Singular Reduction

We have all probably been there. We are sharing about something that has happened in our lives, and the person who is supposed to be listening is instead jumping in to share about how what happened to us is similar to what happened to them. Or maybe we’ve been in the situation where we go to seek advice and the person only wants to tell us what worked for them, even if that solution is not as relevant to our particular problem. The reason these things occur is that we are most comfortable speaking from our own experience. If something happened to us, or something worked for us, we feel that it has the “Good Housekeeping Stamp of Approval” to be illustrative for someone else.

However, there’s a danger to this tendency when we apply it unthinkingly to our spiritual life because God is working in each of our lives in different ways. That doesn’t mean that God doesn’t have some universal principles that are true regardless of who we are, what He has called us to, or when in time He happens to plant us. He certainly does  – and the Bible makes these things clear as they are stated as commands. What we need to be careful of is that,  as Joshua Harris describes in this letter, we don’t reduce a principle to a specific, singular practice. Unless, of course, God has dictated following His command in a specific, singular way. If He has not, we do a disservice to others when we suggest (either explicitly or implicitly) that the way that works for us, is the way that everyone has to do it.

This doesn’t mean that we can’t provide our advice or input. We certainly can. And if we’ve have found a beneficial way to put God’s principles into practice, it would be good for the growth and edification of fellow believers to share it. But we have to make sure we don’t confuse the tool with the rule.  Writing in a journal may be great for our prayer life, but it doesn’t require that everyone has to write in a journal in order to follow God’s command to pray. Flash cards may help us meditate on God’s Word day and night, but it’s not a requirement to use them in order to follow this Scriptural principle. These are trite examples, but they are hopefully illustrative of the larger point. Although I’ve never heard anyone say journaling and flash cards are necessary for the Christian to grow, I have heard the same reduction of a principle to a singular practice in other areas of the Christian life.

Let me perhaps illuminate the point further in a somewhat silly way. Let’s say that God commanded cleanliness. (He doesn’t, by the way. The old adage that “Cleanliness is next to godliness” is not found in Scripture.) One way that I may follow this is to do my chores in a certain order at home, to buy a label maker and to make a standard for myself that an unclean dish will never sit in the sink overnight. These would be great tools to help me follow the fictional command to be clean. However, someone else may follow this command by doing the chores in a different order, using color-coded bins to organize things, and by always using plastic plates and forks so that there were no dishes to clean. They both are following the principle of cleanliness. Their practices, however, are different.

What does this mean for us? First, we must be committed to following God’s commands regardless of the circumstances in which He has placed us. We must never set aside pursuing and doing the things of Him, in order to pursue the things of man. It also means that we need to be a good student of Scripture so that we can separate out the principles of God, and the practices of man (Acts 17:11). Additionally, it means that we need to be careful in our speech to clarify what is a command of God, and what is a tool that has been useful for us in following that command. Unless God has reduced His principle to a specific, singular practice, that we should not either.

Finally, we need to be wise in recognizing that God works in individuals’ lives differently. This is obvious in the fact that Scripture is clear that He has called people to specific roles in His church. If we assumed that we should have the same role as someone else, simply because they are a godly person that we respect, than we may be missing the role that God has for us. If, in the same way, we assume that how one person puts God’s principles into practice is universally true for everyone, we may be unintentionally disobedient to God because we aren’t doing what He has called us to do.

The bottom line is this, God’s Word needs to be used to evaluate our experience, not the other way around. So while someone else’s experience may be helpful for us, it can not become the standard by which we judge our actions. God and His Word must already occupy that position in our lives.

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Beyond the Notes


“Now, let’s begin our time of worship.”

It’s a common saying in churches today. Programmed services means that there is a carefully allotted schedule for everything that happens when believers gather together. The fast-paced nature of our society and people’s over-packed calendars means that we have to stay on schedule otherwise we risk alienating the visitors. So we transition from one item on the agenda to the next, careful to maintain our prescribed order of events. Even the “artsy” churches do this; they just have a cooler way of keeping everyone on track.

And while I’m used to the routine, the words grate on me every time I hear them.

Not because I’m against an organized sequence of events.  You’re talking about a girl who loved to go down the office supplies aisle in Costco long before she had any type of office to speak of. As friends and families can tell you, I love a carefully-crafted plan that gets us to a desired result. So it’s not the strict sense of organization that bothers me.

Nor is it the music that predictably follows this statement. I love music, and I take quite literally the command to make a joyful noise unto the Lord (Psalm 98:4).  For me personally, music is a powerful force in ushering my heart into a statement of humility and awe before God.

But it’s not the only way to worship.

Worship doesn’t consist only of notes being played. Nor is worship something that the Christian starts and stops during the course of their day. All of our lives, the music and the mundane, the notes and the moments, should be focused on giving glory and honor to God. To indicate that it is something that happens when a band starts playing and a group of believers start singing makes the word devoid of its intent. Worship is how we live – not a programmed activity at the start of a service.

Similarly worship shouldn’t be relegated to a particular segment of the service. The preaching, the tithing, the greeting and the announcements should all be acts of worship. And please, don’t give someone the title of “Worship Pastor” unless that person is seriously going to be considering how all these things can bring glory and honor to God.

This isn’t to say we don’t worship God with music. I heartily believe we should.  But our worship should start long before we hear the first strum and should continue long after the last note.

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