you to areas you may need to work on. Right
perspectives and beliefs provide a firm foundation for emotional health. We will see much more on this in the section
on beliefs that follows.
A Dose Of Perspective Restorer
When
I was in Balimo in the remote Western Province of Papua New Guinea the
missionary doctor there Dr. Kath Donovan used to talk about “taking a
dose of perspective restorer” when things got out of sorts with someone in the mission station. A
dose of perspective restorer was often a provocative question or statement that
got us to rethink our miseries. In a similar vein here are a few provocative
statements and questions that can help you to challenge the dysfunctional perspectives
that you have identified as having some influence in your life. I am sure you
will quickly get the idea.
Challenging Ideas Of Permanence
·
Are
your negative circumstances really permanent or do they just feel permanent?
·
How
impossible is impossible? Is anything impossible with God?
·
Haven't
you gotten out of difficult situations before? Can't you do it again?
·
Haven't
you changed and learned before? Can't you do it again?
·
Hopelessness
is never from God. It is a lie and a deception. He is the God of hope.
Challenging Ideas Of Low Locus of Control
·
Is
there one single thing you CAN do to
change things? .
·
Who
is in charge? You, other people, the Devil or God ?
·
Luck
is preparation meeting opportunity. Make your luck by preparing your skills and
seeking opportunities.
·
The
Devil is not in control. Resist the Devil and He will flee. (James 4:7)
·
You
are not God - so you don't have to be responsible for everything. However you
are you and you do have some responsibilities. Fulfill those and let God handle
the rest of the Universe.
Challenging Ideas Of Pervasive Evil
·
You
are not totally sinful if you are worried about sinning. Totally sinful people
are unconcerned about sinning.
·
Are
all politicians corrupt? Was Ghandi corrupt? Was Abraham Lincoln corrupt? Are
there really no good churches? Not even one? Is absolutely everyone wrong in
their theology?
·
Has
the redeeming work of Christ accomplished nothing in 2000 years? Has he not
created some good in some corner of the world?
·
Is
the Devil so powerful that he can ruin everything? Cannot God preserve some
things that are good and beautiful? Cannot one wildflower be excellent in
beauty?
·
Cannot
God make all things beautiful in their time? (Ecclesiastes 3:11) Can He not
make you a wonder and a glory? (Romans 8:28-31)
Challenging Ideas That
Everything That Goes Wrong Is Your Personal Fault
·
Have
you noticed that sometimes you think people are rejecting you when in fact they
are just busy or having a bad day? Might you be exaggerating the degree of rejection? Maybe its not that bad.
·
Is
it really you at fault? Could it just be the circumstances or the other people?
·
When
thinking about yourself stop using "absolute" terminology including
words such as: must, have to, always, never, and totally. They are rarely true.
One mistake does not make you a "total failure".
·
When
there is a problem list those factors you can control and also list those
factors that you cannot control. Leave
those outside your control to other people or even to God. Do not feel personally responsible for
things you cannot control. Then feel free to responsibly and wisely tackle
those things you can do.
·
Cease
seeing yourself as being at the center of the Universe with so many things
spinning around you. Be content to just be one of God's creatures, a son or
daughter with a few assigned tasks to do.
Renewing Transcendent Spiritual Focus
·
We
walk by faith not by sight. Do not let visible things such as bills and
criticism be the only reality.
·
Expect
great things from God. Attempt great things for God. (Carey). Read Hebrews 11 & Matthew 6
·
Faith
is often "more caught than taught" so hang around people who are full
of faith.
·
Have
you drifted away from faith? Have you been deeply disappointed with God? Would
it help to talk to a good pastor or Christian counselor?
·
Are
there genuine concerns about the canon of Scripture, miracles, evolution etc?
Get some material and investigate your doubts and find answers to your genuine
intellectual questions.
Believing In The Goodness of
God
·
Look
at the goodness of God and how He provides for the birds. As a friend of mine
says she has "never seen a skinny sparrow". If God is good to
sparrows - then how much more good will He do for you!
·
Remember
all the Lord has done for you. Make a list of His goodness and remind yourself
of the things He has done. Bring to mind His past love of you and remember He
never changes! He is faithful!
·
Spend
some time in Psalm 23 and Romans 8. Sing hymns, put on Christian music.
·
Examine
your background for things like deprivation, cruelty and disappointment. Are you projecting your experiences - particularly of your
father/parents onto God? Try and separate the two so that you can see God for
all He truly is in His constant lovingkindness and faithfulness. Stand against
those lurking feelings from your past and rebuke them in the name of Jesus.
Maybe even seek counseling.
·
Move
self off center stage. Sometimes we doubt God's goodness because we are
demanding a certain thing - a partner, wealth, the return of a divorced spouse
etc. and He has not answered us yet and we are furious that God is not meeting
our agenda in our time. The goodness of God is bigger than His meeting a single
important demand of yours. Your focus is too narrow. While you wait for your
answer to prayer notice how He sends you beautiful days and good friends and
daily bread. Cultivate thankfulness for what you do have instead of focusing on
what you do not have.
Coming Up With Your Own
Bottle of Perspective Restorer
Cognitive
therapists have come up with a general process for giving yourself a dose of
perspective restorer. Cognitive therapists believe that underneath our difficult emotions
are thoughts that fuel those emotions. With every painful incident there is a
thought that makes it painful and which keeps the pain ongoing such as “I’ll
never get over this, my life is ruined forever”. When those thoughts are
corrected the emotions lose their power and can be brought under control.
People vary greatly in their underlying thoughts. That is why one person can
just laugh something off and another takes it to heart. Underneath person A is
the thought 'Oh that was nothing…", underneath person B is the thought
"that's so unjust, unfair and horrible..". . Our thoughts are under
our control and as we change them we can also change the emotions that they
produce. For instance if you change your thoughts from “I’ll never get over
this” to “One day I’ll be able to look back on this and laugh” then you create
optimism and give power to your life. Most of the statements that hurt us most
are simply not true. In fact if we take a hard look at them they are nearly
always illogical. Self-talk such as
“Everybody hates me” is generally not true at all. Its painful, its untrue and
it needs to be challenged. Your perspective is your thought on the situation
and like any thought you can change it. As you change it you change the
emotions that result. So you can heal yourself of many painful emotions just by
working out a more truthful, balanced and biblical perspective on life. How can
we do this? The five step process below is summarized from "Feeling Good-
A New Mood Therapy" by David. M. Burns.
1.
Find
a recent incident that caused you some emotional discomfort.
2.
Look
at the feeling - name and write down the feeling.
3.
Try
to find the underlying thought that produced that feeling e.g. "I am
always stupid".
4.
Dispute
the thought with facts, Scripture, logic and common sense until you come up
with a more functional perspective on the event.
5.
Write down the new feeling that comes with the new explanation.
Lets
apply this process to a common Christian situation - rejection at the door of the church:
Incident: Rob goes to shake the hand
of the pastor after church but the pastor abruptly turns away because he has
just caught sight of the church treasurer who wants a check signed. The pastor
gives one of those insincere "fake smiles" as he does so. Rob feels
discounted and hurt and is depressed and angry. However Rob realizes he may be
over-reacting and thinks maybe a dose of perspective restorer is needed so he gets out his
spiritual journal and starts scribbling…
Name The Feeling: Rob writes in his journal -
"I feel rejected, hurt, discounted, yes that's the word discounted - like
I didn't count, like I don't matter and I have been at that church for five
years!"
Find The Underlying Thought:
He
deliberately discounted me and despite the fact that I have been at that church
for five years I was treated like a nobody.
Dispute The Thought: Yes it was inconsiderate and
fake but it wasn't that bad. Most of the time he is polite to me and I need not
take things so personally. It was a mistake by him but it doesn’t make me
valueless or unimportant. I am important whether or not the pastor pays
attention to me. God thinks I am important enough to love, save and die for -
that's enough for me. I'll go back and try again next week.
Write Down The New Feeling: I feel much more calm and
balanced and I am surprised that I reacted so much! Boy can I be over-sensitive
sometimes. Glad I gave myself a dose of perspective restorer! I will try again next week.
Well
that's about as far as the best secular approaches can take us. Cognitive
psychotherapy like the work of Beck, Seligman, Burns, Ellis and many others is very good and is generally quite
compatible with a biblical approach. It offers real relief from emotional pain
however it only "goes so far".
It cannot open our eyes to spiritual realities nor can it produce the
sudden whole-of -person perspective changes that the Holy Spirit and Scripture can. To go deeper
still in changing our perspective we must turn to that which is uniquely
spiritual and biblical.
The Perspective Of Your Soul
There
are three “places” in the inner man that can have a perspective on life.
Firstly there is the mind, the rational part of us, that we have just discussed
and which can be addressed logically. Secondly there is the perspective of the
spirit, how we perceive life in and with the spirit and how prophets see the
world. That will be discussed in the next chapter. Thirdly there is the soul. The
soul is the place of life and joy and personhood and subjective judgments and
valuations. Our soul quickened by the spirit is what makes us a living being.
The soul is also a place of unruly and temporary
emotions of daily frustrations, of falling in love, of the joy of a good meal
or a wonderful sunset, the smile at a catchy tune, the sentiments at a movie.
It can be a place of tempestuous emotional storms that need to be stilled. The
soul can be up one minute and down the next. [In contrast the spirit is a place
of grand and timeless emotions, of great joys and piercing sorrows. We shall
discuss this in the next chapter.]
Bringing
the stormy world of the soul under control is one of the great tasks of the
Christian life and results in what the Bible calls peace. Peace is when the
soul is in the state that God wants it to be in. Peace can be brought to the
soul, which is subjective, through things such as a sunset or music of which
William Congreve said “Music has charms to sooth the savage breast” and which
seemed to work for King Saul. However such methods are morally neutral and do
not form character or do anything much for us in the long run. We need
something better. Pure logic does not quite work with the soul to the extent
that it does with the mind. “For the heart has reasons that the mind never
knows”.
The
law of the soul is the law of likeness. Our souls become like the souls of
people we love, admire or emulate or people we respect, see as authoritative,
and obey. That is why children become like parents, disciples like their
masters and dogs like their owners. Adoration and authority mold the soul. We
become like Jesus through loving and obeying Jesus. Thus I have found four
methods to work in bringing peace to the soul and giving it a dose of
perspective restorer. Christo-Centric Worship, Self-Exhortation, Positive
Confession Of Scripture (in its proper context) - and Scripture Memory.
Worship, praise and adoration of Jesus mould the soul into a Christ-like shape. Just like a married couple that adore each other become like each other, just like a young lad that adores his father walks like his Dad and talks like his Dad and wants to grow up like his Dad, just like faithful pooch and the grouch owner sometimes look alike so worship that is focused on Jesus gradually makes us like Him. Worship can also help get our soul’s perspective on life back into line. Here are some extracts from Psalm 73.
(Psalms 73 NKJV)
Truly God is good to Israel, To such as are pure in heart. {2} But as
for me, my feet had almost stumbled; My steps had nearly slipped. {3} For I was
envious of the boastful, When I saw the prosperity of the wicked. …{12} Behold,
these are the ungodly, Who are always at ease; They increase in riches. {13}
Surely I have cleansed my heart in vain, And washed my hands in innocence.
..{16} When I thought how to understand this, It was too painful for me; {17}
Until I went into the sanctuary of God; Then I understood their end. {18}
Surely You set them in slippery places; You cast them down to destruction. {19}
Oh, how they are brought to desolation, as in a moment! They are utterly
consumed with terrors…{21} Thus my heart was grieved, And I was vexed in my
mind. {22} I was so foolish and ignorant; I was like a beast before You….{27}
For indeed, those who are far from You shall perish; You have destroyed all
those who desert You for harlotry. {28} But it is good for me to draw near to
God; I have put my trust in the Lord GOD, That I may declare all Your works.
The Psalm reflects a time of instability and spiritual crisis. The Psalmist says "my feet had almost slipped", "it was too painful for me", "my heart was grieved", "I was like a brute beast before you'. He had lost his spiritual perspective, he was in deep emotional pain, he was envying the wealth and success of the wicked and he thought it was futile to be righteous. He was on the verge of giving up.
The turning point comes when he enters the temple and in God's presence sees the fate of the wicked as it truly is - precarious. After this the Psalmist confesses his folly and rejoices in God saying "it is good to draw near to God". The act of worship was the critical turning point in the spiritual crisis. By fixing his mind on God, adoring Him and coming into contact with spiritual realities his soul and spirit were healed of the turmoil within and a proper perspective on life returned.
By worshipping God, his own perception of reality was changed in three areas. He changed his perceptions about the world, himself and God. Instead of perceiving the wicked as prospering he now saw them as on the brink of destruction. Instead of seeing his behavior as rational and justified he now saw it as wrong and foolish. Instead of seeing God as not rewarding him he turns and says “surely it is good to draw near to God”. True worship restored the Psalmists to a right perspective on his faith.
True worship works. Idolatry does not work. Idolatry creates emotional catastrophe and the soul becomes darkened, limited, superstitious and unstable. If we worship an idol our soul is lowered to the level of the thing we adore be it a statue, a rock, a tree or a fast car. So our worship must be of the Living God, in and through Jesus Christ, in the power of the Holy Spirit. Worship in Spirit and in truth works because we are designed right from Creation to experience life and peace when our mind is stayed on God and we behold the true God in adoration and become like our Father in Heaven.
With
all that is available today it is quite possible to have true worship at home with reading the Bible,
a good cassette and a few friends. Prayer and worship do not need to be in a
certain building on a certain day but they do need to be in Spirit and in
truth. Certain practices can help us to cultivate an atmosphere of true worship
in our daily life. I do not wish to be too prescriptive or legalistic as we do
have a great deal of freedom in Christ but no matter how free we are we do need
to be stayed on God. My personal practice is to have times of prayer and
meditation in the morning and in the evening. I also take “saying grace” quite
seriously. I always pray with meals and refocus myself on God. As I work I may
have some Christian music playing in the background. I also find great
assistance from reading carefully selected high quality Christian books. There
are other practices as well but I think you get the idea. The constant
cultivation of the presence of God based on fixing one’s mind on the truth of
God and adoring His glorious nature is one of life’s secrets for maintaining a
sweet perspective and right perception of life.
May
I also add that I would like to see a greater focus on Jesus Christ not just on
doctrine , or on ethics or even on good Christian psychology. The pulpit in
particular should preach Christ crucified and regularly take the congregation
to behold Jesus in His life, ministry and inner nature. This is the most
powerfully transformational of all preaching because it portrays Christ to our
souls most clearly.
Self-Exhortation
The
following section is based on an excellent sermon of Dr. Daniel Tappeiner that
I had the privilege of hearing while attending the Union Church of Manila. His surprising claim
was that you can interact with your soul and instruct it to take on certain
emotional states. His text was Psalm 42 where the Psalmist, a son of
Korah, became aware of his emotional state and eventually used self-exhortation
to conquer his despondent mood.
A
two-stage process is used of a) questioning the value of the emotion b) then
commanding it to change. First the Psalmist questions the value of his present
emotional state that was hindering his ability to lead the throng in the
worship procession. "Why are you
downcast O my soul”. After that the psalmist gives his soul a repeated command
to change mood and perspective "hope in God…for I shall yet praise Him"
. This eventually causes him to triumph and function again in ministry. In other words the Psalmist did not just
accept his dysfunctional emotional state but corrected it by speaking to his
soul quite firmly and brining it to a functional and biblical resolution.
As speaking to yourself or addressing one's
soul sounds rather strange and building a whole therapy on one Psalm is a bit
tenuous I have I searched to see if there is any further Scriptural validation.
There is a surprising amount! I have located a number of bible references where
people interact directly with their soul and some of these are listed below.
These interactions include speaking to one’s soul or commanding the soul to do something. Seven direct references are
listed below and there are many more in a similar vein especially in Psalms
(quite a few on the familiar theme "bless the Lord O my soul.." ).
(Judges 5:21 NKJV... O my
soul, march on in strength!
(Psalms 25:1 NKJV) To You, O LORD, I lift up my soul.
(Psalms 42:4-6 NKJV) When I remember these things, I pour out my
soul within me. For I used to go with the multitude; I went with them to the
house of God, With the voice of joy and praise, With a multitude that kept a
pilgrim feast. {5} Why are you cast down, O my soul? And why are you disquieted
within me? Hope in God, for I shall yet praise Him For the help of His
countenance. {6} O my God, my soul is cast down within me; Therefore I will
remember You from the land of the Jordan, And from the heights of Hermon, From
the Hill Mizar. …. Why are you cast
down, O my soul? And why are you disquieted within me? Hope in God; For I shall
yet praise Him, The help of my countenance and my God.
(Psalms 62:5 NKJV) My soul, wait silently for God alone, For my
expectation is from Him.
(Psalms 77:2 NKJV) In the day of my trouble I sought the Lord; My hand was stretched
out in the night without ceasing; My soul refused to be comforted. (implies an attempt to speak to the soul to
comfort it and some interaction with the soul..)
(Psalms 103:1-2
NKJV) Bless the LORD, O my soul; And
all that is within me, bless His holy name! {2} Bless the LORD, O my soul, And
forget not all His benefits:
(Luke 12:19 NKJV) 'And I will say to my soul, "Soul, you
have many goods laid up for many years; take your ease; eat, drink, and be
merry."'
So
we see that here the soul/self is being commanded to: be strong, be lifted up
to God, hope in God, wait silently for God, be comforted, bless God and lastly
(by the rich fool) to take it easy. We are all familiar with talking to
ourselves and even with telling ourselves to cheer up. However Scripture based
self-exhortation is a bit more sophisticated and a lot more powerful.
With
Scripture-based self-exhortation you empower yourself to take charge of your
emotional state and to command it to change by divine authority. You use
authority to mold your soul. When Deborah the prophetess, in Judges 5:21 above,
says "O my soul, march on in strength..' she is not just giving herself a
pep talk! She is celebrating a divine victory over Sisera and is maintaining a
faith position that the God who gave her victory then will continue to give her
victory in the future so she can progress and "march on" with a
confident expectation of God's help and deliverance. Underneath these
exhortations lies a deep relationship of God.
So
here is the process for changing your perspective by biblically-based self-exhortation:
1.
Awareness: Become aware of the state
of your soul "why are you downcast".
2.
Questioning: Decide whether it is godly
and functional. If it is not godly or functional then don't accept it. Decide
it must be firmly corrected and brought into alignment with the Kingdom..
3.
Go Upstairs: Take your soul before the
throne of God either directly or in prayer and worship.
4.
Firmly Command The Change: Command your soul to change
to a more biblical perspective within the background of God's will and covenant
purposes.
5.
Repeat
as necessary
Lets
take an everyday case. You feel depressed
for no good reason. You just feel lonely and blue and you start questioning the
goodness of God. You find yourself becoming
out of sorts spiritually and losing your true perspective.
Awareness: "I'm feeling a bit
depressed and blue and I’m questioning
God..".
Questioning: Is this useful and spiritual? No! It's useless and thinking this
way is damaging my relationship with God.
Go Upstairs: Lord I come before your throne and I admit that I am out of sorts
and depressed and that my soul is not
fixed on God as it should be.
Firmly Issue
the Command To Change: "Soul why are you this way! Stop it! Turn and focus on God.
Rejoice in the Lord always! That’s an order!"
That
may seem a little strange and dramatic but believe it or not- it works. Painful emotion that is off-center and
inappropriate, that does not flow from peace, is often an indicator that our soul
is not properly tuned into God, not fixed on the Spirit as it should be. This
process is just taking your soul back to its right position –
that of being stayed on God. Once it is stayed on God then life and peace will
flow in accordance with the promises of God in Romans 8:11 and Isaiah 26:3.
Lets do another, this time much longer demonstration with the common, but very
painful problem of feelings of inferiority:
Awareness: "I am feeling inferior
and the pain is intense"
Questioning: "Why am I feeling
inferior?" There is no good reason in the here and now for me to feel
inferior, its just messing up my emotions and spilling over into my
relationships. I can see that its just a hangover from the past. I can also see
that it is not relevant today, it is
not true today and it is not functional today".
Go Upstairs: O Lord I come before You
now. I know that this inferiority is a lie and that you love me but just now it
feels very, very true. Bring to mind
Your Word and your truth so I can stay my mind on You. There is no
condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus! (Romans 8:1) God does not
condemn me and He is the only true judge. In fact He regards me as His son!
Some people may think that I am inferior to them and I may even be not as good
looking or important or powerful as they are but that does not make me inferior
in my soul, in my inner self, in my true self. I have received the grace
of God, I am seated in heavenly realms
with Christ Jesus. God has chosen to
display me as a trophy of grace (Matthew 11:11-13, Ephesians 2:6, 1:20 , 1
Corinthians 6:1-3 ). I am not inferior! I am in the kingdom of God! I will rule
with Jesus (Rev 2). Praise the Lord.
Firmly Issue
The Command:
Now listen to God o my soul! Listen to his word and stop your lying and
grumbling. Stop telling me I am unworthy. Its not true. Soul I instruct you to
believe the truth of the gospel and to hope in God and I instruct you to be
believe in the righteousness you have received. If you have received
righteousness you are righteous and if you are righteous you are not inferior!
Believe in God and rejoice!
Its
not just a mental exercise its an almost
physical taking hold of one’s self and changing one’s orientation to
life. The person stands outside
themselves and their pain and their circumstances and makes a faith decision
about what they will believe and how they will feel. They then decide to
enforce their faith decision by referring to God’s Word and applying the full
strength of their will. Thus the above process moves the person from pain to
peace by almost forcing their soul to accept the truth of God’s Word. Dr.
Daniel Tappeiner recommends walking around as you do this, saying it out loud
and with energy. It seems to take energy to move an out of balance soul back
into balance.
Now
I know that sounds a bit weird, all I ask is that you try it in private and see
how it goes for you. It does work, even if it is unconventional. Taking
yourself in hand (in a Scriptural way) is good for you.
Positive Confession Of Scripture
In Its Proper Context
With
this method we correct an out of balance perspective by again using the authority of the Scriptures. In
this case we vigorously and repeatedly assert out loud the truth of Scripture
in context. As we do this we are fixing our mind on God and bringing peace to
our soul. Unfortunately some have taken this practice to foolish and
materialistic extremes. They confess Scriptures like a magic amulet to bring
good fortune. Lets leave that version of this practice well behind and focus on
how to use positive confession in a way that brings emotional transformation.
So
here is how to engage in bible based positive confession:
·
Acknowledge
the problem.
·
Search
the Bible and find appropriate and in context Scriptures.
·
Repeat
them out loud declaring them to be true.
Lets
just look at how we can use the positive confession of Scripture to deal with
an inappropriate and overly anxious life perspective - that of the chronic
worrier.
Stage One: Acknowledge the problem “Lord I have a
problem with worrying, I worry over every little thing.”
Stage Two: Do your research and find out what the
Scriptures say about worrying:
(Psalms 37:7-8 NKJV) Rest in the LORD, and wait patiently for
Him; Do not fret because of him who prospers in his way, Because of the man who
brings wicked schemes to pass. {8} Cease from anger, and forsake wrath; Do not
fret; it only causes harm.
(Proverbs 12:25
NKJV) Anxiety in the heart of man
causes depression, But a good word makes it glad.
(Matthew 6:25 NKJV) "Therefore I say to you, do not worry
about your life, what you will eat or what you will drink; nor about your body,
what you will put on. Is not life more than food and the body more than
clothing? ….."Which of you by worrying can add one cubit to his stature?
{28} "So why do you worry about clothing? Consider the lilies of the
field, how they grow: they neither toil nor spin;…. "Therefore do not
worry, saying, 'What shall we eat?' or 'What shall we drink?' or 'What shall we
wear?' …. "Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry
about its own things. Sufficient for the day is its own trouble.
(Matthew 8:26 NKJV) But He said to them, "Why are you
fearful, O you of little faith?" Then He arose and rebuked the winds and
the sea, and there was a great calm.
(Matthew 10:19 NKJV) "But when they deliver you up, do not
worry about how or what you should speak. For it will be given to you in that
hour what you should speak;
(Luke 10:41 NKJV) And Jesus answered and said to her,
"Martha, Martha, you are worried and troubled about many things.
(Philippians 4:6
NKJV) Be anxious for nothing, but in
everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be
made known to God;
Stage
Three: Turn this into a positive confession or self-exhortation by quoting the
Scriptures or rephrasing it in our own
words and applying it directly to our life and circumstances.:
Repetition
and will-power are the keys to positive confession as it is with the following
technique of Scripture Memory. You are deliberately willing your self to grasp
the truths of God and “dinning it into yourself”. In a way it is a humble thing
to do because you are acknowledging your own unruly nature and the necessity of
taking hold of it almost “by force” and submitting it to the truth of God’s
Word. This acknowledgement of a problem, the biblical research, the humility and
wisdom to take one’s nature in hand and the power of being focused on the
truths of God make in context confession of Scripture a very powerful tool for
correction of our perspective and renewal of our perceptions.
Scripture Memory
Scripture
memory is a way we can fix our minds on the truths of God’s Word until it
“sticks” and is memorized. In the process it develops personal discipline!
Scripture memory can make a very useful contribution to having a renewed mind,
an informed soul and a more stable emotional life. It is also a valuable
perspective restorer and well-memorized verses can
be helpful all through one's lifetime. Navigators and other organizations
produce Scripture memory flash cards that are quite helpful.
Concluding The Chapter
We
have seen that our perceptions of reality, and our perspective on life, have a
lot to do with how we react emotionally. We can restore a more functional and
godly perspective through changing the explanatory style that builds up our view of
events and how life works. We can also change the way we perceive life by
correcting the wrong beliefs that underlie painful emotions. On a deeper level
we can change the perception of our soul and its stance on life by bringing it
into line so it is fixed on God through bible based self-exhortation,
Christo-centric worship, positive confession and Scripture memory. As we do these things we will find that our emotions are more constant
and more godly and that we experience more and more life and peace and less and
less depression and anxiety. We will be stayed on God with our mind set on the
Spirit with all the blessings this brings. But there is a deeper perception -
spiritual perception - and we will deal with that in
the next chapter.
Perception
- In And By The Spirit
(Mark 2:8 NKJV)
But immediately, when Jesus perceived in His spirit that they reasoned
thus within themselves, He said to them, "Why do you reason about these
things in your hearts?
(Acts 17:16 NKJV)
Now while Paul waited for them at Athens, his spirit was provoked within
him when he saw that the city was given over to idols.
The
spirit is the place of intuition, dreams, visions and revelation and of the deepest intimacy and
the most direct kind of knowledge. It is the deepest part of our humanity and
it is the place where we "know that we know..". The primary functions of the spirit are
wisdom and perception and knowledge.
The
Bible often talks about our spiritual eyes and ears and of people's ability or
inability to perceive spiritual things. The spiritual man of 1 Corinthians
2:10-16 is the person who is most at
home perceiving things spiritually and accurately. In a few places the NT makes
the seemingly strange assertion that it would be a good idea if all Christians
were prophets. What it most probably means is that all Christians are to become
people of accurate spiritual perception and have a deep intuition of
spiritual reality.
[This
includes sensing what is God's will in the immediate situation like the New
Testament prophet Agabus did (Acts 11:28, 21:11,12). The considerable
difference between OT prophets and NT prophets is well brought out by the
systematic theologian Wayne Grudem in his book "The Gift Of
Prophecy". Again I will just refer the interested reader to this work and
move on.]
What
is clear is that Christians are to move from a place of very obscure spiritual
perception prior to conversion to a place of abundant and accurate spiritual
perception.
Prior
to conversion – darkness:
(1 Corinthians 2:14
NKJV) But the natural man does not
receive the things of the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness to him; nor
can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned.
(2 Corinthians 3:13-16
NKJV) unlike Moses, who put a veil
over his face so that the children of Israel could not look steadily at the end
of what was passing away. {14} But their minds were blinded. For until this day
the same veil remains unlifted in the reading of the Old Testament, because the
veil is taken away in Christ. {15} But even to this day, when Moses is read, a
veil lies on their heart. {16} Nevertheless when one turns to the Lord, the
veil is taken away.
(2 Corinthians 4:3-4
NKJV) But even if our gospel is veiled,
it is veiled to those who are perishing, {4} whose minds the god of this age
has blinded, who do not believe, lest the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ,
who is the image of God, should shine on them.
(Ephesians 4:18
NKJV) having their understanding
darkened, being alienated from the life of God, because of the ignorance that
is in them, because of the blindness of their heart;
After
conversion - universal and abundant
spiritual revelation:
(Hebrews 8:10-12
NKJV) "For this is the covenant
that I will make with the house of Israel after those days, says the LORD: I
will put My laws in their mind and write them on their hearts; and I will be
their God, and they shall be My people. {11} "None of them shall teach his
neighbor, and none his brother, saying, 'Know the LORD,' for all shall know Me,
from the least of them to the greatest of them. {12} "For I will be
merciful to their unrighteousness, and their sins and their lawless deeds I
will remember no more."
(1 John 2:20 NKJV) But you have an anointing from the Holy One,
and you know all things.
(1 John 2:27 NKJV) But the anointing which you have received
from Him abides in you, and you do not need that anyone teach you; but as the
same anointing teaches you concerning all things, and is true, and is not a
lie, and just as it has taught you, you will abide in Him.
(Acts 2:16-18 NKJV) "But this is what was spoken by the
prophet Joel: {17} 'And it shall come to pass in the last days, says God, That
I will pour out of My Spirit on all flesh; Your sons and your daughters shall
prophesy, Your young men shall see visions, Your old men shall dream dreams.
{18} And on My menservants and on My maidservants I will pour out My Spirit in
those days; And they shall prophesy.
(1 Corinthians 14:31
NKJV) For you can all prophesy one by
one, that all may learn and all may be encouraged.
This
is truly a vast transition in our nature. We go from being spiritually blind and without understanding, to
being able to sense spiritual realities and both understand and enjoy them. We
may even sense them so keenly that we are able to edify the Church. A whole new way of seeing things is opened
up. This is variously called "being quickened in spirit",
"having the eyes of your heart enlightened." or having one's
spiritual eyes and ears “opened” to spiritual reality.
This work of the Holy Spirit that is quite independent of
human intellect (see 1 Corinthians chapters 1-4 ). Some very intelligent people
are spiritually blind while some simple folk grasp the things of the Kingdom.
Jesus rejoiced in seeing simple people grasping great spiritual realities by
faith alone and being obviously taught by God.
(Matthew 11:25 NKJV) At that time Jesus answered and said,
"I thank You, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, that You have hidden these
things from the wise and prudent and have revealed them to babes.
(Matthew 16:17 NKJV) Jesus answered and said to him,
"Blessed are you, Simon Bar-Jonah, for flesh and blood has not revealed
this to you, but My Father who is in heaven.
Thus
true spiritual perception which gives poise and balance
to life and underlies true emotional stability is a gift of God. While
spiritual perception is a sovereign work of God it can also be gained through
prayer (James 1:5-8) and Paul prays for spiritual insight to be granted to Christians
in many of the famous prayers in his epistles.
(Ephesians 1:18
NKJV) the eyes of your understanding
being enlightened; that you may know what is the hope of His calling, what are
the riches of the glory of His inheritance in the saints,
(Philippians 1:9
NKJV) And this I pray, that your love
may abound still more and more in knowledge and all discernment,
(Colossians 1:9 NKJV) For this reason we also, since the day we
heard it, do not cease to pray for you, and to ask that you may be filled with the
knowledge of His will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding;
(Colossians 2:2
NKJV) that their hearts may be
encouraged, being knit together in love, and attaining to all riches of the
full assurance of understanding, to the knowledge of the mystery of God, both
of the Father and of Christ,
He
asks for "all wisdom and spiritual understanding" for the Colossians
and goes on His knees for it. The first place the biblical exegete must start
is on his or her knees asking the Lord to break open the word of God in all
wisdom and spiritual understanding. Commentaries have their place but they are
ineffective if the ability to perceive spiritual things is not there to start
with.
Spiritual Sensitivity and EQ
Well
what has spiritual sensitivity got to do with our emotions and
our biblical EQ?:
1.
Spiritual
sensitivity opens our eyes to God’s love and thus allows us to be solidly
grounded as persons..
(Ephesians 3:16-19 NKJV) that He would grant you, according to the
riches of His glory, to be strengthened with might through His Spirit in the
inner man, {17} that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith; that you,
being rooted and grounded in love, {18} may be able to comprehend with all the
saints what is the width and length and depth and height; {19} to know the love
of Christ which passes knowledge; that you may be filled with all the fullness
of God.
To be so able to perceive the love of Christ that we
are rooted and grounded in love and even filled up to all the fullness of God (that stretches the mind, O God
make it come true!) must be the ultimate in emotional stability.
2.
Spiritual
perception gives us the right spiritual passions such as Jesus beholding
Jerusalem and seeing it with his spirit ,and reacting with compassion. With
right spiritual perception we see the lost, our church and
our city and our nation through the eyes of Jesus Christ. We will experience
the vast range of spiritual emotions from weeping over the lost to indignation
over cruelty and hardness of heart. Whatever our emotion - it will be the
Spirit's emotion based on the Spirit's perception of that situation.
3.
Spiritual
sensitivity allows us to be grounded in faith and in the spiritual realm not on
sight and human reason and sentiment alone. (For we walk by faith not by
sight.) Moses was able be steadfast in the face of threats from a tyrannical
Pharaoh because of his special spiritual perception. Hebrews 11:27 NKJV) By faith he forsook Egypt, not fearing the wrath of the king; for he
endured as seeing Him who is invisible. Just as Moses did not fear the Pharaoh and all the
pursuing chariots of Egypt because he could "see Him who is
invisible" so spiritual perception allows us to discern situations so that
fear and anxiety is removed from them. Under pressure and trials we still see
the Presence of an all-loving God. A God who is working all things together for
our good. (Romans 8:28).
4.
Occasionally
people of high spiritual sensitivity will be granted a revelation that turns the whole situation
around and has an effect not just on their emotions but the emotions of all
involved. For instance Paul's revelation from God during the storm at sea:
(Acts 27:19-26 NKJV) On the third day we threw the ship's tackle
overboard with our own hands. {20} Now when neither sun nor stars appeared for
many days, and no small tempest beat on us, all hope that we would be saved was
finally given up….. {22} "And now I urge you to take heart, for there will
be no loss of life among you, but only of the ship. {23} "For there stood
by me this night an angel of the God to whom I belong and whom I serve, {24}
"saying, 'Do not be afraid, Paul; you must be brought before Caesar; and
indeed God has granted you all those who sail with you.' {25} "Therefore
take heart, men, for I believe God that it will be just as it was told me. {26}
"However, we must run aground on a certain island."…. (Acts 27:33-36
NKJV) And as day was about to dawn,
Paul implored them all to take food, saying, "Today is the fourteenth day
you have waited and continued without food, and eaten nothing. {34}
"Therefore I urge you to take nourishment, for this is for your survival,
since not a hair will fall from the head of any of you." {35} And when he
had said these things, he took bread and gave thanks to God in the presence of
them all; and when he had broken it he began to eat. {36} Then they were all
encouraged, and also took food themselves.
The
situation in verses 19 & 20 is such utter despair that "all hope that
we would be saved was given up". Then in verse 22 an angel appears with a
revelation from God to spiritually sensitive Paul. Paul's faith in this
revelation caused him to be able to encourage others so they ate, acted
appropriately during the crisis and had hope. Thus Paul's openness to the
spiritual realm made him able to receive a revelation that had a profound
effect on the lives of all aboard.
Errors in Spiritual
Perception And Their Effect On A Christian's Emotional Life
I
discussing errors in perception am not talking about errors in doctrine - that will be covered in the chapter on
beliefs. This chapter is on perception, viewpoints, world-view, perspectives etc. that underlie our beliefs. For instance errors in
spiritual perception include blindness - but the
resultant beliefs of such blindness are varied. If you are blind to God and His
salvation through Christ, then false beliefs of all shapes and sizes, can arise
in the darkness within you. Thus the disorder of perception lays the foundation
for the disorder in belief. In this section we will deal with what happens when
our human spirit goes awry and how this distorts our whole perspective on life.
Inability To Perceive The Obvious: This is called " a spirit
of stupor" and implies that the hearers are dull to the point of
senselessness to spiritual thing. Those addressed in the epistle to the Hebrews
were called "dull of hearing" and the synagogue Jews were warned by
Paul:
(Acts 28:25-28 NKJV)
…"The Holy Spirit spoke rightly through Isaiah the prophet to
our fathers, {26} "saying, 'Go to this people and say: "Hearing you
will hear, and shall not understand; And seeing you will see, and not perceive;
{27} For the hearts of this people have grown dull. Their ears are hard of
hearing, And their eyes they have closed, Lest they should see with their eyes
and hear with their ears, Lest they should understand with their hearts and
turn, So that I should heal them."' {28} "Therefore let it be known to
you that the salvation of God has been sent to the Gentiles, and they will hear
it!"
(Romans 11:8 NKJV) Just as it is written: "God has given
them a spirit of stupor, Eyes that they should not see And ears that they
should not hear, To this very day."
People
in the "spirit of stupor" fail to "get it". They live life
with practically no true spiritual awareness though they may be outwardly
religious. If they are religious they tend to be stubborn and quite rejecting
of anyone who has genuine spiritual experience. Emotionally they are at ground zero with a purely human
perspective on life.
Paying Attention To
Deceptive Spirits: Just as the Holy Spirit is our Teacher , Satan is our
deceiver! Spirits can and do tell lies and Christians who pay attention to
them can become unstable both spiritually and emotionally and be drawn away
from the faith.
(1 Timothy 4:1-2
NKJV) Now the Spirit expressly says
that in latter times some will depart from the faith, giving heed to deceiving
spirits and doctrines of demons, {2} speaking lies in hypocrisy, having their
own conscience seared with a hot iron,
(2 Corinthians 11:4
NKJV) For if he who comes preaches
another Jesus whom we have not preached, or if you receive a different spirit
which you have not received, or a different gospel which you have not accepted;
you may well put up with it!
(Matthew 24:4-13
NKJV) And Jesus answered and said to
them: "Take heed that no one deceives you. {5} "For many will come in
My name, saying, 'I am the Christ,' and will deceive many. …{11} "Then
many false prophets will rise up and deceive many. {12} "And because
lawlessness will abound, the love of many will grow cold. {13} "But he who
endures to the end shall be saved.
(2 Thessalonians 2:3-13
NKJV) Let no one deceive you by any
means; for that Day will not come unless the falling away comes first, and the
man of sin is revealed, the son of perdition, {4} who opposes and exalts himself
above all that is called God or that is worshiped, so that he sits as God in
the temple of God, showing himself that he is God. …{9} The coming of the
lawless one is according to the working of Satan, with all power, signs, and
lying wonders, {10} and with all unrighteous deception among those who perish,
because they did not receive the love of the truth, that they might be saved.
{11} And for this reason God will send them strong delusion, that they should
believe the lie, {12} that they all may be condemned who did not believe the
truth but had pleasure in unrighteousness.
(Revelation 16:13-14
NKJV) And I saw three unclean spirits
like frogs coming out of the mouth of the dragon, out of the mouth of the
beast, and out of the mouth of the false prophet. {14} For they are spirits of
demons, performing signs, which go out to the kings of the earth and of the
whole world, to gather them to the battle of that great day of God Almighty.
Spiritual
deception involves an opposite kind of error to hardness of heart. Those who
are hard of heart miss seeing the good while those who are spiritually deceived
miss seeing the evil. The carnal nature
of false teachers, their lies, immorality and lust for money is overlooked. The
deceived person does not love the truth and does not really seek it. (2 Thessalonians
2:10,11). Rather they pursue signs and wonders and good feelings. The promises
of wealth and freedom mean more to them than finding out the truth about God
and His Son Jesus Christ. They do not
stop and look at the leader’s character , the fruit on the tree, and instead
they follow wolves in sheep's clothing. (see Matthew 7, John 10, Acts 20 and 2
Peter). Those who are deceived in turn deceive others becoming increasingly
unstable. They are described as "clouds" and "tossed to and fro" even downright
bad "with eyes full of adultery.." (see 2 Peter 2:12 and following
for some colorful descriptions) The
cure for spiritual deception is to know and love God's Word, pursue truth,
check basic doctrine and character and to test the spirits as in 1 John 4:1-5.
Spiritual Inflation
This
term “spiritual inflation” was coined by Carl Jung but has good biblical
antecedents. It describes the overpowering effect of suddenly encountering the
spiritual realm on certain individuals who had generally not encountered much
of the spiritual realm previously. Lacking a proper grounding in their inner
being for spiritual things they become totally carried away with notions of
spirituality. They almost seem to blow up like balloon, becoming overly obsessed with "being
spiritual", and are often grandiose, clamorous, and frequently pompous.
Their utterances, which they esteem as being of great value, are generally of
dubious worth. An elegant and brief description is found in Colossians of
people who are "puffed up". (In other words
"inflated"!). They are wordy but powerless. Saying they know more of
Christ, they are actually completely out of touch with Him. completely! They
place their faith in "what they know" about spiritual things – which,
according to Paul, indicates they actually know nothing at all. For it is not
knowledge that justifies but faith working through love. Not infrequently they
are also licentious in their morality. The Corinthians also seem to also have
had a problem with spiritual inflation and were overly confident in their
knowledge of spiritual things.
(Colossians 2:17-19 NKJV)
{18} Let no one cheat you of your reward, taking delight in false humility and
worship of angels, intruding into those things which he has not seen, vainly
puffed up by his fleshly mind, {19} and not holding fast to the Head, from whom
all the body, nourished and knit together by joints and ligaments, grows with
the increase that is from God.
