Being
Spiritual
People
.
by Steve Clark
In the third chapter of First Corinthians, there
is a passage that provides a fundamental insight
into the work of the Spirit in us (verses 1-4).
Paul was speaking to the Corinthians, a church
he had founded, and said,
But I, brethren, could not address
you as spiritual men, but as men of the flesh,
as babes in Christ. I fed you with milk, not
solid food; for you were not ready for it; and
even yet you are not ready, for you are still
of the flesh. For while there is jealousy and
strife among you, are you not of the flesh,
and behaving like ordinary men? For when
one says, “I belong to Paul,” and another, “I
belong to Apollos,” are you not merely men?
There were a number of problems in the newly
established Christian community at Corinth when
Paul wrote this letter. The chief seemed to have
been serious disunity resulting in
factionalization that was threatening to lead to
division. As we can see in the above passage,
Paul attributed this to the fact that they were
not spiritual people. They were, as he put it,
of the flesh and behaving like ordinary human
beings, rather than like Christians.
To understand what he meant by that, it is
helpful to look at what he said to them in the
first chapter of First Corinthians in verses
4-12:
I give thanks to God always for you
because of the grace of God which was given
you in Christ Jesus, that in every way you
were enriched in him with all speech and all
knowledge – even as the testimony to Christ
was confirmed among you — so that you are not
lacking in any spiritual gift, as you wait for
the revealing of our Lord Jesus Christ; who
will sustain you to the end, guiltless in the
day of our Lord Jesus Christ. God is faithful,
by whom you were called into the fellowship of
his Son, Jesus Christ our Lord.
I appeal to you, brethren, by the name of our
Lord Jesus Christ, that all of you agree and
there be no dissensions among you, but that
you be united in the same mind and the same
judgment. For it has been reported to me by
Chloe’s people that there is quarreling among
you, my brethren. What I mean is...
At the outset of the letter the lack of unity in
the Corinthian church was clearly on his mind.
There were dissensions and quarreling.
Nonetheless he began by thanking God for them
because they had received the grace of God. Even
more, he said that they had received all the
spiritual gifts. Now here is something
extraordinary. The Corinthians had been baptized
in the Spirit and had all the spiritual gifts,
but, as he said in Chapter 3, they were not
spiritual!
To understand what Paul is saying, we first need
to understand that when “spiritual” is used in
the New Testament, it almost never means
“immaterial”. Rather, it means “of” or “related
to” the Holy Spirit. Something is spiritual when
it comes from the Holy Spirit or is somehow
connected to the Holy Spirit. Second, we can
usefully retranslate the word “spiritual” as
“spiritualized”. This will allow us to speak and
think more clearly about what Paul is saying.
As we can see from comparing the above two
passages, the fact that the Corinthians were not
spiritual does not mean that they were without
the gift of the Holy Spirit. Nor does it mean
that they had not experienced the Holy Spirit at
work in and through them (cf. 1:4; Romans 8:9).
Rather, it means that the presence of the Spirit
in them had not transformed them, at least not
in one very important respect. In short, there
is a difference between having the Spirit
present in us and working through us and being
spiritual people, or, more clearly put, being
spiritualized people.
Being of the flesh, as used in 1 Corinthians
3:1, means that the Corinthians were behaving in
such a way that their way or manner of life was
not spiritual.
Flesh in this context
refers to unredeemed human nature, so those who
are of the flesh relate in a way that is
characteristic of unredeemed people. They are
like ordinary people, that is, people who have
never been spiritualized.
Jealousy and strife were the sign that something
was seriously wrong. The phrase among you
indicates that the problem was corporate (and
therefore that the problem was not necessarily
with all the members). In other words the
Corinthian community was acting in a way that
indicated it had not been fully spiritualized,
and this was manifested in the way many of the
members related to one another.
Not all conflict is seriously wrong, but if it
turns into hostility or disunity
(factionalizing) within a body of Christians,
something is wrong. Of course, the cause of the
problem might only be some people who are not
spiritualized – it only takes one side to start
a war – but the existence of the war at least
indicates something seriously wrong. Paul, then,
was probably talking about a community problem
and indicating that it was due to the fact that
the members of the community, some at least,
were not yet spiritualized in how they related
to the life of the community and to one another.
