Christian
Love and Human
Desire
by
Mark Kinzer
.
This article
is adapted
from the
September 1982
Issue of
Pastoral
Renewal: A
Resource for
Christian
Leaders,
published by
Servant
Ministries,
Ann Arbor,
Michigan, USA.
It was
developed as a
practical
scriptural
based teaching
resource for
pastoral
leaders of
Christian
communities,
churches, and
outreach
ministries. -
ed.
Desire:
two views
Desire is a
universal
feature of
human
existence.
Each of us has
strong desires
that color our
thoughts and
influence our
decisions –
desires for
food, drink,
sex, warmth,
companionship,
success,
possessions,
honor.
Many
Christians
fall into
extremes when
they examine
what part
desires should
play in their
lives. On one
side are the
stoics, on the
other side are
the selfists.
Stoic
Christians
adopt the view
common in
Greco-Roman
philosophy
that desires
should be
uprooted.
Their ideal of
virtue is
detachment –
indifference
regarding gain
or loss,
health or
sickness,
success or
failure. This
view is not so
common among
Christians
today, but at
one time it
enjoyed a wide
following.
More common
among modern
Christians is
the selfist
attitude.
According to
this view,
one's primary
aim in life is
to be
self-fulfilled
and
well-adjusted,
and the way to
attain
fulfillment
and adjustment
is through the
maximal
satisfaction
of one's
desires. It is
considered
unhealthy to
disregard or
subordinate
one's desires.
At best, it is
thought, such
action will
cause the true
personality to
wither away
rather than
blossom into
full maturity.
At worst, it
is feared,
repression of
desires will
produce
serious
psychological
dis¬orders. In
the selfist
view,
satisfying our
desires is
crucial for
our own health
and growth and
is also an act
of love toward
others
because, the
reasoning
goes,
self-fulfillment
and positive
adjustment
increase our
contribution
to society.
There are thus
two extreme
positions
concerning
desires. One
is suspicious
of and hostile
to them, the
other is
sympathetic
and favorable.
Is either of
these
positions the
Christian one?
Let us look at
the biblical
teaching for
guidance to
resolve this
question.
Lusts
There are
several words
in the New
Testament that
convey the
meaning of
desire,
longing,
yearning. A
study of one
of the most
frequently
used of these
words, epithumia,
reveals the
biblical
teaching on
desire.
Epithumia
literally
means to set
one's heart or
soul on
something. It
refers to an
exceptionally
strong desire.
The word
occurs over 50
times in
various forms
in the New
Testament
writings, with
diverse
connotations.
In many places
epithumia
carries a
distinctly
pejorative
connotation.
In these
contexts the
word refers to
works of the
flesh such as
jealousy,
enmity,
covetousness,
and desire for
illicit sexual
pleasures. It
is sometimes
translated
"lust" or
"passion":
"Therefore God
gave them up
in the lusts
of their
hearts to
impurity, to
the
dishonoring of
their bodies"
(Romans 1:24),
and "each
person is
tempted when
he is lured
and enticed by
his own
desire. Then
desire when it
has conceived
gives birth to
sin; and sin
when it is
full grown
brings forth
death" (James
1:14-15).
(Also see
Titus 3:3 and
1 Peter 1:14.)
Desires are
obviously very
dangerous. The
image in the
first chapter
of James is
particularly
graphic: epithumia
is the mother
of sin, which
in turn is the
mother of
death.
A similar
passage in 2
Peter speaks
of our
escaping from
the
"corruption
that is in the
world because
of passion"
(2:4),
indicating the
close relation
between epithumia
and death (a
grandmother-grandaughter
relationship,
according to
James). The
stoic attitude
to desires
seems to be
confirmed by
these
passages,
found
liberally
sprinkled
throughout the
New Testament.
Godly
desires
However, there
is another
side to this
word in the
New Testament.
Epithumia
sometimes
describes a
godly and
commendable
desire,
experienced by
angels,
prophets,
apostles, and
the Messiah
himself. For
instance:
"Truly,
I say to you,
many prophets
and righteous
men longed to
see what you
see, and did
not see it"
(Matthew.