(1 Corinthians 4:17-20
NKJV) {19} But I will come to you shortly, if the Lord wills, and I will know,
not the word of those who are puffed up, but the power. {20} For the kingdom of
God is not in word but in power.
(1 Corinthians 5:1-2
NKJV) It is actually reported that
there is sexual immorality among you, and such sexual immorality as is not even
named among the Gentiles; that a man has his father's wife! {2} And you are
puffed up, and have not rather mourned, that he who has done this deed might be
taken away from among you.
(1 Corinthians 8:1-2 NKJV) Now concerning things offered to idols: We
know that we all have knowledge. Knowledge puffs up, but love edifies. {2} And
if anyone thinks that he knows anything, he knows nothing yet as he ought to know.
Being Spiritually Enslaved
To Rules And Regulations: This is known as a spirit
of bondage and slavery:
(Romans 8:15 NKJV)
For you did not receive the spirit of bondage again to fear, but you
received the Spirit of adoption by whom we cry out, "Abba, Father."
(Galatians
4:6-11 NKJV) And because you are sons,
God has sent forth the Spirit of His Son into your hearts, crying out,
"Abba, Father!" {7} Therefore you are no longer a slave but a son,
and if a son, then an heir of God through Christ. {8} But then, indeed, when you did not know God, you served those
which by nature are not gods. {9} But now after you have known God, or rather
are known by God, how is it that you turn again to the weak and beggarly
elements, to which you desire again to be in bondage? {10} You observe days and
months and seasons and years. {11} I am afraid for you, lest I have labored for
you in vain.
The
spirit of bondage is characterized by a desire to observe "days and months
and seasons and years" to take on aspects of the Law such as circumcision
and to be much concerned with dietary regulations and minor laws such as the
Sabbath. (Also see Colossians 2 and 1 Timothy 4 as well as all of Galatians).
This produces a sanctimonious rigidity. It also produces fear , "the
spirit of bondage again to fear…" and a terror of trespassing in even
quite minor matters. This fear can be tremendously destabilizing and in my
experience full-blown phobias are not uncommon in children from legalistic
backgrounds. It is seen at its worst in victims of mind-control cults where
flashbacks occur. In people recovering from spiritual abuse and coming out of
the "spirit of bondage" quite biblical levels of freedom may feel
sinful at first. They nearly always have bouts of fear over "breaking a
rule" no matter how innocent - such as going to a G-rated family movie if
all movies were previously "of the devil".
A Spirit That Lacks Courage
And Assertiveness: Paul calls this is "spirit
of fear" and it is counteracted by stirring up the Spirit
within you and praying for boldness as the church did in Acts 4. It seems to be
most common when there is real danger and persecution and the temptation is to
go easy on preaching the gospel. Emotionally it produces the desire to back out
of God's clear calling on one's life and is a perspective of 'safety
first".
(2 Timothy 1:7 NKJV) For God has not given us a spirit of fear,
but of power and of love and of a sound mind.
(Acts 4:29-31NKJV) "Now, Lord, look on their threats, and
grant to Your servants that with all boldness they may speak Your word, {30}
"by stretching out Your hand to heal, and that signs and wonders may be
done through the name of Your holy Servant Jesus." {31} And when they had
prayed, the place where they were assembled together was shaken; and they were
all filled with the Holy Spirit, and they spoke
the word of God with boldness.
Timidity
seems to have been Timothy's affliction and he is told at various times to
"stir up" the gift that was in him, not to let people despise him, not to be fearful, to suffer hardship
as a good soldier of Christ Jesus and so forth. This exhortation seems to have
worked because Timothy was there through the last, and according to Hebrews
even endured a bout of imprisonment himself.
Other Spiritual Errors
Below
are 22 references to the human spirit going "out of true"
.In each of them the person's perspective on life is deeply affected by their
spiritual affliction. In some cases a spirit of jealousy, in others of ill-will. Others feel that they
are poisoned in their spirit and bitterness colors their world. Some references
seem to be what we would call "moods" and some would hesitate to attribute them to a spiritual cause.
But the ancient Greeks - who invented the term "mood" thought of
moods as inspired and as the work of the spiritual realm. They would even call
on certain spirits when certain moods were desired (see Theocritus
"Idylls"). Moods resemble spirits in that moods tend to come over us
unbidden, dominate us for a while then leave suddenly. There is thus some spiritual
tie up between the human spirit and moods, and that connection sometimes comes
across in these verses. The human spirit is complex and interacts with the
person, with God and with the various entities in the whole spiritual realm. [I
will again duck and weave around the verses below that mention the Lord sending
an evil spirit on someone and just say "Go look up a commentary!".
]The point I want you to get is that our emotions can flow from our human
spirit which can go out of balance due to a wide variety of factors (we will
see four main ones) and that many of these discordant emotions are grounded in
our spiritual perspectives and out of balance perceptions.
1.
A
Spirit of Jealousy: (Numbers 5:14 NKJV) 'if the spirit of jealousy comes upon him
and he becomes jealous of his wife, who has defiled herself; or if the spirit
of jealousy comes upon him and he becomes jealous of his wife, although she has
not defiled herself;
2.
A
Hardened And Obstinate Spirit: (Deuteronomy 2:30
NKJV) "But Sihon king of Heshbon
would not let us pass through, for the LORD your God hardened his spirit and
made his heart obstinate, that He might deliver him into your hand, as it is
this day.
3.
A
Spirit Of Ill-Will: (Judges 9:23 NKJV) God sent a spirit of ill will between
Abimelech and the men of Shechem; and the men of Shechem dealt treacherously
with Abimelech,
4.
A
Sorrowful Spirit: (1 Samuel 1:15 NKJV) And Hannah answered and said, "No, my
lord, I am a woman of sorrowful spirit. I have drunk neither wine nor
intoxicating drink, but have poured out my soul before the LORD.
5.
A
Distressing Spirit : (1 Samuel 16:14-16 NKJV) But the Spirit of the LORD departed from
Saul, and a distressing spirit from the LORD troubled him. {15} And Saul's
servants said to him, "Surely, a distressing spirit from God is troubling
you. {16} "Let our master now command your servants, who are before you,
to seek out a man who is a skillful player on the harp; and it shall be that he
will play it with his hand when the distressing spirit from God is upon you,
and you shall be well."… And so it was, whenever the spirit from God was
upon Saul, that David would take a harp and play it with his hand. Then Saul
would become refreshed and well, and the distressing spirit would depart from
him.
6.
A
Sullen Spirit: (1 Kings 21:5 NKJV) But Jezebel his wife came to him, and said to him, "Why is
your spirit so sullen that you eat no food?"
7.
A
Poisoned Spirit : (Job 6:4 NKJV) For the arrows of the Almighty are within me; My spirit drinks in
their poison; The terrors of God are arrayed against me.
8.
An
Anguished Spirit: (Job 7:11 NKJV) "Therefore I will not restrain my mouth; I will speak in the
anguish of my spirit; I will complain in the bitterness of my soul.
9.
A
Spirit Turned Against God: (Job 15:13 NKJV) That you turn your spirit against God, And let such words go out
of your mouth?
10. A Broken Spirit:
(Job 17:1 NKJV) "My spirit is
broken, My days are extinguished, The grave is ready for me.
11. A Hasty And Compelling Spirit: (Job
32:18 NKJV) For I am full of words; The
spirit within me compels me.
12. An Unfaithful Spirit:
(Psalms 78:8 NKJV) And may not be like
their fathers, A stubborn and rebellious generation, A generation that did not
set its heart aright, And whose spirit was not faithful to God.
13. A Spirit That Is Overwhelmed By Troubles:(Psalms
142:3 NKJV) When my spirit was
overwhelmed within me, Then You knew my path. In the way in which I walk They
have secretly set a snare for me.
14. A Failing Spirit:
(Psalms 143:7 NKJV) Answer me speedily,
O LORD; My spirit fails! Do not hide Your face from me, Lest I be like those
who go down into the pit.
15. A Haughty Spirit:
(Proverbs 16:18 NKJV) Pride goes before
destruction, And a haughty spirit before a fall.
16. An Uncontrolled Spirit:
(Proverbs 25:28 NKJV) Whoever has no
rule over his own spirit Is like a city broken down, without walls.
17. A Perverse Spirit:
(Isaiah 19:14 NKJV) The LORD has
mingled a perverse spirit in her midst; And they have caused Egypt to err in
all her work, As a drunken man staggers in his vomit.
18. A Spirit Of Deep Sleep:
(Isaiah 29:10 NKJV) For the LORD has
poured out on you The spirit of deep sleep, And has closed your eyes, namely,
the prophets; And He has covered your heads, namely, the seers.
19. An Errant Spirit:
(Isaiah 29:24 NKJV) These also who
erred in spirit will come to understanding, And those who complained will learn
doctrine."
20. A Spirit of Heaviness:
(Isaiah 61:3 NKJV) To console those who
mourn in Zion, To give them beauty for ashes, The oil of joy for mourning, The
garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness; That they may be called trees of
righteousness, The planting of the LORD, that He may be glorified."
21. A Grieved Spirit:
(Isaiah 65:14 NKJV) Behold, My servants
shall sing for joy of heart, But you shall cry for sorrow of heart, And wail
for grief of spirit.
22. A Merely Human Spirit:
(Ezekiel 13:3 NKJV) Thus says the Lord
GOD: "Woe to the foolish prophets, who follow their own spirit and have
seen nothing!
This
biblical data may be uncomfortable for many from overly rational backgrounds.
However the realm of the human spirit needs to be explored if we are
to understand the human person. After all our spirit is the deepest part of us.
Without getting lost in all the details lets see if we can draw out a handful
of general principles:
·
The
human spirit has a vast emotional range. It is not a cool, analytical,
emotionless part of the human person. In fact the spirit generates the deepest
and most powerful emotions we know.
·
A
person's fundamental outlook on life flows from their spirit and when the
spirit is affected this affects the actions of the whole person.
·
The
spirit is vulnerable and can be damaged. Traumatic life circumstances and
intense suffering can break the spirit or cause it to be overwhelmed.
·
The
person has some degree of control over their spirit, and this is a good and
desirable thing. A person who lacks control over their spirit has trouble with
maintaining proper boundaries. (Proverbs 25:28)
·
The
human spiritual realm is subject to change. Moods seem to be linked to a
temporary state of the human spirit.
·
God
can cause both positive and negative changes in the human spirit. In Isaiah from a spirit of
heaviness is changed into a garment of praise. In the case of King Saul he
moves from being anointed with the Holy Spirit to being tormented by a
distressing spirit.
The Four Causes Of Problems With The Human Spirit
To
mine the biblical data above a bit further I have found the above list of
spiritual problems can be put into four fundamental categories based on what
causes them. The four main causes of problems with the human spirit are – sin, folly, trauma and
spiritual attack. Each of these can affect our most basic perceptions of
ourselves, life, others and God and lead to emotional discordance. By
understanding these four causes we will be able to frame a wise and appropriate
response as we minister the grace of God.
Firstly
there are those spiritual problems based on sin
- such as the "haughty spirit" described above which flows from the
sin of pride, and affects our perceptions of others. The others in this
category is “a spirit turned against God”, which flows from the sin of
rebellion, and affects our perception of God.
All
of us sin but this is different. This is much deeper. Here the sin has got
right down to the deepest level of the personality and gained a stronghold. In
these cases the human spirit itself has been captured or
defiled by a particular sin. Pride or rebellion has become deeply ingrained in
the person’s nature and now affects their entire outlook on life. When our own
inner spirit has become allied with either of these sins the only cure is deep
repentance, confession and restoration. God repeatedly engineers painful
circumstances in our lives until we realize the great hold such sins can have
on us.
A
third and special case of this is where the sin is the sin of unbelief
concerning Christ in which case repentance and faith leads to conversion.
Christian approaches that are repentance based and helpful here include: Jay E.
Adams' Nouthetic Counseling, and Alcoholics
Anonymous.
Indications Of When Sin Has
Deeply Affected The Human Spirit :
Dealing With Sins Of The
Spirit:
The
course here is fairly well known. Awaken the person to their sin, then ask them
to repent from their sin and to confess it to God and to make restoration where
practical. Repentance involves a turning around from the wrong behavior or
attitude to the right behavior or attitude.
(Isaiah 55:7 NKJV) Let the wicked forsake his way, And the
unrighteous man his thoughts; Let him return to the LORD, And He will have
mercy on him; And to our God, For He will abundantly pardon.
Wrong
ways are to be forsaken and an unrighteous thought life is to be put
aside. Sin is not just confessed, it is
also left behind. Awakening the person
to their sin may be a difficult process and may even require some confrontation
by the elders of the church. This should not be done lightly and the proper
procedure is outlined in Matthew 18.15-20. The seriousness with which the apostle Paul took
church discipline and its severity is almost unknown in the modern church (see
1 Corinthians 5 and 2 Corinthians 12 & 13). Above all pray that the Holy Spirit will help you help the sinner
and will provide both the conviction of sin and the grace and power for change.
Secondly
there are those spiritual problems
based on folly in the human spirit. This is an abiding disposition of foolishness rather than just a
one-off mistake. People characterized by folly in their human spirit
demonstrate a
nature lacking in personal insight and basic wisdom. They are unbalanced and
unwise and unable to rightly judge themselves or others. A foolish person lacks
wisdom in one or more key areas of their life and makes the same mistakes over and
over again. They are frequently stubborn and unteachable and education is of little
avail until the errant spirit is fixed.
They
seem to need discipline combined with a sudden transforming work of God that
corrects the spiritual damage at the root of their folly. Once the error in
their spirit is corrected and wisdom flows a whole major aspect of their
character can instantly change. There is frequently a moment of realization
when light dawns and they say "how could I have been so dumb!". Among
them are those having an errant spirit, a perverse spirit, a hasty spirit, a
sullen spirit, and an inappropriate spirit of jealousy as described in the
bible passages above.
Proverbs
describes a range of foolish people such as the naïve, the young men seduced by
a harlot, the unteachable fool, the lazy sluggard, the scoffer, the person wise
in their own eyes and the boorish fool.
For these people loving discipline, fervent believing prayer for wisdom
(James 1:5), good scriptural teaching and high quality ongoing discipleship may
help correct the error in their spirit. Christian approaches that have proved
helpful here include: Neil T. Anderson's truth encounters and various
discipleship strategies, church discipline and accountability groups. Many
men's ministries specialize in this approach.
Indications of when folly
has overtaken the human spirit:
·
When
the person consistently makes unwise choices that are not so much
"bad" as "just real dumb". They are characterized by an
almost total lack of insight about themselves, their lifestyle and other
people..
·
Where
they are naïve, credulous, gullible or always falling in love.
·
A
deeply derisive attitude to education, knowledge and learning and wisdom.
·
They
constantly show off their knowledge but do not listen to others and are quite
unteachable.
·
Foolish habits, erratic behavior,
impulsiveness, wild schemes, dreaming, loud inappropriate and boorish behavior,
lack of insight, poor decisions.
·
The
person does not set out to be immoral but finds themselves being easily caught
up in immoral relationships or they seem unable to avoid bad company.
·
Where
a person is chronically lazy, slack and disorganized and their life drifts from
job to job and failure to failure, when there is a great sense of wasted
potential.
·
Poor
and very inappropriate communication such as boastfulness, an inability to
listen or be corrected, hasty speech, quick displays of anger and provocation
and little idea of how to be socially appropriate.
Dealing With Folly In The
Human Spirit
As
we saw in previous chapters wisdom is closely associated with the presence and
teaching ministry of the Holy Spirit. Wisdom can be prayed for and is prayed for by Paul. James is quite
specific in saying that a Christian can receive wisdom from God directly
through prayer (James 1:5) This wisdom can be in ordinary daily things where
wisdom may be lacking. An interesting passage that illustrates this is found in
Isaiah 28:
(Isaiah 28:23-29
NKJV) Give ear and hear my voice, Listen
and hear my speech. {24} Does the plowman keep plowing all day to sow? Does he
keep turning his soil and breaking the clods? {25} When he has leveled its
surface, Does he not sow the black cummin And scatter the cummin, Plant the
wheat in rows, The barley in the appointed place, And the spelt in its place?
{26} For He instructs him in right judgment, His God teaches him. {27} For the
black cummin is not threshed with a threshing sledge, Nor is a cartwheel rolled
over the cummin; But the black cummin is beaten out with a stick, And the
cummin with a rod. {28} Bread flour must be ground; Therefore he does not
thresh it forever, Break it with his cartwheel, Or crush it with his horsemen.
{29} This also comes from the LORD of hosts, Who is wonderful in counsel and
excellent in guidance.
God
guides and instructs the farmer in the humble daily routines of farming! God is
thus concerned with our work as well as with our religion. It is His will for
us to have wisdom in all aspects of our
lives. This confidence that God loves to instruct His people should give us
great hope when dealing with foolish Christians. It gives us a solid basis for
prayer when we ask Him to give wisdom to those who lack it. He delights to do
this and James says He gives ‘without reproach”. (James 1:5-8)
Foolish
Christians first need to realize they have been foolish. Once the light dawns
they need to be encouraged to seek wisdom from God. Finally they need to learn
the basic disciplines that will enable them to correct their folly in the light
of their new wisdom. This process takes place best in a Christian community
where accountability and discipleship are lovingly practiced without harshness
or legalism. [See the chapter on Learning Organizations later in this book]. In
such communities personal change is normal and
others around them are also working on aspects of their character.
Support groups, bible study groups, one to one discipleship sessions,
counseling and Christian communities all provide good contexts for the
correction of folly in the life of the Christian.
However
awakening a person to the fact that their behavior is foolish is not easy. Pain
is the great awakener as well as honest and true Christian friends who speak
the truth in love. One method that can work is to get a person to write out in
a journal the consequences of the behavior you are trying to get them to
correct. Then get them to do a cost-benefit analysis. This has awakened many gamblers once they have honestly done a calculation
of the cost of their habit.
Some
people know they are foolish but have no idea how to change. If you want to
lead someone from folly to wisdom be prepared to provide careful, detailed step
by step instruction and modeling. Going
from folly to wisdom involves learning and learning requires a good and patient
teacher. Do not dump a whole heap of demands and ideas on people. Give them
bite-sized bits of counseling homework and encourage every step of improvement.
As I mentioned earlier sometimes wisdom can arrive from God in answer to godly
believing prayer. When it does it sometimes comes in a rush, in a huge
"Aha" moment the person sees what they should have seen all along and
suddenly changes. This is good, but a good structure of discipleship and the
careful systematic teaching of biblical truth can help those moments to occur
with greater frequency.
Thirdly
there are those spiritual problems based on the effects of suffering or trauma. For such people
the trauma of life has
been so deep and so overwhelming that it has affected their human spirit. These
people literally have a damaged spirit, which is in need of healing or comfort.
The spirit of such people can be described as broken, failing, poisoned,
overwhelmed, grieved or anguished.
This
damage to the human spirit is far beyond the normal upsets of life and is a
deep and personal wound such as those inflicted by rape, violent crime, death,
divorce, deep injustice, cult involvement and torture. For these people there
needs to be prayer ministry and an atmosphere of gentle encouragement. In some
cases the damage may be so profound that the person has an "uncontrolled
spirit" and is like a city with broken down walls - easily exploited, and
easily manipulated. Such people will need much rebuilding of the walls and
instructions in setting appropriate personal boundaries. For many damaged
people the biblical truths that give hope and grace may need to be repeated
often in an atmosphere of love, encouragement and healing prayer. Counselors
operating in this area have to be especially gentle and caring and able to
spend hours in healing prayer with a single client. Christian and
Christian-compatible approaches that have proved helpful here include: Healing
of the memories, inner healing, Theophostic counseling, many retreat centers
and prayer ministries, Bradshaws’s championing the inner child, etc.
Indications of trauma having
affected the human spirit:
·
A
distinct event that precipitated the problem.
·
Painful
emotions such as grief, bitterness and sorrow.
·
Flashbacks,
problems with memory.
·
The
person is overwhelmed by life, fearful, or consumed with anxiety.
·
The
person indicates they feel they are emotionally crippled and "lame".
·
The
person communicates that they are broken or damaged inside.
·
The
person pulls away from life and indicates a deep need for comfort and healing,
space and privacy, gentleness and restoration.
·
As
you talk to someone you get the sense that you are dealing with both an adult
and a damaged child in the same person.
·
Unusual
reactions to normal stimuli. A sense that the person is reacting
inappropriately because some wound is being touched.
Go
slowly and go gently. Traumatized people need care and comfort and support
because life has already overwhelmed them. Dealing with severely
traumatized people should be left to trained professionals. However
many people can be helped and many ordinary Christians restored by appropriate
and gentle prayer ministry and healing of the memories. One of the better
Christian approaches is Theophostics (its not as New Age as the name
sounds) by Dr. Ed Smith of Kentucky. David Seamands has also done good work with his "Healing Of The
Memories" and "Healing For Damaged Emotions". Of secular
approaches John Bradshaw's "championing the inner child" is among the
better ones and is worth a read by those involved in ministry. A lot of
research is now being done on Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and on Multiple
Personality Disorder which I believe are extreme forms of having a damaged and
broken spirit. So you can see that this is a huge and specialized area in which
a great deal of research is currently being undertaken and which is quite
impossible top cover in a few hundred words in this chapter. What can we do
then?
1.
Be
supportive, understanding, loving and caring. Give the person lots of freedom.
Let them be angry but don’t let them dwell too long on it.
2.
Be
extremely patient, do not condemn, do not censure. They are bruised and
hurting. Remember "a bruised reed He will not break and a sputtering wick
He will not extinguish."
3.
Avoid
strong emotion. A gentle quite retreat atmosphere is generally far more healing
for trauma than a hyped up evangelistic meeting. There is so much strong
emotion inside them that they are already overloaded emotionally. Part of
healing is to decrease this overloaded emotional level.
4.
Above
all do not suggest to them how they may have been abused or attempt to recover
memories. False memory syndrome induced by zealous counselors is very real and
very damaging.
5.
Where
necessary help them seek justice. Empower them to go to the police and through
the court system. Many Christians are uncomfortable with this but people need
to feel supported and protected and that there is justice in the world. If the
offender is hardened and unrepentant and a continuing risk to the community
then that offender should not be protected by "gracious" Christians.
I faced this dilemma when I knew that a schoolteacher was a serial pedophile,
lacked insight into his condition and was still around young children. He went
to jail for eight years. The victims agreed with this course of action and were
benefited by it.
6.
If
they are agreeable pray for them and soak them in loving prayer. Do not expect
or demand immediate miraculous outcomes. Just soak them in prayer and let them
slowly come face to face with Jesus who heals them. Repeat as necessary.
7.
Encourage
them to seek God's Presence in prayer and worship. Do not censure them for
seeking God in ways that are outside your personal religious tradition. Many
evangelicals are disturbed when a recovering person spends time reading the
mystical writers or sets up a chapel at home with a cross and a candle.
Remember that the spirit is a world of symbols and they are trying to
reconstruct their symbolic realm. This is a complex task - let them be.
8.
Encourage
them to express their feelings via art, acting, music, poetry, writing,
pottery, crafts, gardening, keeping pets and other non-destructive outlets.
9.
Don't
argue but do gently correct false perspectives on life. Much of the continuing
damage comes from believing untruths about God, self or others. These need to
be gently shown to be false and the person shown who they are in Christ and in
the loving eyes of God.
10.
Give
them lots and lots of time to heal and realize that recovery from trauma may
happen in bits and pieces over many years. Don't feel it has to be fixed right
now. Let God heal them in God's time.
If
you are someone that feels that you may have a broken and damaged spirit do not
sit alone and try to heal yourself. You need grace and you need special people
and places that have a healing effect on the emotionally damaged. Ask the Lord
to lead you to the right people and places where you can find the grace you
need.
Fourthly there are those spiritual
problems which are the outcome of a spiritual attack that has affected the human spirit. For mostly Christians this is
just harassment of the believer by an evil spirit external to them. For some
people particularly those involved in the occult or grave sexual sin, exorcism
may be necessary. For simplicity I will
break spiritual attacks into two categories: minor attacks which are generally
attacks on our mood, and major attacks that go deep into the spirit and involve
a major change in consciousness observable to others.
The
classic mood attacks are the suddenly swinging moods of King Saul who was afflicted
by an evil spirit. These dark and evil moods often accuse the person, others or
God and produce hopelessness, despair
and discouragement.. They can also suddenly give rise to lurid and vivid
temptations or can fuel abiding anger and cause an irrational "spirit of
ill-will" to develop. These moods have the following characteristics:
·
They
come over the person without warning.
·
They
then control their thinking and emotions for a while and take it in a negative
direction.
·
They
leave suddenly when rebuked in the name of Jesus
·
They
sometimes can be assuaged by Christian music such as when David played his
psalms on the harp for Saul.
Please
note carefully the above mood "attacks" are not the same as
"demon possession"! In mood attacks the attacking spiritual entity is
external to the believer and is engaged in harassment of the believer through
their thoughts and emotions.
Other indications of spiritual attack on the human
spirit include:
Major
attacks are where the consciousness of the person is greatly altered and it is
evident that the person’s human spirit has been invaded in some way..
A second personality or consciousness may take over the person and speak in a
different voice or the person may suddenly enter a trance state (which is often
rather sweet and seductive) and which obliterates all moral consciousness. In
this trance state the person may perform sinful actions of which they later
have reduced or blurry recollection. In such cases exorcism by an experienced
practitioner who has the recommendation of sensible and mature Christians may
be called for.
Dealing With Spiritual
Attacks
.Here
is a general formula for dealing with minor spiritual attacks on the Christians
emotional life:
·
Become
aware that it may be an attack of the Devil.
·
Try
and give it a name if you can e.g. "a mood of deep discouragement".
·
Resist
its effects on you and say a firm "No' to its lies and suggestions.
·
If
necessary counter its lies with the truth of Scripture or just plain facts.
When Elijah was deeply discouraged and said "I alone am left" God
just said "I have 7000 that have not bowed the knee to Baal" (1 Kings
19).
·
Rebuke
the harassing spirit sternly in the name of Jesus with the spiritual authority
you have as a believer. (see Ephesians 1:20, 2:6, Colossians 2:13-15, Matthew
11:11-13)
·
It
should leave virtually instantly. If it tries another bout later on - then
rebuke it again.
·
If
it returns you may have given ground to it by nurturing resentment or hatred,
or actually liking the vivid temptations or believing there might be some truth
in the accusations If this is the case then remove the ground the Devil is
using to afflict you by repenting of your wrong attitude and then exercising
forgiveness towards others.
When
is exorcism necessary?
When
there is clear evidence of an indwelling evil spirit. These indications include
changes in personality such as a male person talking with a female voice or
vice versa. They also include various peculiar odors and bizarre manifestations
that are quite uncharacteristic of the person; a strong aversion to prayer and
spiritual disciplines and especially to communion and an attraction to unclean
behavior. Some people are overwhelmed by sinful obsessions and compulsions
(unlike in obsessive-compulsive disorder where the obsessions are generally
morally neutral acts such as hand-washing or locking up repeatedly) and unusual
trance states where sinful acts are performed including a compulsion to suicide
and dark obsessions.
Before engaging in exorcism make sure you are aware of your authority in Christ over the demonic realm. See the following verses Luke 10:19, 1 John 5:18,19; Ephesians 1:20, 2:6, Colossians 2:13-15, Matthew 11:11-13, Hebrews 1:14, and 1 Corinthians 6:1-3 and any good and reasonably recent systematic theology. You should also consult some of the books on deliverance ministry recommended in the section below. It is best to learn the art of exorcism from an experienced, wise and balanced practitioner who can show you how to go about it sensibly and effectively. Now to consider a special kind of spiritual attack - curses.
Curses
Curses are an unusual topic for a book
on emotions, but they are real, and are profoundly emotionally disturbing for
those who experience them. They are not just angry words or swear words; they
are acts of power in the spiritual real. Curses are mentioned over 200 times in
Scripture, and were foundational to the Old Covenant (see Deuteronomy 28-30).
God Himself was the first one to pronounce curses – on the earth, on Eve’s
fertility and upon the serpent. Curses are not just a primitive superstition;
they are spiritual pronouncements recorded in Scripture, that profoundly affect
the very structure of reality in some way.
The
world was created by the word of God and is held together by the power of His
Word (Genesis 1, Hebrews 1:1-3, Colossians 1:17-20). Thus God’s words can
change creation and Jesus’ curse caused the fig-tree, representing barren
Israel, to shrivel up. Blessings and curses are first of all God’s words that
operate at this fundamental level of creation and “tilt the playing field” of
life one way or another. Secondly curses and blessings can be from evil spirits
or flow from the human spirit. Goliaths curses against David were “by his gods”
(1 Samuel 17:43) and were ineffective for reasons we shall see later. The David
and Goliath encounter was a power encounter of one spiritual system against the
other and both contenders came in the name of their respective deities. Shamans
and magicians such as Balaam were hired to curse people in OT times and still
do this today. Though curses from evil sources much less powerful than curses
from God they still were feared and were able to do much damage. There are 22
references exhorting believers not to curse others. Curses are finally ended in
the new creation (Rev 22:3).
The
origin of blessings and curses is found in the book of Genesis. The first
blessing is upon the living creatures, which were told to “be fruitful and
multiply” (Genesis 1:22). When God made mankind He also blessed them saying “be
fruitful and multiply” and added a third blessing “have dominion over” (Genesis
1:28). These three basic blessings of: “be fruitful”, “multiply” and “have
dominion over” form the basis of all future blessings, such as the Abrahamic
blessings, and their reversal forms the basis of all future curses such as
those in Genesis 3. Lets look at this a little bit further:
Fruitfulness is the ability to joyfully
express your inner nature and feel that which you are doing is truly creative,
worthwhile and significant. Its opposite is pain in creation especially
barrenness.
Multiplication is exponential increase -
increasing as in 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128 not additively as in 2 , 4, 6, 8, 10,
Multiplication is a huge increase in productivity for a small increase in
effort. Its opposite is frustration and
futility. Putting in a huge effort for little or no reward.
Authority to rule over means dignity,
headship, authority, the ability to be ascendant, to be the head not the tail.
Its opposite is being humbled, to eat the dirt, to be crushed and humiliated,
to be unable to rise.
In
Genesis 3 we see the first curses in operation. The woman is made
unfruitful, the man is made to work in futility and the serpent is told he will
eat the dirt. The three things that make life good are reversed. Life becomes unbearable.
Thus when we are cursed we find life very difficult indeed. No matter how hard
we try to rise we never quite make it. Time and time we get to the brink of
success only to have it snatched away. Curses can affect health, particularly
reproductive health. They can affect earning power and they can affect our
ability to have authority and command over our lives and people who are cursed
may have to endure life-long humiliation.
As
a missionary I can say that curses are real and in some cases they are even
lethal; Ezekiel talks of magic charms that hunted lives (Ezekiel 13:18-20).
Curses are on the rise in Western culture as people dabble more and more in the
occult and in organizations where
people take secret oaths that invoke curses (such as the Masons). Emotionally
curses produce deep confusion and despair and an inability to think straight.
[There
is not a lot of good literature on the topic of curses and all such books need to be read
critically and subjective material carefully evaluated. Derek Prince’s book “Curses and Blessings” is reasonable,
Ed Murphy’s chapter is good but gives no hint on how to break curses, and
Francis Frangipane has some very good books on living in the place of
protection from curses and spiritual attack.]
On
one hand we do want to acknowledge the reality of curses and to deal with them
and to break them on the other hand we do not want to become overly
superstitious and fearful seeing curses everywhere. If your life is affected by
sterility, barrenness, constant lack of success and failure to gain any sort of ascendancy
no matter how hard you try then a curse may be in operation. If you think this
may be the case then do some research on your life and family history and take
the matter before the Lord.
The
good news is that breaking curses can be surprisingly easy for Christians
because we dwell under the protection of the blood of Jesus Christ. Curses have
greatest power where the person who has been cursed has committed some great act
of wickedness such as involvement in the occult. The reverse is also true,
curses have little or no power over a righteous person and Proverbs says that a
curse without cause will not alight on the head of a righteous man.
Scripture
reveals a number of ways in which we can break curses and/or be protected from
them
1)
Live
a righteous life free from major sin and acts of injustice. Abide in the
righteousness of Christ where no curse can penetrate. (Malachi 4:6, Proverbs
26:2, Romans 8).
2)
Put
on the full armor of God in Ephesians 6 :10-21 which is actually armor against
spiritual attack. Ephesus was noted for its magic practices (Acts 19) and its
curses and witchcraft. The primary purpose behind Paul writing to the Ephesians
was so they could have some understanding of their power, authority and degree
of protection in their pagan and occult city. The armor of God is like
the Kevlar of the spirit world protecting the Christian against curses, magic
and occult practices.
3)
God
is able to turn a curse into a blessing. He did this when Balak tried to get
Baalam to curse Israel. (Nehemiah 13:2, Deuteronomy 23:5, Numbers 22&23). A
brief prayer by Jabez that has received a lot of popularity lately is a case of
a person appealing to God to have a curse turned into a blessing and
succeeding. David is particularly bold when he says in Psalm 109 where he seems
to have been the victim of a curse (see verses 17 & 18) (Psalms 109:28
NKJV) Let them curse, but You bless;
When they arise, let them be ashamed, But let Your servant rejoice. David
did not fear the curse, but instead asked God to bless him and outdo the curse,
and then to turn the curse back on those who uttered it. God can out-bless the
most fearsome and disabling curses. It gives us hope that our prayers to God
based on the name of Jesus can not only break curses but have them turned into
blessings instead.
4)
Understand
and plead the fact that Christ has taken all the curses due to us when He
became a curse on the cross (Galatians 3:10-14). In Christ that ground for
curses to succeed against us is removed because on the cross Jesus became a
curse for us and took all the cursing that may have been due to us due to our
violation of God's laws.
5)
Break
associations with the sins of parents and ancestors particularly those
involving the occult or idolatry. Exodus 34:6,7 says such sins bring a curse "to
the third and fourth generation". We have to break ties with such sins by
not participating in occult ceremonies that may be traditional and even
confessing such involvement of your parents and ancestors and forsaking them in
a prayer of renunciation to God. The essential thing is to make a clear break
with the familial sin in your own heart, mind and spirit.
6)
Get
rid of objects that bring a curse particularly objects associated with pagan
worship, idolatry or the occult. For instance if we have our Grandmothers pack of tarot cards we need
to get rid of them. (Deuteronomy
7:25,26) The Ephesian converts were moved by the Holy Spirit to burn their magic scrolls and
occult objects. (Acts 19:18-20).
7)
Do
not engage in secretive or dishonest sins that you think you can get away with
unobserved. In Deuteronomy 27: 15-26 certain sins are singled out as bringing a
curse notably the making of idols, incest, bestiality, treating parents with
contempt, injustice against migrants, widows, the disabled or the poor, hiring
a contract killer, and moving your neighbors landmark or boundary stone. Most
of these are crimes that would never be tried in court because of the secret
nature of the crimes, the lack of two or three eye witnesses willing to testify
or the difficulty of proving of the case such as the “my word against yours’
case of the boundary stone. The curse was God’s way of making sure that such
secret crimes did not go unpunished. People knew that if they did these things
God would repay. Even in the New Testament God is referred to as the one who
punishes those who defile the marriage bed. (1 Thessalonians 4:4-6, Hebrews 13:4).
If you have done any of the things in the above list then repentance,
restoration and an earnest appeal to God for mercy would be a good starting
point in breaking the curse over your life.
8)
Curses can alight where there is deep
abiding injustice against an ethnic group. Saul’s bloodthirsty massacre of the
Gibeonites, which lay uncorrected for years, later resulted in a curse and a
famine in the time of David.
(2 Samuel 21:1 NKJV) Now there was a famine in the days of David for three years, year
after year; and David inquired of the LORD. And the LORD answered, "It is
because of Saul and his bloodthirsty house, because he killed the
Gibeonites."
David broke this curse by going back to the offended ethnic group, humbly asking how they would like to see justice done and then enacting it. After ten of Saul’s sons were hung the famine ended. (2 Samuel 21:1-14).
9)
Slackness
in ministry can result in a curse. The priests in Malachi were under a curse
because of their slackness in God's work (Malachi 2:2 ) and the prophet
Jeremiah cries out "cursed be he who is slack in doing the Lord's work
(Jeremiah 48:10). If you are in ministry do the work of the Lord diligently and
obey His specific instructions if you have been given such instructions.
10)
Put
God’s interests ahead of your own. In the book of Haggai God puts a curse on
the nation (Haggai 1:5-11, 2:16,17 )for being self-centered and neglectful of
their duty to God. The curse is removed when the people obey the prophets and
lay the foundation on the Lord's temple (Haggai 2:18,19) and a blessing is
given instead.
There
are over 200 verses on curses in Scripture and the above list just touches on
some of the main causes and their remedies. Basically a curse can only alight
on an area that God has already judged as being worthy of a curse – such as
incest , idolatry or murder. Most curses generally last only 3-4 generations
though some have lasted since Creation. Repentance from sin, breaking ties with
the occult and taking refuge in Christ who has become a curse for us are the
main strategies we can use to break curses. Part of this is putting on the
whole armor of God, which is designed to protect us from curses leveled against
us in the course of spiritual warfare (Ephesians 6:10-18). When the curse is
lifted then the human spirit that has been affected by the
curse and been bowed down with pain, confusion and futility will be quickly
healed. The person will recover and emotional normality should soon follow.
References On Deliverance
Ministry and Spiritual Warfare
There
are no perfect books on this difficult topic but there are many good and useful
books on deliverance ministry in most Christian bookstores.
Among the better ones I recommend Ed
Murphy's "Handbook of Spiritual Warfare" and the writings of Francis
Frangipane, George Otis Jr. , John Wimber and C. Peter Wagner . Classics on spiritual warfare include
"Born For Battle" by R. Arthur Matthews and "Screwtape
Letters" by C. S. Lewis . My e-book "Praying To Move Mountains"
available from http://www.globalchristians.org/articles/prayer.htm has some short
articles on the topic, and it's free. Books to avoid are those written by
conspiracy theorists or which sensationalize the topic. Especially be wary of
books that "see a demon under every bush" or which place a great deal
of credence on the testimony of demons being exorcised or which have extensive
lists of behaviors that are supposed to get you demonized (especially if the
behaviors are not listed as sinful in Scripture). Such books can bring people
into legalism and bondage. God has made us to be aware of spiritual attacks and
to have victory over them but not to be preoccupied with them, fearful, or overly
suspicious.
Concluding This Chapter
Our
life perspective may be affected by a wide range of events that damage our
human spirit, so that it cannot see God or life correctly. This damage tilts our
basic perception of reality so that the whole of life, including our emotional
life, is dysfunctional. Our human spirit can be deceived or brought into
spiritual captivity and bondage by false teaching or damaged through sin,
folly, trauma or spiritual attack. Curses can bring immense emotional
pain and a feeling of constant struggle and futility. All of the above have
scriptural remedies and can be dealt with and fixed. They are not necessarily
permanent.
As
they are fixed our human spirit will begin to function as it is meant to
function. That is as the place in us that receives God’s truth and God’s wisdom
and which works in co-operation with the Holy Spirit. As our human spirit heals our spiritual sensitivity will increase and we will see
ourselves, others and God rightly. When this occurs the process of co-operating
with the Holy Spirit to become Christ-like emotionally is made much easier.
Once
our perception of life and basic stance on life is relatively OK we can then go
on to create a more functional belief system. This will in turn help us to be
stable emotionally as much of our emotional reactivity flows from what we
believe is happening to us and our explicit, verbal, beliefs that we hear as
"self-talk".
Once
a person afflicted by a bitter and broken human spirit is healed they will no longer
be bitter and broken. They will have a much better outlook on life and see
themselves, others and God in a much more gracious light. However that dark and
bitter period of life may have formed certain beliefs in them that have not yet
changed. Hence the next chapter is on constructing a fully Christian and
emotionally healthy belief system.
The
Thoughts And Intentions Of The Heart
Beliefs, Vows, Desires, Wishes, Games, Life Scripts and Inner Goals
(Hebrews 4:12 NKJV)
For the word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any
two-edged sword, piercing even to the division of soul and spirit, and of
joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart.
The
second step in our five-step model is when perspectives give rise to beliefs,
which gave rise to emotions. In earlier chapters I just used the term “beliefs”
very loosely to cover a whole range of internal activity that comes under the
biblical term “the thoughts and intents of the heart”. In this chapter we will look at that much
more closely. In the next chapter we will see how communities form a lot of
what we believe and how the group we belong to can affect our EQ.
The
“thoughts and intentions of the heart" are our internalized beliefs, both formal (such as theological
beliefs) and informal and more personal beliefs such as "No-one could
possibly love me". These beliefs or thoughts of your heart are often
reflected in what psychologists call your “self-talk” which is the “chatter” that goes on inside you as you are doing
things “I wish Susan would call, I bet she won’t, no-one loves me much
etc”.
These
beliefs are our idea about what is true or untrue, possible or impossible,
plausible or implausible. They contain our conclusions about life and beliefs
about God, others, and ourselves. Unlike perspectives, beliefs can generally be
compressed into a single sentence such as “I believe that Jesus is God” or “I
think I am totally unlovable”. The Bible has two categories here; “thoughts’ which is fairly much
all-embracing and “intentions” which deals with the movements of the will as we
plan, vow and scheme our way through life. The picture we see in Scripture
is that these thoughts and beliefs, desires, vows, and inner goals are
generally verbal. When the prophets cry out “I know what you are thinking in your
hearts it is such-and-so” its always a statement, a sentence that encapsulates
the heart attitude.