In short, the sign of deficient spiritualization
in this instance was a personal relationship
problem, a problem in love of neighbor.
In order to see the positive side, to see what
spiritualization should look like when it is
present, we will look at a different passage:
Galatians 5:13-26. This is sometimes referred to
as the Fruit of the Spirit Passage.
For you were called to freedom,
brethren; only do not use your freedom as an
opportunity for the flesh, but through love be
servants of one another. For the whole law is
fulfilled in one word, “You shall love your
neighbor as yourself.” [Leviticus 19:18] But
if you bite and devour one another take heed
that you are not consumed by one another. But
I say, walk by the Spirit, and do not gratify
the desires of the flesh…
Now the works of the flesh are plain:
fornication, impurity, licentiousness,
idolatry, sorcery, enmity, strife, jealousy,
anger, selfishness, dissension, party spirit,
envy, drunkenness, carousing, and the like. I
warn you, as I warned you before, that those
who do such things shall not inherit the
kingdom of God. But the fruit of the Spirit is
love, joy, peace, patience, kindness,
goodness, faithfulness, gentleness,
self–control; against such there is no law.
And those who belong to Christ Jesus have
crucified the flesh with its passions and
desires.
If we live by the Spirit, let us also
walk by the Spirit. Let us have no
self–conceit, no provoking of one another, no
envy of one another.
To understand this passage, we should recall
some background. Galatians was written in
response to people sometimes referred to as
Judaizers, who wanted all Christians to “live
like Jews” (2:14), especially to be circumcised
and keep the law of Moses. This implied that
Christians who had been pagans (Gentiles) needed
initiation into the old covenant in order to
receive the full benefit of Christianity. Paul
rejected such a view.
In the course of the letter, Paul taught that
being in Christ and having received the Holy
Spirit included all that the old covenant
provided, and more. It was therefore unnecessary
for Christians to add old covenant practices,
like circumcision, to new covenant life. They
did not bring a better or fuller relationship
with God, and to say that they did was to deny
an essential truth about what Christ did for us.
On the other hand, he had to rule out the
misconception that we could be in Christ and
live any way we want just because we have been
freed from the old covenant law, and so we have
the exhortation in Chapter 5 on the fruit of the
Spirit.
Paul began by saying that the Galatian
Christians were called to freedom, probably
meaning freedom from those aspects of the old
covenant approach that came from its purpose in
dealing with human sinfulness and imperfection.
But he insisted that this freedom was not just
lack of restraint. God did not free us so there
would be an opportunity for the flesh, that is,
so that the flesh, our unredeemed nature, could
have its way unrestrained. Rather he intended us
to serve one another in love. Christian freedom
is the freedom to be what we were meant to be –
sons and daughters of God and therefore people
who live in his image and likeness.
In the course of the passage Paul listed off
works of the flesh. These are the things the
flesh will work [do] if left to itself. They
include fornication, sexual impurity…
idolatry…enmity, strife, etc. We would normally
call these “sins”. They are patterns of behavior
that are forbidden by God.
Instead of gratifying the desires of the flesh,
that is, allowing the flesh to do what it wants,
we need to walk by the Spirit. “Walking” is a
Hebrew idiom for “behaving”, that is, for living
a certain way. The way we walk is the way we
live. To call what results when we walk in the
Spirit the fruit of the Spirit means that this
new way we should live will naturally tend to
grow when the Holy Spirit is in us. The list of
the fruit of the Spirit includes love, joy,
peace, patience, kindness, and the like. The
fruit that the Spirit produces, then, is good
patterns of behavior or character traits, good
ways of treating others, good ways of handling
the circumstances of life.
There is an intrinsic connection between the
Holy Spirit and the fruit of the Spirit. The
Holy Spirit is the Spirit of God, and God has
certain characteristics. He is loving, joyful,
peaceful, patient, kind and so on. So the
presence of God’s Spirit in us tends to make us
act the way he himself would. The scriptures
also talk about the result as our being in the
image and likeness of God (for instance,
Colossians 3:10 or 1 Corinyhians 3:18). If the
Holy Spirit is in us, he will be about restoring
the image and likeness of God in us, making us
more like God in the way we live.
