Growing in Truth & Love

Years ago, Toys ‘R Us had a commercial jingle with the following words:

I don’t want to grow up, I’m a Toys ‘R Us kid

There’s a million toys at Toys ‘R Us that I can play with.

From bikes to trains to video games, it’s the biggest toy store there is.

I don’t want to grow up because if I did, I couldn’t be a Toys “R Us kid.

While the lyrics may have been new, the sentiments expressed in the song certainly weren’t. J.M. Barrie captured a similar disposition when he wrote Peter Pan. More recently, others have articulated the growing inclination among young people to adopt this philosophy as a mantra for their life. Despite the desire of many children to speed the maturation process along, somewhere along the way, many lose their ambition and instead revert to attempting to delay the assumption of responsibility that adulthood brings.

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Scripture, however, is filled with exhortation for the need to grow up – not only in terms of our earthly responsibilities, but in terms of our eternal ones as well. One of the ways that we demonstrate this maturity is in our relationships with one another. As Paul writes in Ephesians 4:14-15:

so that we may no longer be children, tossed to and fro by the waves and carried about by every wind of doctrine, by human cunning, by craftiness in deceitful schemes. Rather, speaking the truth in love, we are to grow up in every way into him who is the head, into Christ…”

The contrast made here is perhaps unexpected. Spiritually speaking, children are those that are easily swayed by those around them. This does not come as a surprise as it is not an unfamiliar sight to see those who are immature in their faith be easily convinced of things that are contrary to Scripture. In contrast, it doesn’t state that mature Christians aren’t (although one can make the case from Scripture that mature Christians do in fact stand strong in the faith.) Instead, Paul writes that those who are “grown” in Christ are those that proactively speak truth in love to one another. It’s the willingness to exhort, encourage, and correct each other that sets apart the mature from the immature. If we do that – if we spur each other on with the truth of God’s Word, and sharpen one another with the double-edge sword of truth, than we will be strengthen in the Lord. Those who provide this admonition will grow in their faith, as will those who receive it.

Doing this requires two things – it requires growing in the knowledge of the Truth, and growing in love. As we mature in these things, not only will we know what needs to be said, but we will be prone to say it in such a way that we are motivated not by our own knowledge, but by loving concern for those God has placed in our lives. As such, not only will we be doing the work that God has called us to do, but we will be helping others do so as well (Eph. 4:16).

It can be a hard thing to do – to speak the truth in love to those around us. And like those kids in the Toys ‘R Us commercial we may be tempted to say “I don’t want to grow up.” But God has called us to something greater than immaturity, and as we are willing to lovingly speak the truth, we and those He’s given us relationships with, will grow in Him.

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Unmitigated Confidence

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When my mom was younger she had a dog named Gidget. Gidget liked to be around people but my grandfather had a strict rule that the dog was not allowed in the dining area while they were eating. Gidget’s solution to this was to wait just on the outside of the entryway and to poke her head into the room where everyone was seated at the table. Until my grandfather looked her way. Then she would immediately turn her head the other way. Apparently, the dog thought that it only mattered if she did the right thing if my grandfather’s eyes were directly on her. Otherwise, she would test the boundaries.

Unfortunately, many of us approach our lives in a similar manner to Gidget the dog. When we know our actions are on display, when people are watching us, we are more inclined to do what God expects of His children. When we are in the quietness of our solitude, when we neglect to remember that even when we are in alone He is still well aware of what we do, we are prone to test the boundaries. This is the reason that one of the favorite accusations against Christians is that they are hypocrites. Unfortunately, many behave differently at church on Sunday than they do the rest of the week.

In his second letter to the Thessalonicans, Paul didn’t have such a concern. As he writes to them:

And we have confidence in the Lord about you, that you are doing and will do the things that we command. (2 Thess. 3:4)

Even though Paul wasn’t with them, he had confidence in their obedience. Not only in the present, but in the time to come as well! His statement wasn’t couched in qualifiers or hesitations. He was so sure of the Thessalonicans desire to live a godly live, that he knew that they would be doing the work of God – whether he was there to watch them or not!

Wouldn’t it be awesome if the same could be said of us? How would people’s perceptions of Christians change if they were just as committed to representing Christ when they were with their friends at church as they were when they were with their colleagues at work? What if pastors and church leaders could have confidence in their flocks’ obedience to God’s Word, even if the difficult moments, even when the temptation was intense? Would this not only alter the world’s perceptions of Christ-followes, but also change our churches?

May we increasingly be more like the Thessalonican church, and less like Gidget the dog. May our obedience to God’s commands not depend on the circumstance we are in, but on the call God has placed on our lives.

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