Over
time we weave these sentences into a sort of a bird’s nest of a structure
inside us that we call our world-view. For most people it is a horrific jumble of things they learned at
school, life lessons, Grandma’s sayings, the latest media opinions and a book
they once read. This internal belief structure is more or less functional and
gets people by for the seventy or so years they are on this earth. However for
some people it can go horribly wrong and cause them a great deal of confusion
and emotional pain. It is quite possible to hold conflicting beliefs or inconsistent beliefs or even two entirely different frameworks of
belief. Sunday Christians are a prime
example. At Church they seem to truly believe the Bible. At work they operate
under an entirely different belief system and operate largely without reference
to God. Both are real belief systems for them. They choose which one to operate
under depending on where they are and who they are with.
In
the Old Testament they even had two distinct religions worshipping Baal when it
came to farming and fertility and Yahweh when it came to war. Dual value
systems such as this have been castigated by the prophets, Jesus and the apostles from one end of the Bible to
the other. From Joshua's "choose which day who you will serve"
(Joshua 24:15) to Elijah's "how long will you falter between two
opinions" (1Kings 18:21) to Jesus and "you cannot serve God and
Mammon" (Matthew 6:21-24) to James and his exhortations against
double-mindedness and worldliness. (James 1:5-8, 4:1-7).
Such people have literally two belief systems
and two minds - Scripture calls them "double-minded" and says that
they are spiritually unstable. (James 1:5-8) This instability results from the fact that they
are constantly choosing between two or more things they can believe at any one
moment. One minute they choose to operate from the biblical belief, the next
minute they choose to operate from greed, superstition or expediency. Up and
down, tossed here and there like the waves of the sea.
In
addition to having multiple belief systems people can decide to hold evil and
wicked beliefs or beliefs that are illogical and insane. Some people honestly
and truly believe that the entire world should be organized around their
happiness. Others truly believe that they can take what they like and do what
they like. A few believe that flying jet planes into buildings will give glory
to God and bring them eternal life in Paradise. Yet others believe that
worshipping an idol will give them spiritual power and good fortune. The birds
nest of human beliefs inside us can become toxic.
In fact the first reference to the human heart in Scripture is the depressing Genesis 6:5: “Then the LORD saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intent of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.” Just before the exile the prophet Jeremiah, looking on a wicked, debased and now idolatrous Israel has a similar view “(Jeremiah 17:9 NKJV) "The heart is deceitful above all things, And desperately wicked; Who can know it?”. As Solomon reflected on the nature of life he wasn’t very optimistic either: “(Ecclesiastes 9:3 NKJV) This is an evil in all that is done under the sun: that one thing happens to all. Truly the hearts of the sons of men are full of evil; madness is in their hearts while they live, and after that they go to the dead.” Finally King David as one who had to sort out the crimes committed in his kingdom wrote about the hearts of the wicked: “(Psalms 64:6 NKJV) They devise iniquities: "We have perfected a shrewd scheme." Both the inward thought and the heart of man are deep.”
Jesus
had some firm words to say about the thoughts and intents of the heart as well.
(Mark 7:21-23 NKJV) "For from
within, out of the heart of men, proceed evil thoughts, adulteries,
fornications, murders, {22} "thefts, covetousness, wickedness, deceit,
lewdness, an evil eye, blasphemy, pride, foolishness. {23} "All these evil
things come from within and defile a man."
The
heart of the natural man can go badly and seriously wrong through adoption of a
self-centred and toxic world-view which incorporates ungodly and illogical
beliefs. This is not the total picture though. Even in the OT we find people
described as being penitent in heart and having hearts set on the Lord. Yet
even here the heart can be mixed up.
To
complicate matters still further Christians do not necessarily believe what
they think they believe. Christians are generally still learning to believe that
which they think they believe. This is the difference between believing
something as a notion or as a doctrine and really believing it so that it is
operational for you under stress and pressure. A test of this is "How much
pressure does it take before you start to doubt that which you
are sure you believe? Ask yourself the following two questions:
1."If I was out in a small boat on the Sea of
Galilee and the waves were high and the boat was about to sink would I be calm
or would I be afraid?" Would Jesus
say to me "I have not seen such great faith in all Israel" or would
He say to me "Why are you afraid O ye of little faith?"
2."How low can the bank account go before I
start getting anxious and doubting that God will provide? Where is the point at
which I choose to panic?".
The
difference between the answers we put in the bible study booklet and the answer
we give to the actual pressures of life can be startling. Our notional beliefs
and our operational beliefs under pressure are different. This may not be due
to double-mindedness but just to the need to mature, learn and grow. As committed Christians we are continually
learning to truly believe that which we think we already believe.
So
we can see that the goal is to have a consistent and fully Christian belief
system that is the sole one we operate from, and which is operating at the
level of the thoughts and intentions of our heart and guiding our daily conduct
and informing all our emotional responses. This belief system will fill us with
joy and give us poise and calm in the middle of life's trials. It will be heart
level, practical, biblical, strong and singular. Our lives will ring with faith
and authenticity.
In an earlier chapter we looked at the beliefs of Jesus and how they gave Him zeal to cleanse the Temple, poise in the raging storm and caused Him to marvel at the faith of the centurion. His righteous beliefs gave Him righteous emotions. When we look at the beliefs of Jesus we find there is no “birds nest”, but instead a purity and simplicity that is stunning. His thoughts were always pure and Scriptural and logical and right. Jesus is never for a single second, fearful or anxious or halting between two opinions. When the Devil offers Him all the kingdoms of the world He does not say “Let me think about that for five minutes.” Jesus heart was so fixed on God and so pure in its intentions that He did not hesitate or waver even under strong temptation. Jesus was pure in heart and did not sin even in His thoughts and intentions.
If we are to be like Jesus in all aspects then we must head towards purity of heart. At first this seems to be a long and impossible journey. Purity of thoughts and intentions seems both unsafe in a wicked world (unless we lock ourselves away in a monastery) and impractical to achieve in one lifetime. Yet the promise of Jesus in the Beatitudes is that “The pure in heart will see God”. (Matthew 5:8) and He seems to be calling us to the impossible journey of sorting out and cleaning up our birds nest, changing our beliefs and coming into fellowship with Him. There are quite a few references in the New Testament to this topic and I have listed six of the major ones below:
(Matthew
5:8 NKJV) Blessed are the pure in
heart, For they shall see God.
(1 Timothy 1:5 NKJV) Now the purpose of the commandment is love
from a pure heart, from a good conscience, and from sincere faith,
(2 Timothy 2:22 NKJV) Flee also youthful lusts; but pursue
righteousness, faith, love, peace with those who call on the Lord out of a pure
heart.
(Titus
1:15 NKJV) To the pure all things are
pure, but to those who are defiled and unbelieving nothing is pure; but even
their mind and conscience are defiled.
(1
Peter 1:22 NKJV) Since you have
purified your souls in obeying the truth through the Spirit in sincere love of
the brethren, love one another fervently with a pure heart,
(1
John 3:2-3 NKJV) Beloved, now we are
children of God; and it has not yet been revealed what we shall be, but we know
that when He is revealed, we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is.
{3} And everyone who has this hope in Him purifies himself, just as He is pure.
From the above
references we see that the human heart is purified by love that obeys the truth
in the power of the Holy Spirit (1 Peter 1:22) and fixes its hope on becoming
like Jesus (1 John 3:2,3) as this renewal takes place the person assists the
process by fleeing youthful lusts, all that defiles the conscience and all
insincerity (1 Timothy 1:5, 2:22) so they are purified in order to love the
brethren with a deep and sincere love. (1 Timothy 1:5). Finally all things will
become pure for us (Titus 1:5) and we shall see Him as He is ((1 John 3:2).
So we see that
purity of heart involves two main aspects. Firstly we hope in God and obey the
truth in the power of the Holy Spirit. This establishes the connection with God
so He can work in us and renew us. It also activates the law of likeness – that
we become like that which we love and adore and respect and obey and this also
purifies us. Secondly we do things to purify ourselves. We flee youthful lusts,
we avoid the love of money, we avoid insincerity and flattery and we take hold
of that which is wrong inside us. We need both aspects. Without the love and
adoration all the human techniques will be just futile legalism. Yet without
the human techniques the purity we receive through prayer will be constantly
sullied, by the mess we leave inside us, or get ourselves into.
Jesus pursued love
and was pure, not the other way around. Love purifies us, but purity may not
make us loving. So for Jesus His agenda and driving motive was the glory of the
Father and compassion for the lost and this burning love of all that was
righteous and good and holy ensured that He was pure. For Jesus love was the
priority and purity sort of tagged along as a quality of that burning love.
Unfortunately many Christians have turned this around and the pursuit of purity
as an end in itself has made them legalistic and selfish. The pursuit of purity
can turn us into Pharisees or into highly introspective Christians who always
worry about this or that thought or sin. Love is the cure for legalism. Purity
is at its best when it is a quality of love. The verses above tell us that we
are to love one another from a pure heart. The love is first and foremost, the
quality of this love is then described as “pure”. As we love God and one another in biblical obedience and the
power of the Holy Spirit we are purified and as we are purified our love then
improves. So then, lets roll up our sleeves and start tackling the bird’s nest.
Firstly - Why Should We
Change Our Beliefs?
Why
bother? Why not just put up with the internal bird’s nest and believe what we like?
What’s wrong with believing a mixture of a bit of Hinduism, a bit of Buddhism
and handful of bible verses? Don’t I have the freedom to make a mess of my
beliefs if I like?
True.
You have perfect freedom to be as dysfunctional in your private beliefs as you
like. You can choose to be unhappy, unstable and unfulfilled. No-one will throw
you into jail if you chose to believe nonsense. Unfortunately God is not as easy-going as society or the government
on this issue. God is extremely interested in what we believe and in the
thoughts and intentions of our heart. They are not private matters to Him. They are matters of eternal
importance that can decide your eternal destiny and your reward in heaven, as
well as your degree of happiness in this life.
Here
are six reasons why you should work on your inner, personal beliefs:
1.
God
cares about your beliefs and weighs them up. He judges the thoughts and
intentions of your heart. (Romans 2:15,16; Jeremiah 11:20; Hebrews 4:12).
2.
Jesus
expects us to be increasing in our faith and in fact is quite demanding about
it! The expectations He had of his disciples included being calm in storms
(Matthew 8:26), walking on water
(Matthew 14:31), believing in miraculous provision (Matthew 6:30), being
able to understand parables (Matthew 16:8), and being able to cast out demons,
heal the sick and raise the dead (Matthew 10:8). When they failed to do any of
the above they were rebuked (Matthew 17:20). The phrase "O ye of little
faith" (see the references in Matthew above) shows that the disciples were
expected to learn to believe Jesus with ever-increasing faith. Jesus does not
call us to have a static level of faith. Rather we are called to develop a
growing "mountain-moving faith" that starts from small
"mustard-seed" beginnings. (Matthew 17:20).
3.
Theology
interpenetrates reality. Every belief is theological. Carl Jung used to say
that every human problem after the age of 35 was spiritual in nature. In a
similar vein even the small voices, the dark mutterings of the human heart and
the wretched small-minded beliefs that people have are a form of rebellion
against God and a dwelling in darkness. For instance to believe in your heart
that the world stinks is to malign the Creator. To vow that you will always play it
safe and that you will never love again is to retreat into darkness and flee
the love of God that He puts into people to reach you. Thus all your beliefs have a theological
component and need to brought into the light of the Word of God.
4.
How
we believe determines what we receive.
"According to your faith be it unto you". (Matthew 9:29,
15:28). Conversely having an unstable, worldly or double-minded faith means we
will receive nothing from God (James 1:5-8, 4:1-8). Faith can bring healing
(Matthew 9:22, James 5:15-18) is a prerequisite for receiving wisdom from God
(James 1:5-8), for daily provision and reduction of anxiety (Matthew 6:30-34)
and makes all things possible (Mark 9:23).
5.
Creedal
faith is insufficient. Even the demons have correct theology in the sense that
they believe that God is one - and tremble (James 2:19). Thus merely creedal
belief is insufficient for salvation. Belief must be authentic, loyal to God,
of the heart and worked out in real life. (James chapter 2). The great men and
women of God all had extraordinary personal belief systems that set them apart
from their generation. (Hebrews 11)
6.
Letting
unbiblical and dysfunctional beliefs linger can cause them to become stronger,
more dysfunctional and more painful. Working on them now may take work, but
leaving them will make it much worse later on. (Proverbs 4:23
NKJV) Keep your heart with all
diligence, For out of it spring the issues of life.
Every
church has miserable grumpy Christians alongside radiant faith-abounding
Christians. Well what's the difference between the two groups? Both miserable and faith-abounding
Christians have heard exactly the same sermons and been to exactly the same
bible studies and mixed with exactly the same people in exactly the same
neighborhood church and can tick exactly the same boxes theologically. But only
the faith-abounding Christians have taken the time and effort to make sure
their inner personal beliefs line up with God's Word. Grumpy cynical Christians
have decided not to really believe. They would much prefer to complain.
Faith-abounding Christians have decided that with God’s help they will
interpret reality properly and have paid attention to their heart. They have
decided that they will "truly believe" and have put effort into their
faith. Now they reap joy and have much
more successful Christian lives.
An Illustration of Changing
Beliefs From The Secular World
Even
the secular world has discovered the benefits of working on your belief system.
The Dale Carnegie / Zig Ziglar
"positive-thinking" movement with its affirmations and personal motivation
demonstrated the power of working on personal beliefs. It turned lousy salesmen
into better salesmen. It turned unhappy,
unenthusiastic people into happy enthusiastic people. It caught a fragment of
the Truth (taken incidentally from the founders' familiarity with the Bible)
and applied it successfully to daily life. Why were salesmen so keen to
systematically adopt a new belief system? What motivated them to try? Why
wasn't it left in the "too hard basket?"
1.
They
met other people who seemed successful and who said positive thinking was the
key to success.
2.
These
other people demonstrated an alive and enthusiastic personality they wanted to
possess.
3.
They
compared their personality and results with that of the positive thinkers and decided
to change.
4.
Positive
thinking made intuitive sense and the short sayings had a "ring of
truth" to them.
5.
The
system was skillfully presented.
6.
The
system was simple and easy to apply.
7.
Initial
success was swift and this reinforced the effort required to change their
beliefs.
If
salesmen can diligently work on their belief system in order to sell insurance
then surely we can work on our belief system in order to grow in the Kingdom
and become mature in Christ? Our target is not just being happy, positive and
motivated, though that's not a bad place to start if you are unhappy, negative
and apathetic. Our goal is to have a sanctified and transformational set of
beliefs that give us the emotions that make us whole Christians and empower
service in the Kingdom.
Praxis - A Weird Word For A Great Way
Of Changing Yourself
I
don’t know what your wrong beliefs are so I cannot write a book that says “if
you believe X, then you are better off changing and believing Y”. That would be
long, unwieldy and over-prescriptive. Instead of individual answers I need to
give you some sort of a system that you can put into action each day to
steadily create more functional beliefs. This method needs to be fairly simple
so it can be applied to a wide variety of situations. That method is called
praxis (think of practical) and praxis is a cycle of action and reflection. Its
like the experimental method applied to real life.
With
the disciples we see them having some tough experience such as failing at
healing then asking Jesus a question like "why could we not cast it
out.." and then learning from the
combination of action and reflection. Many of us faced the same task as new
converts when we first started sharing the gospel. Our first attempt might have
been something fairly tactless and naïve like "Dad if you don't believe in
Jesus you will wind up in Hell." The resultant reaction may have caused us
to consider wiser ways of sharing Jesus with those we love! Then we shared the
gospel much better next time around.
Lets
look how praxis can help us to change our belief structure and consequent emotions. Here
are the 7 steps:
1.
We
enter into a situation where we do not function as well as we would like
emotionally.
2.
We
reflect and ask : "What beliefs are underlying these undesirable
emotions"
3.
We
probe further and ask: Are these beliefs true and biblical and in accord with
the facts?
4.
We
construct new better, more factual and more biblical beliefs about that
situation.
5.
We
reinforce those beliefs to ourselves.
6.
We
then re-enter the situation and test our new beliefs to see if they help us
function better.
7.
We
look at the results scientifically and objectively and decide whether to keep
the new beliefs, modify the new beliefs or to stick with the old beliefs.
Dysfunctional Situation: You cannot pray aloud in a prayer meeting. You just sit there in
silence terrified to speak.
What Beliefs Are Underlying
These Undesirable Emotions? : The beliefs might be "I am unworthy to
pray" Or "I don't have anything important to say" Or "They
will just think I am stupid."
Are These Beliefs True And
Biblical And In Accord With The Facts?: No they are not.
I am unworthy to pray: In Christ you are worthy.
You are worthy to stand before God. There is no condemnation before Him. You
have open access to the Father. You have just as much right to pray as a pastor
or missionary.
I don't have anything
important to say: Every prayer is important to
God and the prayer points that have been shared are surely important. You can pray
for them.
They will just think I am
stupid: Who
cares? God does not think you are stupid. Besides if the people are men and
women of God then your lack of fluency will not bother them one bit.
Construct New Better, More
Factual And More Biblical Beliefs About That Situation: "I am fully worthy to
pray, I have important things to say and my lack of fluency in prayer is no
issue with God and should be no issue for others either. I will not fear man's
opinion. I will be a bold and powerful Christian who can pray for world
mission."
Reinforce This New Belief To
Yourself: Drill the new constructive
belief into you. For instance - say it aloud ten times, or write it neatly on a
card and place it in your bible where you can see it each day until the next
prayer meeting.
Re-Enter The Situation And
Test Our New Beliefs: Go to the prayer meeting and pray aloud even a short prayer. How does
it feel? Did a new confidence emerge? Did you suddenly find new friends? Did
someone come up afterwards and say "Glad to hear you pray.." .
Perhaps there is still some nerves but you feel you made a major step forward.
Look At The Results
Scientifically And Objectively: Rate things out of 10. “OK that was 7.5 out of ten,
my new beliefs are much more functional but I am still a bit nervous. I’ll keep
the card in the Bible another month and give it another try.” Perhaps you have noticed that you have also
become more confident in meetings at work as well. As we change beliefs in one
area it may benefit other areas of our life as well.
This
seven step process is very similar to how we unconsciously revise our beliefs
from day to day. As life situations confirm or disconfirm our beliefs we
continually learn and adjust and retest the beliefs. However in "real
life" we do it unconsciously, partially and are subject to denial and
distortion in the process. By making our formation of beliefs conscious,
objective, logical, factual and Scriptural we are more likely to come up with
beliefs that work in healthy and constructive ways. Lets try this process again
in another situation - that of finances.
Dysfunctional Situation: Bill feels a call to Bible
College but is afraid of the fees and of the loss of income.
What Beliefs Are Underlying
These Undesirable Emotions? : The beliefs Bill finds in the "thoughts and
intentions of his heart" are a whole mixture including :
"I must always have a good amount of money in
the bank."
"Its foolish to just trust God when you cannot
see how to pay the bills"
"I need
to be independent"
"I would feel ashamed to take money from others
and have supporters pay my fees"
and "I'll never get the money back again that I
lose in wages and in school fees".
Are These Beliefs True And
Biblical And In Accord With The Facts?: Bill has a read through the gospels and the Sermon
On The Mount in particular and writes down the following conclusions:
"Having
a good amount of money in the bank is desirable and good but having the word of
God in my life is even more important. What I will gain from bible college is
worth more than money in the bank."
"Its
not foolish to trust God financially, Jesus, Paul, the apostles and many great Christian
leaders have done this. I will walk by faith not by sight. God promises to
supply my needs if I seek first His Kingdom and His righteousness."
"I
might feel I need to be independent but that is just pride talking. The
Scriptures say I should be dependent on God and inter-dependent with others,
giving and receiving in community - particularly with believers."
"Its
not shameful to receive from others providing you do not use or manipulate
them. If they wish to give, that is God's work in their hearts. Both Jesus and
Paul accepted support from others so its OK for me to do so."
"I
might never get the money back again but it is like losing earthly treasure to
gain heavenly treasure. Besides God is no man’s debtor.”
Reinforce This New Belief To
Yourself: Bill
goes to his trusted prayer partner Sam with his thoughts and his responses to
them written out. Sam reads them through and talks them over with Bill and says
"You have come to some pretty amazing and biblical conclusions here Bill,
I wish I could think like that, its spot on. You are right, God can provide for
your needs." Together they pray that Bill will have the courage to apply
to the Bible College and that his financial needs will be met. Bill asks Sam to
keep him accountable and to check back with him next week to see that he has
actually sent the forms in.
Re-Enter The Situation And
Test Our New Beliefs: Bill goes back home picks up the forms and fills them in. He hesitates
a few days but eventually posts them off to the college. He feels a sense of
relief and gladness that he has had the courage to obey.
Look At The Results
Scientifically And Objectively: Pretty good , at least 9 out
of 10. Bill no longer feels paralyzed
by his beliefs about money. His obedience is no longer limited by his bank
account. He has broken through and begun putting into action into a new set of beliefs
about provision and finances. He still has a bit of hesitancy and nerves but
feels a new world opening up before him. Serving God will be good!
So
we see that the praxis method can help us to adjust our real life operational
beliefs until they line up with Scripture, logic and the will of God. It may
seem a little long-winded at first but once you become conscious of your belief
system and aware of your weak areas then you will find correcting one area
opens up others, and soon the new good beliefs reinforce one another, and then
you feel much stronger inside. This active cooperation with the renewing work
of the Holy Spirit can be of great assistance to your practical sanctification.
Faith and Works, Beliefs and
Action
Incorrect
beliefs can give rise to strong negative emotions such as fear, doubt and hesitancy. These emotions
can hinder or even paralyze our ability to obey God. Faith and obedience seem to be connected to some extent via the
emotions. Remember what we said earlier – God connects to us through faith,
which works through love, which applies specific and focused wisdom and
knowledge to do good works. The good works need the motivating power of the
master emotion called love. The word emotion comes from the same Latin root as
motive, motor etc. It means to "move toward". Emotions are feelings that move us to action
or in some cases block us from action. When the thoughts and intentions of our
heart are not aligned correctly, our emotions will not help us obey God,
and may even hinder our service for Him. As we correct these beliefs, then our
emotions will tend to follow suit and we will be more able to enact the
commands of Scripture and follow the guidance of the Holy Spirit.
This
of course has strong theological implications in the faith-works debate. My
position is that faith that is of the heart, and continued over time, will
result in works consistent with that faith. If a person claims to believe
something, but never acts in accordance with that belief it can be assumed that
that belief is either held very weakly or is, as James says, "dead"
(James 2;20,26).
For
instance someone may say "I believe in the resurrection of the dead and the life
everlasting". That is good. Such a person should then do works consistent
with a belief in an after-life and a reward in heaven. For instance they should
be able to sacrifice material reward in order to gain spiritual reward. Or they
should do good deeds that no-one notices believing they will be rewarded in
heaven. But if they live entirely materialistically then they are denying their
professed faith. If we were to look at the true "thoughts and intentions
of the heart" of a materialistic person their real beliefs would probably have
very little to do with eternal life. Their belief in the resurrection is simply
held for the sake of doctrinal conformity or intellectual conviction and has
little power in the person's life. It is in effect a very sick or
"dead" belief.
Works
are a guide to us as to whether or not our faith is truly alive, saving, living
and productive. Our works indicate to the world which beliefs we hold that are
strong enough for us to live by and act on. Works are a reliable guide to what
we truly believe in our heart. In a sense our works are our true doctrine. Our
works are the outworking of those beliefs, which we are prepared to act on,
live by and stand for in daily life. Paul is very definite that we are not
saved by works of the law. But he is also very definite that faith working
through love (Galatians 5:6) should result in good works that God has prepared
beforehand for us to do. (Ephesians 2:8-10). Faith works, faith does things,
faith expends energy to do good.
Jesus’
beliefs resulted in action (Acts 10:38) based on compassion (Matthew 9:36-38,
14:14)
On various occasions compassion "moved" Jesus to act in prayer, healing, cleansing and teaching. Thus faith springs into action via love and compassion. Faith that refuses to spring into action through love is lazy, sick or dead.
Moving From Paralysis To
Power
The
connection between what we believe and how we put it into action is through our
inner motive power - our emotions. Our emotions can paralyze our ability to be
obedient. When this happens we need to do what Bill did and examine the
thoughts and intents of our heart to see if there are some that
are contrary to what we are trying to do. As we correct the beliefs in our
heart we will find new liberty to obey God and a freedom from anxiety and inner
conflicts.
To
do this you will have to give up the belief that you are a being of perfect
consistency, that all the thoughts and intentions of your heart are consistent
with each other. As an example of conflicting beliefs take someone who vowed
early in life "I will never be poor". Later in life this person feels
a strong call to be a faith missionary.
It can be predicted that the old vow and the new resolution will be
in conflict and that he or she may experience some reluctance, confusion and
hesitancy. This attack of hesitancy may be first attributed to a lack of faith
or commitment. However if the early vow is remembered and renounced then the
conflict will be resolved. It was not so much a lack of faith, as a hindered
faith.
To
understand the power of these conflicting thoughts, intentions vows and desires
you have to understand a bit about how the mind handles its data and
in particular how it handles time. The mind has no actual awareness of clock
time such as hours, days, months and years. The mind uses event time where actual events are the
indicator of when things should happen. For instance "At two o'clock I
will have a sleep" is clock time while "After lunch I will have a
sleep" is event time. The event is the "clock". The mind uses
event times such as "when I am grown up I will", "After I am
married I shall…" "Until I leave home I will have to” etc.
Events
and instructions continue in the mind until the event time is reached for them to
terminate. Where there is no termination date included in the instruction it
continues indefinitely. Take a student who has often told herself "I've got to study hard all the
time" and who has now internalized this instruction. What's wrong? There
is no time given for this instruction to switch off. She has not said "I
have got to study hard until the exams then I can relax". Instead she has
said "I've got to study hard all the time". Because of the absolute
nature of this instruction even on holidays her subconscious will be reminding
her that she "has to study". There is no "off" switch, no
resolution, and in some cases the study moves from being beneficial to being a
compulsion. The over-use of such instructions, without a "switch-off
date" can lead to a person feeling very stressed as the programmed
subconscious keeps popping up reminders "you must do X now, and Y and Z
and P and Q and R…"
The
same thing happens if the terminating event does not occur, or is not
noted. Sometimes the subconscious mind
needs to be told that a particular event has taken place in order for some
emotion to be properly resolved. For instance someone may need to tell himself
or herself "you are no longer a small defenseless child, you have grown up
now, you can feel safe." Or more commonly "You can relax now, you are
not at work any more." Telling yourself to switch off is an important
instruction.
Secondly
the mind stores things in binary states" such as "on" or "off", "resolved "
or "unresolved", " accomplished" or "still to be
completed", "satisfied" or "unsatisfied",
"guilty" or "forgiven". It may also store things as "a
cause" or "an effect". (Incidentally these binary states are
elegantly reflected in the time-free verb tenses of the Hebrew language used in
the Old Testament.) Memories, thoughts, intentions, vows and inner promises
exist in these binary states. The only way to deal with them is to dispute them
or resolve them or somehow move them from one state to the other. Thus an old vow using words such as "I
will never" or "I must always" can live as an ever-present subconscious
reality all through a person's life unless it is resolved.
To
illustrate, think of a recurring and embarrassing memory that seems "as
vivid as yesterday". When it pops up it has all the intensity of twenty
years ago. Time has not healed. Time does not heal. The only way to deal with
that memory is to resolve it by switching it off and saying "Hey, that's
old history, I've grown beyond that now." One thing some of my clients
have found useful is to imagine they are on a boat at sea and dropping their
embarrassing memories into the ocean one by one and watching them sink. This
resolves them and presses the "off" switch in the subconscious and it
moves to the "dealt with" category and it is thus deactivated. Many
people have reported that it has brought real release.
Thirdly
the mind works by rather loose associations. Some of these associations
(especially with great pleasure or great pain) are very rough and quick while
others, processed at higher levels of the neo-cortex are much more sophisticated. It
is not uncommon to experience chains of associations where one thought leads to
the next which then leads to something else. This can be quite bizarre in
patients with a psychosis. When something "looks like", "feels
like" "smells like" or "sounds like" something else
then a whole cascade of thoughts, memories and emotional reactions can be
produced. The emotion is often transferred from the original to the copy.
Someone may react to their boss like their father or to their new spouse like
their ex-wife. These associations and the reactions and consequent emotions
that follow can produce tragic misunderstandings. "It looks like,
therefore it is, therefore I must, because once.."
So
inner life plans, vows, self-promises and deep desires retain power in the
psyche for as long as they are "active". When, later on in life, we try to do God's will and find that we
are "sabotaged" from within it may be that some of these inner motivational
factors are at work. Take Pablo the programmer, a fine Christian and a
very competent computer technician. He
failed first year at University due to heavy drinking just prior to his
conversion. He came to me for career guidance and when he did the IQ test his
score was so high it was "off the chart". I recommended a medical
specialty after doing some other tests but Pablo never even attempted to take
the advice. His inner vow "I must never fail again, I must always be perfect" was
totally in control and I failed to get anywhere at all. It has been twenty
years now since he failed at University and still Pablo lives a life of inner
safety largely wasting his God-given abilities. Old fears, vows, and promises
to self can wreak havoc with our potential. So can "games" and
life-scripts.
Games and life-scripts were first identified and
popularized by Eric Berne who developed Transactional Analysis in his
well-known book "Games That People Play". While I do not entirely
subscribe to his analysis and the three ego states, his observations are of
real and genuine importance. He has observed people very closely indeed. Games
and life-scripts are very complex and involve an often sinister "pay-off" for the person playing them.
An example is the game "You and Him Fight" where an attractive
woman sets up a situation where she brings two men into conflict - the pay-off
being the sense of power over men, having people fight over her and her own
amusement at their behavior.
Playwrights
and novelists are keen observers of these inner games and scripts that people
live by and enact almost unconsciously as if it is their fate or doom to do so.
Some tragic life-scripts are indeed from God such as that of Judas who was scripted to be
the "Son of Perdition" who would betray Christ. On the other hand
John the Baptist had a clear life script as a prophet. Such ultimate life-scripts are rare. More
often than not we program ourselves and can un-program ourselves as well. Some
people create complex scenarios to avoid taking responsibility for our life and
actions. For instance the person who always "tries" but never
succeeds, for to become successful would bring responsibility and the fear of
blame and failure. This is an interesting area but I need to move on.
Sufficient
to say that the intents of our heart can be very complex like a play
or novel and work out over many years with a few central motivations driving
the plot forward relentlessly. The person may be completely unaware of the game
or life-script. Complex intentions can successfully dwell below the level of
awareness - especially if they are somewhat dishonorable!
Thus
to move from paralysis to power we need to be able to work with the thoughts
and intentions of our heart and to bring them into
conformity with God's will. Here are some techniques in addition to the seven
steps of praxis that I outlined earlier in this chapter:
·
Face Up To And Become Aware
Of The Intentions Of Your Heart: It can be difficult for some people to admit that
they are complex and full of conflicting motivations. To admit to sneaky,
dishonest, crafty or manipulative intentions is not easy for Christians. Many
people are completely blind to this darker side of their character. Pray and
ask God to reveal the thoughts and intentions of your heart to you so that you can bring them
into the light and deal with them.
·
List The Various Conflicting
Intentions: This
is sometimes all that is needed. For instance a teenager may find that he has
two intentions 1. To be on fire for God and a powerful witness for Jesus and 2.
To still be popular with the cool, tough, non-Christians he knows. Once he
realizes that he is trying to do two things at once and that he is asking the
impossible then common sense and Christian maturity will help him choose to
suffer a little for the Lord. Simply listing the various intentions of our
heart then judging them biblically may be enough to resolve the dilemma.
·
Confess Them to God: Confess your wrong motives
and intentions to God and ask His forgiveness and cleansing.
·
Make No Provision For Evil
Intentions: Do
not give yourself the means of carrying out your wrong intentions. Deny them
what they need if they are to be implemented. If your wrong intention in your
heart is murder - don't buy a gun. If the wrong intention in your heart is
adultery - don't rent a hotel room. If the wrong intention is stealing from the
church offering, make sure someone is with you when you count the money. This
principle is what helped Augustine give up his loose living and become a
Christian..
(Romans 13:12-14
NASB) The night is almost gone, and the
day is at hand. Let us therefore lay aside the deeds of darkness and put on the
armor of light. {13} Let us behave properly as in the day, not in carousing and
drunkenness, not in sexual promiscuity and sensuality, not in strife and
jealousy. {14} But put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the
flesh in regard to its lusts.
·
Put It On Paper:
By externalizing our
beliefs and intentions we sometimes can get a handle on them and deal with
them. This is often the real benefit of those management exercises such as
setting priorities and doing mission statements. On a personal level if you
start setting goals and priorities and coming up with a personal mission
statement you will often run into awkward uncomfortable feelings of resistance.
When you do get them try and identify them, and write the feelings of
resistance beside the goal or priority. Bring the conflict to the surface and
into the open. For instance a student may initially draw up a very demanding
study schedule and after an initial burst of enthusiasm look at it and feel
“trapped”; perhaps think “this is stupid” and perhaps even desire to quit. He
should stop and ask: “Why do I think its stupid?” and the answer might be “Because
I need a life”. Once that need is identified blocks of time for socializing can
be scheduled in, along with plenty of time for study. Thus the two intentions
“I need to study” and “I need a life” can both be met and conflict avoided.
Then progress can be made on the major goal of getting a good degree. So put
your thoughts, priorities, goals and intentions on paper paying attention to
internal resistance as you do so. Identify and resolve the conflicts that
emerge. This way you can end up with goals that meet your needs and all major
conflicts satisfied so you can move on in life.
·
Prioritize and Schedule Good
Intentions Using Event Time: Sometimes the paralysis comes from a whole host of
good intentions all wanting urgent attention at once. All having their
"ON" lights flashing so to speak. . The resulting overload, confusion
and stress can be stop us getting much done at all. Use the event time of the subconscious to
prioritize them. First I will do A, then, after that's done I'll pay attention
to B, then when that's completed to C and D. Jesus gives nearly all His
instructions in event time "after you have" "when they"
"wait in Jerusalem until" etc. This is the most peaceful and relaxing
way to do things. So when you are clogged up mentally with a whole lot of
competing good intentions in your heart write them all down on a sheet of paper
and then group them first these, then after those then these here etc. Though
the tasks are not done yet the issue of their urgency is resolved in terms your
sub-conscious mind can understand and you will feel more at peace. Try it!
·
Revoke Personal Vows: Revoke old vows that are now
contrary to the will of God. Your promises to yourself are not as important as
Christian obedience. Even do something as formal as writing the old vow on a piece of paper and writing
"revoked" across it and then burning the piece of paper. Sometimes
you may have to revoke a foolish vow you made to God in which case you should
tell Him the reason you are revoking it and ask His forgiveness. It is for good
reason that oaths and vows are banned in the New Testament (Matthew 5:33-37,
James 5:12).
·
Change Absolute
Language: If you say to yourself
"I have always got to.." then its like fixing a mental switch in the
"always on" position. You have told your mind that you have always
got to do X and it will receive and record that instruction as a permanent
injunction, a law of the Medes and Persians. The mind is fairly literal. It
will take always to mean always and never to mean never. Words like
"always", "never" "have to", "go to",
"perfect" and "100%" jam our mental switches in the
"on" position. With enough of them we feel stuck, anxious and
stressed as we receive multiple simultaneous urgent instructions that we have
programmed into ourselves. . It is much better to give yourself an
"out" by using language like "generally I should" and
reserving the absolute language for situations that are truly absolute.
·
Avoid Psychosomatic
Language: The repeated and
emphatic-use of the language and metaphors of illness can sometimes make us
ill. For instance men who often tell themselves that their wife is a "pain
in the neck" tend to suffer from - you guessed it - a pain in the neck -
and people who "can't stand it any more" get knee trouble! This is
termed psychosomatic language, somatic metaphors or
"conversion" depending on your school of thought and was first noted
by Sigmund Freud. Self-talk such as "If that happened I would die.."
can become like an internal vow. The promise to die if X happens dwells in the sub-conscious and is
then triggered when the dreaded event occurs. The unleashing of the “I would
die” vow can then increase the chances
of a major psychosomatic illness. Let
me say that it is generally only the repetitive, habitual and emphatic use of
such metaphors that makes them a problem. Some self-help books I have read have
a quite alarmist and superstitious understanding and use terms such as
"cursing ourselves" and even assign supernatural powers to such
language. I am not of that panic-stricken view. The terminology needs to be
well embedded in the psyche first, only then does it attain any
psycho-physiological power. Even then, research findings show, psychosomatic
illness is only at its most damaging where there is some physical weakness in
that area already. But still predisposing oneself to it by the inappropriate
use of language is to be avoided.
·
Frame Thoughts and Intentions Concretely And Positively: When you rework your thoughts
and intentions it helps if they develop into a concrete picture of a positive
desirable future. For
instance a struggling student should frame the goal “I will pass in
Mathematics” rather than “I will not fail in Mathematics”. When we see the biblical healing commands
they are faith-filled, positive and have the desired end state in view. Jesus
did not say to the lepers “Leprosy be rebuked” instead He said “Be clean” and
Peter and John did not say to the lame man “Lameness be gone” instead it was “Rise
up and walk”. We need to be solution-focused not problem focused. The
positive end result is what is to be put before the eyes of our heart. These positive end results in Scripture are also expressed
in concrete terms. This seems to work better. “They will beat their swords into
ploughshares” has more power in our being than “weapons will be recycled into
agricultural implements”. I do not know precisely why but when we state our
goals and beliefs in concrete, positive, picture terms we seem to lay hold of
them much more effectively.
·
Constantly Review Your
“Plausibility Structures”: We have limits to what we believe is possible
and impossible, probable and improbable, plausible and implausible. The anthropologist
Peter Berger calls these our “plausibility structures” and says they
vary greatly from culture to culture. I
was challenged in this area when I was a missionary to Papua New Guinea. A
respectable Christian told me that his brother had turned into a python and
slithered out the door never to be seen again. While this was a credible normal
explanation to him, it was utterly impossible and implausible to me. My
plausibility structure was challenged. While I do not advocate Christian
gullibility I do advocate reworking our limits so that they line up with
Scriptures view of what is possible and impossible, plausible and implausible.
Jesus says nine times in the gospels “nothing is impossible with God” or “all
things are possible with God”. His life and miracles reflect His commitment to
this belief. The limits we place on our life are often really limits we have
placed on God through having plausibility structures inherited from the world
rather than from the Scriptures.
There is so much more that could be written on this
but I hope you have grasped the central idea that we need to work on the
thoughts and intentions of our heart, becoming aware of
what is really going on in there, uprooting the weeds and setting the good
plants in proper order. However this is a large task and it is very hard to do
it alone – we need others, and in particular we need a Christian community
dedicated to the same ends. That is the subject of the next chapter.
The
Learning Organization
Christians
In Community Undergoing Radical Transformation Of Their Belief Structure
Mystery Quote: “No-one was ever matured in a theatre.”
Lets just pause a moment and think about how the communities we have been part of have shaped our beliefs. Our family formed our first beliefs and our school and social context many of our other beliefs and the church community then added yet more. On top of this networks you have belonged to and groups of friends that you have talked things over with have probably shaped you. Being involved in community placed an enormous amount of what we believe there. Communities have formed both our formal and informal beliefs, our doctrines, our prejudices our hopes and our paranoias. If beliefs are critical to our emotional health and beliefs are formed in community then fairly logically having the right kind of community will be a big help in emotional transformation. A dysfunctional family is an emotionally destructive community that places wrong beliefs and perceptions in people. The early church was a highly functional community that was emotionally transformational, full of joy and a peace-making, gospel-proclaiming, and miracle-working place to be. It certainly made sure the right beliefs; perceptions and practices were instilled in people. Thus the transforming power of an authentic loving Spirit-filled Christian community that is rightly grounded in the Scriptures cannot be underestimated.
We learn, change and grow best in an adventurous, faith-filled Christian community. That seems a simple enough statement but it is one of those important things that are often neglected. Trying to transform ourselves while neglecting the importance of true community is unfortunately rather common. If we forget about community what are the alternatives? I see only two, a) learning alone by suffering, introspection and “bootstrap” self-help books and b) learning in a classroom. Now God does use suffering to teach us and he does use classroom instruction and sermons – however in my opinion these are His “fall-back” alternatives to adventurous discipleship in loving community. Lets look at the fall-back alternatives first and see why they are less than optimal ways of learning. We tend to do what we have always done and get the results that we have always got.
The Hard Way To Change….
Bootstrap
learning, on our own through suffering and discipline and the use of self-help books
is the hard way to change. Some devotional writers glorify suffering as the
true path to spiritual transformation that is intended to show us what we are
like and to get us to trust God in all things. Their basis for this has some
validity and is more or less as follows:
1.
Even
theologically correct Christians may have dysfunctional beliefs at the level of
the "thoughts and intentions of the heart".
2.
Generally
we are blinded to what we truly believe in our hearts. We like to think we
believe X when in fact we believe Y. Our real beliefs shame us so we hide them
from ourselves.
3.
Generally
only trials and tribulations can expose our true beliefs and allow us to
perfect our faith. In trials we find out what makes us anxious and fearful and
we can then learn to trust God more fully in these areas.