This truth is sometimes expressed in a different
terminology. Christian teachers, especially
those who lived in Western (Latin) Europe during
the Middle Ages or later teachers who have been
influenced by them, sometimes speak about
infused virtues. By virtues they mean good
character traits or good patterns of behavior.
When they say these virtues are infused, they
mean that the Holy Spirit, who has filled us,
produces these virtues in us (pours them into
us, so to speak). They are not just acquired by
our own efforts, but are given to us by the work
of the Holy Spirit. The term “infused virtue”,
then, is another way of speaking about the fruit
of the Spirit.
Paul concluded with an important distinction
when he said that if we live by the Spirit, we
should also walk by the Spirit, or, translated
with different words, if we have life from the
Spirit, we should also live in a spiritualized
way. In Romans 8, a similar passage, Paul makes
the same distinction by speaking of the Spirit
dwelling in you (8:9, 11) and giving [you] life
(8:10-11) and our walking (8:4) or living
according to the Spirit (8:5). Because Christ
gives us the gift of the Spirit, that is, gives
us new life through the Spirit, that does not
mean that we will turn out the way he intended
when he gave us the gift. We will not
necessarily become spiritualized and so live in
a spiritual way. In other words, it is one thing
to live by the Spirit or have new life through
the Spirit. It is another thing to walk in the
Spirit, that is, live in a spiritualized way.
The description Paul gave of what the gift of
the Spirit should produce makes the results
sound automatic. Once we have received the
Spirit, all we need to do is put up our feet,
lay back and let good character and excellent
behavior just grow – no fuss, no muss…and no
effort. Now Paul certainly meant to convey the
fact there is a new spiritual life put inside of
us that gives us a new capacity and desire to
live the way God wants us to. He did not,
however, intend to convey that we will end up
living that life automatically, with no effort.
The way Paul exhorted the Galatians to show the
fruit of the Spirit makes clear that there is a
matter of choice and effort on our part. We have
to crucify the flesh, put the flesh to death,
that is, deliberately choose to depart from the
old way of life. We also have to continue to
avoid the old way of life. We have to, in an
ongoing way, refuse to follow the flesh, the
unredeemed or untransformed tendencies, which
are still within in us. As Paul said in a
similar passage (Romans 8:12), if by the Spirit
you put to death the deeds of the body, you will
live. We can successfully choose to live
differently, but we need to be resolute, even at
times violent, about doing so. We can do that by
the power the Spirit gives us.
If we need to choose to live in the new way, we
need a criterion to judge when we are being
spiritual(ized) or not. This is why the word of
God, scripture, and Christian teaching, is so
important. We cannot always determine what is
spiritual by direct intuition or discernment. We
need to know what God intends the gift of his
Spirit to produce in us so that we are not led
astray (1 Corinthians 12:2) or deceived (1 John
2:26). We need to be able to test the Spirits (1
John 4:4) and so need to know the signs of the
work of the Holy Spirit.
The criterion Paul gave us in the passage we
have been reading is keeping the commandments,
turning away from the works of the flesh and
exhibiting the fruit of the Spirit in the way we
relate to others. We do not need to do
extraordinary things to be spiritual. We do not
have to perform miracles or have great spiritual
experiences, as Paul himself did (cf. 2
Corinyhians 12:1-4). But we do need to treat
others, our brothers and sisters in Christ,
well. The sign of being spiritual, then, is
loving God and neighbor (v. 14).
The well-known passage in First Corinthians
13:1-7, the “love passage”, is in fact about the
importance of the right criterion to evaluate
our spiritual condition:
If I speak in the tongues of men and
of angels, but have not love, I am a noisy
gong or a clanging cymbal. And if I have
prophetic powers, and understand all mysteries
and all knowledge, and if I have all faith, so
as to remove mountains, but have not love, I
am nothing. If I give away all I have, and if
I deliver my body to be burned, but have not
love, I gain nothing.
Love is patient and kind; love is
not jealous or boastful; it is not arrogant or
rude. Love does not insist on its own way; it
is not irritable or resentful; it does not
rejoice at wrong, but rejoices in the right.