13:7).
"The
things which
have now been
announced to
you . . .
through the
Holy Spirit
sent from
heaven, things
into which
angels long to
look" (2 Peter
1:12).
"My
desire is to
depart and be
with Christ"
(Philippians
1:23).
And
he said to
them, "I have
earnestly
desired to eat
this passover
with you
before I
suffer" (Luke
22:15).
Epithumia
is used in a
particularly
striking way
in 1 Timothy
3:1, where
Paul discusses
the office of
bishop: "If
any one
aspires to the
office of
bishop, he
desires a
noble task."
From these
passages it is
evident that epithumia
is not always
evil. In fact,
it is
portrayed as
the right and
proper
response to
that which is
good, noble,
and
intrinsically
desirable: the
revelation of
Christ, our
heavenly life
in God after
death, the
office of
shepherd in
God's church.
The stoic
approach is
unsound. The
Lord does not
want to
liberate his
people from
all desires.
Instead, he
wants to free
them from evil
desires and
fill them with
holy ones. The
Lord
disapproves of
the "desires
of the flesh,"
the passions
of "our former
ignorance,"
the sinful
desires which
characterize
human nature
apart from the
redeeming
grace of Jesus
Christ. He
does not
disapprove of
all human
desires.
Disorder
From the
biblical point
of view, there
are two main
problems with
human desires.
The first
problem
concerns the
object of
desire. As a
consequence of
the fall,
human desires
have become
twisted and
distorted so
that we
commonly
desire things
which are both
harmful for us
and
displeasing to
God.
This is what
Paul means
when he says
that "the
desires of the
flesh are
against the
Spirit, and
the desires of
the Spirit are
against the
flesh"
(Galatians
5:17). The
desires of
sinful human
nature lead to
what Paul
calls the
"works of the
flesh":
"fornication,
impurity,
licentiousness,
idolatry,
sorcery,
enmity,
strife,
jealousy,
anger,
selfishness,
dissension,
party spirit,
envy,
drunkenness,
carousing, and
the like"
(Galatians
5:19-21).
The desires
imparted by
the Holy
Spirit
directly
oppose the
desires of the
rebellious
flesh. The
Spirit imparts
a desire for
righteousness,
prayer, love
of the
brethren,
knowledge of
God, and the
second coming
of Christ.
Desire is not
the problem:
it is the
object of
desire that is
the problem.
However, in
another sense,
desire itself
is the
problem. The
fall of the
human race led
not only to a
distortion in
the objects of
our desires,
but also to a
disorder in
the nature of
desire itself.
Desire became
unruly,
ungovernable,
determined to
dominate and
direct and
control.
Formerly
valuable as a
servant,
desire now
became man's
lord.
"We
ourselves were
once foolish,
disobedient,
led astray,
slaves to
var¬ious
passions and
pleasures
(Titus 3:3).
"Whatever
overcomes a
man, to that
he is
enslaved" (2
Peter 2:18).
"We
once lived in
the passions
of our flesh,
following the
desires of
body and mind,
and so we were
by nature
children of
wrath, like
the rest of
mankind"
(Ephesians
2:3).
Other
New Testament
passages speak
disparagingly
of "following"
our desires
(Jude 16-18; 2
Peter 3:3). Of
course, this
applies
especially to
the desires of
the flesh.
However, it is
also true for
more
commendable
spiritual
desires. It is
wrong for
desires – even
righteous ones
– to rule and
govern us.
This is
evident from
several verses
in Paul's
letter to the
Philippians:
"Yet which I
shall choose I
cannot tell. I
am hard
pressed
between the
two. My desire
is to be with
Christ, for
that is far
better. But to
remain in the
flesh is more
necessary on
your account.
Convinced of
this, I know
that I shall
remain and
continue with
you all, for
your progress
and joy in the
faith"
(Philippians
1:22-25).
Paul desires
to depart from
this life and
be with the
Lord, but he
decides that
it is better
for him to
remain in
order to build
up the church.