4.
Being
perfected in obedience means allowing trials, tribulations and temptations to
show us who we are and what we believe. We are then to adjust to a more
biblical set of beliefs which we then live by with a single mind.
5.
We
can do this on our own through bible study, prayer, discipline, self-control,
reflection on our sins, and the use of self-help books.
The
problem is that suffering is a very slow teacher. For instance how many years
of financial struggle does a person have to endure before they learn to trust
God for provision? Also how do we distinguish suffering that is God's teaching
and suffering that is Satan hindering? Though suffering has an honored place in
the Christian life it is the hardest and slowest teacher of all. There must be
an easier way.
The Slightly Easier But
Fairly Powerless way To Change
A
book came out entitled "Why Most People Learn Almost Nothing At Church And
What To Do About It". I like the title. It points out an important truth -
Church, bible college and Christian education is not as transformational as we
would all like it to be. As a part-time bible college lecturer I have taken
classes in biblical exegesis, theology, church history and counseling. I see
some change, some growth but rarely the transformational change that I hope
for. The classroom can give you helpful information once you have realized that you
need to change in a particular area and are truly searching for answers. If you
are desperate to fix your marriage a Christian marriage seminar may well prove
transformational. You were ready to learn. However most students in most
classes are not ready to learn. They are just there to pass Church History.
Worse even, because the students are extracted from real life they do not have
much opportunity to apply what they have learned in a real life context and
thus the learning does not “stick”. You see some of them five years later and
shake your head at their mistakes. Did they learn a thing? Others of course are a source of joy. Books
and classes and sermons can only take you so far. Academic, classroom learning
is not powerful enough, it cannot blast through the huge blind spots we have.
We go to the classroom but we don’t really learn much that changes us. So
teaching stalls and suffering takes over.
So
most Christians end up with classroom teaching where they are teachable and
suffering where they are not teachable. Classroom teaching plus years of
suffering – are they the only two ways we can be made to change? What about the
transformational power of love? What about the challenge of adventure? Can we
learn from powerful life-changing experiences? Might these move us along the
track a bit faster than teaching and suffering alone? There must be a better
way - and there is! It’s the method Jesus used to change His disciples and
greatly enlarge and transform their belief structures. It’s the process of
discipleship and of being a disciplined learner in a learning community. Lets
see what led the disciples to be so transformed.
Having Our Beliefs Changed
The Jesus Way - How Did The Disciples Learn?
How
did the disciples get to increase in faith? How did they learn? How did they go from
astonishing incomprehension at the start of His ministry to men of God and
founders of the faith at Pentecost? These were the most successful spiritual
learners in history so lets look at how they learned and maybe we can learn the
same way.
1.
The
disciples made themselves teachable apprentices of Jesus. The decided to be
learners not know-it-alls. They were prepared to give up significant comfort in
order to learn. (Matthew 19:27) . They broke with their usual patterns of
living that reinforced their current belief systems. They left their fishing
nets or tax offices and followed Him.
2.
They
planted Jesus’ teaching in their hearts. They probably learned the same lessons
over and over again because years later they could reproduce them word for word
to their hearers.
3.
They
had a strong desire to inherit the Kingdom of God. In fact it dominated their
personal ambitions. (Matthew 18:1-5)
4.
They
expressed a strong desire for specific personal growth e.g. "Lord, teach
us to pray".
5.
They
accepted Jesus' authority over them and simply went where He went, ate what He
ate and did whatever He commanded. Even when Jesus rebuked them they did not
sulk.
6.
They
believed that what Jesus said was true, absolutely true and sought to align
their beliefs with His. (John 6)
7.
They
watched what Jesus was doing. They saw miracles and had their view of reality
enlarged.
8.
They
asked lots of questions and sought to understand.
9.
They
discussed among themselves what Jesus said and did. (Matthew 16:7, Mark 10:26)
10.
They
accepted Jesus' high view of the authority of the Scriptures. (Matthew 5:17)
11.
They
took risks in order to learn such as Peter trying to walk on water or their
various attempts at healing.
12.
They
lived with high levels of ambiguity, confusion and mystery. They seemed to accept mind-stretching
confusion as the price of learning anything worthwhile. (Mark 9:32 , John 10:6
etc.)
13.
They
very gradually moved away from being competitive to co-operative. They stopped
trying to outdo each other and instead, by the time of the resurrection appearances were trying to
encourage and edify each other. They became an encouraging, learning community.
14.
They
tried to do what Jesus was doing. They started with baptizing people in large
numbers(John 4:1,2) and continued to exercise their faith in healing and
deliverance ministries and did so with some success (Luke 10:1-24).
15.
They increasingly accepted responsibility for
ministry. At the beginning they were fairly passive followers by the end they
seem to have roles assigned to them.
Eventually Jesus was able to deliver the Great Commission to them
without incongruity. (Matthew 28:18-20).
The
communities in the early church and the traveling bands of apostles and missionaries that spread the gospel in the 1st
century also took adventurous
discipleship in community very seriously.
The reason we see so little change is that instead of being adventurous we try
to stay in our physical and emotional and intellectual comfort zones. Instead
of accepting legitimate spiritual authority and accountability (though it can
be abused) we are independent and unteachable. Instead of tolerating ambiguity
and confusion we demand simplified, watered-down paradox free theology. Instead
of letting God set the learning agenda we try to decide what we will learn and
how and when. We want to be in control of our learning, our lives and
ourselves. We do not want storms as teaching aids. We value the Kingdom a
little and the world a lot and consequently we don't take the risks and make
the sacrifices to find the "pearls of great price".
Deep
and revolutionary change of our belief structures and the emotional
authenticity and joy that follows requires a very costly commitment to learning
and personal transformation. While the Holy Spirit can work through a course or a
book or a set of tapes and produce some personal change this is not the sort of
deep change you get with adventurous discipleship over a number of years. I have
seen greater change in young people in a one-week Christian camp or a four-week
short-term missions trip than in years of good youth group bible studies. While
information has its place and can be transformational if given at the right
moment it is not the major means of transforming our beliefs. Revising our
beliefs starts with becoming an active learner about life, about God and about
people and plunging into experiences and relationships yet always being guided
by the Scriptures rightly interpreted. To create the right belief structures in
our lives we have to try to approximate the conditions the disciples lived
under as much as is reasonably possible. The early Franciscans took being like
the disciples with total seriousness and turned Europe upside down. It works.
The Importance Of A Learning
Community
Jesus
and the disciples formed a learning organisation, a community filled with
disciplined learners in which beliefs were transformed and spiritual greatness
produced. It is almost impossible to be deeply transformed outside of community
or as part of a community that is antithetical to one's new beliefs and growth.
Cults take this power to transform beliefs in and through community to a destructive
and harmful extreme. It is the growth of the person not the service of the
organisation that is of critical importance. A true leaning community is the
opposite of a cult. It is a place where individual personalities are developed
- not squashed into clones of each other. Unlike a cult a learning community is
a place where difference is permitted and where accountability is mutual and
constructive not hierarchical and destructive. A true transformational learning
community is a place of great freedom and love and adventure. I once
experienced a bible study group that was like this and it was an exciting and
transformational place to be. I have seen families that were learning
communities and mission teams that were on the edge of adventure and both changing
the world and the people within the team. Small groups of friends seeking God
together such as the Holy Club at Oxford under John Wesley and the Haystack Prayer Meeting
have produced mighty revivals.
How
do we find or create such a learning community?
(1 Peter 5:1-7 NKJV) The elders who are among you I exhort, I who am a fellow elder and a witness of the sufferings of Christ, and also a partaker of the glory that will be revealed: {2} Shepherd the flock of God which is among you, serving as overseers, not by compulsion but willingly, not for dishonest gain but eagerly; {3} nor as being lords over those entrusted to you, but being examples to the flock; {4} and when the Chief Shepherd appears, you will receive the crown of glory that does not fade away. {5} Likewise you younger people, submit yourselves to your elders. Yes, all of you be submissive to one another, and be clothed with humility, for “God resists the proud, But gives grace to the humble.” {6} Therefore humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God, that He may exalt you in due time, {7} casting all your care upon Him, for He cares for you.
There are numerous
bible passages describing the ideal kind of Christian community and the
atmosphere of a learning organisation. One of these is quoted above. It seems
to me that learning community revolves around two things – leadership and
ethos. In reflecting on what makes good community I find that it involves
balancing creative tensions. Too much one way and the community becomes dull
and bureaucratic, to much the other and it self-destructs in disorganization. I
have listed seven tensions (I am sure there are others as well) that my reading
of Scripture sees as foundational to good Christian community they are:
Explanation
of the eight creative tensions above:
Lets
put this together. First we looked at the disciples as the ideal community
members with their high commitment to finding spiritual truth and allowing themselves to be stretched.
Lately we have looked at the eight
tensions that the leadership of a learning organization need to be aware
of and bring into balance. In such a community grace and truth and love will
meet and people will be transformed in their belief structures and emotional
lives. They will learn, they will grow and they will have lots of fun.
How
can we do this? How can we create a therapeutic, healing, loving, sanctifying
community that really works? I have explored these issues in two ebooks that
can be downloaded from here. The ebooks are Beyond Denominations – The Networked Church, and Temples and Tithes. The first looks at abandoning denominational hierarchical structures in
favor of networks of churches in a local area. The second looks at some of the
doctrines, particularly misinterpretations of the Old Testament and the law,
that keep Christians in bondage or which confine them in dysfunctional
structures. Traditional church structures are not transforming people at the
rate they should be. It is imperative for our own personal spiritual and
emotional growth to find or create alternatives. Here is my suggested pathway:
On
the other hand you may just want to make your current church more
transformational. In that case start by throwing out those things that don’t
work for you and doing more of those things that do work for you. Ask God to
show you where to start. Generally if you spend more and more time doing things
that do work for you they will gradually and naturally push out the
dysfunctional elements along the way. For instance if you find that small
groups help your people to grow then have more small groups! Get more and more
people into small groups and delegate more and more functions to them. Even
allow the small group leaders to baptize and administer the Lord’s Supper.
After a while you will have most of the preaching and teaching and praying and
counseling and baptizing and sacraments being done in people’s homes in small
groups. They will be in small mutually accountable communities and the pastor
will be teaching the leaders to lead and dealing with the most complex
questions. Maybe everyone will be so involved in their small groups that they
won’t “come to church” any more. They will just be the church. That will solve
the problem of the parking lot.
The
above example may shock you but it poses a fundamental question – what is our
community for? Is it for the people? Is it for God? Or is it for a structure?
We need to find a way of being together that makes us most like Jesus Christ.
The present way of being together does that a little and is better than
nothing. However there has to be a better way of being church and thousands, if
not millions, of Christians are searching for it.
What
has this got to do with Biblical EQ and in particular with our belief structure? Church structure seems a long way from emotional health. To answer
that - emotions flow from beliefs and beliefs are formed in community and how
far we can go with those beliefs and what they really mean is often reinforced
day by day in that community.
An
extreme example of dysfunctional
communities is the cults. Cults are communities that form wrong
beliefs and produce destructive emotional states. Cults are community gone
wrong and are a huge danger to emotional health. Just do an Internet search on
“cults” or read the biography of someone who has been in one and you will soon
see the terrible damage they can inflict. Structure can quietly shape community
so that it goes badly wrong. For instance if there are a small handful of
highly coveted church positions in a large church then that will tend to create
lobbying and internal politics as people try to get elected. Or if the
structure is one of professional performers “on stage” and a large audience in
the auditorium then it is natural for people to be spectators rather than
actively involved with their faith. I was mulling this over with respect to why
mega-churches seemed to be so shallow unless they had good home groups, when
God suddenly and almost audibly spoke these words: “John, no-one was ever
matured in a theatre.” (Hence the mystery quote at the beginning of the
chapter).
On
the other hand in the past twenty years or so whole therapy movements have
grown up around getting community right – notably family therapy. Or they
employ community as a tool for healing emotions in T-groups, encounter groups,
support groups, Twelve Step groups and so on. Even in the business world
various branches of systems theory and the study of organizational behavior has
revealed that structures, beliefs, emotions and behaviors are inextricably
linked and that good companies must have good structures if they are to
maximize the potential of their staff.
The emotional potential of people is released best in a good and rightly
structured community. Thus the link between community culture and transformed
human emotion is well documented and strong.
When
we do get community right it has tremendous healing power. This can even happen
on a small scale such as the “Jones family”, a loving Christian household that
people just keep “dropping in on”. There they are welcomed and loved and
changed. More counseling is done in the kitchen than in many a pastor’s study.
Over the years this small functional community of just one family will help
hundreds of people towards wholeness as they absorb the atmosphere and feel the
love and warmth there. Love is the great transforming force in biblical EQ.
People
are matured in families, groups of friends, marriages and good groups. They are
matured in communities that speak the truth to one another in love. People are not matured in a theatre, even by the best
performers. When we turn churches into theatres we rob Christians of the chance
to mature. So structures and beliefs and emotions and community and maturity
are all part of one seamless whole.
In the last few chapters we have explored how emotions are formed in the realm of the spirit and the soul and in community. In this next chapter we will look at another place emotions are generated – in our bodies, and turn to the complex topic of the interaction between our physical bodies and our emotions.
Emotions And Our
Physiology
(Psalms
31:9-10 NKJV) Have mercy on me, O LORD,
for I am in trouble; My eye wastes away with grief, Yes, my soul and my body!
{10} For my life is spent with grief, And my years with sighing; My strength
fails because of my iniquity, And my bones waste away.
In Psalm 31 above David cries out at how his emotions are affecting every aspect of his physical being. His body and his emotions were in continual interaction. Yet only recently has Greek based Western thought fully grasped this rather obvious fact. Anger turns the face red, fear turns it white, a pizza at bedtime can give you nightmares, a pill can make you high, alcohol can relax you and too much coffee can make you anxious (I believe there is even a clinical condition called “caffeine anxiety neurosis”!).
I have seen this relationship in a dramatic way in my own life. As an epileptic since childhood I have adopted a quite different personality under each change of medication. On phenobarbitone I was “out of it”, while on Tegretol I was happy, Dilantin made me dizzy and Valproate makes me rather depressed. Coming off phenobarbitone at age 33 was one of the very best things I ever did and my life and personality improved immensely.
The Body of Jesus
Earlier in this book we saw that at the incarnation God prepared a special sin-free body for Jesus that was perfectly designed for doing the will of God. The perceptions and beliefs of Jesus generated emotions that interacted with and were expressed through His body for the edification of the hearers. The body of Jesus was primarily a vehicle for ministry including the unusual task of martyrdom, but more than martyrdom, dying as the perfect Lamb of God without a bone of His body being broken then being raised from the dead. The fact that Jesus’ physical nature was sinless and special and had a unique destiny does not make His body artificial or an illusion. Jesus body was real and had the same feelings that our bodies do.
Under duress Jesus wept, groaned deeply, and even sweated drops of blood. (Luke 22:44) So we see Jesus’ emotions affected His body. But did His body affect His emotions? Was Jesus so fixed on the Father that His physical emotions of hunger, thirst etc were not even noticed?. Did He sort of float above our earthly existence? Not at all. Jesus felt His physical life just like we all do and even cried from the cross “I thirst”. However the physical life did not dictate His behavior or responses; even after fasting forty days in the wilderness Jesus was able to resist the temptation to turn the stones into bread. Jesus was tempted in all points as we are including by emotions generated from within the human body and by the intense cravings of the flesh. Yet He was able to resist His physical desires when it would have been sinful to give in. At other times He quite legitimately satisfied them with a drink of water from the well or a breakfast of fish on the beach.
So we see that intense physical cravings can push us towards sinful responses but that like Jesus we can overcome them and master them. We also see that emotions can affect our bodies and bodies our emotions. Finally our physical bodies are to be consecrated to God s vehicles for ministry expressing His thoughts and doing the good deeds He has prepared for us.
Spirit, Soul and Body
Our emotions are so heavily modified by our diet, fitness level, medications and other aspects of our physiology that it leads researchers to ask questions such as: Do we really have our own emotions or are all our emotions just a product of our biology? If a change of medication or a bump on the head can modify our emotions completely - were they ours to begin with? Do we have a spirit and soul that is “inside us” and relatively stable and the source of many of our emotions – or are we just a bundle of rather well trained biological responses?
The view of this book is that we do have a spirit and a soul and that the emotions generated there are expressed to the world through the body. When we are sad we cry, when we are happy we dance. In a perfect world our body would report the world accurately to us through the senses and express our feelings to the world with poetry, poise and clarity. Unhappily we live in earthen vessels in a fallen world. Communication does not happen as well as we would like and we neither understand clearly, nor are as well understood as we wish. Plato saw this dilemma and concluded that the soul was trapped within a material body that was inherently evil. This is not the Christian view. Christian belief has it that the spirit and soul reside in a good body, which has unfortunately been tainted by the Fall. The body now has evil resident within it but it is our present bodies will be redeemed and transformed at the resurrection of the dead. [It was Jesus human body, the one in the grave, which rose and was resurrected. The grave was empty. Similarly it is our present human body that will be transformed in the twinkling of an eye at the resurrection into a glorious spiritual body. We do not lose our bodies; we have them changed.] Notwithstanding this redemptive hope the body is a problem - perhaps the biggest problem of all.
This interface between the soul and the body is complex and poorly understood yet it is one of the main areas of problems in the Christian life. Is it unspiritual for me to have bouts of depression that are induced by the medication that keeps me alive? Is the terror of a child with high fever and delirium a failure of spiritual nerve? Is post-natal depression a sign of sin in a woman’s life? Is the weariness of chronic arthritis or the sudden emotional swings that come to people with spinal damage a sign of unbiblical behaviour? I hope you have answered a firm “No” to all these questions. No-one with malaria wants bizarre dreams, visions and tropical terrors. No-one with a damaged spine wants to suddenly find themselves swinging emotionally. These emotions arise unbidden and unwanted from neurological damage and from chemical imbalances in the body. Yet they affect us deeply and are a large part of our spiritual struggle.
Where emotions have a physiological basis changing the underlying physical condition will often bring emotional relief. When the fever goes the delirium and its terror passes and is simply a memory. If the person manages to give up drinking too much coffee their anxiety levels decline. Thus it makes sense for Christians to visit a physician and to see if there is some underlying physical cause for their emotional condition. There may be a medication with fewer side effects than the one you are using or there may be simple lifestyle changes that can make you feel much better.
The body seems to have an emotional memory of its own as well. A person may find themselves physically repelled by mushrooms after a previous dose of food poisoning despite knowing that the present mushrooms are fine. Many a person has sworn off drinking port after a night on the town. There is a deep physical and emotional reaction to those substances that the body associates with illness and pain and even towards certain odours associated with them.
The problem comes when a psychological problem remains after the original physiological issue has subsided. For instance when a small child becomes afraid of a certain object that may have been the focus of nightmares or delirium. In one childhood measles case the flowers on the floral curtains seemed to turn into huge attacking spiders and this terrified the poor child for days on end. The parents pointing out “there is no need to be afraid of the floral curtains any more” didn’t help. The damage from prolonged fear is too deep for common sense. In these cases the body has affected the soul. Counselling and proper therapy are needed. It may even be simpler to buy new curtains!
Repeated physiological stimuli can set off permanent physical changes. These changes include the chemical cravings in alcoholics and drug addicts or some of the neurological changes reported among torture victims and those with post-traumatic stress disorder. Since the problem is now physiological or chemical and seems to be lasting then the response may involve medication, behavioural conditioning or even, in severe cases, neurosurgery. Much research is currently being done on how our neural pathways are affected by our life experiences and the degree to which they can be retrained. It is an extremely interesting but very complex area.
Our emotions have an incredibly complex series of physical correlates that include hormones flooding our system, changes in blood supply, the activation of an emotional region near the stomach, neurones firing and neural pathways and various associations in the brain. The “fight-or-flight” response [which I will spend the next chapter discussing] is a massive activation of the body by the emotion called “fear”. According to some recent research our more instinctive fight or flight reactions seem to be processed in the limbic system especially in the amygdala. On the other hand our more balanced, less fearful, more refined and thought-out responses come from the pre-frontal cortex. The two areas are connected with the cortical region normally modifying information from the amygdala. When the amygdala or pre-frontal cortex is damaged people lose connection with many of their emotions. These regions of the brain seem to do much of the processing associated with our perceptions of emotional reality.
Damage to these regions can lead to coarse and vulgar expressions of emotion including a distinct lack of impulse control. I once counselled a woman who had tragically been the victim of unethical experimental psycho-surgery and had both her frontal lobes removed as s treatment for depression She was a kind and loving person but her speech was laced with uncontrolled profanities. Her control over finer expression had been totally lost when her frontal lobes had been removed. This unfortunate woman was a born again Christian but could not attend church because of her constant swearing. Was she really sinful and unspiritual or would we all end up like her given the same neurological damage? I think the latter. Her kind and loving heart was evident. There was not a trace of meanness or hatred in her soul. She was in love and wanted to know whether or not to marry the very patient man who cared for her despite her condition. After a few sessions of counselling I gave them my blessing. The brain was damaged but the person was intact. This leads to the next question – what is the relationship between the mind and the brain?
The Mind-Brain Problem
The philosopher Descartes posed the problem of how the physical organ called the brain and the subjective phenomenon of ‘mind’ interact. Is my mind merely the product of my neural activity - a perfectly predictable thing that obeys the laws of physics so that I have no free will as Thomas Huxley proposed in 1874? Are mind and brain the same phenomenon but viewed from different angles so that the brain is how we view it from outside and the mind is how we view it from inside? Bertrand Russell held this view. The philosopher and mathematician Leibniz saw them as parallel universes in perfect harmony but not interacting. Mind and brain were like two matched clocks that kept the same time though they were quite separate and without interaction. The Idealists such as Hegel saw Mind as the only reality and the physical brain as simply a creation of Mind. This is regarded by most as an extreme view. Twentieth century philosophers have been taken with the notion that Mind is just a computer program running on the hardware called the brain thus there is no mind-brain duality and no problem. There are almost as many solutions as there are philosophers. Some invoking quantum states and others reverberating neural circuits. It’s a fascinating subject and if you have the time just search on the Internet for “mind-brain problem” or “consciousness” and you will find as many articles as you like with as many different theories as you can manage. Well is there a Christian, biblical and Scriptural solution to it? Is our consciousness simply a physical part of us or is there some “entity”, a soul or spirit, which is separate from the body and possesses consciousness?
The Bible is quite clear that consciousness persists after death. To put it bluntly the mind continues to exist after worms have eaten the brain. Thus the mind does not depend on the brain for its existence. But does that lead to the Idealist position where the Mind creates the brain? Not at all! The Bible states that the body was formed before the mind. God made Adam out of clay – Adam’s body existed, presumably including his brain, before the spirit of life and consciousness was breathed into him and he became a living soul. (Genesis 2:7) Therefore if the body existed before the mind it is not created by the mind. The Idealist position collapses. The separate natures of Mind and brain can be seen as follows: a) We live on after death therefore the human mind can exist independently without the physical brain. b) When God created mankind He made the physical body first. Therefore the physical brain can exist independently without the human mind. This is called the “strong dualist” position. If you think about it it’s the only position that can support any sort of free will or morality. If the mind, that is my humanity and reason, is simply a biochemical or computing phenomenon, a somewhat predictable entity like a complicated billiard ball then I am relieved of all responsibility. I am predetermined by a complex set of initial conditions and my reactions are simply Nature taking its biochemical course. Hitler and Mother Teresa are just different neurological arrangements and society happens to prefer the latter over the former. For a Christian this is an entirely untenable position despite its appeal to the deconstructed amorality of the modern world.
To me the Christian position seems to fall out as follows:
1. Mind
and brain are separate entities. Mind is eternal but the brain is temporal.
2. Mind
is grounded in consciousness, which arises from the soul that is quickened by
the spirit.
3. The
brain as we know it mainly acts on sense data from the physical world and
co-ordinates the physical functions of our bodies. In maps of the brain complex
physical tasks such as the co-ordination of the thumb take up most of the
space. Brain maps show very little space devoted to the existential matters of
the Mind.
4. Thus
while we are in this physical world we need a physical brain. It’s the data
link between an immaterial soul and a material universe. The physical brain
mediates how our mind communicates with our bodies and receives sense
impressions about the external physical world. When the mind expresses itself
it does so through our bodies which are co-ordinated by our brains.
5. The
spirit is designed to handle communication in the spiritual realm directly and
intuitively. So when we are not in this material realm, such as when we with
God in heaven, we can have consciousness via the spirit without the presence of
a physical brain. A case of this is the souls under the altar, which can speak,
feel and communicate with God. (Revelation 6:9,10).
6. Thus, as we saw in the chapters on perception
we can receive knowledge directly and intuitively from the spirit in
Spirit-to-spirit communication. Such communication goes directly into our Mind.
When it occurs it can be very powerful because it is so direct. When Daniel
received prophetic messages it left him emotionally drained. (Daniel 10:8)
7. We
can also receive communication directly through our senses into our brain. This
input is filtered before it reaches consciousness and does not necessarily get
there. For instance we can come out of a daydream to be suddenly aware that the
kettle has been furiously boiling for a few minutes and that our brain knew
this at the time but it just was not getting through to our consciousness.
Consciousness can ignore sense data. Input to the brain does not necessarily
mean input to the Mind.
8. Damage
to the brain is mainly damage to our ability to process sensory data and to
interact with the physical world.
9. Brain
damage does not affect Mind and our ability to have a soul or a spirit or to
experience salvation. Christians working with people with mental disabilities
have no doubt about the spirituality of their clients.
10. While this is
so most people have a strong interaction between Mind and brain, which produces
wisdom, intelligence and creativity.
While the Mind is ultimately independent of the brain; damage to the
brain can reduce our ability to experience our Mind in this life for instance
in the case of the deep confusion that accompanies Alzheimer’s disease.
Thus our emotions flow most fundamentally from our soul and spirit but are then connected to the world and the senses through the body, which includes the brain. This connection is intimate and deep and unless something disturbs it mind and brain appear to be a seamless whole as the body-soul-spirit complex functions as one integrated entity.
In the case of the client with dual frontal lobotomies her ability to interact with and evaluate her vocabulary was missing. She did not know the difference between appropriate and inappropriate words. This was a loss of cognitive processing in the brain not a deficiency of character or spirituality. Also the personality changes that come with medication do not necessarily affect a person’s salvation or their spirituality though they do affect how that person experiences his or her spirituality.
Stress
In the following section on Stress I am using the published work of Brisbane based Christian psychiatrist and stress researcher Dr. William Wilkie and in particular two chapters from his book “Understanding Psychiatry”.
Stress is an interesting area in the mind-brain problem because stress is the emotion we experience when our brain cannot cope with all the processing that is required of it. The physical brain is like you desktop computer and if you have too may programs running it can slow down or “hang”. There is “just so much” your brain can do at once. Dr Wilkie theorises that this is due to the capacity of the reticular formation, an area at the back of the brain that filters incoming data and decides what will get attention and what will be discarded.
For instance you are driving along a pleasant country road in Australia, listening to the car radio and enjoying the view. Then a 6ft tall red kangaroo jumps out in front of your car. Your reticular formation switches the focus of your attention in a split second, you no longer pay any attention to the radio or the view and every particle of your attention is focussed on the kangaroo and how to avoid hitting it. Deciding what is urgent and important and of value for the brain to process is the job of the reticular formation and most of the time its automatic. You do not consciously think “’I’d better stop listening to the radio and looking at the view, I think I’d better concentrate on the kangaroo.” That’s too slow. Most of the time the change in attention is lightning fast and automatic and not under a great deal of conscious control. Now the problem comes if in addition to the kangaroo you have a truck coming in the opposite direction and a ditch on one side of the road and a large tree on the other. In this case you will probably hit the tree. Why? Because the reticular formation won’t cope with all the situations at once. It will process the huge oncoming truck and the sudden movement of the kangaroo and maybe even the yawning menacing ditch by the side of the road but the tree is just “part of the landscape” and there are lots of trees so you “won’t see it” and you will hit it with horrible consequences.
On a much less dramatic scale this happens to busy modern people every day. There is too much to do and “stuff falls off the plate”. There are some things that we know we should be paying attention to, that just don’t happen. We get that clogged up feeling in our head and we might even say “If I have to think about one more thing I’ll scream” Or “Stop the world I want to get off!”. That clogged up, “I cannot cope with all this” feeling is what we call stress. We feel stress when we have too many things, that are too urgent, too complicated or too important, to be all processed at once. In extreme case sit can lead to burn-out or stress breakdown. Stress breakdown has three stages. Firstly our system fires warning bells about the overload we are experiencing and we feel stressed and anxious and uptight and tense. These uncomfortable feelings are trying to tell us that we are doing too much and it would be a good idea if we slowed down. They are saying “You are driving yourself too fast, back off.” Many people ignore these warning signals, they like “driving fast”, living on adrenalin and they have an image of wanting to do more than others. So they suppress the anxiety by an act of will and keep going. They then become in danger of second stage stress breakdown. In stage two the person loses control of emotions and finds themselves getting angry or upset very easily. They can cry one minute and laugh the next. These sudden emotional changes are termed “emotional lability”. The person in stage two stress breakdown also lose their ability to adjust to change and to motivate themselves to get started though once they have started they can work as hard as anyone else. The system is beginning to crumble at this point and the person becomes subject to psychosomatic disorders as the body tries to slow the person down. These include migraines, headaches, asthma, dermatitis and hay fever. The immune system suffers and resistance bacteria and viruses already present in the person’s body may be able to cause disease. These include common infections such as colds and ‘flu, herpes virus infections, mouth ulcers, lobar pneumonia, boils and pimples, tonsillitis and urinary tract infections. Most people get the hint at this point and slow down but for some who do not they can go into severe, third stage stress breakdown commonly called burn-out. This is characterized by three things, and unfortunately they are generally not recognized as being stress related. The three symptoms of third stage stress breakdown are:
1. Avoidance of sensory stimulation
2. Development of intolerance, and
3. Apparent change in personality.
The brain’s circuit breakers have cut in. Everything is being rapidly simplified to reduce the number of issues the person has to deal with.
In order to avoid sensory stimulation the person may retreat to the countryside, separate from their partner, stop having sex, avoid loud music and stop going to shopping centres. Sounds will seem too loud, ice too cold, lights too bright. They will switch off the radio when others turn it on. They will go outside and walk around and just “space out”.
Development of intolerance is a mechanism for making life easy to classify, so the reticular formation can deal with the backlog. If the shades of grey and complex questions can be eliminated life becomes simple and things can be processed again. If everything can be reduced to the binary states the brain is most comfortable processing, then it can whiz through the decisions. As the decisions are made the clogged up feeling goes and some of the stress can be removed. Racism and intolerance may have their roots in our brains ability to process information and cope with change. Intolerance over things that our intolerance cannot hurt is actually, in a weird way, useful. Say someone was intolerant of Communists in Russia – that simplifies things for them and probably won’t hurt the Communists one bit. (I am not justifying racism and intolerance here, its wrong, but it may help to know some of why it arises). The danger is when intolerance is close to home and we apply it to people we know. In third stage stress breakdown people become totally intolerant of small things “If you leave your shaving hairs in the sink I will leave you”. I personally know of cases where that has happened. Just a small thing, that was previously tolerated or laughed at, becomes a major drama. Things previously tolerated become unable to be tolerated in third stage stress breakdown.
Lastly the person in third stage stress breakdown may have an apparent change in personality and change their values. They may be unable to resist cult recruiters, they are easily brainwashed, they have sudden changes in beliefs and ideas and attitudes that required some will or effort to maintain are likely to be abandoned. Some talk of a strange feeling of peace and purity that comes with this process as everything gets radically simplified. There is also a loss of the “law of strength”. Normally a slight tap on the knee elicits a slight movement and a large tap on the knee a large movement. The law that a small stimulus generally elicits a small response and a large stimulus a large response is known as “the law of strength” and is a sign of a normal functioning of the nervous system. In third stage stress breakdown the person ignores the electricity bill and major responsibilities while becoming preoccupied with trivia. When the electricity is cut off nobody in the house can understand why the bill was not paid. All the aspects of the personality change can be attributed to the person avoiding complexity in their life.
The above is pretty much just summarized from Dr. Wilkie, now we move into the Biblical EQ bit. We have seen that our emotions are linked to our brains ability to do the processing that the mind requires of it. The mind is the key here. It is what is actually telling the brain what it should and should not process. The mind labels the input as important or unimportant, urgent or not urgent. This labeling starts early in life and continues throughout life. Some people develop the anxiety producing habit of putting “urgent” labels on everything like a mistaken worker at the Post Office who puts Priority Paid on every article. This is a very stressful habit. Others put the urgent and important labels on things they have no control over. This may be even worse. If the way your mother treats your father is totally important to you, and as a small child you have no control over that, then you will become stressed out, anxious and helpless. Similarly if what the boss thinks of you is important, and you have very little control over that, then work will be stressful for you. If, on the other hand, the quality of your works is important to you, then you can control that. Focusing on your work rather than on people’s opinions is less anxiety producing and stressful and will probably impress the boss as well. Finally we can put urgent and important labels on totally the wrong things and get into fights over how many angels can fit on the head of a pin. W can totally stress ourselves out with apologetics issues that are of limited importance in real life. Its probably not your job to worry about every one of the 6000 cults on planet Earth and to refute their doctrines one by one. Thus our mind can make it impossible for our brain to work properly. Our mind can give our brain so many tasks to do that it freezes up. (Come to think of it, I used to feel that way about school homework!) The mind can overload the brain, you can ask too much of yourself. In such cases you need to ask yourself the following questions:
1. Am I trying to do too much?
2. Is what I am doing too complicated?
3. Is what I am doing too urgent? Am I trying to do too many things in too short a space of time?
4. I what I am doing “too important” am I telling myself that virtually everything is important?
Then make the necessary changes. I also find it very useful to make a list of all I am trying to do in one column, then have a second column where I decide whether or not that thing is under my control, God’s control or someone else’s control, then a third column where I write down what action I will take on those things where I do have some control. I often find that of thirty or so things that are worrying me they can be reduced to about eight concrete steps of action I can take. That eases my mind a great deal.
If the mind can pack the brain too full it can also unpack it. We can learn an emotionally responsible lifestyle where we ignore our egos and the demand to do more, more, more, and settle down to a quiet Christian simplicity that just does what God wants us to do. Paul says, “Make it your ambition, to lead a quiet life”. That seems a strange use of ambition in the 21st century. It was probably a strange use of ambition in the first century. We are to consciously and ambitiously aim at simplicity and quiet living and godliness and peace. By doing that we will be able to avoid burn-out and establish Christ-like and loving emotions.
(1 Thessalonians 4:11
NKJV) that you also aspire to lead a
quiet life, to mind your own business, and to work with your own hands, as we
commanded you,
(1 Timothy 2:2 NKJV)
(pray ) for kings and all who are in authority, that we may lead a quiet and
peaceable life in all godliness and reverence.
(1 Peter 3:4 NKJV) rather let it be the hidden person of the
heart, with the incorruptible beauty of a gentle and quiet spirit, which is
very precious in the sight of God.
Leading a quiet life was Paul’s aspiration and prayer and was precious in the sight of God. Rattling around in a stressed out state and living on adrenalin is worldly and foolish and emotionally irresponsible. God can better do the work of the Kingdom with people who live quietly and love deeply and rest in His guidance. Remember “My yoke is easy…and you shall find rest for your souls”. The harried, hurried Christian lifestyle is not spiritual though it may appear so. In 1987 I was on 27 Christian committees and I felt important. And feeling important was about all I achieved! We are important if we do God’s will, in God’s way, in God’s time, at God’s pace and live quiet loving lives in all godliness and truth.
I know I am preaching a bit here but my primary audience for this book, are my fellow missionaries, and they need to hear this! Stress can damage us emotionally and spiritually and lead us to make silly mistakes in ministry. It does not indicate a loss of commitment or a lack of spiritual strength and endurance to adjust your life so that it is quiet and godly. That is God’s will for you. My personal test of when I am too busy is when “the fruit of the Spirit start falling off the tree”. When patience falls away, when gentleness is not as there as it used to be, when joy is a memory and peace a wished for state, then I am too busy.
The thing that finally cured me was when I figured out that nobody really cared a great deal about how much I produced. But they did care about who I was and how well I treated them. What they really wanted was to see Christ in me, watch me grow and sense my love and care. You are a fruit tree not a factory and people want to taste the fruit. Fruit trees are quiet and grow best in quiet. Thus endeth the lesson.
Responsibility For Emotions and Emotional Expression
The
September 2001 issue of Readers’ Digest chronicles the depression, violence and
cruelty that come with the long-term use of “shabu” or methamphetamine. Previously normal people, once addicted, are transformed into
cruel monsters that electrocute their wives and kill their children. Are these
people truly responsible for their actions? Can drugs change us so profoundly
that we become evil under their influence? When are our emotions “ours”? Can we
be held responsible for actions based on our emotions when these emotions are
the products of a chemical we have consumed? Drugs and other chemicals can remove inhibitions and make sin much easier
to commit. In extreme cases the person
becomes pleasure centred and disinhibited and unable to respond to the
prodding of natural conscience in any effective way. At this point they are
easily taken over by evil (including demonic influences).
This question has obviously got huge legal and spiritual
ramifications. Interestingly the Law of
Moses had
no excuses for drunkenness or other acts of diminished responsibility. It seemed to take the view that you are an
adult and are fully aware that alcohol or drugs and can make you become
uninhibited and cause you to do foolish things. By choosing to become drunk you
are thus choosing to make crime more probable. Therefore in biblical law you
are responsible for the crime even if you now regret it. Generally however most
modern law codes make allowances for some forms of diminished responsibility.
This is the exercise of legal grace rather than strict justice.
The drug addict is
an extreme case of a familiar problem. We all do things “under the influence”,
things that we do not wish to do. Under the influence of anger we explode,
under the influence of lust we commit fornication, under the influence of
provocation we start an argument that never subsides. Later we wonder how or
why we did such things. All of us are under the influence – of “the flesh”. In
a similar fashion to the law courts above, God grants us grace as He
understands the struggle we have with a fallen body that does not wish to obey
His laws. (Romans 7)
The Good That I Wish I Do Not Do….
Christians are a mixture of Christ-like emotions and evil lusts. While we cannot stop the evil lusts arising within us (because of our fallen nature) we can prevent their controlling us completely. The classic verses on this are Galatians 5:16-18
(Galatians
5:16-18 NKJV) I say then: Walk in the
Spirit, and you shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh. {17} For the flesh
lusts against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh; and these are contrary
to one another, so that you do not do the things that you wish. {18} But if you
are led by the Spirit, you are not under the law.
Christians are capable of victory because of
the Holy Spirit within them. They make get angry but they do not murder, they may
feel strong lust but they walk away from the temptation to commit adultery. The
Spirit can bring the flesh under control so that it does not do all that it
wants to do. We stop short. God pulls us back from the brink of moral disaster
through the work of the Holy Spirit.
This leaves us with two obvious questions
that need to be answered. Firstly – what is the nature of “the flesh”? And
secondly “how do non-Christians, without the Holy Spirit, gain any measure of victory over
sin?”
The “flesh” is the set of negative impulses
that arise from our fallen bodies. Some translations call it the sinful nature
but it is not a “nature” as such. It is physical, it is our physical flesh
interfering with our quickened spirit and maturing soul. Its what Romans 7
calls “the law of sin in our members”.
Some people doubt that our sin nature is
physical and is grounded in our mortal bodies. However it is quite clear that
the “flesh nature” will no longer be with us after we die. All sinful impulses
will stop when our body dies. While we are in this body we desire to sin. When
we leave this body we lose the desire to sin. Therefore the desire to sin is
located in the fallen physical body. If you were to shoot a born-again Christian
and then a few minutes later go to Heaven and ask if anything was different
about his or her nature they would say “all desire to sin is gone, I have left
the flesh behind.” In heaven we shall neither sin, nor desire to sin.
When sin dwells in the flesh it programs our
physical bodies to react wrongly by inappropriately activating physical
appetites like food, sex and comfort and through the corruption of the natural
fight or flight response. Thus the flesh is sum of the demanding impulses of the
body that has been disconnected from reference to God and formed habits and
neural pathways inimical to the Spirit. Neural pathways are like tracks through
the grass that are worn by much travelling. They connect stimulus with response
and sometimes with the wrong response.
I will illustrate with a brief incident in m
own life. Prior to my conversion I was quick-tempered and would pick fights.
After it I of course left this behind. Many years later some friends decided to
“ambush” me for fun. In a split second I had my fists up before my thinking
intervened and I of course put them down.
The reaction programmed into me by sin was still there in my neural
pathways and was activated by my previously well learned response to fight or
flight situations.
The apostle John says that which is “born of
God” cannot sin, nor does it desire to do so (1 John 3:9-11). That part of us
that is born of God, that is Christ in us, has no desire to sin. However that
which is, in the words of the gospels, “born of woman” does sin. The flesh,
born of human genetics inherits the Fall. The “new man” part of the born-again
Christian is born of heaven, born of the will of God, born from above and does
not inherit the Fall. The “new man” is born of God, free from sin and even free
from the desire to sin. Paul says this new nature is “enslaved to
righteousness”. Thus Christians are a mixture of the Fallen which born of human
genetics and the Eternal which is born of God.
