"We live under the
illusion that if we can acquire complete control, we can understand God, or we
can write the great American novel. But the only way we can brush against the
hem of the Lord, or hope to be part of the creative process, is to have the
courage, the faith, to abandon control. For the opposite of sin is faith, and never virtue, and we live in a world which believes that
self-control can make us virtuous. But that's not how it works."
"Walking on Water"
Madeleine L'Engle
"Walking on Water"
Madeleine L'Engle

That veneer creates an aura of
self-righteousness. As I read the L’Engle quote above, my drive toward
self-induced virtue was wrecked. And I feel equally shattered that my role and
example in Christian education can contribute to young people endeavoring for
virtue through self-control. Conformity to a standard is part of any community;
therefore, schools have an established set of standards. However, it can never
supplant our desperate need for a complete transformation of our heart, mind,
and body (Romans 12:1-2, Philippians 3:21).
Jesus warns educators: “Whoever
causes one of these little ones who believe in Me to sin, it would be better
for him if a millstone were hung around his neck, and he were drowned in the
depth of the sea.” That warning speaks straight to the heart of Christian
education (and parenting). Whether my example leads to a grave moral failure or to a
self-induced virtue, I am causing a little one to stumble. My students live in
the same mess that I do. Leading them to conformity will not fix the mess. The
solution for all of us is complete dependence on Jesus Christ.
Recently,
my wife shared this quote from Pastor Kerry Willis during recent chapel at her
school: “Jesus Christ does not want to be part of my life. He does not want to
be the center of my life. He does not want to be the most important thing in my
life. He wants to BE my life.” Our mess is transformed by the Gospel of Jesus
Christ: we were bought with a price. “Lord, I believe; help my unbelief.”
I want to thank Pastor David O’Dowd,
Covenant Presbyterian Church, and Pastor Kerry Willis, Harrisonburg First
Church of the Nazarene, for faithfully proclaiming God’s Word and speaking straight
to our greatest need, Jesus Christ.
Where's the 'like' button?
ReplyDeleteGreat reminder that our lives are hidden under our Saviors!
I was bought with a price...and I am not my own!
-Tarah