Even such a
holy and
spiritual
desire as this
must be
subjected to a
higher
standard of
conduct – the
standard of
God's law of
love. Thus,
scripture
teaches that
desires should
not
automatically
govern
behavior, even
when they are
apparently
virtuous and
holy. condemns
desires
without
qualification
nor embraces
them as the
key to
self-fulfillment
and the
infallible
guide for
human conduct.
Desires can be
helpful or
harmful, holy
or unholy,
spiritual or
fleshly. Even
at its best,
desire should
not be the
main factor
determining
human
behavior.
I know some
Christians who
think they
have found a
foolproof
method for
discerning the
will of God
for their
lives:
whatever they
desire most
must not be
God's will,
and whatever
they desire
least must
certainly be
his will. Now,
it must be
acknowledged
that the Lord
often calls
his servants
to do things
that run
contrary to
their
preferences
and desires,
sometimes
because their
desires are
disordered or
misleading,
sometimes
because he
wants to test
their love and
obedience.
However, the
conviction
that God's
will must
always
conflict with
human desires
is an
inadequate
rule of thumb
for receiving
divine
guidance. When
a Christian's
life is in
good order by
the grace of
God, his
desires will
often coincide
with God's
desires.
Problems
Desires can
also be a
major
hindrance to
living for the
Lord. They can
make it very
difficult for
people to
follow the
commandments
and the
guidance of
God. This most
obviously
applies to
desires that
have a sinful
object:
desires for
sexual
immorality,
desires for
drug-induced
euphoria,
desires to see
others suffer.
However, the
Christian life
can also be
derailed by
more neutral
desires.
For example,
Phil has a
strong desire
to work as a
salesman for a
particular
pharmaceutical
corporation.
This desire is
neutral in
itself –
intrinsically
neither good
or evil. If
this desire
leads Phil to
accept a
position
involving the
kind of
traveling and
overtime that
would prevent
him from
caring
properly for
his wife and
children or
participating
in the life of
the church,
then this
neutral desire
has probably
ensnared Phil
in a wrong
decision. Or
again, Sarah
Connors
experiences
desire to read
mystery
novels. The
desire is
neutral in
itself (some
may argue this
point!). But
if this desire
leads Sarah to
read novels
each evening
till two a.m.
and be sleepy,
distracted,
and unfaithful
in her
responsibilities
during the
day, then this
neutral desire
has led Sarah
off the track.
At times even
virtuous and
holy desires
can hinder us
from doing the
will of God. I
know a
Christian man
who has a
remarkable
love for
prayer. Given
the
opportunity,
he can pray
for hours at a
stretch
without
tremendous
effort. This
is
unquestionably
a wonderful
God-given
desire and
ability. But
it can get him
into trouble.
Once, when he
worked as an
administrator
in a Christian
organization,
he was taking
lengthy breaks
and going to a
local church
to pray. As a
result, he was
accomplishing
little at
work. When
admonished by
his supervisor
for his poor
performance on
the job, my
friend
suddenly
realized that
his fervent
desire for
prayer could
actually pose
a temptation
needing to be
resisted. Even
the purest and
most lofty
desires can
prevent
Christians
from
accomplishing
the will of
God
Rationalization
One of the
most subtle
yet common
ways that
desires hinder
Christians is
by disguising
themselves in
spiritual or
reasonable
garb. When we
allow this to
mislead us, we
are
rationalizing.
It is
remarkable how
ingenious we
can be at
devising
spiritual and
sober reasons
to explain why
we should do
those things
that we
strongly
desire to do.
This is the
grave danger
of
rationalization
– it involves
not only
deception of
others but
deception of
ourselves.
Human desires
are shrewd and
deceitful.
They win their
way as much
through
persuasion as
through force.
Strong desire
disposes one
to succumb
even to
shallow
persuasion.
Desire
conquers, yet
we may never
fully realize
that it has
won – and that
we have lost.
If Christians
are to
maximize the
good and
minimize the
evil in their
desires, they
must begin by
accepting a
crucial and
fundamental
truth: desires
should be
servants and
not lords.