The Decent But
Natural Man
How then can non-Christians lead decent lives as many of then do? Through the law of God written in their consciences by the common and prevenient grace of God and activated by their will. God places some restraint on human evil through various checks and balances including government, the human conscience, the Law, religious teachings and examples and even though direct communication through dreams and visions, signs and portents such as Abimelech had when he was warned in a dream not to touch Abraham’s wife Sarah (Genesis 20:3-7). The non-Christian is given much assistance by God to restrain evil but they do not have the ultimate assistance of the indwelling Holy Spirit. The natural, not yet converted man has a conscience from God but is not yet born of God. The not-yet-converted can restrain sin to some extent but they cannot be truly holy in the eternal sense as they lack Christ in them.
The Mind, The Spirit and The Flesh
How then can a Christian have victory over
the evil passions that arise within them? By setting our inner nature, our
Mind, on the Spirit.
(Romans 8:3-8 NKJV) For what the law could not do in that it was
weak through the flesh, God did by sending His own Son in the likeness of
sinful flesh, on account of sin: He condemned sin in the flesh, {4} that the
righteous requirement of the law might be fulfilled in us who do not walk
according to the flesh but according to the Spirit. {5} For those who live
according to the flesh set their minds on the things of the flesh, but those
who live according to the Spirit, the things of the Spirit. {6} For to be
carnally minded is death, but to be spiritually minded is life and peace. {7}
Because the carnal mind is enmity against God; for it is not subject to the law
of God, nor indeed can be. {8} So then, those who are in the flesh cannot
please God.
After the tussle between flesh and spirit in Romans 7 Paul presents the secret of life
and peace in chapter 8. The mind, which can be renewed (Romans 12:1,2) can be
set on the things of the Spirit and bring life and peace. If it is set on the
churning and burning desires of the flesh then there is trouble leading to
death. We can chose where to set our consciousness, what to meditate on, what
to think about. We are not forced to dwell on sin and negativity. Rather we can
seek those things which are above (Colossians 3:1-4) and contemplate that which
is beautiful, spiritual, noble and true.(Philippians 4:8).
This training of our consciousness is vitally
important. Napoleon Hill puts this well from a secular perspective when he
talks of “Your inalienable right to the full and complete control and direction
of your own mind to whatever ends you desire.” He goes on to say: “Our mind is the only thing we can control. Either we
control it, or we relinquish control to other forces, and our minds and our
wills become as chips in a puddle of water, being swept one way then another,
and never coming to any satisfactory conclusions, easily falling prey to any
negative wind that blows.”
For the Christian
we need to learn we have control of our minds and to forcibly direct them to
the ends we desire such as eternal life and peace. If we want a victorious
Christian life we must take charge of our minds and they must deliberately be
directed on the things of the Spirit. The next chapter will look at this in
some detail.
Don’t Forget The
Medical Side And Common Sense
Not all emotional
problems based in the body have a “spiritual solution”. Exercise, regular rest, a good diet and some
basic disciplines can help alter our moods and
emotions so we are happier and more easily spiritual. There is nothing terribly
noble about praying for victory over emotions that need not arise in us at all
with a bit of common sense. If you feel chronically out of sorts get a good
“executive physical”. Maybe there is something wrong and your body is warning
you. If a distressing emotion is being produced by a physical factor we can change,
then it is up to us to change it. If your medication is literally “driving you
crazy” see if it can be altered. If
your air conditioning system makes you grumpy – see what can be done about it
or install a fan. If a high level of caffeine is making you tense and anxious,
praying for peace may be less effective than changing to decaf or lessening
your intake. In short – don’t forget to see a doctor and
use your common sense and take care of your health to keep you happy in body
and soul.
Other
Matters In The Mind-Body-Emotions Interaction
There are many
very interesting and even speculative areas of study in the area of the issue
of the interaction of our mind, body and emotions. For instance:
·
Feats of Strength Emotions can not only make you sick – they can also make you strong.
Hormones released by emotions can strengthen the body to perform great feats of
strength on desperate occasions. This is the positive side of the emotions-body
interaction.
·
Dissociation
From The Body This is when people
experience a separation between their consciousness and their physical body generally as a
result of severe trauma. Some people report out-of-body experiences where the
Mind seems to leave the body through dissociation and then return. Paul could
say of his trip to heaven “whether in
the body or out of the body I do not know” (2 Corinthians 12:2,3). There is
also a clinical condition known as Multiple Personality Disorder or
Dissociative Disorder where people have multiple consciousnesses in the one
body, which seem to “take turns”. This seems to be the result of the person’s
consciousness being fragmented by the trauma.
·
Amnesia is
physical damage that results in a loss of recent memory and in severe cases an
inaccurate sense of “self”. Severe amnesiacs seem to be locked into the
maturity level that they have the last lucid memories of so that a 45 year old
amnesiac may remember nothing after he was 17 and still think he is 17 and
dress and act culturally much like a 17 year old. The physical structure and
memory storage that the Mind needs to interact with surrounding culture has
been damaged and an inaccurate sense of self results. This shows that our
cultural self-consciousness relies on data from the outside world such as time,
age, and fashion. When this is disrupted our cultural identity is damaged.
·
Emotions and
Cognition Emotions release hormones
which affect cognition. For instance in the fight or flight response blood flow to the brain is reduced and instead it is sent
to the hands or the feet. This prepares us well for a good battle but poorly
for an exam (where the blood flow needs to be going to the brain). Habitual
aggressive or panicky emotions invoke this response which then reduces
cognitive ability. Tests on emotionally troubled youth found them
under-performing on academic tests while better-adjusted and calmer people did
much better. This is no surprise to teachers who have observed this for years. Thus emotions affect cognition by affecting
the physical structures the brain needs to do its clearest thinking. The mind
does not seem able to express itself clearly and efficiently through the body
if the emotions have hijacked the resources it needs to do so.
·
Prayer and Meditation Goleman reports that “prayer works on all emotions”. Numerous studies
show the calming effects on the body of prayer and even New Age authors such as
Paul Wilson acknowledge that prayer is puzzlingly powerful in achieving states
of calm. The physiological effects of a mind focused on God are clear,
unequivocal and measurable by modern instrumentation. The mind can bring the
body into a calm sate with lowered blood pressure and peaceful emotions.
All these puzzling things contribute to the awe and mystery surrounding
how our mind and body interact and how our emotions are produced and coped
with.
Conclusion
There is a complex interaction between our bodies and our emotions such that our health can affect our feelings, and our feelings can affect our health. Emotions are produced primarily in the soul and spirit but have very strong interactions with the body. Mind and body are separate but very inter-connected entities. Stress is what happens when our mind overloads our brain and asks too much of us. A quiet and godly lifestyle can prevent stress and assist our sanctification. The body presents the Christian with a problem since the Fall. Since the Fall, the body has been corrupted by sin and this corrupt physical state is known as “the flesh”. The flesh leads to sinful impulses and negative emotions, is weak, mortal and temporary and we will be rid of it at death. The flesh and the Spirit are at war. Our Mind is ours to focus and control and our consciousness is the decisive factor in many spiritual issues and can be focussed on the Spirit or on the flesh. Christlike emotions will flow when the Mind is focussed on the Spirit. Destructive out-of-control emotions will overpower us if the Mind is focused on the flesh. Emotional and spiritual victory depends on having Christ in us, the hope of glory, and in choosing to focus our consciousness on the things of the Spirit. This results in a constructive emotional state known as “life and peace”. We should also take care of our health and consult good medical advice. We should also acknowledge that there is much mystery here and much we do not know. The next chapter will at how the mind is the secret to personal mastery.
Part Three
Practical
Applications
The Masterful Mind
(Romans 8:4-6 NKJV)
that the righteous requirement of the law might be fulfilled in us who
do not walk according to the flesh but according to the Spirit. {5} For those
who live according to the flesh set their minds on the things of the flesh, but
those who live according to the Spirit, the things of the Spirit. {6} For to be
carnally minded is death, but to be spiritually minded is life and peace.
The decisive factor in Biblical EQ is the Mind of the believer. If it is set on the flesh and we are carnally minded the result is death. If it is set on the Spirit and we are spiritually minded the result is life and peace. Chapter after chapter in this book has demonstrated the truth of those two statements in Romans.
The previous chapters have laid the ground-work showing how our emotions flow from our perceptions and our beliefs and how they are affected by our physiological state. This chapter looks at the decisive act of setting our mind on things above, on the things of the Spirit, on mastery of our life and our emotions. Through the Mind we gain mastery. This chapter is about experiencing that mastery.
You may
have heard of the “fight or flight response” that humans and animals have in response to threat. It
does not take high level thinking to engage in the fight or flight response.
Even the most unthinking of creatures such as an ant can make the decision
whether to avoid an intruder or whether to stand their ground and fight. The
fight or flight response is fast, rough, instinctual, and sometimes quite
inaccurate. Mostly it is a useful instinctive response with high survival
value, but it is not the stuff of wisdom, ethics, or the Spirit. Under the rush
of the adrenalin that the fight-or-flight response releases people can quickly perform great feats of
strength; they can also behave absolutely stupidly, because adrenalin signals
the body to send blood away from the brain where it is needed for thinking and
send it instead to the muscles, where it is needed for running and fighting.
When people combine these two aspects of the fight-or-flight response and
quickly perform great feats of strength which are stupid , unthinking and
ill-informed we have the groundwork for violence and tragedy. When societies
give in to their instinctive fight or flight responses we see factions,
disputes, wars and vendettas breaking out. Survival may seem to depend on the
fight or flight response but true civilization depends on taming it and
mastering it.
Why is the fight or flight response so destructive and if so why do we
have it? I suppose initially it was not
a bad thing. The fight or flight response was meant to operate in a human being
who was connected to God. This connection would have moderated and altered the
response. But now it isn’t so well connected and its become one part of us that
has been most affected by the Fall. Cain was the first person in
Scripture who was faced with the task of managing murderous rage (Genesis 4:7)
– and he chose to fight instead. His descendant Lamech boasted of murder
(Genesis 4:23,24) and by the time of the Flood his descendants had “filled the earth with violence” (Genesis
6:11). Trusting fallen human beings to choose self-mastery rather than fight or flight was
a total failure. Eventually Moses came along with the Law, which
pointed the way to what was right and wrong and gave very reasonable and
agreeable limits for human conduct. The Law also failed. Finally God sent His
Son and the laws of God were written on our hearts through the Holy Spirit (Hebrews 10:16) that we might
become spiritual overcomers (Revelation 21:7). This has worked but even so it
has been no easy task. Only re-establishing the connection with God has brought
any measure of control to the fight-or flight response.
The
problem with the fight-or-flight response in fallen humanity is
that it eliminates choice and when you eliminate choice you eliminate all sorts
of things like freedom, morality, love and decency. When the fight-or-flight response occurs blood flows to the hands
and feet and away from the brain and huge shots of adrenalin and other hormones
take over and the fast action control centers of the brain come into play and
suddenly you are exploding at people, or running, or fighting. In common parlance your “buttons have been
pressed” and you are just reacting at an entirely visceral and instinctual
level. This is not a bad thing when you are running away from a charging
rhinoceros. Speedy reactions may be a very good thing. However in modern life
the provocation that sets off the response may be a cutting remark or a threat
to our ego in the office. The feeling of threat is enough to set off the entire
chemical cascade that is known as the fight-or-flight response. Road rage
involves people reacting to rudeness as if it were the proverbial charging
rhinoceros. A minor incident becomes a matter of life and death. The perception
of threat and the impact of adrenalin cause us to react without choosing our
reactions. Startled people have accidentally shot their
family members thinking they were burglars and soldiers have fired on their own
troops through the sheer speed and inaccuracy of this response. You cannot be Christ-like and filled with
rage and gut-level fight or flight responses.
Neither can you be a timid, always retreating wimp soaring into anxiety
attacks like a frightened bird at every alarming news item which one effect of
the “flight” side of the response in modern life. The fight or flight response
removes our ability to make wise, free and balanced moral choices and is
definitely not the stuff on which Christian character is built.
[Lest I be misunderstood its not wrong to fight
under some circumstances if it is a chosen and wise moral act. At other times
its Ok to retreat and avoid certain troublesome situations as long as it is
thought through, wise and moral to do so. The great biblical warriors like King
David fought battles and won victories but they did so out of deep character
not out of flash-pan rage. The military heroes of Scripture like Gideon, David
and Jehosophat were people of mercy and thought and heart and balance. They
were not just big bundles of anger walking around looking for a fight and they
were not governed by the fight or flight response.]
Mastery
The alternative to the fight or flight response is to achieve mastery of the situation. Jesus always demonstrated
mastery of any and every situation He was presented with. He neither fought the
soldiers who arrested him or fled them but rather throughout His entire trial
demonstrated an amazing degree of personal mastery. At no point in His life did
Jesus give in to the adrenalin-filled panic of a fight or flight response. He
could have gathered an army but He did not. Perhaps He could have fled hostile
Israel and gone to Greece and been welcomed as a philosopher, but He did not.
There were times when He avoided Jerusalem because of the hostility and because
His time was not yet come yet at no point did He react from instinct alone.
His actions were masterful, strong, wise and
spiritual. His Spirit-filled mind had total mastery over His flesh and His instincts. This gave
Him power, poise and a degree of personal authority that seems to have been the
main aspect of His personality that people admired and is frequently commented
on in the gospels. The following verses are just some of the verses that show
how other people saw Jesus as having authority and how Jesus saw His own
authority being used to master situations. (Matthew 7:29, 8:9, 21:23-27,
28:18-20, Mark 1:27, Luke 4:32, Luke 9:1, 10;19, John 5:27, 7:17, 12:49, 14:10,
16:13, 17:2)
Jesus
was not thrown even by encountering the Devil in person. During the temptation
in the wilderness Jesus met the Devil in a face-to-face spiritual encounter that must have been
of incredible intensity. The Devil was out to destroy Jesus, he was malice
incarnate, and he was beguiling, tempting, and pushing Jesus into a wrong
response. Jesus neither fled nor fought. Jesus mastered the situation, resisted
the temptations and used His authority to deal with the problem. Jesus did not
flee. He mastered the temptation to avoid the encounter and thus preserve
himself from possible spiritual harm. He faced the dangers of the Devil at full
force. He stood His ground against pure evil. Jesus did not fight. Jesus did
not launch into an aggressive tirade against Satan. There was no raw and
red-necked stream of spiritual vitriol directed against the Devil. Instead
Jesus defeated Satan through the calm use of God’s authority based on God’s Word. Jesus
mastered the situation.
The
biblical example of Jesus in the wilderness shows us that even if we think a
situation is utterly evil and threatens our health, identity and success (as
the wilderness temptations did for Jesus) that we do not need to get upset and
become reactionary. Nor do we need to pack our bags and run. We just need to
calmly and authoritatively expose that situation to the truth of Scripture and
the authority of God. We want to end up moving through life as Jesus moved
through Israel, and cope with our pressures and threats as he coped with
His.
When I speak of mastery I am not speaking of sinless perfection. Mastery is more like a combination of faith, courage, decisiveness and balance. It is having spiritual authority, poise and power in all situations. It asks questions such as: How can we tackle every situation in life as if it were the perfect golf shot? How can we master every threat and every frustration with grace, power and poise? How can we move through a grossly unjust trial without losing our cool? How can we forgive those that nail us to the cross? Of course these reactions are the supreme achievements of a Perfect Life. They are what made Jesus the spotless Lamb of God. While we may not always achieve them we can aspire to them and discipline our minds toward them.
Lets
move from the cosmic to the comical and consider my attempts at playing golf. As an under-funded missionary I do not own golf clubs or have a golf
membership but once every few years I am dragged out onto a golf course by a
friend. When the ball lands in the rough, as it often does, I have three
possible responses – fight, flight or mastery. I can become depressed at the difficulty, give up on the shot and pay
the penalty – that is the flight response. I can hit wildly with all my might
and try and blast it out of there – that is the fight response. Or I can call
up my considerable golf prowess, concentrate carefully, keep my eye on the
ball, visualize the wonderful trajectory it will take and get it out of there
with just the right touch. This is the mastery response and as you may well
guess it is the most difficult response and the hardest to perfect. I rarely
get it right, but it is the one I wish to practice and reinforce. There is really no other possible choice
since the other two responses just lead to failure. Mastery is the hardest
choice but it is the only choice that goes anywhere.
I need to spend a few paragraphs defining what I mean by “Mind” before we go too far and get confused. By the Mind I do not mean various individual thoughts or mind as intellectual activity or a set of intellectual abstractions. I mean mind as the entire mental framework of the person. We use the word Mind this way in the phrases “single-minded” or “open-minded”. Mind in this sense is an inner state of consciousness that has certain properties. The mind is controllable and can be focused by the believer. Paul asks us to set our mind on various things such as the Spirit, things above, and the pursuit of maturity so the mind is something we can focus on God. For those of you who enjoy Greek the phren word family phroneo, phronema and phronesis , phronimos is in view here. Thus the mind is that part of our total consciousness and awareness that we have some control over. In this definition it does not include dreams or the sub-conscious. The sub-conscious is part of our mind in a larger sense but not part of it in this narrow sense we are using it here because we have no real control over the subconscious and cannot discipline it or focus it. Neither is mind in this sense the scattered thoughts that drift in and out of a person who is daydreaming or watching TV. Of such people we sometimes say “their mind was switched off when they watched the movie”. Their inner consciousness was inactive. Thus the mind is what thinks when you do some real thinking. The mind is where you receive and mull over wisdom and where you make real choices about your actions. That’s your mind. It is that part of your consciousness that you can control and exert and which bears a close relationship to the “real you”.
Throughout this book I will keep saying that the mind is the only part of our consciousness that we can control, and therefore it is of vital importance. I do not mean to imply that we are all mind or that the mind is superior, rather it is part of an integrated whole which it directs. The mind is like the wheel on the bridge that controls the rudder of a ship. The navigator plots the course and then the wheel is turned to a definite bearing and the ship holds that course. The course of the entire ship is determined by where the captain’s wheel is set. The wheel is the only part of the ship that can be focused on a direction or course of action. The engine will drive the ship anywhere, the cargo hold does its job, the air-conditioning makes it bearable but the wheel, connected to the rudder sets the entire direction and destiny and decides which port the ship will go to or even if it will be shipwrecked through carelessness. The mind is that part of us which we can steer and which we can plot our course with. It’s the only part of us that can do that job. Therefore it is decisive.
We need to love God with our whole being – mind, spirit, soul, and strength, and all these parts of us are vital and important but it is the mind that directs the spirit, or the soul, or our energy and strength onto God and His purposes. The mind is the critical point where the decisions are made and the course committed to.
The mind in the sense of the phren word family generally means the wisdom and understanding especially of the righteous (Luke 1:17, Ephesians 1:8). This mind be set on various things. When Jesus rebuked Peter he said he was “not mindful of the things of God, but the things of men." (Matthew 16:23, Mark 8:33), the legalistic Romans nit-picking about food and drink were literally “rules-minded” in the Greek (Romans 14:6). The mind can be set on the flesh or the Spirit (Romans 8:5,6) and things above (Colossians 3:2) or on earthly things (Philippians 2:19), which caused Paul to weep. Due to the renewing and infilling of the Holy Spirit we can even have “the mind of Christ” (1 Corinthians 2:14-16) and when we are humble servants we have a mind like Christ’s (Philippians 2:5). On the other hand we can have a childish mind (1 Corinthians 13:11, 14:20) Unity of mind is important and Christians are to be one-minded and like-minded. (Romans 12:16, 15:5, 2 Corinthians 13:11) This word family can also mean the careful, prudent mind, that which thinks of others, the mindful and thoughtful person (Philippians 1:7, 4:10) though the word “mind” is rarely used in English translations of this aspect.
Thus it is clear from the New Testament that the sort of mind we end up with is entirely our choice. We can focus or mind on God’s interests or man’s interests, the Spirit or the flesh, the things above or earthly things. We can choose to be humble, like-minded, unified and thoughtful of others or we can choose to be puffed up, childish, contentious, worldly and carnal.
Mastery and The Mind
Mastery is a product of the focused and disciplined mind bringing the whole person into submission to an over-riding ethic or ethos. Throughout history everyone from Zen monks to Spartan warriors and corporate traders have discovered this. People have become masterful human beings by disciplining themselves in all sorts of pursuits from archery to fencing to philosophy. That is why competitive sports, while trivial in themselves, have shaped many a person for the better. The somersaults of a champion gymnast are in themselves quite pointless. They don’t feed the hungry or make any great philosophical point. Its not doing somersaults that makes the gymnast great but the discipline he or she puts in. The sport builds mastery and mental strength into the gymnast so that when the days of gymnastics are over the character remains. Another point, the focus must be external to self. The gymnast does not find self-mastery by focusing on self-mastery. He or she finds self-mastery by focusing on somersaults.
The mind is the only part of our consciousness that we can focus and direct therefore it is the only part of us that can give us mastery. A million dollars will not give you personal mastery. People who win the lottery often end up poor because of their lack of personal mastery. The money has not made them masterful. A strong body will not give you mastery except of certain physical skills. Athletes can be enslaved to alcohol or drugs. Education will not give you personal mastery, there are many well educated people who are small-minded and weak-willed. Willpower won’t give you mastery as the will can simply become stubborn and inflexible, unable to adapt to changing situations and thus lead to inevitable defeat. Even religion won’t give you mastery. Many people are enslaved by cults, caught up in bondage to religious guilt or overtaken by idolatry and superstition. Only the adaptable, flexible, trained, focused and disciplined mind can bring mastery.
Please be clear about this, I am not advocating mentalist philosophies, mind science, Christian Science, or think and grow rich kinds of mental mastery. They are half-truths. The mind is not a terribly significant force in itself. The mind does not have the ability to create heaven or hell as Blake thought. God creates Heaven and Hell. Reality is His creation, not ours. The mind does not create the world but it does enable us to move through it with poise and power. The mind is not God. The mind works best when it is set on God. In biblical terms personal and emotional mastery is a product of the mind set on God and imbued with His Word and authority. The unaided mind operating alone by itself cannot produce mastery of the kind we see in the life of Jesus Christ. For that kind of mastery we need more than positive thinking. We need a direct connection to God and the mind must be resolutely set on God, on the Spirit, on things above, on the Kingdom, and the righteousness thereof.
Directing The Christian Mind
So we see that we are faced with three universal truths: Firstly that personal mastery is the only wise option. Secondly that such mastery is solely a product of the mind. Thirdly that the mind becomes masterful as it is disciplined and focused on something outside itself. This book maintains that the highest degree of mastery can only be attained when the ‘something outside itself” is God. You can achieve a sense of mastery by focusing your mind on fencing or gymnastics or horse-riding but you won’t end up like Jesus just by focusing on those things. The mind must be directed onto Christ. That is its proper place.
This directing of the mind is a forceful and decisive activity. It is hard to put into words. It is not concentrating on Christ, neither is it speculating about Christ or studying or daydreaming about Christ. It is not even thinking about Jesus as such. It is not an internal, reflective or meditative process. It’s similar to standing outside yourself and directing yourself onto Christ. Its like standing at the top of a high-dive tower and looking down and plunging in with total commitment. It’s choosing where your life energies will be focused and your mental processes directed. It’s like going outside yourself but towards Christ at the same time. I suppose you could call it faith, or at least faith is very much involved in it. I am stuck for an analogy. It’s a little like those missiles that lock onto their target or a cat focused on a mouse. The whole of the mind is fixed on Christ and directs the total life energies of the believer in that direction. As this focus is attained everything else is entrained, the emotions, the will and the responses. Just as someone absorbed in a video game entrains all their concentration, emotions and will into the game so a Christian absorbed in Christ, with their mind set on the Spirit, inevitably brings their whole life into conformity with Jesus.
It may not be immediately obvious but when we direct our mind to a purpose it means that we commit ourselves to the rules and techniques that the particular purpose requires. For instance in writing this book I must follow the rules of the English language. I am hardly conscious of that because I have internalized many of the rules. Now and then the spell-checker or grammar checker on this computer alerts me to where I am going wrong. Then I correct it. That is part of writing, part of the project, and part of being focused on writing a book. Following the rules of English grammar is not bad or awful. It’s not a restriction on my freedom or a legalism or a lack of grace. It’s just required. Mastery of anything means sticking to the rules. Similarly, following Jesus has rules. Submission to the commandments of Jesus Christ is not optional if we are to stay focused on Christ and know life and peace. Obeying these commandments is not the whole of the Christian life but they are part of the discipline of the Christian life. They make it flow and if you are to have mastery in the Christian life you must decide to obey the rules. You cannot just make up the spiritual life as you go along any more than you can decide to reinvent English grammar every time you write.
Deciding to totally set your mind on Christ and achieve total life mastery is the very hardest thing you will ever do. But what are the alternatives? To potter along lamely is not much of a life. To refuse it totally is to go into eternal darkness. But the effort seems tremendous, the focus too narrow and the rules too hard. The focus must be kept and we are unruly. We are prone to distraction. We are far too easy on ourselves. We don’t want to get up and practice. We want heaven from our armchairs. So we make a commitment to Christ, then that fades, then another one, then a spiritual breakthrough, and then a slack patch. We are all over the place. Our minds are set on ourselves, or on our finances, or on the opinions of the Christian community or on the success of our ministry. We find easier goals and substitute foci. We become anxious, stressed, harried and spiritually weak. We need to come to a point of final decision where we look at the mess, pull ourselves together and decide with all that is within us to focus ourselves totally on Christ alone and pursue single-minded, focused, disciplined mastery.
People are drifting around in ministry without a real and solid connection to God because the cost of staking everything on God is too high. You must come to that decision. The Christian life is unlivable without it. You cannot dabble in the eternal. You must commit totally to it and direct your mind to it.
Prerequisites For Self-Mastery
The
absolute prerequisites of spiritual progress are that you are born-again with a
new nature from God, that you have the filling of the Holy Spirit and that you are single-mindedly
devoted to God in obedience to His word. Without these three things you do not
stand a chance.
Unless
you are born-again you do not have a new nature. Without the new nature it’s an
impossible job. If you are not Spirit-filled and led by the Spirit in your
daily life then you will not have power over the flesh (see Galatians 5:16-18)
and you will struggle continually and lose continually. If you are not
single-minded you will be double-minded and double-minded people receive
nothing from the Lord (James 1:5-8). You will be left wallowing in your doubt
and indecision. These three things are the basics. Before I go on to talk about
techniques in self-mastery you must have these three
things in your life or be prepared to have these three things in your life as
soon as possible.
Its fine to talk about the need for a personal relationship with God and having one’s mind set on things above but how will that keep someone from exploding next time someone cuts them off on the highway? What are the practical tips for mastering our fight-or-flight response and for mastering life?
There are thus two levels to emotional self-mastery. Firstly we must set up the foundations of the new self and the God-focused mind. That renews our connection with God and sets up some spiritual lines of control over the fight or flight response. Then we must learn the practical details of responding to life intelligently and wisely.
· Pay attention to your physical state. If you realize that your fists are clenched and your neck is rigid and you are physically tensed up and alerted for danger then try to undo those physical states. Unclench your fists, rub your neck, relax your posture. The fight or flight response is partly a physical response and as we undo its physical correlates it will lose much of its power. Perhaps try and relax or use deep breathing if you are tense, guarded or explosive.
· Be aware of the magnitude of your emotional responses and the quick “zoom” to anger or anxiety that the fight or flight response produces. Learn to recognize when you are zooming to disaster and practice keeping a lid on it.
· Take time to think. Use your God-given right to choose your response. Do not just respond on auto-pilot. Once you stop and think you are far more likely to choose a good and much more optimal solution.
· Disengage. If you have started to move into attack mode pull back the troops! Go for a walk, cool down. Have a pray about it.
· If you are going into a situation that you know aggravates you (such as dealing with an annoying person) try to make a conscious decision about how you are going to react in that situation. Then rehearse your balanced and biblical reaction over and over in your mind. Perhaps seven times or seventy times seven? (see Matthew 18) Train yourself mentally to react rightly just like professional golfers ‘see the ball going in the hole’ even before they make the shot. Use mental rehearsal to disarm potential conflict situations.
· In the converse of this - don’t mentally rehearse the wrong response. Don’t see in your mind’s eye a picture of yourself strangling the boss of the phone company. It may be very satisfying but it is not helpful. It is educating yourself in the wrong direction.
· Use the ‘what would Jesus do?” question as a quick reference.
· Question your perceptions of threat. Is this really a life or death issue? Am I getting tensed up over nothing? What does it say about me if I am so easily riled? Or on the flight response: Is it really that bad? Is the world going to end over this? Is this fear, anxiety and emotional reactivity helping me? Has running away from things helped or hindered my life?
· Learn to find your emotional center and to live from it and to know when it is in balance and out of balance. This is quite difficult for many people.
· Some people will push you wanting you to explode so they can take advantage of your immature reaction. Be alert to this and deliberately react the opposite way they are pushing you. (1 Corinthians 4:12) For instance when they revile you greet them with a blessing. (1 Peter 2:23 NKJV) who, when He was reviled, did not revile in return; when He suffered, He did not threaten, but committed Himself to Him who judges righteously;
· Remember that when you react rightly to unjust treatment that “great is your reward in heaven”. So rejoice and give yourself a pat on the back when you keep your cool. Positive reinforcement for good behavior. (Matthew 5:11)
· Do not return evil for evil. (Romans 12:17) Keep a lid on your desire to retaliate. Leave retaliation to the Lord. (Romans 12:19) If we return a blessing instead we will inherit blessing. . (1 Peter 3:9).
· If people rip you off and insult you don’t escalate it into a life or death struggle over honor and pride. This is what Jesus means when He says “do not resist him who is evil”. (He does not mean that the police should not arrest robbers!) Rather it means “don’t let the evil person push you into a full-scale, adrenalin packed, fight or flight response”. Deny the natural man’s urge to strike back. If he slaps you, turn the other cheek, if he takes your cloak, let him, if he makes you walk a mile, go two. If he says “give me money” let him have some. (Matthew 5:38-42). Deny your reactivity and show you are made of different stuff.
· Don’t let unkind, ungrateful, stingy, mean or small-minded people get to you. God is merciful to the unkind and ungrateful and we have a great reward in heaven when we do likewise. (Luke 6:35) Brush their meanness to one side without taking it too personally and treat them as well as you can with reasonable safety (because some are quite toxic).
· Do not get your ego hooked into the game of “Christian comparisons”, my church is bigger than your church etc. This only leads to fuming and fighting.
· Do not let theology push you into fight or flight mode. For instance “I won’t study the Second Coming its too contentious” (flight response) or “You are a heretic and I will torch you verbally since the law won’t allow me to burn you at the stake” (fight response). The mastery response is to learn about the Second Coming and other aspects of theology and grow in God and only debate under circumstances that are harmless to the hearers (such as with good friends in the ministry) unless of course there is an urgent apologetic reason. Even then your speech should be seasoned with salt.
· Learn correct responses by modeling mature Christians and by studying the heroes of the faith.
· Make a personal commitment to grow in this area.
· Have some friends keep you accountable for your reactions and encourage you to maturity.
· Enjoy the feeling of grace rather than the feeling of explosive emotional power.
Overcoming Paralyzing Fears
The flight part of the fight-or-flight response has not received a lot of attention so far. Its not as dramatic and many people simply dismiss it as weakness or nerves. When it blossoms into fully-fledges agoraphobia people disconnect from life for fear of giving a panic attack in public. Fear can create a state of life that is almost unbearable. The person becomes over-reactive, nervous, withdrawn and anxious and may be filled with phobias and obsessions. Dr Claire Weekes has done some wonderful and compassionate work on this and every pastor should read her books which are listed under “agoraphobia” in the reference section at the back. Below I will summarize, very briefly and perhaps a little roughly and inaccurately, the central points of her work.
Life circumstances cause the person to reach, at some
point in their life, a point of nervous exhaustion in which fear that already
exists cannot be suppressed or controlled by the will and during which new
fears can be easily implanted. (See the section on stress in the previous chapter)
Strange frightening thoughts then appear in a tired mind. The person worries about these thoughts. This further activates the fight or flight response and exhausts the person and so they have even less energy to control their fears with. More fears then surface, the person then worries, and so on in a vicious circle. The strange thoughts in the tired mind eventually reach such an intensity that they lead the person to the threshold of panic. A small incident then triggers a full-scale panic attack, which, if this spiral continues, may become the first of many.
Mastering such fear means moving away from the fight or flight response. Instead of trying to fight the fears or run away from them they are just accepted. This position of not fighting and not running away disengages the fight or flight response, lowers the adrenalin levels and helps the person think. They are encouraged to go slowly because the need to “hurry” or take action activates the fight or flight response. They are encouraged to rest, eat properly and recover strength and get over their prior depletion. This enables then to get some perspective on their fears. They are told that the only way to deal with fear is going through it and her famous phrase “even jelly legs will get you there” has helped man agoraphobics. Of great importance is floating through experiences. The problem with fearful people is they engage life too tightly. When you grab life too tightly it bounces you round and you end up either struggling with it or fleeing from it. A bit of detachment can lead to peace of mind and Claire Weekes teaches “floating through” normally traumatic experiences such as shopping in a large mall. The person floats through the shop door, floats around the store, floats up to the counter, floats out the money and pays for the goods and floats out again. The person is slightly detached but not dissociated from reality and is able to do the task that was impossible before. Dr Weekes has reduced a whole lot of complex medicine to four short phrases that are of great help to those who have panic attacks - and to the rest of us as well!
1. Face, do not run away.
2. Accept, do not fight
3. Float, do not tense.
4. Let time pass – do not be impatient with time.
Hints on working these out in your life are contained in her excellent books which are listed in the reference section. Mastery of fear means setting the mind in the right stable position. We set it into the situation but without fighting it. We are calm. We are like Tiger Woods looking at a golf ball in the rough. Its no big deal, small problem, he can handle it. Neither are we tense. Some people believe that being tense is being responsible; being tense means you are putting the effort in. That is a mistake; being tense ruins the golf shot and also ruins life. Jesus was not a tense person and Jesus was the most responsible and committed person who ever lived. And mastery means letting time pass. Jesus never seemed to care about time, Abraham and Moses took years, seemingly wasted years. By letting time pass we actually use it best. The people who look the most hurried and who have the most time-consciousness with their organizers are generally the junior executives. The members of the board seem unhurried. Thoughtful, careful, responsible and wise, but unhurried. There is a lot of spiritual wisdom for anxious people in the four phrases above. As an exercise think of Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane and during His trial using the four concepts above – facing, accepting, floating and letting time pass. Before I leave the topic of fear I want to deal with a peculiarly Christian form of fear – reacting to new and powerful spiritual experiences.
Reacting To New And Powerful Spiritual Experiences
New
and powerful spiritual experiences often activate the fight or
flight response. The result is over-reaction, division, fear and anxiety.
I hope you can see that there is no place for angry, reactionary responses or
panic stricken flight from strong emotions or unusual spiritual experiences.
Flapping around wildly is not the correct response. Rather we need to analyze
that emotion or experience in the light of Scripture holding to what is good
and rebuking that which is evil. Discernment is a mastery response not a fight or flight
response.
Because
we are creatures and not the Creator we have a certain inbuilt dread and fear
of the numinous. The old writers talk of “the dread of God”. The powerful and the spiritual evoke
emotional reactions within us and those reactions are often immature. We become
reactive and fearful unable to cope with emotions and experiences that are
unfamiliar to us. Instead, when evaluating a new teaching or experience we
should say “I’m a mature person with a good brain and I know the Scriptures
fairly well, I’ll just sit back and watch, I’ll hold to the good bits I find
here and reject the junk, I don’t have to fear what’s going on. I’ll pray for
protection and discernment, stay within my boundaries and work it out as I go
along.”
We can need to
accept that we are complex creatures with complex emotions in a complex world
created by a God far beyond our comprehension and that sometimes we will
encounter things that rattle and disturb us. We need to accept the experience
“as is” then evaluate it in the light of Scripture, holding to the good and
discarding what is of evil.
Avoiding
a black and white stance where its got to be “all of God” or “all of the Devil”
is important. People who take black and white stances lump people into one
category or the other and thus have very blunted discernment. “All X are Y” is
frequently incorrect. For instance not all Arabs are Muslims, and not all
Muslims are terrorists, therefore “All those Arabs are evil terrorists” is not
true and is a very poor judgment. Similarly “All Baptists are legalistic” or “All
Pentecostals are flakes” are untrue stereotypes. Thus black and white stances
are poor discernment and lead to damaging evaluations and serious mistakes in
judgment. Jesus never named an opponent or launched a personal attack against
an individual. Rather in every debate He found the good (do what the
Pharisees tell you) and dismissed the evil (but do not do as they do).
See Matthew 23:2,3
Lets apply this. Suppose you hear a sermon that is in major error what should you do? Leave the church and never return (flight) or talk to everyone indignantly and start a church split (fight) or seek a peaceful but powerful solution (mastery)? The person with a good biblical EQ would work out carefully what was incorrect and then talk it over with their pastor and if he or she did not respond would take the matter to other responsible leaders in the church in a peaceful and caring fashion.
To
give a further teaching example how should we react to a controversial
theologian like John Spong? A wise approach is to write against the
controversial doctrine without attacking the person. We can defend the truth of
the resurrection and expose the error of wrong facts, theology and logic
without engaging in personal attacks or feeling overwhelmed by heresy. Our
stance should be emotionally mature, clear, authoritative, biblical and
balanced. The emotionally competent Christian should never fight (do not resist
him who is evil); nor should we flee (when you have done all, stand) rather we
should demonstrate courage, self-mastery, integrity, power and competence when these various challenging
doctrinal situations arise.
Fear looks for the problem but faith looks for the solution. Fear generates the fight or flight response but faith generates intelligent thinking and personal mastery. In this section I want to talk about being “solution-focused” as an alternative to being “problem-focused” and as a way out of the fight or flight spiral and as a huge step towards personal mastery.
I
first came across this concept in the work of
William Hudson O’Hanlon and Michele Weiner-Davis in their book “In
Search of Solutions” which looks at a new approach to brief family therapy.
It’s a brilliant book and I highly recommend it. It has revolutionized my
clinical practice. However I have as usual sought to go a ‘bit deeper” and seek
its application to the Christian life and it is my conclusions, based on
reflecting on their work, that I will present here.
Their
concept is that instead of trying to analyze the problem down to its last
detail, we should instead search for the solution. A youth in trouble with the
police was brought to one of them for counseling. So instead of asking “why do
you break the law” they asked “when don’t you get into trouble?”. The youth
replied “when I play football”. How
often can you possibly play football the counselor replied? Soon the youth was
playing football and other sports in his every spare moment. He was not getting
into trouble any more because the time that has been given to doing bad things
was now given to doing harmless things. They found a solution. In just two
sessions of counseling his delinquent behavior was reversed. But if the
therapists had taken the “find the problem” route they would still be analyzing
his childhood and he would still be in trouble with the police.
Imagine
two motorists in identical situations with their tires punctured by nails.
Problem-Focused Pete bends down and finds the nail in the tire and says “Why
was that nail in my tire?”, he then searches around for sources of nails.
Finding none he walks around looking for where the nail may have come from in
the life history of the road. Finally he sends the nail off to the government
analytical laboratory hoping to get to the source of problem. Meanwhile his
wife and kids are furious but Problem-Focused Pete leaves them in the now hot
car because he must get to the source of the problem. A few days later the
answer comes back from the government laboratory and Problem-Focused Pete is
till there, by the side of the road, searching for where the nail came from.
Solution-Focused Sam gets a puncture, says “how can we fix this”, gets out the
jack and the spare, fixes the tire and is on his way in five minutes. It’s a
lot less intellectually satisfying but his family is eating pizza soon after,
while the other one frets by the highway.
Sometimes
in counseling we end up so focused on the problem that we miss really obvious
solutions. Instead of getting our clients on the road as soon as possible we
end up analyzing the nail to bits. Being solution-focused means looking for the
solution, not focusing on the problem; finding the way forward for people and
situations, not getting stuck in the “blame game”; stopping doing things that don’t work and continuing
to do things that do work. Doing more of what works and succeeds and less of
what does not work and just frustrates.
Some
of the basic concepts as I understand them are:
The
person who is chronically poor and unable to pay their bills does not need to
ask: “Why am I poor and unable to pay my bills”. That will just lead to them
blaming themselves, their wife, their parents, the government, their employer
and God. They do need to find a solution and ask the questions: “How can I best bring my finances under
control? How can I make myself wealthier? How can I solve this financial mess?”
The solution focused approach will work better and faster than all
problem-focused analysis of their poverty.
When
we become problem-focused we start finding people to blame and enemies to
accuse or we get wound up over the size of the problem. Basically we soon end
up in fight or flight mode. When we start searching
for solutions we start thinking, we start using our mind, we start praying, we
start digging into the Scriptures, we ask for wisdom, we tally our resources
and we move forward step by step in faith believing that God has a solution. In
other words we start marshalling our resources towards mastery.
Jesus
had an amazingly solution-focused approach to life. There was
always a solution. There were no “problems” for God. In the gospels Jesus says
“nothing is impossible with God” or “all things are possible with God” a total
of nine times. Jesus finds solutions for blind people, lepers, demon-possessed
Legion, Lazarus in the grave, five thousand hungry listeners and a boat full of
disciples on a stormy sea. Whatever the problem there was always a solution and
the solution always gave glory to God. The faith of Jesus searched for, found
and activated solutions.
Jesus
never gave a long-winded analysis of things when the disciples asked “Why”. In
John chapter nine when they asked “why was this man born blind, who sinned, him
or his parents” He cut them short. The analysis was not needed and not helpful.