Love bears all things, believes all things,
hopes all things, endures all things.
Paul was not saying here that speaking in
tongues, prophesying, understanding mysteries,
moving mountains, giving away all our
possession, letting ourselves be killed in
martyrdom are bad without love. He was, however,
saying that those things are not a criterion of
whether we are doing well. That criterion is
love, the fruit of the Spirit. The presence or
absence of the fruit of the Spirit in our lives
will tell us if we are spiritualized people or
not.
The communitarian aspect of being spiritualized
also needs to be emphasized, because we live in
such an individualistic culture that we tend to
interpret the above passages as simply
concerning being about individual Christians. We
easily overlook the fact that the Paul was
trying to instruct a group of Christians about
how to live together, about how to be a body of
people filled with the one Spirit of God. Even
as individuals, we can only successfully become
a dwelling place of God in the Spirit by being
built into the new temple (the Christian people,
the church), as we can see in Ephesians 2:17-19:
And he came and preached peace to
you who were far off and peace to those who
were near; for through him we both have access
in one Spirit to the Father. So then you are
no longer strangers and sojourners, but you
are fellow citizens with the saints and
members of the household of God, built upon
the foundation of the apostles and prophets,
Christ Jesus himself being the cornerstone, in
whom the whole structure is joined together
and grows into a holy temple in the Lord; in
whom you also are built into it for a dwelling
place of God in the Spirit.
There is, then, a direct connection between
being built into a body of Christians and living
the life of the Spirit. We are not normally
first brought to life spiritually and then unite
ourselves to others who are also alive
spiritually. Rather, it is as we are joined to a
body of Christians that the Holy Spirit comes to
dwell in us in an ongoing way. We receive help
to live the life of the Spirit by being part of
a community that is living the life of the
Spirit.
Two truths are linked here and elsewhere in the
scripture. On the one hand, we become spiritual
or spiritualized by living in a body of people
who are living the life of the Spirit, and, on
the other hand, relating to one another in a
good way makes us a fitting place for the Holy
Spirit to dwell in. Relating to other Christians
in a good way should increase spiritual life in
us, just as letting the Holy Spirit dwell in us
should bear fruit in relating well to others.
True spiritual life and Christian community go
together.
The chief criterion, then, of being spiritual is
how we love one another in a daily life way.
Good relationships among Christians is what
makes a body of Christians a truly spiritual
temple. We are filled with the Spirit so that we
can be a temple to the glory of God, a body of
people who love God and love one another.
An Experiential Relationship
With God
The gift of the Spirit gives us power to live
the Christian life, to walk in the Spirit, in
part by making our relationship with God
experiential. The experiential aspect is only
one component of good Christian living. We also
need to believe in an orthodox way. We need
practical wisdom for how to deal with the
various things we come across in life. We need
to repent of our sin. And so on. In speaking
about the experiential aspect of our Christian
life, we are only focusing on one feature of
Christian life. Nonetheless, it is an important
one.
For many, Christianity is a matter of ideas,
either about what happened in the past (the
events narrated in scripture) or about doctrine
and morality. They think they mainly need to
“live up to” what they have been taught.
Relationship with God in Christ, however, should
not be just a matter of ideas, however true we
believe them to be or however well we try to
live up to them. It should be something
experienced in our world, experienced as real
(objective) and personal, a relationship with a
person with whom we interact. We can, in other
words, make contact with God and know that we
have done so. To use the word we will use for
such objective, interactive contact with God: we
can and should experience him and his presence
with us. To use the scriptural phrase: we can
know the Lord (Jeremiah 31:34).
We can see that experience is an integral part
of the Christian life in a number of passages in
scripture. The most striking one is Galatians
3:1-5 where Paul says:
O foolish Galatians! Who has
bewitched you, before whose eyes Jesus Christ
was publicly portrayed as crucified? Let me
ask you only this: Did you receive the Spirit
by works of the law, or by hearing with faith?
Are you so foolish? Having begun with the
Spirit, are you now ending with the flesh? Did
you experience so many things in vain? – if it
really is in vain. Does he who supplies the
Spirit to you and works miracles among you do
so by works of the law, or by hearing with
faith?