Desires can
help us to do
the things we
ought to do;
we should
never allow
them to usurp
the place of
the law of God
and the Spirit
of God and
become the
criterion of
our conduct.
What is a
Christian's
criterion of
conduct? Jesus
sums up the
law in the two
great
commandments:
love God and
love your
neighbor (Mark
11:28-34). The
apostle Paul
similarly
states that
love is the
fulfillment of
the law
(Romans
13:8-10,
Galatians
5:14). A
Christian is
to be guided
by love rather
than by his
desires.
That statement
may seem like
a
contradiction,
for "Is not
love itself a
type of
desire?" It is
certainly true
that the Greek
word eros
has to do with
desire, but
that is not
the case with
agape, the key
New Testament
word for love.
The love that
guides
Christian
conduct is not
a desire or an
emotion.
Instead, it is
a commitment
to serve
others, to put
others first,
to lay down
our lives for
others, even
as Jesus laid
down his life
for us.
We
can be changed
Most
Christians
need to battle
regularly with
unruly
desires. It is
therefore
crucial that
pastoral
leaders know
how to help
people
overcome their
desires and
live in
righteousness,
love, and the
Holy Spirit.
It is also
useful for
pastoral
leaders to
know how to
help people
grow in the
Lord so that
their unruly
desires change
into or become
overshadowed
by submissive,
supportive,
spiritual
desires.
Christians
need not
resign
themselves
fatalistically
to a state of
perpetual
conflict with
rebellious and
unrighteous
desires. As
people mature
in Christ
their
"constellation
of desires"
should
gradually
change such
that they more
and more
coincide with
God's desires.
We may never
reach perfect
harmony
between our
desires and
God's but
substantial
change is
possible.
Unfortunately,
some
Christians try
to change
their desires
in a way that
does as much
damage as
good. This
happens when
people
recognize that
they have a
strong desire
for something
that others
would find
shameful or
repulsive.
They then
decide to
change this
desire in
order to avoid
social
disapproval. A
serious
internal
conflict then
arises. The
reason for the
conflict is
that they have
not actually
renounced the
old desire
from the
heart. Their
predominant
concern is
merely to
escape
ostracism.
They are
reacting to an
external
pressure
rather than
choosing a
deep-seated
internal
change.
I have seen
this pattern
of conflict
develop among
people having
problems with
sexual desires
– a habit of
viewing or
reading
pornographic
material, for
instance. The
person who
wants to
change merely
to avoid
social stigma
experiences
little
progress and
intense
internal
conflict. On
the other
hand, the
person who
wants to
change because
he or she
desires to
please God can
usually put
the habit
aside fairly
simply. The
key lies in a
genuine change
of heart.
In scripture
"heart" does
not refer
primarily to
the emotions,
as in
contemporary
Western
culture.
Instead
scripture
views the
heart as the
core of the
human person,
the seat of
one's
fundamental
orientation in
life. The
heart has
thoughts
(Hebrews 4:12)
intentions
(Hebrews
4:12), and
purposes (1
Corinthians
4:5). Any
significant
and lasting
change must
begin with the
heart.
A person who
renounces a
particular
desire from
the heart can
experience a
gradual
reorientation
of his or her
set of
desires. This
is not a
repression of
desires in
reaction to an
externally
imposed
pressure, but
a fundamental
reordering of
desires that
begins at the
center of
one's life and
flows
outwards. Of
course, in a
certain sense
the change
occurs in
response to an
external force
– the
revelation of
God's desires.
However this
external force
produces a
genuine
internal
change when we
respond to it
sincerely from
the heart and
in the power
of the
indwelling
Holy Spirit.
In my own life
I can see that
my righteous
desires are
much stronger
and my
unrighteous
ones much
weaker today
than they were
when I first
became a
Christian in
my college
days. On
occasion
unrighteous
and unruly
desires still
raise their
heads. Some of
them will
probably
accompany me
to the end of
my earthly
life.
