"This book explains what spiritual
maturity is, why we should pursue it, and how we can
reach it. Readers are treated to a compelling vision
of what mature Christian discipleship looks like and
at the same time given practical means to implement
that vision in real life... A significant
contribution to a hugely important subject for the
church today."
- Dr. Daniel Keating, Sacred Heart Major Seminary
The following interview was
originally published by Eerdmans Publishing
Co. in their blog: EerdWord.wordpress.com.
Used with permission.
What makes From Here to
Maturity such a unique contribution?
There are lots of good books on spiritual growth and
lots of good books on leading churches. Some books
focus on youth, others on adults. Meanwhile, much
research suggests that American Christians of all
ages do not understand what spiritual maturity is
and are not sure how to get there. This book
provides a focused look at spiritual maturity as
taught in the New Testament and a straightforward,
practical process for helping individuals and whole
congregations grow to spiritual maturity. And it
shows how adolescents, emerging adults, and older
adults can all work together to help one another
mature in Christ. A growing body of research shows
that the right kinds of youth ministries can help
the whole church grow up, and this book provides
practical advice for how to create that kind of
youth ministry in your church.
What’s one thing that not
enough people know or understand
about spiritual maturity?
According to the New Testament, spiritual maturity
is attainable (see 1 Corinthians 3:1-4; Ephesians
4:11-16; Philippians 3:2-16; Hebrews 5:11-6:1). The
exhortations to grow up that we find in these
passages clearly assume that the readers should
already have become mature. Such exhortations make
no sense if maturity is impossible to achieve in
this life. We would be more faithful to the biblical
witness if we started thinking of spiritual maturity
as basic competence in the Christian life. It is the
foundational stage of spiritual formation that makes
further growth in holiness possible.
Whom do you envision reading
From Here to Maturity?
The book is designed for pastors, youth pastors, and
other church leaders. My dream is that church
leadership teams would read the book together. The
last chapter provides a step by step process for
assessing the current state of spiritual maturity in
your congregation and discerning some strategic next
steps to take together. I tried hard to make
realistic recommendations and to describe a process
that could be implemented with a reasonable level of
effort. Some books establish a rigid paradigm and
suggest that church leaders need to change
everything they are doing. That’s not the approach
here. Instead, my hope is that church leaders will
look at everything they are already doing through
the lens of spiritual maturity and make targeted
changes. Churches are more like gardens to be
cultivated than they are like math problems to be
solved. Small changes made consistently over time
really do make a big difference.
What difficulties did you face
in writing From Here to Maturity?
I knew that it was important to talk about emotional
maturity in the book, but the topic of emotions in
the Christian life is vast, confusing, and sometimes
even contentious. Even so, given the fact that I
think disordered emotions are among the most common
manifestations of spiritual immaturity in our age, I
wanted to provide some substantive guidance on the
topic.
As it turns out, I
found a growing consensus among philosophers,
psychologists, and Christian spiritual formation
writers regarding what is being called the cognitive
theory of emotions. This way of understanding how
emotions work is actually very ancient, and is the
dominant way that Christians have thought about
emotions throughout the ages. For example, Jonathan
Edwards and John Wesley both taught about emotions
in this way.
Understanding
emotions not as fundamentally irrational and opposed
to thinking, but rather as being in constant,
dynamic interaction with our thoughts and our will,
helps us make sense of our lived experiences with
emotions. Even more importantly, this understanding
of emotions leads to better approaches to spiritual
formation. As we do our part to submit to his
working in our lives, God can and does transform our
emotional patterns so that they become resources
for, rather than obstacles to, spiritual growth.
What’s next for you?
In the first chapter of From Here to Maturity, I
provide a sketch of the extremely difficult and
perhaps even broken process of growing from
adolescence to adulthood in America today. For my
next project, I’d like to dig deeper into this
problem to discover what exactly has changed in the
process of growing up, why it has changed, and what
that means for the church. There has been a lot of
interest in recent years in the problem of emerging
adults leaving the church. I think that problem is
just one symptom of a deeper sickness in our society
that makes it harder for Christians in all stages of
life to become the human beings God wants us to be.
There is a scholarly conversation out there about
changes in the patterns of human development and in
how people’s identities develop, but I have yet to
see that conversation translated into terms that can
guide pastors, youth pastors, parents, and other
concerned Christians in their work. That’s the kind
of writing I love to do, so I’m looking forward to
seeing where that research leads me.
From
Here
to Maturity: Overcoming the Juvenilization of
American Christianity, by Thomas E.
Bergler, published 2014 by William B. Eerdmans
Publishing Company, Grand Rapids, Michigan
/ Cambridge, U.K., paperback,
189 pages. Book can be ordered
from publisher.
Thomas Bergler is
professor of ministry and missions at Huntington
University, Huntington, Indiana, U.S.A. He is a
frequent speaker for Kairos and Sword of the
Spirit conferences.
His 2012 book The
Juvenilization
of American Christianity was featured in Christianity
Today and Preaching
and won an award of merit from Christianity
Today.