In this passage Paul shows that he expected all
the Christians in the Galatian church to have
had an experiential relationship with God. He
asked two linked questions: did you experience
so many things in vain? and does he who supplies
the Spirit to you and works miracles among you
do so by works of the law, or by hearing with
faith? The striking thing is that he actually
expected them to be able to answer the
questions; otherwise he would not have made his
point. He expected them to know, from
experience, how they received the Spirit and how
they, or at least some of them, worked miracles.
The answer to Paul’s rhetorical questions, of
course, is that the Galatian Christians
experienced the gift of the Spirit by hearing
with faith, not by being circumcised and
following the ceremony of the old covenant law.
We will consider the importance of hearing with
faith in the next two chapters. Here it is
enough for us to see that Paul actually expected
the Christians he had raised up to have
experienced the Spirit and spiritual gifts.
Such a view is not restricted to Paul. The First
Letter of John says the same thing in an equally
explicit way, in verse 4:13:
By this we know that we abide in him
and he in us, because he has given us of his
own Spirit.
In verse 3:24, it says something similar:
All who keep his commandments abide
in him, and he in them. And by this we know
that he abides in us, by the Spirit which he
has given us.
The First Letter of John was written to help a
group of early Christians judge whether they
were true Christians, truly spiritual people, or
not. This had become important because they
needed to be able to distinguish between
Christian spirituality and that of certain
people, sometimes called Proto-Gnostics, who
claimed to be the truly spiritual ones.
According to 1 John, the criteria of true
(Christian) spirituality are whether people
believe in the incarnation of Christ, whether
they keep the commandments, and whether they
love other Christians – as well as whether they
have experienced the Spirit. In the above two
passages, then, John was saying that Christians
should know that they have a true relationship
with Christ, that is, whether they abide in him
and he in them, by their experience of the
Spirit.
The above set of passages tells us that
Christians should experience the Spirit. Others
could be added. If we cannot point our finger to
anything definite in our experience that
indicates the presence of the Spirit, the
questions or comments in these passages make no
sense. If that is the case, then our Christian
life is missing something. We should have an
experience of Christ as a real person, an
existent being who is something other than us
(and not just an aspect of us, our spiritual
selves, as New Age people sometimes say). And we
should have an experience of the Spirit he has
given us as present in us and working through
us.
Although the truth about the experiential nature
of Christianity is important, it has to be
approached with some caution. Our goal should
not be to have spiritual experiences, but to
have a good relationship with God that is
experiential. We do not want to become
“experience-focused”.
We live in a time when a large number of people
are focused on experience. They are especially
looking to have experiences with high subjective
interest, excitement, personal satisfaction. We
can see this in many ways. A while back, about
fifteen years or so ago, I came across a
striking example in an article. The writer had
noticed a new phenomenon – the first Feminists
were starting to have babies. Since the early
Feminist movement was noted for being somewhat
hostile to women having babies and spending much
of their life taking care of them rather than
going out to work, their new interest in babies
was newsworthy.
Most of the article contained interviews of
women who had recently had babies and were
answering the question why they had them. One of
those interviewed expressed a common opinion.
She said, “I knew I was getting older and soon
would not be able to have a baby. I did not want
to miss the experience of having a baby, so I
had one.”
That is an extraordinary approach to having a
baby. She did not have a baby because the baby
was important to her, because a new living human
being would come into the world. She wanted to
have a baby so she could have an experience! It
would be hard to find a better example of how
experience-focused our age can be, and yet many
of us do not even notice such things, because
they are so common.
Such an orientation is all around us. New Age
religion is very experience-focused. To many of
the proponents of New Age teaching, it does not
seem important what God or spirit or spiritual
force they might be experiencing. The important
thing is that they are experiencing something
spiritual. And they do not seem to be at all
concerned that there might be any bad effects
from experiencing a relationship with an evil
spirit.
Christians too can be experience-focused.
Charismatics can be especially prone to this,
seeking leadings, times of “slaying” or
“resting” in the Spirit, “divine appointments”,
etc. Such things become a center of attention,
even the goal of the Christian life, rather than
a spiritual help in the course of seeking a good
relationship with the Lord. This too is probably
a result of the times we are living in.