Nonetheless,
significant
change has
occurred, and
more will
occur in the
future.
1.
Love God
Pastoral
leaders and
mentors can
help fellow
Christians
take several
steps that
will
facilitate a
positive
change in
their desires.
The first step
is to set
one's heart on
the Lord
himself, on
loving him and
his ways, on
growing in a
personal
relationship
with him.
For many
Christians God
is a distant
and impersonal
force who must
be served and
obeyed
dutifully but
is never
really known.
In scripture,
to know God is
to personally
encounter him,
to taste in
experience of
his goodness
and his power
and his
holiness – "to
know the love
of Christ
which
surpasses
knowledge"
(Ephesians
3:19). This
type of
knowledge
cannot be
separated from
love and
faith. When we
know the Lord
in this way
our obedience
to him ceases
to be a
dutiful
gesture of
homage to a
remote deity
and becomes
instead an
expression of
a loving
personal
relationship
with a Father
who is king of
the universe.
As Jesus said,
"If you love
me, you will
keep my
commandments"
(John 14:15,
21, 23;
15:10).
Loving
obedience such
as this leads
a Christian
not only to
desire to do
God's will,
but even to
desire what
God desires.
It leads one
to respond
readily and
eagerly to his
word, to "run
in the way" of
his commands
(Psalm
119:32). An
earnest desire
to please him
should grow to
the point
where it
overwhelms all
contrary
desires and
holds them
captive.
In a similar
way Christians
can cultivate
the
reorientation
of their
desires toward
loving other
people. Some
Christians
interpret
agape as the
sort of dry,
detached,
impersonal
service that
would allow
one to say,
"Oh yes, I
love Fred, but
I'll never
like the man."
This attitude
invites
conflicting
desires.
Instead, we
should set our
heart on
knowing others
as well as
serving them,
laying down
our lives for
others within
a loving
personal
relationship,
even as Jesus
gave his life
out of a
genuine
committed
personal love
(John 13:1).
Christians
should
actively
cultivate
relationships
with those the
Lord calls
them to love.
Then they will
find their
desires
increasingly
supporting
them in living
a life of
committed
love.
2.
Surrender
A second step
that will help
people
reorient their
desires is for
them to
surrender to
God's will
completely and
from the
heart.
Conflict
between God's
desires and
ours sometimes
indicates that
we still hold
a tight grip
on certain
areas of our
life: we are
unwilling to
abandon
ourselves
totally to
God.
For example,
in the past I
had a strong
and
undisciplined
desire to
engage in a
particular
form of
Christian
work. The
desire seemed
to be from the
Lord, but it
was not yet
time for it to
be realized. I
found it very
difficult to
submit to
God's will in
the matter and
desire what he
desired –
which was to
defer my
calling till a
future date,
to be revealed
by him in his
good pleasure.
As I prayed
about the
matter I began
to see my true
condition – I
had not really
surrendered
the entire
area to him. I
wanted to
serve the
Lord, but I
wanted to do
it my way and
in my timing.
As I repented
for my lack of
abandonment I
found a new
freedom to
accept God's
will with joy
and even to
desire what he
desired.
Why do
Christians
hold on to
things rather
than
surrendering
them to God?
Often the
reason lies in
a lack of
trust. In my
own case, I
feared that I
would lose
precious years
of my life and
be less
fruitful once
I turned my
hands to the
task. I felt
as if I needed
to act to
preserve the
potential
fruitfulness
of my service.
How absurd!
Couldn't I
trust God to
provide the
fruit at the
proper time?
My part is to
focus on doing
whatever he
calls me to do
when he calls
me to do it.
At this point
it is
important to
distinguish
desires from
compulsions
and
addictions.
For various
reasons
desires can
develop into
compulsions –
habitual
actions that
are extremely
difficult to
overcome. To
bring a
change, the
person must
repent from
the heart. But
there may also
be the need
for
deliverance
from spiritual
bondage, and
then for help
gradually to
reverse the
pattern. The
pastoral
leader must
distinguish
between the
case in which
a person has
not
fundamentally
decided to
renounce a
desire from
the case in
which a person
has made the
renunciation
but needs
further help.