What was needed was a solution that would give glory to God. So Jesus healed
the blind man. Jesus did not teach His disciples to analyze problems and write
treatises on them. He taught them how to provide solutions by healing the sick,
raising the dead, cleansing the lepers and preaching the Kingdom of God. (See
Luke chapters 9 & 10).
Obviously
a fairly basic level of analysis is needed. You do need to identify if the
person is blind or lame or demon-possessed so you can know what to do. But you
don’t stop right there with the analysis. You move from the analysis, by faith,
to the solution. This is where mastery comes in. To move through life
with mastery is to be able to see the solutions in every situation and to
implement them to the glory of God. This requires a changed mindset. Instead of
a fearful, helpless, analyzing, quarreling and useless mind we need one that is
bold, and confident and faith-filled and solution-seeking and this can only
come through the power of the Holy Spirit as the mind is fixed on God.
We
are to move away from the visceral and self-defeating reactions of the fight or
flight response to the noble, practical, solution-focused and faith-filled responses of
the sanctified believer. The instrument for doing this is the mind. The mind is
the only part of our consciousness that we can focus and deploy. We can use it
to stop automatic responses and to master our emotions. We can focus it on God
and things above and be connected to His eternal power. We can use it to give
us poise and power when we face our fears and to search for positive
faith-filled solutions to pressing needs so as to give glory to God. The disciplined, focused mind is the only
instrument we have to bring us out of our messy emotions and into life and
peace. Mastery is the only wise
alternative and mastery comes from the mind and the
mind set on the Spirit is life and peace. The next section will deal with
getting a handle on our emotions; first identifying them then choosing those we
will express and those we will deny.
Getting A Handle On Our Emotions
(John 11:35 NKJV) Jesus wept.
Like it or not God
has made us to be emotional beings. He wants us to have emotions – His
emotions. He wants us to weep over the lost, be moved with compassion for the
oppressed, be outraged by injustice, provoked by idolatry and angry at the hard
of heart. He wants us to love the sheep in our charge, be caught up in the
agony of intercession and have hearts full of hope. The Christian life,
properly lived, is awash in emotion. However it is not merely sentimental,
trite or unstable. Truly Christian emotions have a majesty about them. They ring
of the Kingdom and participate in and agree with the Truth.
People
and their emotions are like bells. Some people are like alarm bells going off
anxiously and loudly. Some are chipped
and cracked and when they “ring” the sound seems painful or like the bells on old-fashioned trams noisy,
clanging, rattling. Yet others are like shop bells being rung by everyone that
enters their life. Some are like a carillon, gentle, and beautiful and silvery;
finally there are those that are deep and resonant and summon the countryside
to worship. The aim of this book is to produce people who ring true and ring
deeply with the emotions of God. People whose very emotional presence is a
declaration of the Kingdom of God. To do this we must get a handle on our
emotions, we must be able to name them and we must start to choose which
emotions we will express and which emotions we should deny.
Many people cannot clearly identify their emotions. They simply use general words and phrases such as “good”, “bad”, “up” and “OK”, instead of more specific and useful words like “disconsolate”, “elated” and “perplexed”. For others feelings are just a confused blur. Yet others are so hurt that pain overwhelms all other finer feelings and for those people the emotional choice is constant pain or oblivion. Many chose oblivion via drugs, alcohol, or promiscuity and increasingly they escape into the total oblivion of death through suicide. Such people need help. They need to untangle their emotions and work through to peace. So being able to “feel their feelings” and being able to identify and name their emotions is a crucial first step.
Another reason why good emotional identification is important is that mistaken emotional identification can lead to spiritual disaster. For example take the common confusion between love and lust. A young person who confuses these two can end up in a disastrous relationship. Love and lust are opposites as looking at 1 Corinthians 13 soon reveals: “Love is patient (but lust is impatient), love is kind (but lust is cruel), love does not envy (but lust envieth all things), love does not parade itself (but lust struts its stuff)… and so on. If we think we are feeling one thing but are in fact feeling its opposite all sorts of havoc can be unleashed. Regret and repentance can seem similar. However regretting being found out is far different from repenting from sin. Unless we can correctly identify emotions in ourselves and others we can make serious mistakes in judgement.
For information about emotions and the fine differences between them the Psalms, classic poetry, novels and good literature are excellent sources. The great writers and poets have put their emotions into words with such fine skill that others through the years have found them to be important and accurate descriptions of emotions. Whole poems can focus on a single emotion such as Keats’ “On Dejection”. The portrayal of emotions by great authors helps us to get in touch with our feelings and to discriminate between them. When a poem particularly resonates with us then it is probably evoking an unexplored feeling that needs to surface.
Of course writing our own poetry, keeping a diary, painting, joining a drama group or attending a 12 step group or workshop can also be ways to get in touch with buried feelings and gradually sort out the emotional knots within. As we do so it is initially important to simply accept the emotions that surface rather than leaping to spiritual judgements before the process is complete.
Making spiritual judgments about the emotions we
experience is often counter-productive and causes us to express some emotions
and repress others to conform to a spiritual standard or model that we have
been taught in church. This can confuse us emotionally and spiritually and is
the subject of the next section.
Most
Christians have a strong belief
about what the perfect Christian is like. Some may think the perfect Christian
is an extroverted evangelist. Others may think the perfect Christian is a quiet
and ascetic mystic, while yet others may think that the perfect Christian is a
blessed and happy believer living a happy and contented life. This model of the
perfect humanity shapes our emotionality. For instance people who think the
“blessed believer” is the ideal Christian tend to emphasize the importance of
joy as an emotion. They also tend to deny painful emotions such as grief or
disappointment, which do not fit with their model of the happy contented Christian.
This process of valuing some emotions and denying others based on our idea of
the “model Christian” is very common. Lets look at how your mental model of the
perfect humanity may be affecting which emotions you repress and which emotions
you express. The following table lists sixteen different models of ideal
humanity along with their central premises, the consequences for the expression
or repression of emotion and the key weaknesses of the model. Each of them is
in some way a human cultural creation, each falls somewhat short of Christ who
should be our model.
Model Of The Ideal Person |
Areas
Expressed
|
Areas Repressed |
Weaknesses and Limitations |
The Blessed Believer: The ideal Christian is a person of great faith who prays fervently and receives great blessing from God and lives in abundance and happiness free from anxiety and turmoil. Salvation is easily and joyously and often instantly received. Abraham, Isaac, David and Solomon are seen as models Can easily focus on material blessings as a sign of God’s approval. |
Praise, gratitude, thankfulness, joy and
contentment. “Rejoice in the Lord always”. Salvation is from misery to
happiness. Happiness is a sign that Jesus is in your heart. |
Sorrow, depression, grief, anxiety, genuine
doubt, feelings of weakness and inadequacy, disappointment , any sense that life has treated them in
an unfair manner. Negative emotions are construed as indicating a “lack of
victory”. |
Model fails when life appears to be far less than
blessed such as when life appears to be unjust or unfair or when pain is
overwhelming or during grief and sorrow. Job is the classical example of a
blessed believer being challenged by life. |
The Penitent Pilgrim: The
pilgrim is escaping judgment and heading away from the World which is doomed.
The Christian life involves separation from sin and worldliness and the
serious pursuit of salvation which only relatively few attain and which is a
perilous journey. Pilgrim’s Progress.
Lot escaping Sodom. James |
Sorrow for sin, seriousness, self-examination,
correction of faults, penitence, intense prayer, travail, joy over
forgiveness, righteous anger, woe,
and pessimism over the world. |
Frivolity, laughter, flippancy, playfulness, sensuality, attraction to worldly
things, sexuality, pride over achievement, romance. Positive emotions are
treated with suspicion. |
Can become legalistic and joyless. Fails to give
proper place to the goodness of Creation and creates rebellion in people
brought up in this system who learn life is not as grim as portrayed. |
The Independent Achiever: Emphasises
being in ministry and achieving things for God. A Christian is measured by
the size of his or her ministry and how they achieved it alone as their
personal vision. Strategic thinking, business skills and personal success are
highly prized. Models include Nehemiah and the apostle Paul. |
Faith, hope, vision, optimism, joy, and the
emotions of the will and the mind. |
Tend not to be artistic and may lack compassion
at times. They avoid necessary introspection and reflection. Doubt and fear
are repressed rather than faced. |
Can lead to burn-out. Works for some people but
can destroy others. Their spouses often suffer. |
The Sacrificial Servant:.
Its what you give up for God that counts. The Christian “has no rights and is
there to “spend themselves for God” and “burn out for Jesus”. Spiritual
indicators include remoteness of
where one serves and the poverty of conditions. David Brainerd is a model
example. |
Enthusiasm and passion for God and devotion to
the cause. |
Most emotions are repressed or sublimated including most natural affections. |
At times is the stuff of cults. Tends to love God
alone and sacrifices self, family and neighbour to the cause. |
The Serene Saint: Like
Yoda in Star Wars these are the unruffled and wise contemplatives full of
peace and deep emotions. Their goal is tranquillity of soul and union with
God and self-mastery.
|
Tranquillity and peace, gentle emotions,
prayerful devotion, saintly emotions, mercy. |
Anger and most intense emotions including
sexuality are repressed. |
Can be weak at critical moments and fail to
tackle issues of justice and practical issues of life. Can become very
selfish and inward. |
The Radical Revolutionary: Enjoys
turning over the tables in the Temple. Seeking after justice they identify
with the Old Testament prophets. The ideal Christian is a counter-culture
revolutionary who brings transformation to society and justice to the poor. |
Righteous anger, passion for justice, indignation
, wrath. Vision, hope and even optimism may also be present. |
Tend to be overly serious and lose natural playfulness
and joy. Gentleness and meekness may also be lacking. |
In some contexts this is very much needed in
others it is totally inappropriate. Not a whole of life perspective for most
people. |
The Evangelist: The
ideal Christian sees many people saved. They are master communicators who are
always witnessing. They have strong personalities are enthusiastic and clear
sighted. |
Black and white emotions. Enthusiasm, passion for
the lost, joy, exuberance. |
Reflective quiet emotions are often seen as impractical. |
Lacks any understanding of ambiguities and
complexity, a very confined and narrow model. |
The Aggressive Apologist defends
the faith from error at every turn and exposes heresy, cults, witchcraft and
deception as well as contending with other belief systems. The ideal
Christian is knowledgeable , theologically correct, logical and able to
debate others so that they convert to Christianity or correct their ways. |
Reason, logic, righteous indignation, anger,
forcefulness, suspicion, evaluates and discriminates. |
Playfulness, gentleness, creativity, sympathy,
mercy, emotions of the heart. |
Tends to distrust emotional expression and be
overly logical and dry. Can make a person very rigid in their later years. |
The Ecstatic Enthusiast: Led
by the Spirit they are “on the move
for God” and express strong enthusiasm for spiritual things. Spiritual
ecstasy is a sign of God’s presence. The day of Pentecost is the ideal
Christian moment to be recreated at every opportunity. |
Trance states, ecstasy, passion, enthusiasm, joy,
exuberance, praise, thanksgiving. |
Critical faculties, analysis, contemplation,
thinking, reflection and negative emotions such as pain, grief and
disappointment. |
Tends to spiritual burn-out and can be very
unstable and insufficiently critical. Tends to fall for fads and is too
simplistic for many of life’s deeper practical issues. |
The Reasonable Man: Wisdom
and Reason are the voices of the Spirit who leads Christians into a balanced
and moderate life that reflects proper priorities and which is well adjusted
to the social context the believer lives in. Extremes are interpreted as a
sign of a dysfunctional personality. Solomon is a model. |
Reason, analysis, ethical reflection, conventions
and social mores, well-tempered emotions, kindness, gentleness,
reasonableness. “Moderation in all things” |
Strong emotion of all kinds is disapproved of as
well as any major breach of social standards. |
Unless the Bible is taught clearly and strongly this
rapidly tends to an insipid worldliness and spiritual skepticism. |
The Perfect Man: Like
Confucius’ concept the perfect man is without inappropriate emotion or any
visible faults. Emotion is carefully guarded and kept under control. The
perfect man is upright, ethical, has
perfect manners and social perception, and is extremely humble and meek. |
Proper behavior, loyalty, humility, meekness,
convention, submission, restraint, ethics, duty. “Being without fault in
one’s conduct in life”. |
Anger, pain, any socially disabling emotion,
anything that may cause loss of face. |
Because how others perceive the Christian is of
ultimate importance it can produce harshness and hypocrisy. Very
individualistic and tends to ignore larger social issues. |
The Good Samaritan Love
of neighbor expressed as social action and deeds of mercy mark the true
Christian. Kindness, gentleness, mercy and helpfulness are the premier
virtues. |
Mercy, gentleness, kindness, hospitality, inclusion,
practical deeds of love and compassion. |
Exclusion, rejection,
unkindness of any sort, tries to develop a very inclusive and non-theological
faith. |
Has much merit but can become just social work without
a true saving gospel being proclaimed. |
The Principled Idealist is
characterised by seeking the high and noble life lived by principles and
virtue and self-renunciation for the Ideal Good. People are valued by their
principles, intentions and ideals without reference to actions. There is a pursuit of absolute excellence
at the personal level and of a
Christian Utopia at the corporate level. |
High ideals and aspirations, concepts, ideas,
justice, philosophies, ambition, personal striving for high goals, vision,
personal principles, ethics, mission statements, nobility, virtue, the
Absolute Good, Utopia. |
The mundane, earthy, concrete details of daily
life are scorned. Attention to detail and diligence are often lacking.
Earthiness and pragmatism are perceived to be un-spiritual. Tends not to
allow feedback from results. |
Frequently disorganized. Also godly ambition and
personal ambition can easily be mixed. Often so focused on the external goals
that they lose personal insight and can become dishonest and treacherous. |
The Perceptive Pragmatist is able to sum up life quickly and fix problems on
the spot. A Christian is measured by their capacity to be useful and by their
skills in judgement, analysis and implementation.
|
Analysis, evaluation, enthusiasm, practical
knowledge, authority, wisdom, toughness, shrewdness, energy. |
Empathy, kindness, compassion, mercy. Most
emotions are not felt deeply and they tend to be deemed as irrelevant. |
Tend to come unstuck in mid-life and feel a deep sense
of meaninglessness. May neglect relationships. May see virtue as impractical. |
The Intelligent Instructor is a learned Christian who teaches well and can
exegete the difficult verses of Scripture. The goal is knowledge of God and
wisdom and knowledge are equated with progress in the Christian life.
Academic prowess is prized and church is often made into a classroom. Ezra is
a model.
|
Thoughtfulness, balance, evaluation, discipline,
kindness, gentleness, logic, intelligence, knowledge, reasoning, debating,
humour, moderate emotions suitable for the classroom. |
Strong passions are suspect and practicality may
be lacking. The subjective and non-cognitive areas of the Christian life tend
to be deeply distrusted. Lack of celebration and praise. |
Can become dry, dull and overly rational. Praise
and worship tend to be seen as only teaching tools. The central idea
that knowledge of theology is
progress in God is deeply flawed. |
The Child of
Nature is still
living in the Garden of Eden and feels free to express all kinds of emotion.
Spontaneity, freedom, expressiveness, artistic skill and creativity are high
on the agenda.
|
Nearly all emotions are freely expressed.
Creativity, joy, freedom. The inner
child is given freedom to play. |
Discernment, wisdom, truth and responsibility.
Can be undisciplined and immature emotionally. |
Can become overly sensual and fall into moral
disorder. There is a tendency to anarchy and irresponsibility. Lacks power
and authority. |
So we see that the
Christian’s mental model greatly influences which aspects of life they pay
attention to and which emotions they express or repress. In fact we probably
choose our own model partly because we are naturally more comfortable
expressing one set of emotions than another. This may be due to, among other
factors, our culture, our denomination, or to our natural temperament.
I find God paying a lot of attention to those areas outside my model. He challenges my preconceptions and stretches my view of what I should be like. The gap between my natural comfortable model of the Christian life and the life of Jesus is a gap He wants closed. He wants me to model myself after His Son and does not allow me to invent my own destiny or a ‘better idea’ of how I should be sanctified. For instance I am naturally rational and cognitively orientated and uncomfortable with high levels of emotion, so God in His desire to make me like Jesus, has made emotions a real area of challenge and of study for me.
God will not be satisfied with you being less than Christ-like. He will work on the difference between the model of faith you have adopted and that displayed in the Scriptures. Your mental model of the ideal Christian undoubtedly has many Scriptures that support it – but here and there it can be improved and in fact needs to be improved if you are to be fully like Jesus. . In my Christian life I have had to do a major revision of my faith about every seven years or so. I move from a certain model to a more Christlike one then that in turn is challenged and revised and so the process goes on.
Changing Our Mental Model
How then do we correct our mental model of the Christian faith – particularly one we are quite committed to? For a start read one of the gospels and note the difference between how you act and react to how Jesus acts and reacts. Would you be happy being a friend of publicans and sinners? Would you let a prostitute touch your feet? Would you say “You cannot serve God and Mammon” with conviction? At those points where your model and the gospel model disagree you must decide to change and become like Jesus. Other clues are inner discontent with where you are at (maybe its your model of Christianity that’s wrong), or a desire for something more. Go with your questions seeking their answers in the Scripture and “brick by brick” you will build up a more mature idea of what it means to be a Christ-like person.
The central questions of changing mental models are “Can I be more like Jesus than I am now ?” and “What is my actual working notion of the Christian life? Is it what Jesus meant by the Christian life?” To doubt our mental model of the faith is not the same as doubting God. I do not doubt the authority of the Scriptures but I do periodically question how I have interpreted them and the mental pictures I have generated. Thus changing mental models means being honest to God and the Scriptures and tough on one’s personal comfort zone, church culture and traditions. It is honest biblical reflection on where we are at spiritually, in the light of Scripture.
You may need to make a calculated decision to move beyond your culture and upbringing, accepting that which is good and rejecting that which is evil and moving to maturity in Christ. The Jewish Christians in the book of Acts had a most difficult time doing this because they were so sure of then superiority of Jewish culture and practices and of the need to be circumcised. Their model of Jesus was that He was “a good Jewish boy who kept the Law” – and He did! However He also accepted Gentiles! Chapters ten to fifteen of the book of Acts detail with the terrible tension Peter and the Jewish Christians faced when the Gentiles accepted the gospel. A church-wide conference had to be called to resolve the issue. Changing models of faith was not easy then and its not easy now.
It requires the power of the Holy Spirit if radical change is to occur and if we are to have the courage to be more Christ-like emotionally than our community believes is desirable. For instance people who bring prostitutes and drug addicts to church may not be welcomed with enthusiasm. Departing from our comfortable model of Christianity to a genuine Spirit-filled and Christ-like existence will have a huge cost and be understood only by other seekers on the same journey. [Remember that this is your quest and that you may not be able to take your church with you. You may see the need to change while they are content with where they are. You do what you must do to be like Jesus. That’s your responsibility. They will have their time and path to Christ-likeness.]
To sum up – we need to get a handle on our emotions by first of all identifying them and secondly making a conscious decision about which emotions to express and which to deny. Our mental model of the Christian faith will greatly affect how we express or repress emotions. Our mental model serves as a sort of Christian master plan that guides our destiny, thoughts, emotions and behaviour. It is shaped by culture, conditioning and our community of faith with its traditions as well as our own conclusions about God and Jesus. It needs to be revised now and then when it has outlived its current usefulness. We need to move to ever more Christ-like mental models and these in turn will pattern our thoughts, behaviour and biblical EQ. As we become Christ-like we will express and repress the right emotions, in the right way and at the right times for the glory of God and the extension of His Kingdom. This leads us to a problem – what about the emotions I have today, right now, before I have changed a bit. How do I handle them? How should I evaluate them? How should I react to them? That is the subject of the following chapters.
Acting On And
Reacting To Our Strong Emotions
(Psalms 143:4 NKJV)
Therefore my spirit is overwhelmed within me; My heart within me is
distressed.
Handling strong emotion is not easy – and life in the Spirit is frequently full of strong emotions. Love, righteous anger, compassion, ecstasy and joy in worship can be transcendent and powerful emotions that sweep the believer along. In the face of such powerful emotions what should we do? How should we act on our emotions? How should we react to them as they well up inside us? That is the subject of this chapter.
Jesus And Strong Emotions
Did Jesus have strong emotions or were His emotions always mild and uneventful? From incidents such as His cleansing of the temple, His cursing of the fig-tree, His groans at Lazarus’ tomb, His rebukes of His disciples, His blazing anger at the hard hearts of the Pharisees and His rejoicing at the return of the disciples from their ministry trip; we can say Jesus had many strong emotions. Jesus was a fully emotional Jewish man filled with the Holy Spirit and sent on a holy mission for the glory of God. He was not a bored and passionless bureaucrat. He was a prophet and the Son of God.
The strength of Jesus’ emotions flowed from the power of His perceptions and the strength of His beliefs. What we perceive and believe gives force to our convictions and emotions. If you behold little of reality and believe almost nothing, then you will feel small and dull passions at best. However if you are filled with the Spirit, and see Heaven opened, and know the truth, and believe the Scriptures, and are truly on a mission from the Lord then your emotions will be strong and clear and grow in strength and grandeur. To add the obvious, the reverse is not true, strong emotions do not mean you are spiritual. People can be gripped by all sorts of strong and yet fleshly emotions. So strong emotions can be both godly and fleshly. Jesus was powerfully emotional but was without sin. How did He do it? He exercised self-control.
Self-Control, Repression, Grieving and Quenching
There are two main spiritual errors when it comes to the expression of emotion in the Christian life. The first is giving expression to carnal emotions such as wrath, bitterness and clamour. This is called “grieving the Spirit” and is mentioned in Ephesians 4:30,31. The second error is the repressing of holy emotions that arise within us because of the work of the Spirit. This is called “quenching” the Spirit and is mentioned in 1 Thessalonians 5;19. Holy emotions frequently have an intensity about them that makes many people fear their presence and clamp down on them. Self-control means managing our emotions so that fleshly and carnal emotions such as wrath and bitterness are kept out of the Christian life and holy emotions such as compassion are given full expression in the best manner possible. Thus, as we saw in the last chapter, self-control does mean clamping down on some emotions – but not on all. The Christian life is about holy emotion not a dead and passionless existence. However before we can control our emotions and manage them appropriately we must become aware of their existence.
Repression is
the opposite of self-control because it denies the existence of the emotion and
does not enable us to control it in any way at all. That is why people who use
repression of emotion as a main device in their Christian life are often
subject to outbursts of rage. They in
fact have no real control of their emotions and no insight onto their emotional
state. Before I go any further I want you to stop and think about the concept
of “permission to feel emotion”. This is denied to many
people. They are told from a young age to keep emotions, particularly negative
emotions, completely under wraps. Once this is successfully internalised such
people may have to give themselves “permission to feel” those emotions that
they have denied themselves over the years. Such emotions may include sensual
emotions, pleasure, anger, disappointment and
grief. Gradually coming to feel long lost emotions can take some time. There is frequently a deep fear that control
will be lost. It needs to be remembered by such people that they have
successfully controlled that emotion for perhaps thirty or more years. They
know how to put the lid on the box when they have to. It is most unlikely they
will truly lose control but the experience will feel new and a bit scary at
first. Eventually the recovered emotions will lead to the deeper resonances of
life and a fuller and more meaningful existence.
The aim of biblical EQ is that we move from repression and denial of emotion to proper self-control of emotion. Thus the Holy Spirit will not quenched by being good emotions being stifled or grieved by inappropriate emotions such as wrath or bitterness being expressed. This makes the person of the Holy Spirit absolutely central to the Christian’s true experience of emotion. It is as He is released in His fullness that we move into the emotional life of our Saviour. It is we are led by the Spirit that we experience His moving within our souls, His passion for the lost, His hatred of sin, His love of holy things, His rejoicing in the truth. Self-control is a fruit of the Holy Spirit and operates under the leading of the Holy Spirit so that we enter into holy emotions and forsake fleshly passions and ungodly wrath and dissension. Through the leading of the Holy Spirit and His infilling we become a joyous, loving, holy and zealous people filled with holy emotions and the fruits of the Spirit. (Ephesians 5:18-21, Colossians 3:16-17, Galatians 5:16-23)
True Holy Spirit led self-control is neither apathetic nor stoical on one hand or irresponsible and indulgent on the other. The Holy Spirit leads us to express emotion wisely and truthfully but also joyously and with depth and intensity. Shallow sentimentality is not found in the Scriptures. People of faith are deep, resonant and have a grounded-ness about them. Neither are Spirit-filled Christians cold and stoical or flaccid and apathetic. The people of the Living God are most fully alive. That is what makes Christianity attractive. Many people say of the time they first met Christians “they had something about them, a joy that I really wanted.” The Holy Spirit filled believer is emotionally alive and emotionally substantial.
Self-Control and Other Control
If we are not self-controlled we are other-controlled. In other words if we do not take charge of our emotions then they will be up and down with every change in the weather, every different circumstance, every tiny provocation. If we do not take positive and definite control of our emotions we will simply be flotsam and jetsam on the sea of life. Basically the choices are self-control or other-control, mastery - or madness in its various forms.
There is a common myth that other people can “press our buttons” and make us explode with anger or burst into tears or react emotionally. “He made me so mad”, “She seduced me, she made me have sex with her” and so on. Most of the time, this is just plain untrue. Generally you were able to master your emotions in that situation but you chose not to.
Say you are in a heated domestic argument, with much shouting and red-faced anger, and the telephone rings. So you pick it up and suddenly your voice is calm and rational, you say hello nicely and take the message. In doing so you just took control of your strongest and angriest emotions. You mastered yourself, in a second of time; just in order to answer the phone. You knew how to calm down and you did. You knew how to stop shouting, and you did so. You demonstrated instantaneous movement from powerful emotions to complete rationality; switching off your fight-or flight response as you did so. It was impressive. The phone incident demonstrated that you do possess the power to instantaneously master strong emotions. You can do so easily and routinely in order to avoid embarrassment. Why then do you not use the power you have when you answered the phone more often? That is the power we call self-control and you do have it.
The phone incident shows we have an “off-button” for the fight or flight response. We can switch it off suddenly and completely. The off-button is like the red emergency button they have on trains where I come from in Brisbane, Australia. The red button is behind plexiglass which must be broken by effort but once that button is pressed the whole train with its hundreds of tons of locomotives and carriages comes quickly to a grinding halt. Your fight or flight response may seem like a runaway train but you have the red button and with a bit of effort you can stop it completely.
Hitting the red button is as easy as saying “Stop” to yourself in a firm and commanding tone of voice (either audibly or inaudibly). The red button can be pressed as soon as you decide to take charge of yourself and your emotions. This involves coming to the realization that you should take command of you emotions, then doing so by switching off the fight-or-flight response and returning to a rational way of being. Lets break down the phone incident and see how that happens:
1. You are caught up in the argument. Your face is red, the anger is surging, you are floating on the adrenalin and in a strange way the rage feels good. You are letting fly. You are half-aware that the rage is controlling you but you don’t care. You are going with the flow of the fight or flight response.
2. The phone rings, you pick it up.
3. You realise the call is important.
4. You realise your present responses are inappropriate.
5. You decide to take control of your emotions.
6. You switch off the fight or flight response. (By pressing the “red button”).
7. You return to a rational and intelligent way of being as you take the call.
The critical point is when you decide to take control of your emotions. Realizing your emotions are inappropriate is not quite enough. You must make a definite inner decision. Some people realise their emotions are inappropriate but think “what the blazes” and let fly over the telephone as well! That inner decision, that choice between “what the blazes” and “I’d better cool down” is critical. That’s the equivalent of breaking the plexiglass. It’s the bit of effort that’s required to stop the whole shuddering train. After that decision is made pressing the button is easy. When you put yourself in control of yourself you achieve mastery. When you decide to put your mind in charge and not your adrenalin you win. You must make the firm and definite decision that even when emotions are powerful you are going to be in charge of them. This is not repression, it self-control. It’s the sane, rational, functional part of you being in control of your emotions. Its deciding to appoint your Spirit-filled mind as the CEO of Myself Inc.
This is very powerful. No-one can make you react emotionally unless they use so much force (such as torture) that they actually break you. If you definitely decide not to laugh (say at a dirty joke), no-one can make you laugh. If you definitely decide not to cry, (say in order to stay together in an emergency) then no-one can make you cry. Your emotions are yours to express or repress. You are in control of them. You can stop them and you can let the go. Your mind can decide how you will or will not react as long as you make the decision to put it clearly and absolutely in charge of your life.
Some people fear people of strong minds and say they are
repressed and even that they have ‘deep inner rage” which in a few cases is
true. Repression and rage live together in some people. However we are aiming
at a Spirit-filled Christian use of the mind. We want the mind to be strong and
strongly in control, but we also want it to be holy, renewed and spiritual. We
want the mind to permit holy and appropriate emotions and to stop fleshly and
inappropriate emotions. We do not want to quench the Spirit. Thus we need
discernment about when to press the button. We do not want either total
emotional repression, or a runaway fight-or flight response. We need a balanced
middle ground. We need to discern our strong emotions. Thus we do not need to run away from strong emotion whether it be
positive emotion, negative emotion or even deep spiritual emotion. The presence
of strong emotion should not panic us into a fight or flight response or shut us down into repression. Rather we should
evaluate the emotion rather than react to the emotion, we should master the
emotion and not just flee from it or try to beat it to death. The mastery stance requires discernment and discernment requires understanding
of emotions, their sources, their place in our life and their relative values.
The following few sections deal with how we can respond to the strongest
emotions such as temptations and powerful spiritual experiences with
poise, power and wisdom.
Emotions and Discerning
The Truth
Before we decide to let an emotional control or direct our behaviour we need to know whether or not it is leading us in the right direction. Can we safely follow our hearts? Are emotions a good guide to truth and to right behaviour? If the Holy Spirit produces good emotions are all good emotions a sign of God’s Presence? Can we tell the truth of a doctrine or the authenticity of a movement by how it makes us feel? Not at all! “It feels so good it must be right” is a downright lie!
While the Holy Spirit produces joy and peace, the presence of joy and peace does not necessarily indicate the presence of the Holy Spirit. People can feel at peace after a bottle or two of wine! People experience joy and peace when they convert to Buddhism, a New Age group or even to Islam. People join cults because they feel better there than at church. Cults can feel warm, loving, tranquil and enlightened. Cults often meet the emotional needs that were not met in the local church and someone has said “Cults are the unpaid bills of the Church.” Thus good feelings are no guide to good theology. The opposite may also be true, bad feelings are no guide to bad theology. We may experience negative emotions when we are being confronted with the truth. The prophets – who spoke the truth – found many people reacting negatively to them. The truth was not producing good feelings in those who heard. Negative emotions are no indication of error and positive emotions are no indication of truth. Thus good emotions are not a guide to good theology neither are difficult emotions an indication of wrong theology.
If this is the case is it “too risky” to cultivate a Christian subjectivity? Not if we place emotions in their right place as a response to truth and a guide to action. Emotions are a valid response to truth but not a valid guide to truth. Jesus reacted emotionally as He perceived the truth but Jesus did not arrive at the truth via His emotions. He arrived at the truth via Scripture. Jesus wept when He saw His friends grieving as Lazarus’s grave. He was moved by compassion when He saw people sick, harassed and lost. His emotions were a response to His perceptions in a framework filled with God’s truth. However Jesus never said “I feel X therefore I will believe Y”. His emotions moved Him to act and His actions were based on truth revealed from the Father. His emotions did not show Him what was true or false – they just moved Him to act on what He already knew (from Scripture) was true or false. We do not follow our emotions, rather we need to follow truth – and express emotion as we do so.
Bob was a 50-year-old executive having a mid-life crisis. Somewhere along the road he was told, “just follow your heart”. He followed his feelings into an ‘emotionally fulfilling relationship” with a younger woman and a painful divorce that he now deeply regrets. The adultery felt great. However it was not of the truth. The good feelings were not an indication of a right course of action. These good feelings can be intense, global and very convincing. There is such a thing as very strong temptation. There are emotions that can lead us into adultery, drugs and alcohol addiction, gambling, and acts of self-destruction. These emotions feel true, authentic and valid at the time. They may even feel “cosmic” and like a form of self-awareness, self-discovery or enlightenment. Affairs can seem totally “right” in their initial phase, the first drink for an alcoholic “feels terrific”, the guru makes people feel “at one with the Universe”. Unless there is a solid examination of the truth and awareness of the consequences these powerful emotions can lead people to shipwreck their lives.
Following our heart can be truly catastrophic. However repression is not the answer. [In fact repression can be the indirect cause of the catastrophe as temptation comes strongest to our repressed unmet needs.] Rather than repressing our emotions and unmet needs we need to be aware of our heart and discipline it according to the truth. During a mid-life crisis the best advice is “acknowledge your feelings but follow the truth.” It is perfectly Ok to acknowledge to yourself that, “I am strongly tempted to have an affair” as long as you stare that fact in the face and decide to refuse the temptation because you love God. It can also help to look at the consequences and say, “I will not do so because that is wrong and destructive and would make shipwreck of my life.” By acknowledging the temptation and refusing it you can grow in emotional and spiritual maturity.
There is however an aspect of emotion that can guide us and is meant to guide us. Emotions can act as a “preliminary analysis” of a complex situation prompting us to give it more thought. For instance our emotions can make us uneasy about someone and after we look harder we find out they have a reputation for being dishonest, predatory or cruel. Or our emotions can give us the hunch that there might be real potential in a certain situation. Once our emotions have alerted us we can then examine the situation objectively and see if our emotions have informed us correctly.
There is a place for hunches, gut feelings, emotional signals and awareness of emotional atmosphere. Emotions are able to reduce a very complex situation down to a certain feeling or impulse and they do this very quickly and efficiently. A young man sees a lady and feels “Wow, she is the one.” this judgment may be made in a second or two. That judgement however will need a lot of further examination before it can validly lead to marriage. Emotions are thus meant to be initial assessments of complex situations – but only initial assessments.
This is useful in that our emotions select the situations that our reason will go to work on and analyse. A young man cannot analyse the suitability of every young lady he meets – that would be impractical. Rather he thinks about those he is attracted to. Thus his emotions select first and his thorough evaluation follows later. Emotions can make us attracted, suspicious, repelled, guarded, curious or astonished at a given situation. Sometimes this initial impression is validated by further thought at other times it is proved totally wrong.
In our own culture and on familiar territory our impressions can be quite accurate however the further we are from home base the worse our emotional judgement becomes and the more we must rely solely on objective evidence. Inner impressions have a place in our discernment of situations and we should listen to them. God has placed them within us. However we need to be careful in relying on them and not mistakenly think that we are always right. If there are significant consequences from following those impressions we should be very careful and check the facts carefully before proceeding. These impressions cannot replace reasoning rather they alert us that reasoning should commence on a particular issue or line of thought. They are a stimulus to thought not an alternative to it.
When emotions are damaged the ability to form accurate impressions of
situations also suffers. Emotionally damaged people tend to be prone to
mistakes in judgment. They rush into love, they hold back from friendship, they
gamble on foolish ventures, and they run from shadows. The ability to sense
what is happening in a situation, then to sit back and analyse it adequately,
is out of kilter. People who have been emotionally damaged should not enter
into a significant relationship or project until they have healed to the point
where they have functional and accurate discernment. They should look at their
decision-making and be careful – seeking the advice of friends and family and
striving to be as objective as possible.
Even if their ability to assess situations was good before it will not
be as good now. This loss of judgement can be alarming but it is temporary and
will pass in time as emotional healing takes place.
Many of our most
powerful emotional experiences are spiritual experiences. The spiritual life and
the emotional life are thus very closely connected and our meaningful spiritual
experiences are
nearly always highly charged with emotion. Truth, for the believer is real and
living and meaningful and the discovery of truth – those great “Aha!” moments
is frequently deeply emotional. When Ezra read the Law the Jews wept (Nehemiah
8:1-9). Truth and emotion went hand in hand. The scientific age with its view
of truth as clinical and unemotional is rooted in Greek Platonism not in
biblical (and especially Hebrew) reality.
In the West it has led to false dichotomy between theology and emotionality
that is even reflected at the level of denominational differences. Part of the
appeal of the New Age is having teaching that is expected to be emotionally and
existentially meaningful.
Thus
it is the testimony of men and women of God down the ages is that deep
spiritual experiences were also often powerful
emotional events. Biography after biography talks about nights in anguished
prayer, times of breakthrough and joy, deep sorrow over sin and being astounded
by the presence and power of God. Revival in particular is seen as full of
emotion. However this has led to the common error that only deeply emotional
experiences are truly genuine spiritual experiences. The true convert is
expected to weep or be joyous or have certain feelings. The emotion, which
often accompanies spiritual change, has in some cases become required. That is
simply not a biblical stance. The biblical sign of true conversion is a life
lived so that repentance is demonstrated and the “fruits of repentance” are
shown. The life, not the emotions, is the true indicator of piety.
Thus a highly
emotional person is not more
or less spiritual than a relatively unemotional person. The emotional volume
level is not terribly important. What is important is that we have the right
sorts of emotions. We should feel some sort of contrition when we do wrong. We
should feel compassion for the hungry. We should feel indignation when
blasphemy occurs. These are proper and holy emotions. Improper and unholy
emotions might include rage over a trivial insult or jealousy over a person’s
success. The question is not whether the emotion is loud or muted but whether
it is holy or fleshly.
A vision does not
make a saint. Powerful spiritual phenomena are recorded both for genuine
prophets, seers and mystics and for false prophets, cult leaders and
mischief-makers. Most Christians seem to have a significant dream or vision at
some point in their life. A few have them often. However most dreams, visions
and experiences of trance seem to be of fairly limited value. I am a missionary
and while writing this book I took ill with a tropical fever and spent a few
days in delirium. During the delirium amazing and disturbing visions came
to me every time I closed my eyes. These visions were a sign of a high
temperature, not of great holiness, and antibiotics “exorcised” them from my
mind. The experience, though interesting, was of little spiritual value and I
did not gain anything from it. It was just interesting spiritual stuff and
that’s about all. Even when a dream or vision has a distinctly numinous and
awesome quality about it there is no guarantee that it is genuine and useful –
until Scripture tests it.
At no point are
Christians exhorted to enter into altered states of consciousness. Rather they are at times warned about
excesses in this area and placing too much emphasis on dreams and visions (see
Colossians 2). To balance this I have, during my missionary career, seen the
great value of dreams to pre-literate tribes-people in Papua New Guinea and
among Muslims. People frequently come to Christ or make a definite change for
the better in their Christian life because of a dream in which Jesus or an
angel appeared to them. The fruits of the dream show its validity and such
valid dreams fit within the biblical pattern. However they occur naturally
without any special inducement or the use of drugs.
Thus we need to
take our dreams and visions seriously and evaluate them
wisely and in a balanced and biblical fashion. Writing then down is helpful and
then leave them in the notebook while you pray and consult the Scriptures and
perhaps a wise Christian or three. Here are a few guidelines for doing the
evaluation:
·
Chronological
date setting is not found in Scripture, so I doubt any dream that uses actual
times and dates (e.g. 18th September 2003) to forecast the future.
The Scriptures use event time, (e.g. seven years after the appearance of
the man of lawlessness) not clock time, when setting the prophetic calendar.
·
If after your
dream or vision you find yourself convinced of your own spiritual importance
then pause, stop think. Spiritual pride is not what God wants. The dream or
vision is not Scripture and is very probably not a new chapter in the book of
Revelation. Calm down, evaluate it very carefully and then share it with a few
others. Humility will help you sort out the truth.
·
Dreams and
visions and spiritual experiences can
come from God, from your own imagination, or from the Devil. Those from God are
scriptural and edifying and point to the complete sovereignty of God and glorify His Son Jesus Christ, those
from self tend to be filled with daily events or political events and are often
self-centred, those from the Devil are
tempting or terrifying or accusing.
·
I do not think
it is presumptuous to say “Lord if that dream was of you please give it to me
three nights running and substantiate it with Scripture and other signs.” God
allows us to test the spiritual realm (1 John 4:1-3). This is especially so if
the dream points to a major change in life direction.
·
No dream that
contradicts Scripture, invites you to sin, fills you with pride or terrifies
you out of your mind, is from God.
·
The power of
the emotion in the dream does not tell you how important or spiritually
valuable the dream is. You can have powerfully emotional dreams following too
much pizza but they are of no spiritual value. The spiritual value is
determined by carefully weighing the dream against Scripture.
·
Many dreams do
not carry direct symbols that are easily interpreted (like the fig tree for
Israel). Most of the language of dreams and visions comes from within your own
subconscious and the metaphors you use to yourself. They are like the cartoons
in the paper. So if in your dream your wife has a knife in her neck it may not
mean she is going to die. Instead it probably means that you are finding her to
be a “pain in the neck” and that the argument over the dishes has made its way
into your dreams. After you have written down your dream look for the metaphors
you commonly use and see if any have popped into it. This is a good starting
point for interpretation.
·
Doctrine flows
from Scripture in context not dreams and visions. A dream may serve as an
illustration of a doctrine (I once had a wonderful dream of Jesus as the
Shepherd) but they are not the source of doctrine. A dream or vision can be
your subconscious making truth real to you in pictorial form but it does not
invent new truth. Nebuchadnezzar’s dream of the tree n Daniel 4 merely told him
he needed to become humble – it illustrated an already existing doctrine and
carried God’s warning of the consequences of sin (as many dreams do, see
Genesis 20:3-7).