Knowing someone
experientially
To understand what it means to say our
relationship with the Lord should be
experiential and why spiritual experience is
important, we need to clear away some
misconceptions about experience. First, human
experience is not always exciting, stimulating,
emotionally moving. We might touch a live
electric wire. That would be an exciting,
stimulating and moving experience. But we also
might watch a boring movie. We would still be
having an experience, even if we were
uninterested and unmoved, at least until the
point when we fell asleep.
Knowing that we can have human experience
without excitement or much subjective
stimulation has special relevance to our
understanding of our spiritual life. We often
have to live through periods when we cannot
experience much in a lively way, and yet those
are often times when we most need to relate to
the Lord. The way we experience life changes
when we get sick, for instance. We are usually
dulled in our ability to respond to and
appreciate things. If at such a time we evaluate
something connected to our relationship with God
like prayer by how much we are moved by it or
how immediately interested we are in praying, we
may not be able to pray at a time when we most
need to.
Something similar is true of old age. As we get
older, we do not respond as immediately to
people and events as when we were younger. If we
have to be excited, stimulated and moved in
order to believe that we are having significant
experiences, we will be tempted to evaluate our
experience of personal relationships and
relationship with God as getting poorer as we
get older, when instead it is just changing with
age and may even be getting deeper in many
respects.
Not only is experience not always exciting,
stimulating and moving, it is often not
conscious or adverted to, surprising as that
seems to many. In fact, we very commonly do not
notice what we are experiencing. I can tell you
about an experience that you are having right
now, but almost certainly are not noticing – you
are breathing. Now that I have mentioned it, you
are conscious of it. Moreover, you know that two
minutes ago or ten minutes ago you were having
the same experience, but you had not adverted to
it.
We most often notice or are conscious of our
experiences when there is a change, when
something new happens. If we stop breathing, we
will very quickly have a conscious experience of
our breathing, or, to be more precise, of the
fact that our breathing has ceased. Or if we
smell something pleasant and make a point of
inhaling to get more of the fragrance, we likely
will notice our breathing. We also become
conscious of our experiences when there is some
difficulty related to them. People with asthma
or some other breathing difficulty are often
more regularly conscious of their breathing.
The same thing is true of our personal
relationships. I recently went to a funeral of
an old acquaintance. At the funeral, I noticed
that one of my friends was crying during the
service. This surprised me because I had not
thought he had had that much of a relationship
with the dead man, so I asked him about it. He
responded that he was surprised too and said, “I
had not realized how important he was to me
until he was gone and I missed him.” Very often
that is the case. We only realize the depth or
strength of relationships with people we live
with or see regularly when those relationships
are lost or are threatened.
Experience, then, is not always exciting,
stimulating and personally satisfying; nor is it
always conscious or adverted to. But nonetheless
the presence or absence of an experience of
something, especially of an experiential
relationship with people, is important. It
changes our lives in objective ways, some big,
some small.
One of the members of our community comes from
Fiji. He studied in England, became part of the
university outreach, and then stayed to be part
of the community. I knew him for many years, and
I knew that he had a father who was still alive,
because he talked about him, but his father was
always in Fiji or at least some place other than
where I was. I had a certain relationship with
him in that we knew of one another and both knew
that we had a relationship with a third person,
his son.
One day I happened to be in London when the
father, who worked in the Fijian diplomatic
service, came on a mission. We had lunch with
him right after he got off the plane from Fiji
and that was my chance to meet him. Now, I have
a great deal of sympathy with people just
getting off a plane from a long flight trying to
cope with a new time zone and country, because I
do that frequently and can feel a bit like a
zombie. My friend’s father is always gracious
and the lunch was pleasant enough, but he was
clearly tired and much less lively than usual.
Having lunch with him was not an exciting,
stimulating, moving experience.
Nonetheless it was an important event. For the
first time, I met him, made his acquaintance
personally. Before I had known about him. Now I
knew him – experientially. That changed our
relationship, established it in a personal way.