This
distinction
must be made
in helping
someone with
an actual
addiction,
such as
alcohol. A
complicating
factor where
addiction is
involved is
that physical
or
psychological
craving may
have replaced
any other
desire, and
the person may
actually have
come to detest
what he also
continues to
desire.
3.
Honesty
A third step
in reorienting
desires is
honesty. All
Christians
experience
some wayward
desires which
conflict with
God's will. An
honest
acknowledgement
of wrong
desires will
lead to a
greater
progress in
learning to
live with them
and even in
changing them.
The greatest
obstacle to
honesty about
desires is
false shame.
People are
sometimes
ashamed of
what they
desire, and
therefore try
to hide it.
Many people
would feel
some
embarrassment
at admitting
that they do
certain things
to impress
people and be
the center of
attention, or
admitting that
they have
lied, or that
they have a
desire to quit
everything and
travel around
the world.
Often people
are especially
ashamed of
their sexual
desires.
Shame is the
right response
to sinful
behavior. Adam
and Eve
naturally felt
shame for
their guilt,
as illustrated
by their
sudden sense
of nakedness
(Genesis 1:25;
3:7, 10).
However, shame
is not the
right response
to desires.
Often, wayward
desires are
only
temptations to
sin rather
than sin
itself. Often
they are
merely natural
human desires
that are
inappropriate
in the given
situation.
Christians
should be
discreet and
modest in
acknowledging
desires, but
they should
not be
ashamed.
To whom should
people
honestly
acknowledge
their desires?
First,
Christians
should be
honest with
themselves.
Rather than
either
rationalizing
or repressing
their desires,
they should
face up to
them and
acknowledge
them for what
they are.
Secondly, they
should be
honest with
the Lord.
Rather than
waiting for
their desires
to change
before
speaking to
the Lord about
them, they
should present
their unruly
desires before
him, admitting
them openly in
prayer, and
seeking help
from him in
managing and
even changing
them.
Thirdly, they
should be
honest with a
brother or
sister in
Christ. Rather
than keeping
their desires
simply between
themselves and
God, they
should
acknowledge
them before a
trusted
counselor,
eagerly
receiving the
advice or
support they
might give.
Those who
honestly
acknowledge
their desires
to themselves,
the Lord, and
another person
will grow in
self-control
and even see
their desires
change.
Pastoral
leaders and
mentors
facilitate
honesty by
listening
patiently and
attentively to
people who
wish to
discuss
embarrassing
desires,
rather than
cutting them
off with a
hasty
admonition.
Often the
pastoral
leader should
arrange for
the person to
be part of a
support group.
Sometimes this
is more
beneficial to
the person
than the
pastoral
leader working
directly with
him or her. In
other cases a
person can be
helped by an
intensive
pastoral
effort. To get
control of a
particular
desire, a
person might
profit from
having some
one person to
talk with
regularly who
offers help,
not simply
correction.
The two can
make an
agreement that
the one being
helped will
tell the other
when he fails
to do what is
right; the
other can
offer frequent
counsel and
prayer.
4.
Discipline
A fourth step
in reorienting
desires is to
work for
change.
Christians can
gradually
master many of
their errant
desires
through the
prudent
exercise of
discipline and
self-denial.
As with
emotions in
general,
desires can be
compared to
children.
Sometimes the
right way to
help a child
is to show
patience and
forbearance;
at other times
it is better
to discipline
the child and
resist his or
her stubborn
and rebellious
will. In
similar
fashion it is
sometimes
helpful to
bring our
desires into
submission
through force.
A persistent
refusal to
yield to
desires
weakens them
and increases
one's control.
It is
important to
help the
person we are
guiding
determine
whether a
problem with
desires stems
from too much
or too little
control. Some
people are
very
controlled. To
encourage them
to fast for
problems with
their desires
will only
cause more
anxiety and
over
scrupulosity.
Other people
lack control
in much of
their lives.
