Friday, October 2, 2015

No Power in the Process

      In conservative, homeschooling circles certain, practices have emerged to define the philosophy which drives the way we live our lives.  A reformation of education has lead into a reformation of almost every area of life.  Processes like Courtship, Entrepreneurship, child training, wearing skirts instead of pants, and daughters that stay at home rather than attend college are just a few of the marked differences that set us apart as a unique culture in the world we live in.  If you question any of these beliefs, it's as though you threaten to tear apart the thread that binds our lives and makes us who we are.  But why do we hold so tightly to these processes and defend them with zeal and passion?  I believe that in many ways these changes have resulted not only in a shift in how we live our lives but also where we place our hope.  As a whole, I perceive our thinking has been warped by adopting the idea that somehow righteousness is achieved by a process instead of attained by the Person of Jesus Christ.
     I believe we often try to establish a perfect system where the outcome is always good.  Let me give you an example.  Instead of dating, courtship is the process by which many young people like myself are "guaranteed" a happy marriage to a wonderful spouse.  If we put in a + b, we have the promise that c will be the outcome.  Courtship is the "right way" to go about this thing called marriage, we are told.  If we just follow these rules and these steps, we will gain a good relationship that is founded on purity. 
     In many ways, we have succumb to the thinking that the Galatian church was rebuked for.  By adhering to the old law of circumcision, the Galatian church sought to perfect in the flesh what had begun as a work of the Spirit. 
"Let me ask you only this: Did you receive the Spirit by works of the law 
or by hearing with faith? Are you so foolish? Having begun by the Spirit, 
are you now being perfected by the flesh?"
(Galatians 3:2-3)  
     We say that God is sovereign over our salvation but when we put our confidence in a process instead of in Him, we deny the fact that He is able to sanctify us and make us holy.  Have we been seeking to perfect our lives, not through Christ but through laws, rules and regulations?  At the very core of the issue it's not about whether we should follow a courtship or dating model or work for a business or own our own, it's about our heart.  Paul's first rebuke to the Galatian church was that they were "so quickly deserting Him who called you in the grace of Christ and turning to a different gospel." (1:6)  The gospel isn't Jesus plus courtship, wearing skirts and homeschooling.  The gospel is that Christ's righteousness is imputed to us by grace alone through faith alone.  This same pattern continues for sanctification as we live with a righteousness that is wholly not our own. 
      While there is no such thing as a "homeschool gospel",  I fear that as we hold so dearly to the practices that we praise, the fruit of the flesh has been produced in our lives to some degree or another.  
"Now the works of the flesh are evident: sexual immorality, impurity, sensuality,
 idolatry, sorcery, enmity, strife, jealousy, fits of anger, rivalries, dissensions, 
divisions, envy, drunkenness, orgies, and things like these. 
(Galatians 5:19-20)
     Note the words in bold.  Are we guilty of having idolized a system?  Has emnity, strife, jealousy or envy been sown in our lives as we see others doing things differently or being more successful as they adhere to the system?  However, above all the others, I must point our divisions.  I fear that this is the fruit of the flesh that has hurt or will hurt the body of Christ the most.  Do we hesitate to socialize with people who go to public or private school and still call themselves Christians?  Is it a sin to go on a date?  When one family wears pants and the other only skirts, is there a division that occurs in the heart as the later is looked down upon?  And when one girl goes to college and another stays home, is there grace for a different decision than yours to be made?  
     Law-righteousness always keeps us from Christ-righteousness.  When we are busy pursuing processes to provide us with righteous living, our gaze is distracted from the One who alone can make us righteous.  There is not power in the process, only in the Person of Jesus Christ.  
"On Christ the solid rock I stand,
All other ground is sinking sand."
    Have you been building your life on the sinking sand of prescribes processes?  If you have, I would encourage you to retrain your way of thinking through the lens of God's Word. Colossians 3:2 says that, "In (Christ) are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge." If we are seeking Him, wisdom will come. 

1 comment:

Hannah Joy Halsey said...

Hi Kayla, thank you so much for your post! It was spot-on and I completely agree with you! It reminds me of a song I enjoy from Thousand Tongues, called "Not in Me." I shared the words to that song below. May it encourage you as it has me!

Not In Me
by David Ward (based on Luke 16, the parable of the Pharisee and the tax collector)

1. No list of sins I have not done, No list of virtues I pursue;
No list of those I am not like can earn myself a place with You.
O God, be merciful to me, I am a sinner through and through
My only hope of righteousness is not in me, but only You

2. No humble dress, no fervent prayer, no lifted hands, no tearful song,
No recitation of the truth can justify a single wrong;
My righteousness is Jesus' life; My debt was paid by Jesus' death;
My weary load was borne by Him, and He alone can give me rest.

3. No separation from the world, no work I do, no gift I give
Can cleanse my conscience, cleanse my hands, I cannot cause my soul to live
But Jesus died and rose again, the power of death is overthrown
My God is merciful to me, and merciful in Christ alone.

May God richly bless you as you continue boldly sharing His truth with others, sister! <3 Hannah Joy