Since then I have gone to Fiji. Because I knew
him, I stayed at his house. In the course of
being there he told me many things about Fiji
and Fijian society and Fijian history that most
Americans would never know. Once when he was a
Fijian senator, I got to go to a meeting of the
national Senate. Many things happened
differently thereafter because I had had an
objective experience, the simple objective
experience of meeting him.
The same thing is true of our relationship with
God. There is a big difference between knowing
about God and knowing him from experience.
Experiential knowledge of God allows us to enter
into a relationship with him that is personal
and more dynamic than it would be otherwise.
That is the case whether we experience it as
exciting or routine, whether we consciously
advert to it or take it for granted.
We can lead a good Christian life without having
made experiential contact with the Lord. Many
have, but it is more difficult, because the
experiential aspect of the relationship with God
imparts vitality and strength. That is why many
people after they have been baptized in the
Spirit experience a “spiritual high”. They have
experienced a major change for the better in
their Christian life and they notice it at once.
For others, an experiential relationship with
the Lord comes about more gradually, like slowly
developing a friendship with someone we have
lived with for many years. Nonetheless, it still
makes their Christian life more vital, even
though they cannot date the beginning of a
change.
It is also true that our experience of Christian
life, our experience of God, is often ordinary,
even routine, like most of our experience of
life. If we evaluate our Christian experience by
how we consciously feel about it, or even more,
by how exciting, stimulating or moving it is, we
might often be tempted to think that “God has
gone away” or we “lost it” or “it faded away”.
That could be the case. Some people have lost
their relationship with God or it has become
weak. But it is rarely the case that people are
concerned about their relationship with God when
they do not have much of one. They are usually
concerned because they do have a significant
relationship with God, but something has changed
in the way they experience it.
The question, then, is how can we evaluate our
spiritual experience. We can find the answer in
many parts of the New Testament. A short
statement of it can be found in Colossians
1:9-13:
And so, from the day we heard of it,
we have not ceased to pray for you, asking
that you may be filled with the knowledge of
his will in all spiritual wisdom and
understanding, to lead a life worthy of the
Lord, fully pleasing to him, bearing fruit in
every good work and increasing in the
knowledge of God. May you be strengthened with
all power, according to his glorious might,
for all endurance and patience with joy,
giving thanks to the Father, who has qualified
us to share in the inheritance of the saints
in light. He has delivered us from the
dominion of darkness and transferred us to the
kingdom of his beloved Son…
Paul in this passage gives a sketch of how
spiritual experience should function. First of
all, it is not an end in itself. The true end or
goal of the Christian life is to lead a life
worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing to him,
bearing fruit in every good work, and increasing
in the knowledge of God. The goal, in other
words, is love of God and love of neighbor. To
make this possible, the Holy Spirit works inside
of us, equipping us to live the way God wants us
to. Our experience of the work of the Holy
Spirit, then, should be manifested in how we do
God’s will, and therefore doing God’s will is
the main criterion for evaluating our spiritual
experience.
In saying this, the above passage contains much
the same point as the passages we looked at in
the first part of this chapter, but it adds a
couple of important truths that help us to
recognize when the Holy Spirit has been active.
First, it makes clear that one of the ways the
Holy Spirit works in us is to give us spiritual
wisdom and understanding. He provides light for
our minds so that we can know God and know his
will. Second, it makes clear that he also
strengthens us interiorly so that we can go
through trials and sufferings in a good way. The
fact that he gives us light and strength is
noteworthy partly because many Christians tend
to assume that the only way to discern the
working of the Holy Spirit in us is by feeling
him move inside or perhaps by feeling a desire
to do something.
To say that the Holy Spirit gives us light, does
not mean that every time he does so we have a
conscious experience of being enlightened,
although that often happens. Nor does it mean
that whenever the Holy Spirit strengthens us, we
have a conscious experience of being
strengthened, though that too happens. More
commonly, our experience is of having new
spiritual wisdom and understanding or having
greater strength and reflecting on the fact that
we did not produce these things ourselves but
seem to have received them in our relationship
with God. The criterion for evaluating what is
happening with us spiritually is by considering
how well we are able to live our Christian life
as a whole, not how often we have a strong
conscious awareness of the Spirit working in us,
much less how often we “feel” him at work in us.