·
Some people
experience vivid dreams in response to political events in the news. Hundreds
of such dreams and visions have been sent to me over the Internet and at least
ninety-seven percent of them have been substantially wrong. They generally
predict invasions of America or Australia, gigantic tidal waves, and huge
earthquakes. My theory is that such dreams represent a way of dealing with anxiety
over the instability and
wickedness we see around us. They carry a spirit of fear and anxiety within
their structure and seem to lack substance.
·
Demonic dreams tend to
fall into four categories inflating, accusing, terrifying or seductive.
Inflating dreams convince the person of their own importance and generate
spiritual pride, accusing dreams “reveal” the supposedly secret sins of another
person or convince the dreamer of their own inevitable damnation and judgment,
terrifying dreams use fear as their main weapon and often involve demons and
masks and sometimes leave the person struggling to breathe, seductive dreams involve very realistic and
vivid dreams of sexual acts and are powerfully alluring playing on the deep
sensuality in the person to make them wake up with a strong desire to sin.
·
Dreams can
result in distraction from ministry. Quite a few of my colleagues in the
ministry have moved out of flourishing but difficult ministries and gone to a
place they saw in a dream to start a “new and exciting ministry”. In every case I think they have ended up
disillusioned. My theory is that sometimes the pressures of ministry make us
want out and our subconscious manufactures a way out for us in the form of a
spiritually acceptable dream or vision. Such callings should be tested over
time.
Powerful spiritual experiences and
dreams and visions are not to be feared and fled from. Nether are they to be
over-rated. Rather they are to be carefully tested and the truth extracted from
them.
The Point Of Balance
Archimedes once
said “Give me a lever long enough and a place to stand and I
could move the earth.” But where can we stand to get a grip on our strong
emotions? Tis’ a fine notion to think that we can stand outside our strong
emotions, evaluate them Scripturally and then bring them into submission to the
Holy Spirit. But this fine notion seems very impractical to many people caught up in
the roller-coaster ride of their own powerful emotions. Here are some hints
that may help you to find a “place to stand” so you can take charge of your own
emotional life.
· Make a definite and clear decision to place Jesus in charge of your life with your Spirit-filled mind as His CEO. Your mind, set on the Spirit, has delegated authority from God to bring the rest of you under control and into line with His purposes.
· Realise that you are the boss. You are the master of your emotions. They are not the master of you. You have a right to tell them what to do. They are your emotions after all, your property so to speak.
· Realise that you have the control panel inside you. You can press the “red button” and take control of the fight-or flight response. You can modulate the volumes of emotions and control them.
· Don’t disown your emotions. You have to own them before you can boss them!
· Realise that the apparent authority of strong emotions is largely illusory. They are just part of you, they are not the President of the U.S.A. They may feel compelling but they have no right to compel you at all.
· Think. Use logic. Stop and think hard about where your emotions are taking you. Check the consequences of the actions. Choose to be rational and sensible.
· Evaluate the truth of the propositions the strong emotions are putting to you such as “it would be a good idea to punch X” or more subtly “You should follow your heart and have an affair”. Even if these things feel true and right and authentic and satisfying and fulfilling they may be wrong. See Genesis 3! Choose to stand on God’s Word.
· Apply the principles in the chapter on mastery.
· Be constantly filled with the Holy Spirit. Just pray “Lord fill me with the Holy Spirit and grant me wisdom and self-control and fix my mind on You.” That is the sort of prayer He delights to answer. If you can get hold of the Campus Crusade booklet “How To Be Filled With The Holy Spirit” you will find it a big help and very practical and easy to use.
· Be aware of your weaknesses. Know that “under such and such circumstances I tend to react in X manner”. Check yourself. Watch yourself carefully. Have friends keep you accountable and have them pray with you and help you find your point of wisdom and balance.
· Get it very clear that the Holy Spirit is wise and intelligent and His leadings are generally wise and intelligent. Don’t destabilize yourself by following many crazy ideas thinking they are leadings from the Holy Spirit. Stand in wisdom and do not move from it.
By practicing the above techniques on a daily basis you will gradually learn how to generate dignity, power and poise. Day by day you will become a stronger person not tossed here and there by every strong emotion that comes your way. You will hop off the roller-coaster of your own emotions and start to take charge of yourself and your destiny. Best of all you will learn to be a Spirit-filled Christian and be able to consistently demonstrate the fruits of the Spirit.
Once we have started mastering ourselves we can more fully engage in profitable relationships with others. To do this, and to minister grace, we need to be able to recognise and understand their emotions, which is the subject of the next chapter.
8. Jesus seemed to be always poised and in charge. He had obviously found a “place to stand” in order to manage His emotions and manage life. What are some things that can make people lose their poise? How can you find such a “place to stand”?
(Matthew 9:4 NKJV) But Jesus, knowing their thoughts, said,
"Why do you think evil in your hearts?
As I write this chapter the news is filled with the horror of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Centres. Emotions such as grief, sympathy, sorrow, anger, anxiety and perplexity are openly being expressed. The world teeters on the brink of war and there is anxiety about the stock market’s ability to open on Monday. The air seems charged with highly contagious emotion. Now how can I recognise all this from a television screen? What gives us the capacity to read another person’s emotional state and to respond to it? What happens when we fail to do so?
There are about 30 or so common emotions that are reasonably easily recognised. These include, fear, surprise, apprehension, sadness, elation, doubt, anxiety, guilt, contentment, sexual interest, curiosity, anger, frustration, annoyance, and laughter amongst others. A sensitive, discerning person may be able to recognise hundreds of different types of emotions while an abusive person may recognise as few as nine or ten. Criminals frequently have trouble recognising or identifying with the emotions of their victims. Sociopaths are almost completely unable to recognise emotions in others in any meaningful way.
Jesus and Emotional Recognition
Jesus was able to recognize emotions in Himself (“my heart is deeply troubled”) and others (“for He knew what was in the hearts of all men”) and was able to read situations with astonishing accuracy and spiritual perception. This made His ministry very effective and His encounters with His opponents very humbling for them. Jesus could read, understand and appropriately categorize people e.g. as “wolves”, “whitewashed tombs” or as “that old fox” and He was always spot on. We are not quite so fortunate and it seems that we are always learning about how to read people and continually being surprised by the twists and turns of the human personality.
Jesus judgement of others was not by sense perception alone for Scripture says He did not judge “by the hearing of the ear or as the eye sees” (Isaiah 11:3). Rather He judged by the Spirit of the Lord. His connection with God gave Him the perception, beliefs, wisdom and understanding with which to make accurate judgements about other people. He also would have used His five senses but the data from them would have been fed into the existing faith framework. Faith perception was primary and sense perception fitted into that, yet if you had tested any of His findings, you would find they were not vague and mystical but would have stood the test in the real world. They were not fanciful mystical attributions but factual, correct and perceptive judgements.
Jesus’ advice on the topic of discerning other people was generally simply to look at their actions, not their words and especially to look at the fruit of their lives. (Matthew 7:20) Later on we will see why that advice is so valuable. For now we just need to note that Jesus did advocate using one’s eyes ears and intellect when reading other people. Jesus did not recommend a peculiar mystical formula for arriving at conclusions about people but rather He recommended careful and prayerful analysis based on facts taken over time. While this advice was primarily aimed at helping the disciples assess human character it is also good advice when assessing human emotions.
Emotional Recognition
It seems sophisticated neural processing is needed for the recognition of emotions and that it is based in an almond shaped part of the brain called the amygdala. (Damasio et al. found that bilateral damage to the amygdala impaired the recognition of emotion from facial expressions.) To give you an idea of how complex this task is, “affective computing” or teaching computers to recognise emotions in humans, struggles, even on fast computers, to obtain a 50% success rate on just 8 basic emotions. The complexity of the task of accurate emotional recognition means that it is a task we are learning all life long.
But isn’t emotional recognition simply a “natural attribute” with some people being naturally sensitive to others while others are brutish and insensitive? There is plenty of evidence in the EQ literature that emotional recognition is partly genetic wiring and starts very early in life. However there are two schools of thought. One school says EQ is truly innate, that we can be damaged but not improved. That EQ is set very early in life and is mainly genetic and that like IQ it can be reduced (say by a blow to the head or emotional abuse) but not improved. Thus this view maintains that a sensitive person can be hurt and become emotionally clumsy but that a person born with a brutish disposition cannot become sensitive.
The other view is that EQ, while having a genetic component is a teachable skill. My experience from teaching EQ seminars is that about 85% of people are teachable to varying degrees but 15% have not even the faintest desire to improve emotionally. I think that on the whole EQ is more learned than genetic.
Emotional Recognition and Christian Ministry
Sensitive and caring ministry to others depends on being able to accurately recognise and understand the source of emotion in others. Without this skill pastoral care will be clumsy at best and damaging at worst. Tasks such as counselling and prayer ministry require a fine feeling for personal emotions. If God has called us to ministry He has called us to minister grace to a hurting and damaged world and called us to be able to understand people – including being able to read their emotions.
This is becoming increasingly difficult as in our multi-cultural societies ministry means reading emotions of people from different backgrounds, genders, and ethnicities than our own. Any pastor of a church of any size in the modern world will have to be able to read the feelings of people of half a dozen races and a wide variety of professional and economic backgrounds. We cannot run away from this challenge but must embrace the learning required to be emotionally competent ministers in a complex world.
Interestingly some research done with the Penn Emotional Recognition Test suggests that introverts have better skills at recognising emotions than extraverts. Given that extraverts are more socially active this seems surprising. Perhaps introverts have greater sensitivity which makes them withdraw from numerous interactions through overload. It also gives some truth to the stereotype of the loud, insensitive extravert! Thus quiet sensitive counsellors and spiritual directors may indeed be the ones to look for when you want your emotions deeply understood.
In reading another person’s heart the thoughts, intents and feelings need to be surfaced. Jesus, our model, was deeply emotionally aware and “knew what was in the hearts of men”. He did not just read the surface emotional issues but the deeper undercurrents of the heart. There are some gender differences in what people conceal and what they are willing to reveal though these are far from absolute. In general I find men are willing to talk about their plans and intentions and tend to conceal their feelings while tend to women conceal their plans and intentions and are more revealing of their feelings. While it is relatively easy to recognise the six basic emotions of happiness, sadness, fear, anger, surprise and disgust it is very hard to recognise thoughts and intentions and the more subtle emotions such as apprehension and tentativeness. Reading people deeply takes time and practice and wisdom. Here are a few clues I have found helpful:
1. Start from a neutral position as free as possible from your own baggage. The more emotion you are carrying – and thereby projecting onto others, the more inaccurate you are. A study by Walz showed that aggressive men saw more anger in other people than was really there. The aggressive men were projecting their own anger onto others. This mislabelling led to behaviour problems in life as they reacted in hostile ways to this perceived but non-existent aggression.
2. If you do have a great deal of pain, do not try counselling others until you have dealt with it. This is why I recommend that Christian counsellors and ministers who have been recently divorced take two years out from the ministry until their emotions have been worked through. There is generally too much baggage there to be accurate in reading emotions and to be therapeutic in counselling.
3. Do not take the latest bit of psychology you have read and dump its conclusions and observations on everyone. I have a lot of time for the MBTI personality test and similar instruments but personality typology can become an obstacle to judgement when taken too literally. In general look at the objective facts about the person first then, much later, employ your theories.
4. There is no prize for the hastiest judgment. Suspend religious judgements until all the facts are in. Hasty labelling of clients and leaping to spiritual conclusions is unwise and potentially damaging. There is plenty of time to come to conclusions, so use it wisely and well.
5. Listen to understand and not to judge. There is indeed a place for confronting sin – after we have fully understood the situation. If we seek to understand first and listen intently and with intelligence and wisdom our words of admonition will be far fewer, much more on target, and more easily accepted by the parishioner.
6. Expand your own emotional vocabulary. For instance use words like exhilarated instead of “up” and ‘satisfied” instead of “good”. By becoming aware of a wide range of emotional terms as they apply to yourself you will be soon able to pick up these finer emotional tones in others as well. Roget’s Thesaurus is a good starting point.
7. Use the “mirror principle” to work out what the other person is thinking. By the mirror principle I mean the observation that what A thinks of B is generally the mirror opposite of what B thinks of A. For instance if you think someone is very tall then you probably look short to him or her. If you think someone is not too intelligent you probably look like a complicated intellectual to him or her. If you think that certain people are quiet and polite they probably think you are loud and rude. And if you think young people are loud and over the top and energetic they probably think you are staid, quiet and a bit on the slow side. People are often seeing you in an exact mirror image of how you see them.
8. If you can get hold of a “chart of emotions’ do so. These charts have dozens of different facial expressions with the emotions labelled underneath. A counsellor should be able to help you get hold of one.
9. Don’t just read one aspect e.g. facial expressions, voice, body language or verbal statements. Survey the whole person and watch for patterns as a whole. Just reading body language alone can lead you astray. For instance a person with their arms crossed may be just cold from the air-conditioning – not rejecting what you are saying at all. You need to look at all the other factors as well.
10. Try and figure out what they are not saying as well as what they are saying. For instance if a client talks freely about everyone in their family with the exception of their father – about whom they are totally silent, then there may be something worth exploring.
11. Study crowds and pick up on social distance, actions and reactions. The location of the person in the room , who they are talking to, how many people they move amongst and the degree of animation they are showing. For instance a person who is feeling timid may be in the corner of the room, the person who is feeling lonely may be on their own, the socially insecure may be glued to just one person and the tragically disconnected person may be near the bar and drinking a bit too much.
12. Assume that even the most seemingly irrational behaviour seems intelligent to the person doing it. Then try and work out what that reason is. What thought is behind it? What need are they trying to meet? What emotion is driving it?
False Positives and False Negatives
Most of us have an area that we “get wrong” consistently when reading others. A “false positive” is when you think someone is happy and they are not. It is mistakenly thinking the situation is better than it is. Most men think their marriages are good when their wives think otherwise. Thus the men have a “false positive” when it comes to reading their wives emotional state. A false negative is when a person thinks a situation is bad when it is in fact good or OK. For instance a person from a rejecting family may see anger or rejection around them in normal friendly social situations. They have a “false negative” when it comes to reading others emotions. They “fill in the blanks” with rejection and find it difficult to believe they are accepted. These false attributions can have enormous social consequences. The young man who thinks a girl loves him when she does not and goes away heartbroken, the husband who thinks his wife is flirting with other men when it is not the case and becomes enraged “over nothing”, or the feeling in many offices that “the boss does not care about us’ when that is often far from the truth. Learning to read other people’s emotions accurately can thus save us much pain.
False reading of other people’s emotions leads to mistaken action and reactions on our behalf. People react to “shadows” instead of realities and defend themselves from perceived emotional threats that simply do not exist. For instance if we believe that the boss hates us and is about to fire us we may start a rumour campaign or even resign our job to avoid the rejection. What a surprise if we get promoted instead! We do not just react to circumstances we react to our interpretation of those circumstances particularly the emotional perception – whether we are liked or disliked, accepted or rejected, valued or despised. Most people will stay at even a lower paying job if they perceive they are liked, accepted and valued. Therefore people who habitually see the world as disliking them, rejecting then and despising them are going to find life tough going. They, like Cain, will be a wanderer on the earth. This is indeed tragic if their fears are unjustified and their rejection only in their own minds.
To continue this thought for a while we need to look at how “false negatives” can affect us socially and politically. When people constantly misread others intentions towards them and this spreads to an entire group then entire churches, denominations, cities and even nations can become embroiled in it. This group aspect of emotional misunderstanding is often indicated by phrases such as “they hate me” or “they are up to something” where “they” is rather loosely defined. Eventually false negatives can come to include whole classes of people e.g. “all men are lustful rapists” or “all Americans hate Muslims” which of course rapidly leads to prejudice. If this goes far enough the false negative can involve an all-embracing projection of fear and suspicion upon the total environment. This fear and defensiveness produces a harsh defining of boundaries between those who are “in” and those who are “out”, those who are with us and those who are against us. Or even between those who are of God and those who are of Satan. Fear, paranoia, prejudice and hatred can all flow from allowing false negative attributions of others to grow and become believed.
How do these false perceptions come about? They mainly come about through three basic errors in observation and logic:
The first error is not gathering all the facts, or using a biased source of facts. Take the prejudice “All Muslims are terrorists”. If we base our sampling on action movies where all the Muslims are terrorists we may arrive at this conclusion. However if we gather all the facts we will find that there are over 1 billion Muslims and that there are maybe 10,000 terrorists. So if we do our sums we see that only one in one hundred thousand Muslims are terrorists. Thus the complete facts do not bear out the prejudice that all Muslims are terrorists. If truth be told, the facts paint the opposite picture.
The second error is choosing to unjustifiably filter the facts so that some aspects are emphasised and some heavily discounted. For instance take the radical feminist rhetoric “all men are rapists”. This is easily disproved statistically. However someone being shown the statistics on rape might say “Ok not all men have been caught as rapists and maybe not all men have raped someone – but they would if they could” and thus the false negative is maintained by using a “filter” which keeps the prejudice intact.
Or thirdly we can have no facts at all. The whole thing can be imaginary. We can be so completely inaccurate in our reading of people that we get it completely wrong to begin with. This is often due to our family background training us to see things a certain way e.g. training us to see rejection where there is none or being unduly suspicious of others motives.
Another source of error that I find is becoming common in Christian circles is “mystical attributions” such as “I sense in my spirit that so and so has a Jezebel spirit”. This often lacks an objective basis in fact. Where I have seen it in operation it has been a power play that makes the speaker look spiritual and perceptive and labels their enemy with a stigma that is difficult to contest or remove. Unless there is substantial good evidence for such a judgment these mystical observations that are plucked out of the ether should be treated as insubstantial and perhaps even as dangerous. At best they come from being misled about the nature of the gift of discernment. Genuine discernment is both spiritual and intelligent with the Holy Spirit operating through a renewed and quickened intellect not just through impressions.
People who operate through inner impressions alone are liable to serious error. Those who have a genuine gift of discernment are generally characterised by a sharp mind, a habit of continual observation, a deep and quiet graciousness, a listening spirit and the ability to keep their conclusions to themselves. While the spiritual man does indeed judge all things he or she does not do so irrationally and hastily or solely on the basis of an inner intuition. True spiritual judgement is solid and substantiated. When Jesus said the Pharisees were “whitewashed tombs” He was able to clearly point out why in factual terms such as the devouring of widow’s houses. He did not say “In my spirit I just know you are whitewashed tombs don’t ask me why!”. The spiritual perception is a new framework that encompasses all known and substantiated facts. Jesus said it is like reading the weather and knowing that a certain wind means rain and another means heat. First there is observation and fact, then there is interpretation of all the observed facts in the light of Scripture and the guidance of the Holy Spirit.
At this point take a minute and ask yourself the
following questions about the ay you form judgements:
Do others say that you are overly critical or defensive?
How often do you properly gather the data?
How often do you sit down and calculate things out and check the facts?
Do you thoroughly search the Scriptures using a concordance or computer bible or do you just pluck verses from here and there?
Do you “look on the negative side of things”?
Do you filter out positives?
Do you over-emphasize negatives?
Do you anticipate rejection when there is none?
Are you often suspicious of people and then find out that your suspicions were unjustified?
Do you draw sharp boundaries between groups of people, lumping them together as “in” or “out’, good or bad, with you or against you?
Do you fix on the negative and ignore the positive?
Does one bad part make the whole thing wrong for you?
Do you go on inner intuitions and dark emotions separate from objective evidence?
Do you feel that you must play judge, jury and executioner?
Do you imagine terrible things about people and imagine them doing evil deeds? (e.g. “I am sure our neighbours are bank robbers.”)
If this partly describes you then you need to be aware of these tendencies and strive to counteract them. If you have a constant sense of rejection you may need to tell yourself: “I am probably just imagining this, I always see more rejection than there is.” If you are overly suspicious stop and ask “Is this the real picture, are my suspicions based on solid evidence, not just wild fancies? If you are constantly defensive and see criticism in every remark, then try and re-interpret those remarks “Maybe they were just making a constructive suggestion, maybe it wasn’t a personal criticism at all.”
This involves standing outside your own mental processes and evaluating them. Its called “meta-cognition” or thinking about thinking. You think about the way in which you think and as you do this you correct that which is unhelpful, illogical, irrational or untrue. In the realm of emotions we do this by realising that our thinking about our emotional environment and other people may be wrong. We than think about our thinking and challenge our negative perceptions with the simple question “Is this really so?” Is it really so that my wife is having an affair? Is it really so that my neighbour is a bank robber? It is really so that everyone is out to get me?
Good emotional recognition means picking up the emotions that truly are present in the situation such as love and acceptance and not projecting into it emotions that may not be truly present in the situation such as criticism and rejection.
False positives are generally not as dangerous as false negatives but can be just as difficult to recognise and deal with. The pastor may build a castle from a compliment and may start to believe that everyone likes him and become oblivious to his weaknesses. The naïve and sheltered may honestly believe that all people are beautiful and have good intentions – and only find out otherwise in one of life’s hard lessons. The missionary may think that the village accepts him because it is polite to him while underneath they are seething with anger at his cultural blunders.
The indication of false positives is constant disappointment. The girl does not love you. The wonderful business opportunity sends you broke. The church does not renew your call. The village eventually tells you what it thinks. There is a balance here, on one hand its good to be positive, optimistic, hopeful and full of faith and its Ok to strive high and fall flat now and then. That’s part of the journey, an honest mistake. On the other hand it’s lousy to be constantly and continually disappointed, ripped off and hurt. Lets be blunt, its stupid, its folly, its not listening to your warning bells. There is often a fine line between faith and folly and pain is a warning of folly. Blows are made for the backs of fools. If you are constantly disappointed in relationships then perhaps you are just too optimistic about how much people love you. If you are in a constant state of shock and your plans come down with a thud at regular intervals perhaps a reality check is in order.
There are two main sources of false positives which are a) being conned by others and b) being conned by ourselves. Sometimes the two work together so that people who want something from us play on our vanity and then we go home and strut and preen and daydream about how wonderful we are. As we do this we edge closer and closer to catastrophe and disappointment.
Lets get a tough but fair biblical perspective on this. All people are sinners, and for the vast majority of people self is on the throne. What does this mean? It means that most ordinary people are primarily acting in their own self-interest and are not particularly concerned about your interests except as they may intersect with their own interests. They aren’t terrorists or bank robbers but they are not saints either. They are just plain selfish with a few bursts of altruism at Christmas time and during a crisis. After these seasons of good-will it’s back to looking after number one. Neither are most people interested in the fine points of being terribly good, honest and ethical, as this conflicts with their more selfish interests. Sure they are not as dishonest as a con artist, but they are not at all interested in becoming like Mother Teresa.
This means that selfishness rules and that real love and appreciation is relatively rare. The Bible does not paint the picture of a world filled with good, nice people who we can trust and who really love us. Neither does it paint a picture of a world full of terrorists. It paints the picture of a selfish world that has disconnected itself from God. This should be our picture also. If we see everyone as “nice” we probably have a wrong picture, or a very low standard of what being nice is. If we walk into a new group of people and believe we have been instantly accepted and that everyone loves us and is only thinking about our welfare – then perhaps you should double check. Maybe behind their acceptance they have a selfish motive. They may want your money, your membership or even your soul. Normal people are only that nice when it is in their self-interest to be that nice. Always ask, “Who benefits?”
It does not hurt to ask the question “Is it really so?” in positive circumstances, especially if they are unusually positive, and very especially if things seem “too good to be true”. I have no intention of plunging you into doubt and cynicism, that’s why I dealt with false negatives first. But I do not want you to be ripped off by nice salesmen of shonky goods, used cars, cheap real estate and fake watches; or in the spiritual realm by cults and some televangelists. My experience is that perhaps a dozen people, tops, really love us, and act in our interest and care about us. That’s good and it makes life worthwhile. The rest of the 6 billion people on the planet are only being nice in order to get something. Now that’s Ok if it’s a fair trade. But sometimes its not a fair trade and we are being conned or used. In which case we get disappointed. You cannot trust the 6 billion like you trust the twelve. You need to be careful and cautious and wise.
By nature I am a positive, faith-filled optimist who loves seeing people achieve and being involved in big projects and grand schemes. Unfortunately I am nearly always way too optimistic and trusting and I need help with the details. So I value the input of people who can help me see reality. I have needed to adopt the solution-focused thinking mentioned earlier in the book and to meticulously look at the data and ask tough realistic questions if I am to make the impossible, possible in the real world. There is a balance between say, believing in everyone/selecting the best possible staff; or between seeing all things as possible / and choosing projects that are wise, sane and profitable and which will not bankrupt Frontier Servants.
The questions I find most helpful in digging out reality are:
· Who profits?
· What is their track record?
· What is this leading to?
· Why do they want me in particular?
· If I look at their actions alone, separate from their words and stated policies, what picture do I get?
· What are the statistics on this? (business opportunity etc.) Are they showing the stats to me? Are the stats they are showing me reliable and verifiable
· How much extrapolation is going on here? Am I taking a little acceptance to mean total acceptance or a little profit as an indicator of great riches to come? Am I just daydreaming?
· What percentage of people who do this are truly successful? Are the trainers and speakers rich and everyone else poor? Does the business itself generate money or does talking about it generate the money and the business itself is a scam?
· What are the obvious, logical interests of this person/group of people?
· What about the big four areas of self-interest which are money, sex, power and status; are they involved in this, if so, how?
· What do they want from me? Can I deliver those expectations? Should I deliver those expectations?
· Will I get a fair deal at the end of the day?
The above questions may seem at first to have little to do with our emotions. But they do have a lot to do with avoiding disappointment on one hand and not becoming overly cynical on the other. They are questions that will bring you to the truth of the matter and help you get in contact with reality, which is ALWAYS good for us emotionally. These questions do not have to give negative answers. You may indeed find out that you will profit, that it is a fair deal, they do really like you and they are reliable, honest people with a good track record. If so go good! Go for it! The above questions will help you sort out the wheat from the chaff and the rogues from the rest. They will enable you to lead a less ripped off life and guide you to worthwhile and profitable areas to spend your time, money and life energy. In fact I regularly watch the investment channel CNBC, which is a bit weird for a missionary who has no investments of any sort. I do this because I want to find out how realistic and successful people think. The interviews on leadership and the tough questions people ask and the emphasis on facts and data are healthy for me as I am someone who needs to come down to earth regularly and not get lost in my nice, comfortable but thoroughly impractical theological speculations.
Other than being conned by others we can be conned by ourselves. We can mistake mere politeness for genuine love or being given a position on a committee for genuine acceptance. We project our own faith and hopefulness into the situation. We extrapolate and we build castles in the air. We build expectations of love and warmth and hope and success that go way beyond the facts, and that this world may not deliver on. Pride and vanity alter our ability to objectively look at ourselves and our plans and others. Pride and vanity puff us up so that it becomes painful to be honest with ourselves and hard to look reality in the face. We need to come to a “sober estimate”, not a wildly projected estimate, of ourselves and of reality. When we have a fair idea of who we are we and who others are we can see past flattery and politeness simply accepting them as normal social nonsense. We can then instead listen to the real heart values and concerns of those around us. We can hear what they are really saying. We can learn to cope with the truth; which well may be that “we are mainly selfish and only love you a little bit”. If we are to perceive the emotions of other people truly and understand and communicate with them well, and attain to a high biblical EQ, then we must be humble and meek to hear what is really there.
But what will this do to our self-esteem? If we cannot con ourselves how do we stay happy? If we have to face the truth, such as “we are mainly selfish and only love you a little bit” - is that worth believing? Why not stay with the illusion? Living in touch with reality is far more emotionally functional and will eventually cause your self-esteem to grow and you become more successful. How? I’ll give you a common example from Christian culture.
Christian workers ask people to pray for them and support them and they get a lot of positive vibes. With even a little bit of extrapolation they may think “All these people love me and hundreds of people will pray for me and support me, they really care for me”. Buoyed up by all this they become euphoric and surge into ministry on cloud nine. They perceive the emotions of others as being altruistic, positive, caring and full of love. Everyone is nice and they are happy. But six months later there is a huge crash. People forgot to pray, and people didn’t support, and people were just being nice. It wasn’t real. Your brochures went in the bin. So bitterness overtakes the Christian worker. Anger and resentment rise to the surface. All those broken promises hurt and they hurt badly. If the Christian worker is lucky they wake up and say: “That’s life, I should not have expected a fallen world to be that nice. I’ll divide my supporters into three groups. Those I know well and who I know want all the details about what I am doing, then those who I think will support regularly but are not terribly interested in the details of the ministry, then the flaky ones who will support me once or twice then give up. I’ll divide my effort proportionately and expect my prayer support and human understanding from the first group, my economic support from the second group and a bit extra now and then from the third group but I will not rely on them”. Thus the Christian worker adjusts to reality, takes a sober and realistic view of people, and works out how to move forward in a solution-focussed way. They succeed. Life stabilizes, and ministry happens, and self-esteem grows. Reality is good for you.
What’s Going On Here?
One of the big barriers to correctly reading the emotions of another person is that we cannot understand how on earth they could possibly react that way. We make light of reality of the other person’s emotions. People may react in immature ways but we still need to try and understand the source of their immaturity. Writing someone off as “just unspiritual” without understanding why they are unspiritual does not contribute to the solution. It only contributes to the problem. Lets take the teenage “you don’t love me” explosion as a classic case. The teenager stomps to their room, slams the door and accuses their parents of not loving them. Why? Is it a means of gaining emotional distance so they can feel free to grow up? Are they hurting and disappointed over a personal matter and were not listened to at home? Writing off the reaction as unspiritual or trying to cast out the demon of rebellion out will only make things worse and rob the parents of insight and understanding and valuable relationship building opportunities. Humouring the reaction then searching for understanding is far more profitable.
· Firstly acknowledge the emotion as real. It may seem bizarre but it is never the less being expressed.
· Next, search for the concept that the person is acting on or reacting to. With the teenager the concept they are reacting to may be “you don’t listen and you don’t understand”.
· Try to put that concept in a single phrase or sentence. Once you have boiled down what they are reacting to in one sentence you have probably got the gist of the matter.
· Then ask “why have they come to that conclusion, is it a mistaken conclusion or a correct conclusion, and what can I do to help the matter?”
With those four simple steps you can go a long way to sorting through emotions. In addition bear in mind the three levels of a difficult conversation I mentioned earlier in this book – Facts, Feelings and Identity:
What are the facts of the situation?
How are they interpreting those facts and generating certain feelings?
What are they sensing about their identity – is their core being under threat in some way?
To sum up this chapter – as Christians we need to be sensitive to the emotions of others so we can minister grace to a fragile and hurting world. This means we need to be able to accurately read other people’s emotions. If our judgements are inaccurate it is often because of false positives or false negatives. We need to review our thinking patterns so they are both faith-filled and positive but also realistic and humble. Much can be gained by distilling the thought behind a person’s emotion into a single sentence. This sentence provides the key thought that they are acting on or reacting to. It can also help to ask about the facts, feelings and identity issues involved.
Once we have identified another person’s emotions we need to know how to respond appropriately. That is the next chapter.
The Appropriate
Expression of Emotions
(Ecclesiastes
3:7-8 NKJV) A time to tear, And a time
to sew; A time to keep silence, And a time to speak; {8} A time to love, And a
time to hate; A time of war, And a time of peace.
Once we are in touch with our own emotions and the emotions of others we need to put those feelings into words so that they touch minds and hearts and minister the grace of Jesus Christ to the world. With Jesus as our model and some guidance from the Wisdom literature of Scripture we will look at how to speak and act with emotional understanding and appropriate expression.
Issues of Timing -There Is A Time
We are not free to
just “let fly” with our emotions. According to Scripture there is an
appropriate time for each and every form of emotional expression. This is not
chronological time such as “at 3 pm you may weep” but event time linked to life events and happenings “at a funeral it is a good
time to express sympathy”. An emotion “out of time” is jarring and unedifying
and may even be cruel. Laughter at a pastor’s joke is appropriate; laughter at
a person’s misfortune is not. Each expression of emotion has its time and
place. Each is “beautiful in its time” (Eccl 3:11). Emotions in their time are
truly of the Spirit and a blessing to others.
Generally our
emotions should be matched to those around us so we “Rejoice with those who
rejoice, and weep with those who weep.” (Romans 12:15 ) Emotions should be congruent in both type and intensity. For
instance if people are rejoicing loudly it is appropriate to rejoice loudly
with them, if they are weeping quietly it is appropriate to weep quietly in
sympathy. When Mary and Martha wept over Lazarus – Jesus also wept. In times of
deep suffering and anguish silence can be the best counsel (Job 2:13). Culture,
circumstances and social dynamics normally tell us what emotional expression is
appropriate in any given situation but this can be modified by the Holy spirit
from time to time.
People who get the
social timing of
emotional expression wrong can quickly become social outcasts. The classic
comic figure is someone who always makes a mess of things in social situations.
At the other extreme are people who always blend in perfectly. Such people may
lack authenticity and
become false and hypocritical, weakened morally by over-compliance with the
norm. The “time to speak” is dictated ultimately by the Holy Spirit not
social convention (though such conventions are useful and we should know them).
Jesus and the prophets often seemed to be “speaking out of turn” in setting
forth God’s message to their time and place. Others such as Ezra and Daniel
seemed to fit much more closely into the warp and woof of their social situations.
However God calls
us to speak we should remember that it is His interests we are serving with our
every word and every expression of emotion. Our communication is to flow from
the Spirit and be for the edification of others. It is not our own interests we
serve or our own need for expressing ourselves. Ultimately love of God and love
of neighbour should govern the expression and timing of our emotions. Lets look
at a few Scriptural guidelines on how we can do this.
Issues of
Intensity - Being Strong With The Strong And Weak With The Weak
We need to match our emotional expression with the strength of the person and the depth of the spiritual needs of those around us. When Jesus spoke to people who strong, hard and stubborn he was strong and harsh and direct (Matthew 23:1-10). On the other hand with the broken and hurting he was so gentle that it could be said of Him “ a bruised reed He will not break” (Isaiah 42:3). Paul makes the puzzling statement “with the weak I became weak” (1 Corinthians 9:22). This means that Paul did not overwhelm weak souls with his powerful personality. Instead Paul measured the strength of his reactions to what the person needed and could take. Paul also tells us to “uphold the weak and be patient with all” (1 Thessalonians 5:14) and that no-one was weak without him becoming weak (2 Corinthians 11:29). On the other hand when Peter was in error this same Paul “withstood him to his face” (Galatians 2:11). The revivalist Charles Finney used to classify sinners into “hardened”, “awakened” and “penitent” each requiring a different approach from the evangelist.
We see a good example of this principle early on in the book of 1 Samuel when Hannah is weeping before the Lord (1 Samuel 1:9-18). Eli the high priest at first sternly rebuked Hannah thinking she was drunk. It was a “strong” response – and in this case it was inappropriate. On realising that Hannah was pouring out her soul before the Lord Eli changed from a “strong” to a “weak” or gentle response. He became conciliatory and replied “may the Lord grant your petition”. In doing this Eli adjusted his emotional expression to suit the spiritual needs of the situation. Eli was big enough to admit his mistake and adjust his response.
We are to be both priest and prophet. Is the person strong and hard and do they need to be brought to repentance? Then be strong and speak like a prophet. Are they troubled in soul like Hannah - then minister grace like a priest.
Issues of Place - Private and Public Emotion
In 1 Corinthians 14 Paul writes about the use of the gift of tongues saying that private tongues were for private moments and not for the general worship service. This established the principle that only things that are edifying to the church as a whole should be brought into the public domain. Private spiritual and emotional experiences may be very helpful to the person in private – but they are not for general public consumption.
In church life we have different levels of sharing, that which we share with God alone, and that which we share without our family and close friends, that which share with a cell group and that which will share with the general public. As a rule of thumb the higher the level of emotion the more private the sharing should be. Emotional sharing is restricted to where it can safely edify the people who hear. Even between Jesus and the disciples at the Last Supper Jesus said "I still have many things to say to you, but you cannot bear them now.” (John 16:12) He limited His most intimate sharing to what the disciples could cope with and be edified by.
The principle of “for the edification of all” needs to be carefully weighed up when there is sharing of intimate personal testimonies, or the use of the prophetic and the visionary and even during times of passionate intercessory prayer in a known language. I know a woman who is a powerful and prophetic intercessor who groans and travails before God. Unfortunately her private travail, her pain, her anger, and her righteous indignation are voiced with such deep intensity in the evening service that people are not edified but only embarrassed. This has caused many to leave that service or even find another church. It is the right emotion in the wrong place. While it is deeply sincere and not sinful as such, it is simply not edifying or helpful. Her emotional outpouring that has its place before the throne of God in private is out of place in a general worship service. Powerful private emotions, even when they are holy emotions, are not for general public consumption. Lets see how even Jesus and the apostles observed this rule.
Much to the frustration of bible scholars and students of prayer, Jesus never revealed publicly the nature of His private prayer times with the Father. Neither did He reveal to His disciples much about His dreams and visions or describe in any detail His experience of the spiritual world. Also Paul was very reticent in describing what was probably his most powerful spiritual experience in 2 Corinthians 12. Scholars still debate whether this was Paul’s experience or that of someone he knew. If Jesus and Paul and the apostles were highly reticent to speak about their private spiritual experiences and if countless great men and women of God since have shared their reticence perhaps we should be very careful about expressing these sorts of things in public. I am especially careful about the expression of private dreams and visions or the numerous accounts of trips to Heaven or Hell. In Colossians Paul sternly warns Christians about people who take their stand on visions they have seen and depart from the Head, which is Christ (Colossians 2:18,19).
The exception to this is in small groups where intimacy has developed over time and permission for deep sharing is an understood part of the group dynamics. Those who followed David in the wilderness, the 12 disciples of Jesus and the various missionary companions of Paul are Scriptural examples of small groups that seemed to have lived and shared at a very deep level. Cell groups, bible studies and 12 Step groups are all places where sharing and emotional expression can go deeper for Christians. We all need outlets for our deep emotions and while friends and family should provide this, often they do not do it very well so some alternative structures need to be created. If our private world fails us we cannot just take our overwhelming emotions public. They need to be shared in private with a counsellor, a therapy group or a small group that will willingly accept emotions at that level and keep them in confidence. It is simply not safe to share yourself in public with a fallen world, which is not committed to respecting you and your privacy.
How can we know
what is appropriate expression of emotions and spiritual experiences? Firstly we need to ask does it match the
emotional tone and
volume of the group. Is the sharing much more intense than what other people
are sharing? Is it much “deeper” than the group normally copes with? Is it in a
tone of voice that is much louder and strident than the other sharing? Is it
about matters that other people cannot cope with or have no personal experience
of? Are people looking awkward and embarrassed? Are you expecting people who
hardly know you to act as family or close friends, or even to be therapeutic
for you?
Secondly
we need to ask if God meant us to share it in the first place. With some
visions God told people to “seal up the scroll”, and yet others were to be
announced. When the seven thunders spoke the apostle John was not allowed to
write down what they said. (Revelation 10:3,4) but to Ezekiel God said, "Son of man, eat what you find; eat
this scroll, and go, speak to the house of Israel." (Ezekiel 3:1). We need
permission from God to share our dreams and visions and without that permission
the general rule should be to keep quiet and wait on God for His timing for
that revelation.
Thirdly we need to spiritually evaluate that which we think the Lord has told us to share especially if it has a high emotional content. Often the best thing to do is to carefully write down exactly what you think God wants you to say – just as the prophets wrote down their revelations. Then wait on it in prayer for at least 48 hours. The finally share it with two or three others that you trust and who can help you if you have accidentally said something that is not quite in line with Scripture. Many churches have the policy that all prophecy should be passed by the elders before being aired in public and this seems to prevent much abuse of the prophetic.
Fourthly we need to be careful about the presence of young people and those with more sensitive and impressionable dispositions. Some horrifying sermon illustrations (especially one about a father letting his son be killed in a swing bridge to save a passing train) are so emotional that they can only be described as manipulative. These can scare young people in the congregation leaving them with distorted views of God and church. Sermons need to be G-rated when children are present.
Fifthly ministers need to be extremely careful about sharing intimate or sensational information, especially that of a sexual nature, from the pulpit. There are certain lines we need to draw when dealing with social evils and Paul refuses to comment about certain gross perversions that “should not even be mentioned among the saints” (1 Corinthians 5:1, Ephesians 5:3). Sensational and vivid material is seldom edifying unless it is masterfully handled. It tends to spark unhealthy associations, start rumours, and lead to idle curiosity or inform people about things they are better off being ignorant about. Confessions in particular should only be made to God alone or to highly trusted and confidential others. If some details have to go public because of the public nature of the offence they should be kept to an edifying minimum.
Finally deep emotions should only be shared when there is genuine trust already present – not to elicit trust or as an act of manipulation. Some clever people share their emotions in a way that gets people in. They use emotional sharing to build trust – which they later violate. Proper emotional sharing is built on pre-existing trust and is not a tool to manipulate others with.
Once we have the timing of our emotional expression right
and decided on how private or public it is to be we then need to make sure that
we deliver a clear, unambiguous and balanced message.
Emotions are often
mixed and in order to express them clearly we need
to give a picture of all the emotions involved in a particular situation and
their relative strengths. For instance consider a Christian father watching his
daughter go out on her first date with a godly young man from the church youth
group. He may say something like:
“Jill,
Steven is a good choice and I am pleased that you have chosen to go out
with him and not some other guy. He is a guy of real character and I am
sure he will treat you well. However that skirt you have chosen is a bit too
daring. I know it is your first date and you want to be attractive but I
want you to change it right now. I also want you back here by 10:00 pm
and no later. That will make sure that your Mum and I can feel that you have
a responsible attitude to dating and we can trust you in the future.