They are
unable to say
no to
themselves. It
is helpful for
them to pick
one simple
area, to
decide to
control it,
and to get it
into shape.
They might
start with
almost
anything –
eating,
watching
media,
impulsive
buying.
Working to
change desires
is not the
most important
step in
reorienting
them. Setting
one's heart on
the Lord,
surrendering
to his will,
and honestly
acknowledging
one's desires
are all of
greater
importance.
Nonetheless,
working for
change is also
very helpful.
Just as Paul
worked to
pummel his
body and
subdue it (1
Corinthians
9:27), so
Christians
should work to
subdue their
desires and
bring them
under the
reign of
Christ.
Impart
confidence
Finally, I
would offer
the following
pastoral
observations.
First, it is
often helpful
to encourage
people who are
having a
struggle with
unruly and
sinful desires
not to take
their desires
too seriously.
Usually people
are capable of
doing the
right thing
even when
their desires
oppose them. A
person may
feel tired,
depressed, and
unenthusiastic
about prayer,
but he or she
can still
choose to
pray. Better
to pray and
forget about
contrary
inclinations
than to fret
introspectively
about one's
irreligious
desires and
never actually
come before
the Lord in
prayer.
We should
guide people
in dealing
confidently
with their
disorderly
desires.
Several years
ago I
counseled a
young man who
experienced
strong
perverse
sexual
attraction As
long as he was
anxious about
the desires
and terrified
of yielding
them, he made
little
progress.
breakthrough
came when he
realize that
his anxiety
was more of a
problem than
his desires.
As he grew
more confident
and peaceful
about dealing
with the
disorder, the
disorder
itself began
to wane.
Second, when
we are helping
someone make a
decision, we
should teach
them to pay
some attention
to morally
neutral and
positive
desires.
Christians
should regard
their
inclinations
as data to be
taken into
account with
all the other
relevant data.
A desire for
something can
be point in
its favor, for
desire helps
person act
with greater
zeal and
vigor. For
example, most
people perform
more
successfully
at a job they
like than at
one they
dislike.
Therefore,
desire for a
particular job
is relevant
piece of data.
The third
pastoral
observation
also concerns
people's
neutral and
positive
desires. While
many pastor
leaders are at
least
sometimes
willing to
steer people
away from
wrong or
clearly
inappropriate
desires, they
are very
reluctant to
offer advice
that goes
against people
following good
desires. Few
pastors would
try to
dissuade a
young person
from pursuing
a legitimate
career which
they strongly
desired – as
Randy's past
did when he
recommended
that Randy
leave medicine
for pastoral
ministry. We
too seldom
question
whether a
person's
desires are in
fact matched
by gifts. Many
Christians
have desires
such as
wanting to go
into full-time
Christian
work, to be a
missionary, to
be a minister
or priest. But
we know from
experience
that not
everyone who
feels thus is
called.
Without
pressuring
people, there
is a place in
pastoral
ministry for
advising
people to put
aside good
desires,
either to
avoid taking a
mistaken path
or for the
greater glory
of God.
If, in
response to
such counsel,
a person
freely and
from the heart
chooses to go
against his or
her strongest
desire, he or
she can expect
the decision
to be
eventually
followed by a
shift in
desires. Randy
made his
choice several
years ago. It
is clear to
him now that
he made the
right
decision. In
retrospect he
sees the
greater value
of the gifts
and abilities
he has as an
evangelist and
pastor than
those he has
for medicine.
His desires
have altered.
He would not
want to be
doing anything
else than what
he is doing
now.
In conclusion,
desires are a
gift from God.
They can
easily get
Christians
into trouble,
but they can
also be an aid
in loving and
serving the
Lord. God's
intention is
not to root
them out, but
to work in
Christians'
lives so that
more and more
they desire
what he does.
> See related article
on
in
the Living
Bulwark
archives.
This
article by (c)
Mark Kinzer is
adapted from
the September
1982 Issue of
Pastoral
Renewal: A
Resource for
Christian
Leaders,
published by
Servant
Ministries,
Ann Arbor,
Michigan, USA.
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