Our conscious experiences of the Holy Spirit are
only intended to equip us to live a life
pleasing to God, and if they do not do that,
they are not benefiting us and may be merely
emotional and not genuinely spiritual. We might,
for instance, go to a charismatic conference or
prayer meeting and have a very good experience.
We might have been ‘in the heavenlies” and
return at night enthused and uplifted. Then we
might get up the next morning and come down to
the breakfast table. We find our wife there a
little more grumpy than usual. We find ourselves
more irritable than normal because of the late
return we had the night before. Our young son
spills the milk all over us. Even worse, he
spilled it on the last clean shirt we had. We
finally get to the car and drive away late. On
the way it seems like every light we come to is
red. Still later we get to work and remember
that we were supposed to meet with our boss the
first thing in the morning and he is waiting for
us. At the point, the question is, what good was
going to the prayer meeting and being in the
heavenlies.
The answer should be that it is good if it helps
us to make a good response to our boss, to our
family, to our daily life responsibilities. If
we handle our relationship better with our wife
or children, with our job – and with the Lord
himself – at least over time, then it has been
good. If not, it has not been good, or at best
neutral. We need to be spiritual at home and at
work, not just at the prayer meeting or in
conferences. If we have a job, are married, have
a family to raise, that is where our vocation
is. If our spiritual experiences at the prayer
meeting or conference do not help us to love God
and love our neighbor in our daily life, to live
our vocation well, they have not helped us to be
spiritual people. Christian spiritual experience
should equip us to live daily life better, the
daily life we were called to.
It should also help us to live Christian life
for the long haul. Much of life is routine and
should be. We cannot constantly live in a state
of excitement or constantly have everything new
and interesting, whether humanly or spiritually.
The spiritual experience we need is the kind
that persists through ups and downs. Sickness or
discouragement may make our experience of life
“flat” or “sour”, but it does not have to
eliminate our having a personal relationship
with God or our confidence that he is with us or
our making a good spiritualized response to
difficult circumstances.
Dry periods are also part of spiritual living.
Even though our emotions in relationship to God
and spiritual things may seem arid or
desiccated, we can still live in a spiritualized
way. In fact, it seems to be true that God uses
such times for bringing us to a new level of
spiritual life. A “dry” relationship with God
over a period of time, a dry prayer life, forces
us to choose whether God himself is more
important to us than “what we get out of” prayer
or “what we get out of” our spiritual life.
Moreover, as we get older we experience life
differently and so experience spiritual life
differently. We need an approach to spiritual
experience that allows us to be in a good
relationship with God when we experience all of
life in a quieter less energetic way. If our
model for Christian fervor is the response of a
newly converted young person, we will only be
able to see our spiritual life as one of steady
decline.
We need a broad enough understanding of
experience, one that takes in the many ways we
experience people and things in the course of
human life. Otherwise, we will be often tempted
to think that we have lost our relationship with
God, or at least lost a vital one, despite the
fact that it is still there. Nonetheless, we do
need to come to know the Lord and then live in
the confidence that he is with us and accessible
to us. It is part of God’s plan that we have an
experiential relationship with him.
This gives us our second conclusion. Our
charismatic spirituality aims at our becoming
spiritual(ized) people, people who love God and
neighbor with all of our life for the rest of
our life and are enabled to do that better
partly because of having an experiential
relationship with God.
This
article is adapted from the book Charismatic
Spirituality: The Work of the Holy Spirit in
Scripture and Practice, Chapter 2,
copyright © 2004 by Stephen B. Clark and
published by Servant Books, a division of
Saint Anthony Messenger Press. Used with
permission.
Steve Clark has been a
founding leader, author, and teacher for
the charismatic renewal since its
inception in 1967. He has authored a
number of books, including Baptized
in the Spirit and Spiritual Gifts,
Finding New Life in the Spirit,
Growing in Faith, and Knowing
God’s Will, Building Christian
Communities, Man and Woman in Christ.
Steve is past president of the Sword
of the Spirit, an
international ecumenical association of
charismatic covenant communities
worldwide. He is the founder of the Servants
of the Word, an ecumenical
international missionary brotherhood of
men living single for the Lord.