Have a good night and have fun and don’t forget to pray. I hope you
enjoy the movie it sure sounds good.”
Here
the father is expressing a wide range of concerns each in balance with the
others giving a coherent message. The anxiety is not out of balance with the
love and the clear rules are set in a general context of approval, care and
concern. This is what I call the “light and shadow” technique. It involves expressing all aspects of
an issue, its boundaries, the light and the dark and the various contrasts so
it cannot fail to be understood.
Often I use the
phrases “I am saying” and “I am not saying..” e.g. “I am saying you need to
redo that work, but I am not saying that you are a bad employee. I continue to
value your services.” By giving the contrasts, by clearly stating what you are
saying and what you are not saying, the message is made completely clear and
misunderstanding is removed. The concerned father in the illustration above may
have just said “You are not going out in that skirt.” without any further
explanation. If he had done so the daughter may have leaped to a range of
rather dramatic and negative conclusions. By including the reassurances, and
placing things in context, potential misunderstanding and conflict was avoided.
Paul often uses this technique in his epistles where he reassures the church of
his prayers, love and concern and then firmly corrects a wide range of issues.
This
use of the “light and shadow” technique takes a while to master. First of all you have to know the
main fears of the other person and then you have to possess the courage to
address them directly. For instance in getting someone to do some very
sub-standard work again you might say “This work is well below your best George
and I’m disappointed the you produced it. You are in no danger of being fired
but I very much want you to lift your game and to do this over again. I value
your work and I think highly of the contributions you have made in the past but
this is just not good enough. I am sure you will do a better job this time
around.” The obvious fears of dismissal and of being thought incompetent are
addressed and reassurance given. At the same time the message that it is not
good enough is clearly and firmly conveyed.
This
raises one of the trickiest questions in human communication – how much
emotional truth can we tell in a given situation? We may have the timing right,
the choice of audience (private or public) correct, a balanced and tactful
statement but how much do we tell people about the emotional truth of the
situation?
Is not some pretence a normal and even an essential part of life? What about people who are in constrained social roles such as an archbishop or mayor where a high degree of emotional control is required? Do you really want an emotionally honest policeman during a crisis? Aren’t we supposed to be joyful, so what’s so wrong about faking a bit of enthusiasm?
Christians do not express emotions for mere impression management, or for personal catharsis under the guise of authenticity. Emotions are expressed for the glory of God, for the edification of His people and or the love of one’s neighbour. Thus a policeman in a crisis will not vent his or her feelings but maintain good emotional control and a professional demeanour as that is the right, loving and most edifying course of action in a crisis. Contrary to some pop psychology books this is not repression. It is in fact responsible Christian emotional management. It is not pretence; it is self-control.
Pretence is when you pretend to be experiencing an emotion that you do not really have within you. Self-control is when you bring a real and existing emotion into line with God’s will. Faking it till we make it tends only to produce good actors and skilful hypocrites. False emotion ends up deluding people and eroding our morality. We cannot lie about our emotional state without lying about ourselves and the danger is coming to believe the lie and losing touch with ourselves forever. On the other hand should we not be so in love with “total sincerity” that we answer the question “how are you?” with a list of woes and complaints!
Our emotions should be true and not false but they should also be appropriate and edifying. We are to express true emotions that are modulated by the circumstances, timing and needs of the situation. We think before we emote. We aim to edify, to be appropriate, to inject those feelings into the situation that encourage, uplift or console. We balance truth with grace, bringing both to bear on the situation. Jesus did not retreat from expressing emotion, His emotions were real and authentic and spiritual. There was a solid and appropriate truth about them. Yet they conveyed grace and fitted the moment perfectly.
Thus we should never fake an emotion except if you are actually an actor. Christian emotion is to be real, but it is also to be self-controlled. The emotion revealed should fit the circumstances, and it should edify others. If I am boiling mad nothing is gained by “being honest”. I am far better off maintaining self-control. But neither should I fake happiness in order to disguise my anger. That ends up being self-distorting and untruthful. God is self-revealing but He is also self-concealing! He reveals the truth about Himself, a bit at a time, as we can manage and cope with. He does not reveal all of Himself at once. Similarly, we need to reveal the truth about ourselves, so we cannot pretend emotionally, but we need to fit that truth to what others can bear.
Conclusion
In this chapter we have seen that there is a proper time for very emotion and that this is an “event time” not a clock time. We also saw that emotions have a proper intensity that depends on the person – being strong with the strong and weak with the weak. Emotions they have their proper audiences and private emotions belong in private. We have also seen a little on how to balance emotions in our speech and how to express them wisely and truthfully for the glory of God and the edification of others. Much more about appropriate emotional expression can be learned by observing people of integrity in your own culture and surroundings. Watch how they handle situations and how the delicate balances are achieved, what is said and what is left out, how they encourage and how they rebuke and how they carry the image of Jesus in their behavior. The final chapter will be about love. After all is not that what we are aiming at as we express our emotions?
Love Is A Many
Splendoured Thing
(Ephesians 3:19 NKJV) to know the love of Christ which passes knowledge; that you may be filled with all the fullness of God.
Ephesians
3:19, quoted above, is my favorite bible verse. It never fails to make me gasp
in awe and wonder, especially the last phrase “that you may be filled with all
the fullness of God”. According to St. Paul you
and I can be filled with all the fullness of God. That is absolutely
mind-boggling. If this verse was not there in Scripture I would have called it
heresy and never dared to invent it. It’s too much, and I cannot absorb it
fully. God means us to become like Jesus who was the fullness of Deity in bodily form (Colossians
2:9). We partake of that sort of fullness and are to grow up in all aspects and
be like Him.
I
am saying that we can partake of the fullness of God and be filled with it. I am
certainly not saying that we can become God. We will not be “Him who sitteth on
the throne”. We will be the ones waving palm branches and having white robes
and singing Alleluia in Heaven. Whatever being filled with all the fullness of
God means, it does not turn us into an object of worship, or make us the
Creator and sustainer of the Universe.
Being filled with the fullness of God is sharing a nature, and is what
theologians call “participating in the communicable attributes of God”. The
incommunicable attributes such as the ‘omni’s” belong to God alone.
This promise that
through love we
can be filled with the fullness of God is a
marvelous promise in the midst of a wonderful prayer. Lets look at the whole of
Paul’s prayer and put it in its proper context.
(Ephesians 3:14-21 NKJV)
For this reason I bow my knees to the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ,
{15} from whom the whole family in heaven and earth is named, {16} that He
would grant you, according to the riches of His glory, to be strengthened with
might through His Spirit in the inner self, {17} that Christ may dwell in your
hearts through faith; that you, being rooted and grounded in love, {18} may be
able to comprehend with all the saints what is the width and length and depth
and height; {19} to know the love of Christ which passes knowledge; that you
may be filled with all the fullness of God. {20} Now to Him
who is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think,
according to the power that works in us, {21} to Him be glory in the church by
Christ Jesus to all generations, forever and ever. Amen.
There is a succession of ideas and “spiritual stages” here, each of
which leads to the next and forms the foundation for the one to come:
1)
We
are strengthened with might through His Spirit in the inner self.
2)
This
leads to Christ dwelling in our hearts by faith.
3)
We
then become rooted and grounded in love
4)
We
comprehend with all the saints the greatness of the love of Christ
5)
That
we may be filled with all the fullness of God.
The other chapters of this book have dealt
with stage one - being strengthened in our inner self and, achieving personal
mastery. They have also dealt with stage
two and being focused firmly on Christ so He dwells in our heart by faith and
we experience life and peace. Then in the last few chapters we have started
exploring stage three and learned a bit being grounded in a loving lifestyle
where we express ourselves in edifying ways.
In this last chapter I shall try and take you
through the last three stages – becoming rooted and grounded in love,
comprehending the greatness of the love of Christ and being filled with all the
fullness of God. All three final stages involve
the mystery called love. The practice and the experience of love, leads us to
the fullness of God. The high reaches of the spiritual life are about perfecting our ability to love God and love one another.
Love is the ultimate in biblical EQ. The ultimate use of our emotions is love
of God expressed in worship and that is the use they will be put to in Heaven.
The ultimate state of our emotions is pure love. The ultimate pitch of our
emotions is when we can love our enemies.
(Matthew 5:43-48 NKJV)
"You have heard that it was said, 'You shall love your neighbor and
hate your enemy.' {44} "But I say to you, love your enemies, bless those who
curse you, do good to those who hate you, and pray for those who spitefully use
you and persecute you, {45} "that you may be sons of your Father in
heaven; for He makes His sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain
on the just and on the unjust. {46} "For if you love those who love you,
what reward have you? Do not even the tax collectors do the same? {47}
"And if you greet your brethren only, what do you do more than others? Do
not even the tax collectors do so? {48} "Therefore you shall be perfect,
just as your Father in heaven is perfect.
If we love our enemies we attain spiritual
perfection. Loving our enemies and
blessing those who curse us leads us to become sons of our Father in heaven (Matthew
5;43-45). In verse 48 Jesus’ apparently absurd command is “you shall be
perfect, just as your Father in heaven is perfect”. This is as ‘ridiculous’ as
saying we can be filled up with all the fullness of God. The two apparently absurd
statements are of course connected. Love leads us to be in the fullness of God,
and loving our enemies makes us perfect like our Father in heaven. Both
perfections are attained through strenuous love. God desires us to dwell in
perfect love where we can love friend and foe alike.
The path to spiritual perfection is the path
of loving our enemies, overcoming our fight or flight response, exercising our biblical EQ skills and dwelling in a perfect
benevolence towards all, free from animosity, hatred, revenge and the spiteful
impulses of the flesh. That is high
ground indeed. {Let me quickly add that as I said earlier in the book, Biblical
EQ is only part of our sanctification and a portion of God’s work in us,
however I think it is an important part.}
Love is of course the fulfillment of the law, the perfection of what I am calling Biblical EQ and the one great Attribute of the Christ-like nature. Every Christian agrees with that. Its part of what Americans call “motherhood and apple pie”. A global sentimental statement that makes us all feel warm and with which no-one dare disagree but which is apparently of little real consequence or practical value. In most bible studies everyone present can tell you love is a good thing and fulfills the law and we should be doing more of it, and the Good Samaritan was very nice and a wonderful example, and we should all love God and our neighbors and that means everyone, Amen. So I’m not going to say any of that. You already know it. I’m going to ask a few tough questions such as “Why don’t we love very well at all, why are we still mainly selfish and only love a little bit?” and “Paul talks of the love of God being poured out in our hearts and this love transforming us from glory to glory and even making us perfect and filling us with the fullness of God. Was he just joking? Is that just theological waffle? Or is it for real? If its for real how can we get hold of it?” They are some of the real, “where the rubber hits the road” questions of Christian living and this book is all about those sort of questions, especially where they intersect with our emotional life. But first a definition of love:
Love is a lawful and practical way of life, which
we live out from Christ within us, in a common benevolent connection with God
and with others.
Love is lawful.
It rejoices in the truth and takes no pleasure in evil. (1 Corinthians 13:6)
The true follower of God in the O.T. was someone who “loves Me and keeps My
commandments” (Exodus 20:6, Deuteronomy 5:10). In the N.T. love is demonstrated
in keeping the commandments of Jesus Christ.( John 14:15, 21; 15:10 1 John 5:3)
In 2 John love is even defined by obedience: “This is love, that we walk
according to His commandments” (2 John 1:6). Thus love is not some kind of
maverick sentimentality that can ride roughshod over laws and do what it likes in pursuit
of the grand passion. Love is God’s nature at work and God is lawful and holy
so love is lawful also.
Love is practical.
As we saw in the chapters on beliefs our emotions are meant to move us to
Christian action. Faith working through love should move us to do the good
deeds that God has prepared beforehand for us to do (Ephesians 2:8-10,
Galatians 5:6). The parable of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10;29-37) shows that
loving your neighbour often involves practical action. This is backed up in
innumerable passages in Scripture most notably James chapters 2 and 3 and in 1
John, particularly 1 John 3:16-18.
(1 John 3:16-19 NKJV) By this we know love, because He laid down His life for us. And
we also ought to lay down our lives for the brethren. {17} But whoever has this
world's goods, and sees his brother in need, and shuts up his heart from him,
how does the love of God abide in him? {18} My little children, let us not love
in word or in tongue, but in deed and in truth. {19} And by this we know that
we are of the truth, and shall assure our hearts before Him.
The specific practical help we are to love our enemies
with is given in the book of Romans.
(Romans 12:20-21 NKJV) Therefore "If your enemy is hungry, feed him; If he is thirsty, give him a drink; For in so doing you will heap coals of fire on his head." {21} Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.
Thus love is not a mere emotion detached from action. It is not a sentiment that we “can have in our hearts” without ever acting on. Love is a spur to action. Faith working through love moves us to do things of a practical nature
Love is a way of life. (Ephesians 5:1-2 NKJV) Therefore be imitators of God as dear children. {2} And walk in love, as Christ also has loved us and given Himself for us, an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet-smelling aroma.
To “walk in love” means to make it our lifestyle. This lifestyle is reflected in Acts chapters 2-7 where the early church is shown living in love, helping widows, healing the sick, preaching the gospel, obeying the commandments and enduring persecution in a noble and forgiving spirit. The lifestyle of the early church was one of constant worship, constant fellowship, unity of soul and spirit and an incredible desire to meet one another’s needs (Acts 4:31-37).. It was a lifestyle of love, empowered by the Holy Spirit and led by the apostles. This sort of lifestyle love is called ‘abiding in love” in 1 John and means dwelling from day to day in love so it totally characterises one’s life. The love we are called to, which perfects us, is thus not an occasional spurt of affection. Nobody can be made into the fullness of God by an occasional spurt of affection. Abiding love, that we can walk in and which transforms us, is not the warm gooey feeling you get singing Scripture choruses, though it is slightly related. Real love is a lot more solid and real and ethical and practical than that. Lets keep going and see if we can figure out what this abiding, transforming, lifestyle love is like.
Love is lived out
from Christ within us Love is a Jesus thing. Love is what Jesus in us wants to do. Love flows
from Christ within us. The natural man cannot attain to this sort of love, the
love that cares for enemies, that abides in the commandments of
God and makes us into the fullness of God. If the natural man could do that then God
would have kept Jesus in heaven. If the natural man was adequate to become like
God then there is no need for a cross, a resurrection, an indwelling Holy Spirit and a
new nature. So if we need a new nature to love then the old nature is useless
and the Law is useless. Law-keeping does not makes us loving it only makes us defeated
and condemned because we are weak and the flesh always wins (Romans 5-8,
Galatians 3&4). At best the Law is a holy, and righteous and good tutor
that brings conviction of sin and leads us to repentance. The natural man under
the tutelage of the holy, righteous and just law just ended up a sordid mess.
The flesh ran rampant. God got locked out. So God instituted a new covenant, in
Christ, where the law is written on our hearts by the Holy Spirit and the
Christian life is lived from the inside out, not from the law book in.
Listen! You can
only live the Christian life one way – from Jesus in you, out to others and the
world. Love is not a feeling that comes into you. Love is living water that
flows out of your inmost being because Christ dwells in your hearts by faith.
Hear ye! Hear ye! Hear ye! Christ in you is THE hope of glory.
The only hope, the sole hope, He is all you have got in the fight against sin
and the quest for a godly character. Your strength, intellect, cleverness,
willpower and rule-keeping cannot avail. They are not a ‘hope of glory”. They
are certain and agonising defeat. It is God who is at work within you! Let the
new man live the new life. Let Jesus in you love others through you.
But how? That was
my question for years as people would talk about living the new life from
Christ within us. How do we get in touch with Christ within us and how do we
“do it”? It just seemed like so much theory to me, a bit of swift-handed
exegetical fiddling, a holding out of a hope that there was no way to lay hold
of. But the early church did know this love. It worked for them and it can work
for us. The secret is connection. Forge
the connection with God and with others, and maintain that connection like your
life depended on it, which it does, and Christ will flow out of your inmost
being. No connection, no flow, deep connection, deep flow. Lets look at that a
bit further.
Love involves a common benevolent connection with God
(1 Corinthians 6:17 NKJV) But he who is joined to the Lord is one
spirit with Him.
Many counseling theorists are now exploring the transformational power of love as it flows in direct personal connection to God and to others. Our selfish individuality has led us astray. For too long we have wanted counseling recipes we can work on our own without having to open up to God or man. We are discovering that God has designed His world to be firstly connected to Him and then to one another in a huge inter-connected cascade of love. In this regard I recommend the recent work of Larry Crabb and his book Connecting. I also recommend the work of Dr Ed Smith in Theophostics. These are just two people in a vast and growing movement trying to explore the transformational aspects of relationship to God and others. We are not islands, we are people and people need connection. This connection is a vital part of our EQ and a key to maturing in Christ.
“To know the love of Christ that surpasses knowledge that you may be filled..” (Ephesians 3:19). The knowing of the love is vital. It’s the connection that is transformational. Its knowing Christ, and the extent of His love, that matures us. It’s the experiencing of that relationship, and being rooted and grounded in love, which stabilizes us. I commenced my Christian life believing that I should be “well grounded in the Scriptures” and that was good and helpful. However it was only much later that I saw the need to be rooted and grounded in love and in Christ. You and I are grounded in a personal relationship with our Saviour. Now even if my Bible was confiscated I would still have my rock solid foundation in my relationship with God. The Scriptures have contributed immensely to that relationship of course. However I relate to a Person not a set of Scriptures or even a set of elegant doctrines. Now its God’s Spirit within me, and His personal connection to me, that changes me from glory to glory.
(2 Corinthians 3:17-18 NKJV) Now the Lord is the Spirit; and where the
Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty. {18} But we all, with unveiled face,
beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the
same image from glory to glory, just as by the Spirit of the Lord.
The Jews had the Torah but we have Christ and with unveiled faces we behold Him and by the power of the Spirit we are transformed, rooted and grounded and perfected in love, and go from glory to glory until we reach the fullness of God.
Connection is everything and through it we receive the love that truly changes us. God is our greatest and only real need. We do not need to go on eating, or working or breathing, but we do need to stay in connection with God. We establish that connection at our conversion when we repent from sin and being disconnected and place our faith in Christ. We maintain that connection through setting our minds on the Spirit, on things above, and on Christ and the interests of God. We need to make a definite clear commitment to fix our minds in the right place. That’s the only thing we can do to keep the connection open. The mind is the only part of our consciousness we can control. Fixing it on God through prayer, meditation and concentrated love in the Spirit is all I can humanly do to maintain my transforming link with God.
Through the transforming work this connection works in me I gain mastery over the fight or flight response, over the flesh and all the wrong impulses it contains. Through this connection I find the power to be obedient and I obey, in the Spirit, not according to the letter. Over time the Spirit produces His fruit in me and I bear love, joy and peace and become humble, meek, patient, gentle, kind and full of self-control. I begin to love my enemies and pray for those who persecute me. I have the strength in the inner self not to retaliate. I become rooted and grounded in love and my world moves from being self-centred to God centred and other-serving. I start communicating with grace and ministering effectively and grasping the height and depth and width and length of the love of God until, many years from now, I am filled up with all the fullness of God.
This connection seems horribly fragile at first and the Devil tries his best to break it. He assails it with doubt, confusion, distraction, lust, and every spiritual attack he can manage. The first part of this book addresses those concerns and it is clear that we can damage our connection through sin and carnality. Now lets look at what the Scriptures say about the nature of our connection to God. As you read the Scriptures below notice: a) What God has done to establish the connection with us, and the nature of that connection. b) What we must do to maintain the connection, c) How our connection with God also means connection with other Christians.
(Romans 5:1-5 NKJV) Therefore, having been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, {2} through whom also we have access by faith into this grace in which we stand, and rejoice in hope of the glory of God. {3} And not only that, but we also glory in tribulations, knowing that tribulation produces perseverance; {4} and perseverance, character; and character, hope. {5} Now hope does not disappoint, because the love of God has been poured out in our hearts by the Holy Spirit who was given to us.
(1 Corinthians 6:17 NKJV) But he
who is joined to the Lord is one spirit with Him.
(1 Corinthians 15:2 NKJV) by
which also you are saved, if you hold fast that word which I preached to you;
unless you believed in vain.
(2 Corinthians 5:20 NKJV) Now
then, we are ambassadors for Christ, as though God were pleading through us: we
implore you on Christ's behalf, be reconciled to God.
(Ephesians 2:13-22 NKJV) But now in Christ Jesus you who once were far off have been brought near by the blood of Christ. {14} For He Himself is our peace, who has made both one, and has broken down the middle wall of separation, {15} having abolished in His flesh the enmity, that is, the law of commandments contained in ordinances, so as to create in Himself one new man from the two, thus making peace, {16} and that He might reconcile them both to God in one body through the cross, thereby putting to death the enmity. {17} And He came and preached peace to you who were afar off and to those who were near. {18} For through Him we both have access by one Spirit to the Father. {19} Now, therefore, you are no longer strangers and foreigners, but fellow citizens with the saints and members of the household of God, {20} having been built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ Himself being the chief corner stone, {21} in whom the whole building, being joined together, grows into a holy temple in the Lord, {22} in whom you also are being built together for a dwelling place of God in the Spirit.
(Colossians 2:17-19 NKJV) which
are a shadow of things to come, but the substance is of Christ. {18} Let no one
cheat you of your reward, taking delight in false humility and worship of
angels, intruding into those things which he has not seen, vainly puffed up by
his fleshly mind, {19} and not holding fast to the Head, from whom all the body,
nourished and knit together by joints and ligaments, grows with the increase
that is from God.
(1 Timothy 6:10-12 NKJV) For the
love of money is a root of all kinds of evil, for which some have strayed from
the faith in their greediness, and pierced themselves through with many sorrows.
{11} But you, O man of God, flee these things and pursue righteousness,
godliness, faith, love, patience, gentleness. {12} Fight the good fight of
faith, lay hold on eternal life, to which you were also
called and have confessed the good confession in the presence of many
witnesses.
(James 4:8 NKJV) Draw near to
God
and He will draw near to you. Cleanse your hands, you sinners; and purify your
hearts, you double-minded.
(Revelation 2:13 NKJV) "I
know your works, and where you dwell, where Satan's throne is. And you hold
fast to My name, and did not deny My faith even in the days in which
Antipas was My faithful martyr, who was killed among you, where Satan dwells.
God has done an enormous preparatory work. He has brought us near by the blood of Christ, which cleanses us from sin and allows us to approach the throne of grace in time of need (Hebrews 4:14-16). We have access to the Father through the Spirit and this access is so intimate that Paul says we are joined to the Lord and one spirit with Him (1 Corinthians 6:17). We are at peace with God (Romans 5:1-5) and the love of God pours into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who is given to us. Yet as we saw earlier we can grieve and quench and resist the Spirit by sinning. Maintaining the connection means maintaining a good relationship with the Holy Spirit who is our access to God (Ephesians 2:18). To keep that connection wide open and draw near to God we must purify our hearts if we are double-minded and put away sin (James 4:8). We also need to deal with speculative spirituality that can disconnect us from the Head which is Christ (Colossians 2:19). We have to flee greed and worldliness and the love of money and pursue virtue as Timothy did so that we may lay hold of eternal life (1 Timothy 6:10-12). Keeping our connection strong may involve some vigorous effort, in the midst of persecution we may have to hold fast and not deny the faith, an injunction that appears man times in the letters to the seven churches (Revelation 2:13).
What
we are doing in all this is not inventing a new law but maintaining an existing
relationship we have with God through faith according to His grace. Our
relationship started with a faith connection to God and it is maintained by
keeping that faith connection in good shape so that the Christian life can be
said to be “from faith to faith”.
(Romans 1:17 NKJV) For in it the righteousness of God is revealed from faith to
faith; as it is written, "The just shall live by faith."
Now the faith connection is kept in good shape by intensely loving God, and having our minds fixed on Him so His Spirit can touch our consciousness, which is absolutely staked on things above. Christ in me wants to focus His entire attention on the Father and the things of the Spirit but for some reason that God has built into things, it requires my mind to be set on things above. There is an act of my will before Christ can most fully connect. As the Father communicates with His Son in me, by the Spirit which gives us access to the Father, I experience grace and am transformed.
This grace requires my faith. I must trust God and trust His word and launch out and rest myself on Him. As I draw near to God by faith I will naturally move away from sin. If I want to stay near to sin, it is very hard to draw near to God. Faith means trusting that God is a rewarder of those who seek Him. Faith is the inner pragmatic calculation that the goodness I will receive through my connection with God far outweighs the goodness I think I will receive through sin. It’s a decision that the word of God is reliable, and that the reward He promised will arrive, and that God is utterly trustworthy. God gives me a hint that this is so through the Holy Spirit, which is the guarantee of the inheritance to come. As I make this definite, tough, strong decision to seek my goodness in God and not in sin the Christ life within me is fully released.
This is “holding fast”. I do not mean that you need to hold fast or you will fall away. It’s not that sort of holding fast. You are not in a precarious relationship with an angry Creator. You stand forgiven in the love of God. The problem is “me”, not God, it is I who break the connection not Him. I hold fast in order not to disconnect myself from the Head or grieve the Holy Spirit that pours Himself out into my heart.
Lets try it another
way. The relationship with God is rock solid on His side. I do not have to do
anything to please Him. I am justified by faith alone and not by any works of
the law. I am safe in grace. Its like a marriage here in the Philippines where
there is no possibility of divorce. You can sin all your like in that marriage
and theoretically and legally it will never rupture. It is rock solid. But I
love my wife and I value our relationship and I have no wish to grieve her so I
do not sin against her. Similarly I am safe with God, and legally speaking the
relationship is rock solid, I can sin a great deal and still He will be
faithful even though I am faithless (2 Timothy 2:13). But if I did so the
transforming relationship of agape love would be in tatters. I have no desire
to grieve Him, and so I choose not to sin, not because I “have to” in order to
get into heaven, but because I want to in order to know Him more fully and
because I want to be transformed by His love being poured out in my heart
through the Holy Spirit. I have decided for the fullness of the
Christ-like life. However sin grieves Him. Sin is disruptive to our
relationship so it must go. I don’t want it.
What incentive do I have to make this tough decision? And what has it got to do with love, which after all is the subject of this chapter? This love that we abide in, and walk in, and which penetrates every corner of our being, is the royal highway to the highest reaches of the Christian life and the very ground of all that you and I will inherit in Christ.
As we love,
we fulfill the Law (Romans 13:10),
become imitators of God (Ephesians 5:1,2), and perfect as our heavenly
Father is perfect (Matthew 5:43-48), we attain to all the fullness of God (Ephesians 3:19), and we abide in God and He
abides in us (1 John 4:16), and we become like Him (1 John 3:1-3) and share key
aspects of His nature so the apostle can say “as He is, we are”. (1 John
4:17). This is not heresy it is
Scripture. God intends us to be like Jesus, in every aspect and to be full of
love. That is, we are to be spiritual, eternal, loving, wise and mature like
Jesus is. We are the redeemed (Revelation 5:8-10). We are the brands snatched
from the fire (Zechariah 3). We are the ones clothed in white standing before
the throne of God, and as we stand there we will realise that we are like Him
(1 John 3:1-3). Our destiny is to bear his image (Romans 8:28-31) and we will
be eternal, and immortal, and clothed in a spiritual body, (1 Corinthians 15:
42-54). We will be so like Him that Jesus will not be ashamed to call us
brethren (Hebrews 2:11-17). God has done something magnificent in us by grace,
and seated us in heavenly realms with himself that the succeeding ages may
marvel (Ephesians 2:4-7). The inheritance I want is to be so
transformed by God’s blazing love poured out in my heart that I am made utterly
like Jesus Christ. That is something worth focussing on, and it makes leaving
sin alone very worthwhile.
Love involves connecting with others
At this point some of you are probably saying something like “John, I thought this was going to be a wonderful, practical book, but you go and ruin it at the end with all that theology”. Aha! This is the point, I could have left it as a ‘wonderful how-to book” and you could have tried to put it into action in your own strength. And you would have done what you have always done and got what you have always got. Unless you learn to tap into the power of Jesus within you this book will only be a little bit useful to you. However if you get that connection going and God’s power is at work within you and you set your sights on having your emotions redeemed so you can be like Jesus and love people – then, guess what? You will make ten times the progress.
Now lets go back to our definition of love: Love is a lawful and practical way of life, which we live out from Christ within us, in a common benevolent connection with God and with others. What’s the “and others”? What is so special about the early church? How come people loved each other? How come my church is cold and dead and selfish? Going back to one of the questions I started this chapter with: “Why don’t we love very well at all, why are we still mainly selfish?”
Selfishness comes from people who believe in preserving themselves, at all costs, and being competitive. The selfish person who pushes into the queue at the ATM is self-preserving (of their time) and competitive (with the others in the queue). Selfishness results in envy and selfish ambition and a whole lists of rotten behaviors that cause disorder in churches and communities and are very well described in James 3 and Galatians 5. In direct contrast with this, love of others flows from self-giving via the cross. Lets look at a very famous passage of Scripture:
(John 3:16-18 NKJV)
"For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son,
that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. {17}
"For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but
that the world through Him might be saved. {18} "He who believes in Him is
not condemned; but he who does not believe is condemned already, because he has
not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God.
When God wanted to
love the world He did not send a poem. He did not send an email with a nice
graphic and a catchy tune. He sent His Son, thus He gave Himself. When we love
others we send a bit of ourselves to them. When Christ loves others through us,
He sends a bit of Himself to others through us. Early in my ministry I received
a very nice note from a couple in the church who said, among other things “we
see God’s love shining out through you.” I was flabbergasted and humbled. I had
no idea that God’s love could be
seen in me. All I could see was my mistakes.
Somehow Jesus had given Himself to others through me. As Paul said, (2
Corinthians 4:7 NKJV) But we have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellence
of the power may be of God and not of us. Thus when I love others I
establish a connection and send a bit of myself along that connection to them,
at the same time Christ uses that connection to send Himself to them. God is
still sending His Son into the world – through you and I.
Just in case you
think I have gone all mad and mystical, go over the metaphors for the Church in
Scripture. Christ is the Head of the church, which is His body, and so
when parts of his body love a person He is loving the person. When I hold my
wife’s hand, it is not just my hand that is loving Minda, it is all of me,
including my head and heart. Similarly when a part of Christ’s body loves
someone it is also Jesus loving someone. I went through a very dark time in my
life once that lasted for a few months. Every time I was at my lowest a certain
chatty friend would appear from nowhere with some of my favourite junk food and
restore my spirits. Anne was like an angel. She was Christ ministering to me.
In her I saw and felt God’s love. God sent Jesus wrapped up in Anne. This
identification between Christ and His people is so close that when Jesus
revealed Himself to Saul on the Damascus Road , He said “Saul, Saul why are you
persecuting Me?” and “I am Jesus who you are persecuting.” To persecute the
church was to persecute Jesus.
(Acts 9:4-5 NKJV) Then he fell to the ground, and heard a voice saying to him,
"Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting Me?" {5} And he said, "Who
are You, Lord?" Then the Lord said, "I am Jesus, whom you are
persecuting. It is hard for you to kick against the goads."
Christ is in His body. Where His body goes Jesus goes, what His body loves Jesus loves. What His body forgives, Jesus forgives. (John 20:23, James 5:15) What His body binds and looses on earth is bound and loosed in heaven. (Matthew 18:15-20). Thus there is a very intimate relationship between the love of Jesus and the love of His church. Jesus still loves the world in the sense of John 3:16, and Jesus wants to love the world, through His body the church. He wants to release His incredible love into His body that they in turn may release it to the world. The church in the early chapters of Acts was a community filled with the transformational love of Jesus that then went out and loved people and changed the world. The basic job of the Church is not evangelism, its loving people. Loving them into maturity in Christ. (Ephesians 4:11-16)
Ok why are so many churches cold and selfish or only lukewarm in their love? Here are a dozen or so reasons that may apply:
1) They have little idea of the Christ-centred and Spirit-filled life and are struggling along in legalism.
2) They have lost the vision or knowledge that the main task of the church is loving people into maturity in Christ.
3) Their concept of love is weak and little more than “being nice to people” combined with the odd affectionate statement. It lacks reality or practicality.
4) They have descended into fleshly behaviour or worldly behaviour and grieved the Spirit.
5) They have opted for control and respectability and quenched the Spirit.
6) They focus on the things of this world such as current events or politics or even good counseling theories rather than on Christ.
7) They have no mastery, no focus, no disciplined mental attitude, they are not steadily connected to Christ but are unstable, and are blown here and there by the latest fashions / “winds of doctrine”.
8) They have opted for liberal theology or New Age trends and follow the teachings of men, which have the appearance of wisdom and godliness, but lack any real transforming power.
9) They are riddled with disunity; this robs them of power and love.
10) They are spiritually lazy and hard of hearing or they opt for comfort and avoid the cross.
11) They are financially dishonest like Ananias and Sapphira.
12) There is gross sin or immorality in the leadership.
How then can the church be brought back to a place of burning blazing love where it loves Jesus above all and where we love one another with powerful agape love based in the Spirit so that Jesus is giving Himself away all day long in our midst? How can we get this “connecting with one another in the power of Christ and the love of the Holy Spirit” thing going?
1) Fix any of the above 12 faults that are wrong.
2) Renew worship so it is absolutely Christ-centred. Teach on the life and ministry of Jesus.
3) Fix their minds on eternity and seek the presence of the Holy Spirit.
4) Give people a vision for real biblical love as described in this chapter and get them thirsty for it.
5) Follow the leadings of the Holy Spirit.
6) Engage in real, helpful practical one-another ministry (see Gene Getz’s excellent book on the one another commands). Love one another in deed and truth, not just word and tongue.
7) Try and build an adventurous, faith-filled learning community as described earlier in this book.
All I am saying is
connect the Church to God, and get them to release Christ in them to one
another, then stand back. In a functioning Christian community the
whole community is connected upwards to Jesus Christ who is the Head and then
horizontally as Christ in us ministers to one another through an amazing
network of interpersonal connections that carry
the love of God. If each person is Christ-focused and self-giving then enormous
power is present as they become one in the Spirit. I am not talking about the
cultish Groupthink or group conformity, but a creative Spirit-filled diversity,
where people are one in soul and spirit but as different as can be
individually.
(Ephesians 4:11-16 NKJV) And He Himself gave some to be apostles, some prophets, some evangelists, and some pastors
and teachers, {12} for the equipping of the saints for the work of ministry,
for the edifying of the body of Christ, {13} till we all come to the unity of
the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to a perfect man, to the
measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ; {14} that we should no longer
be children, tossed to and fro and carried about with every wind of doctrine, by
the trickery of men, in the cunning craftiness of deceitful plotting, {15} but,
speaking the truth in love, may grow up in all things into Him who is the head;
Christ; {16} from whom the whole body, joined and knit together by what every
joint supplies, according to the effective working by which every part does its
share, causes growth of the body for the edifying of itself in love.
Those who minister should edify the body of
Christ into unity of the faith and the knowledge of the Son of God, to a perfect
man, to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ. We are back to
where we began this chapter taking of the fullness of God. This fullness is achieved in
community. Its something the body achieves for its members. We don’t do it to
ourselves. We have to love people and be loved by people if the fullness is
going to happen for us. How do we get there? By speaking the truth in love,
(v.15) and speaking the truth in love is a pretty good definition of what
biblical EQ enables us to do. THE END
Teachers Guide
The
following suggestions are not meant to be prescriptive for the professional
educator but are merely a few suggestions which are meant as a help to those of
us who are not professional educators but have teaching responsibilities.
Biblical
EQ can be
used as a text book on emotional development and I suggest the book be taught
in 24 one hour lectures as follows –
one hour introduction, six hours on the first six chapters in the
theological section, ten hours on the five chapters in the ontological section
and finally eight hours of lectures on
the six chapters in the practical section (2 hrs each on the chapters on first
and last chapters in the section.) However the book is taught I think 20 hours
of lectures would be a minimum for most undergraduate students to grasp and
digest the topic.
For
in-service courses and extension learning I would recommend pre-reading the
book and discussing it chapter by chapter by teleconference or in email
discussion groups. The book can be also easily be broken down into three
one-day workshops, one for each section, and taught as an intensive over a long
weekend. I also am preparing a one day seminar for church groups which just
gives a very basic coverage of the topics in the book.
Small
group discussion in groups of three or four is absolutely essential for this
sort of material. The aim of this book will be largely defeated if you teach it
in a large classroom and use assignments and exams alone as the assessment
tool. A bright student could go through such a course largely unchanged.
Students should interact face to face about the issues and to stretch each
other, as gently as possible, so that real change and real growth occurs.
Considerable guidance and facilitation by the lecturer may be needed to ensure
these discussion groups achieve their aims. The section on private and public
emotion should perhaps be briefly reviewed in class at the commencement of the
small groups as some vulnerable students may share too much emotionally while
others share very little.
I
would encourage students to keep a personal journal of their reflections on the
course (if this is considered an acceptable form of assessment) and encourage
discussion of case studies that they meet in their ministry experience. The
book raises many deep and provocative questions such as the mind-brain problem
and the nature of the human spirit. If a class is prone to wandering off into less than edifying
arguments over these issues they might be channeled into 15-minute formal class
debates with a definite conclusion. These debates could be made part of the
‘participation” mark that most lecturers give.
While
the book has an objective to achieve emotional transformation it also has an
informational purpose and is content rich. Assessing understanding of the
content and the grasp of the concepts involved is very important so I would
encourage some academic form of assessment, such as a two hour exam at the end
of the course worth around half the marks. If assignments are to be used
instead of an exam I would suggest three separate assignments – one on each
section as I think it would be very difficult to cover the course content with
a single term paper. Even in the case of
in-services and courses where formal assessment is not used the academic
content still needs a little emphasis because it is the concepts that will stay
with the learner, perhaps popping into relevance many years in the future.
May
the Lord lead you as you teach both the academic and experiential aspects of
Biblical EQ.
Further References
Alcoholic Anonymous World Services; Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions, Sydney 1952 ( authors are anonymous of course!)
Anderson,
Neil T. Set Free, London 1998, Monarch
Anderson,
Neil T. & Quarles M& J Freedom
From Addiction, Ventura 1996, Regal
Weekes,
Claire; Peace From Nervous Suffering, Sydney 1973, Angus and Robertson
Weekes,
Claire; Simple Effective Treatment of Agoraphobia, Sydney 1977, Angus
and Robertson
Weekes,
Claire; The Latest help For Your Nerves, Sydney 1989, Angus and
Robertson
Melamed,
Barbara G. & Siegel, Lawrence J. Behavioral Medicine, New York 1980,
Spinger
Boundaries
(Personal)
Cloud,
Henry; & Townsend John; Safe
People, Grand Rapids 1995, Zondervan
Cloud,
Henry; & Townsend John; Boundaries, Sydney 1992, Strand Publishing
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Crabb, Larry; Connecting, Nashville 1997, Word
Holpp,
Lawrence; Managing Teams, 1999
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Limerick,
David; & Cunnington, Bert; & Crowther, Frank; Managing the New
Organisation 2nd Edition, Warriewood 1998, Business and
Professional Publishing
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Tom The Circle of Innovation,
London 1997, Hodder & Stoughton
Senge
Peter et. al The Fifth Discipline
Fieldbook , London 1994, Nicholas Brealey
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David M. Feeling Good A New Mood Therapy
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Martin E.P.; Learned Optimism, Sydney 1998, Random House
Winter,
Richard; The Roots of Sorrow, Westchester
Illinois 1986 Crossway Books
Cava,
Roberta; Dealing With Difficult People, Sydney 2000, Pan Macmillan
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Robert; & Sawaf, Ayman; Executive EQ, London 1997, Orion Business
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1980, Regal
Goleman,
Daniel; Emotional Intelligence, London 1996, Bloomsbury
Goleman,
Daniel; Working With Emotional Intelligence, London 1998, Bloomsbury
Weisenger,
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John; Homecoming, New York 1990, Bantam Books
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Handbook For Clergy and Religious Professionals, San Francisco 1991, Harper
Smith,
Ed; Theophostics – Beyond
Tolerable Recovery (workshop manuals)
Kelsey, Morton; Dreams A Way To Listen To God, New York 1978, Paulist
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Peter ; Understanding The Mid-Life Crisis, Melbourne 1981, Sun Books
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& New York 1989, W.W Norton &
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Martin; The Spirit of Counsel , London 1983, Mowbray
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G.) The Nature of Revival,
Minneapolis 1987, Bethany House
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Taylor,
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Stress
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and Davis , Please Understand Me
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Haye, Tim; Transformed Temperaments, Wheaton, Illinois 1971, Tyndale
House
Transactional Analysis (Games, Life Scripts for section on Thoughts and Intents
of the Heart)
Berne,
Eric; Games People Play, London 1976, Penguin
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Gestatalt Experiments, Reading Massachusetts 1973, Addison-Wesley
About The Author
John Edmiston B.Sc. Adv. Dip. Min. B.D.
is Field Director of Frontier Servants missionary society in the Philippines
and the Executive Director of the Asian Internet Bible Institute. He has also
served as a missionary in Papua New Guinea. Before becoming a missionary John
worked as a career guidance and workplace-counseling consultant, mainly for the
public sector. His passion is to see revival come to God’s church through the
spiritual and emotional renewal of Christian workers and the structures that
they work in. John is married to Minda, who is a university lecturer in Botany.
John can be contacted by email on
johned@aibi.ph