BEING
AND DOING
THE
development of love has to be one of the prime concerns
of all who seriously want to follow Christ. Yet how many
of us are clear enough in our own minds about what Christian
love really is, and make the development of it a conscious
goal in our lives?
It's
very easy to be vague about Christian love, to exercise
it in an indeterminate manner, and to acquire the notion
that it's nothing more than "doing good." Obviously
"doing good" comes into it, but it's nowhere near
the whole story. In fact "doing good" is more
of a by-product of Christian love, the result of it rather
than the object of it.
This
is why Paul could say that "love is the fulfilling
of the law" (Rom.13:10). Adultery, murder, theft, false
wit-nessing, covetousness, and all other such wrongs, simply
don't happen when people have love (which is a paraphrase
of Rom.13:9). Doing good occurs instead. Doing good happens
when we give attention to who we are rather than
what we do.
Love
is about being
One
of the most important things to learn about love is that
it has more to do with being than doing. It concerns
what we are rather more that what we do. The
fruit of the Spirit, which I believe is love, is something
which grows and ripens in our character and personality,
bringing about a gradual inner transformation. It is not
developed by our deeds; it is developed by the Spirit through
our delight and meditation in the Spirit Word.
How
easy it is for us to get things back-to-front and imagine
that it's by all our doing that we will eventually evolve
the right sort of Christ-like characters for ourselves.
It's not so. The simple truth is that the transformation
of our characters from within must come first,
and then the deeds will take care of themselves. Getting
it the wrong way round and putting deeds first will produce
the sort of imitation fruit of the Spirit that the world
produces with all its good deeds. God does not approve it
because it's phoney fruit.
The
Apostle Paul teaches us in his famous chapter on love (1
Cor.13) that we can do all manner of wondrous things in
the service of God and our fellow man, but these will count
for nothing if we don't first have love—that is, if we don't
put ourselves internally right first. Love is more about
being than doing! The error of getting it back-to-front
manifests itself in at least three different but similar
types of unfulfillment.
1.
The joyless worker
Why
is it that some believers find themselves overburdened by
trying to live the Truth? Life in the Truth is the most
satisfying and fulfilling way of life available to anyone
living on this planet, as we said at the outset of this
book. Yet some people work flat out at "doing"
the Truth with very little satisfaction, as their weariness
will betray, (barring the dubious satisfaction of grumbling
about all those who aren't so overloaded!). A law of diminishing
returns sets in. Too much time and effort spent in doing
and not enough attention given to being (to what we are
inside) can make life go spiritually flat, like old
Coca Cola. The joy of doing will eventually wear
thin if the joy of being hasn't preceded it.
2.
Non-starters
Then
again, there are some believers who have the opposite but
equally unsatisfying problem. Theirs is not the problem
of being unfulfilled by a demanding work schedule; theirs
is the problem of being defeated even before they start.
They have a fixation on the doing, and there seems to be
such an unclimbable mountain of things for them to do that
they give up at square one.
It's
all too much, they think. They can never hope to do it all—or
as much as person B, C and D are doing—so why bother? They
have seen doing as the most important thing in Christian
life and they have backed away from it, feeling inadequate
to do as much as they feel they ought to do, or as much
as they see others doing. If only they would concentrate
on being and not doing, the problem would go away.
3.
The becalmed
The
third type of unfulfilled believer is closely related to
the last. He or she would certainly find it hard to say,
hand on heart, that their life in the Truth is the most
satisfying and fulfilling way of life. I'm talking about
those who are the spiritually becalmed.
When
you're on a sailing boat which is becalmed, you're stuck
out in mid-sea with no wind in your sails. And if you don't
have a motor, you have a problem. You're not going anywhere.
You just drift with the tide. The situation could get life-threatening.
Believers
can become spiritually becalmed. In this state all their
years in the Truth seem to have produced very little by
way of spiritual progress. They had such grand aspirations
when they started out on the spiritual journey, but they
have grossly underachieved.
Probably
most believers feel a bit like that from time to time (and
rightly so, because self-satisfaction in the spiritual life
is the fast lane to stagnation), but the believers I have
in mind are the chronically dissatisfied. They're stuck.
They can't get started any more, and they don't see any
way of getting themselves started. Here again, the
problem is usually too much attention to external achievement
and too little on internal development.
It's
the mistake of believing that only when they do well
will they be well. So they give up trying,
because every time they try, they get all fired up and busy
in the Truth, then their efforts peter out. Now they're
not sure where they're going—if anywhere. Becalmed is the
word for them.
Are
you a human being, or just a human doing?
Maybe
you recognize yourself as a joyless worker, or a non-starter,
or one of the great becalmed. Or maybe you know there's
something wrong with the way you are spiritually but just
can't figure out what it is. In all cases I suggest you
check to see if you have a being/doing problem. Are you
aiming to be all that you can through delight and
meditation in the Word?—or are you aiming to do all
you can, and wondering why you don't seem to change for
the better?
Remember
also, that busyness can sometimes be a way of hiding from
ourselves. We can fill our lives with things to do so that
we don't have to face ourselves and notice that we're not
being what we need to be. Occupation can mean avoidance.
It's a reason why some people can't handle retirement from
work. To cease from work is to come face to face with self.
And if work is all they are, then they are nothing when
the work stops, so they need to put off retirement for as
long as possible. You might fear slowing down on work in
the Truth for the same reason. You mistakenly believe that
you are what you do. So, if you don't, you aren't!
The
solution, as I've said, is to relegate doing into
second place, and put being in first place. Cultivate
the fruit of the Spirit and allow your spiritual activities
to develop naturally from that. This is putting things in
the correct order.
Eye-service
Alas,
the pressures we put upon one another are in some degree
to blame for our back-to-front thinking. There is a great
temptation to eye-service in the Truth. How gratifying it
is to do lots of the tasks that can be seen by our Christian
colleagues! How easy it is to concentrate our efforts on
high profile tasks to the detriment of our inner spiritual
growth.
Not
that we should shun leading Bible study groups, going on
missionary travels, or other observable work, but rather
that such work needs to be an extension of who we are
in the Truth, not our preoccupation. All our work in the
Truth is done as a good and natural outlet for our enthusiasm
when we delight and meditate in the Word.
In
fact, when we get being and doing in the right order, we
don't even think of what we do in the Truth as work. We
become totally free from the rat-race of spiritual performance.
We will be doing what comes naturally, and enjoying it.
And when we stand before Christ and he welcomes us into
his kingdom, saying how he'd been hungry and we'd fed him,
thirsty and we'd given him drink, naked and we'd clothed
him, sick and visited him... and so on, we'll scratch our
heads and say, "When, Lord, did we ever do all that?"
We won't remember. It all came naturally from a Christ-like
mind, from a mind in which the fruit of the Spirit had been
nurtured. Those who have put doing before being are rejected.
They will argue that they have done all manner of
wonderful things in Christ's name. They've got a list as
long as your arm. But Christ will say only, "Depart
from me..."(Matt.25:31-46).
Being
is more important. This is what the fruit of the Spirit
is all about. It's about the development of our inner lives
through the development of love. The doing will take care
of itself.