Looking Back and Looking Ahead

This is my eleventh post. I want to take a quick look back on the first ten, to make sure that I’m staying on course with the purpose of this blog.

The long journey to transformation, with its daunting demands, begins at the trailhead. We have cast in our lot with Christ. We have experienced the free gift of redemption by His grace. We recognize, however, that negotiating the transformation trail will require giving up old ways and patterns of thought to enter into a new reality: bearing the genuine image of the Son of God. We start out toward this tremendous opportunity because we know Him—at least something of Him—and we find ourselves drawn to Him.

The initial posts had to do with prayer, with seeing Christ in everyday events, and with scripture. We start out with these essentials. They will help us “hike our own hike,” following the unique path through life that Jesus has laid out for us. The last couple of posts touched on Jesus as our security. This fundamental understanding will keep us from losing heart when the going is difficult. Much more could be said on these subjects, and I have begun to share some valuable resources that all of us can draw upon. I need to look to other believers who are more experienced, more spiritually mature. Although it may seem to me that I sometimes have to walk alone, I cannot experience the fullness of transformation all by myself.

Likewise, transformation is not primarily about me or for me. Maybe you knew this already, but this concept came to me only recently. So then—why transformation? So that God can have the purpose for which He created. So that we can take our place in that purpose, as partners with Him in achieving that end. 

Now the question naturally comes up—what is my part in this? Jesus was asked about this by a crowd, when he admonished them to “labor for the food that endures to eternal life” (John 6:27): what is this labor?—”what must we do, to be doing the works of God?” The immediate reply of Jesus: Believe! “This is the work of God, that you believe in him whom he has sent” (John 6:29). Believe in a Christ who will never leave or forsake us. Believe in a Christ who will not compromise. Who brings the dead to life, and calls into existence things that are not. Who is passionate about accomplishing His Father’s purpose. Believe in Christ rather than promises. Keep turning to Him, beholding Him, pressing in to Him. Yielding and surrendering and decreasing in the magnitude of my powers, so that His power can be on display. Persistent believing redirects our attention from “our work” to the work of the Lord. 

This kind of belief leads to active participation instead of passive waiting. Patient endurance without anxiety. Full commitment rather than divided loyalties. In saying this I admit to going well beyond the limits of my own experience. Furthermore I am told (and I believe it is true) that the work can progress only so far in an individual who is living as an individual. Its completion requires community life, in the company of other believers who are on the same journey of transformation. Certainly those of us who want full transformation look forward to this part of the journey.

And what is the work that God has assigned to Himself? The work of conforming us to the image of the Son, producing in us the characteristics of Christ. This reminds me of a couple of things. One is an observation about Daniel’s friends made by Nebuchadnezzar, emperor of Babylon, in connection with the divine intervention that delivered them from the fiery furnace: they “set aside the king’s command” (Daniel 3:28). The other concerns Jesus himself who, “When the days drew near for him to be taken up, set his face to go to Jerusalem” (Luke 9:51). On behalf of his faithful ones, who mark their determination by setting aside the commands of “king self,” Jesus makes His own determination: once again he sets his face, this time to see his work of transformation accomplished in them.

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