Monday, December 28, 2015

Reacting to Change: Selfishness or Sanctification?

Change. 
It is likely one of the most detested words in the English language (unless when used to denote money, that is). Merely mention it, and people will respond with visceral reactions of apprehension, fear, and/or resistance. Understanding why such reactions are so common is not difficult. We are obsessed with comfort, dependent on routine, and enamored of the status quo. We’ve all heard the phrase a thousand times: “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it,” which is just another way of saying don’t go changing things up just for the heck of it.

But what if things really are “broke”?

Is change always a bad thing? Somehow I think we all know deep down that the answer to this question is a resounding “no.”  So why, then, do we so often automatically react negatively to the idea of change? Perhaps it is because change requires adjustment and because we also know deep down that adjustment makes us uncomfortable—and we detest being uncomfortable.

But as Christians, we have not been called to a life of comfort. We were not saved out of our depravity to live lives of ease and pleasure but rather to live in surrender to the One who died for us. We were rescued not for our own sake but for His. He experienced the ultimate discomfort in absorbing the full brunt of the wrath of God, and we have been called to follow Him—which means carrying a cross. Every. Single. Day.

Yet too often we are more concerned with maintaining a high level of comfort than we are with developing a lifestyle of holiness. We would much rather be catered to personally than serve others ourselves. We are more than content to sit back in the comfy recliner of assurance, knowing that we will be going to Heaven one day, and ride out the rest of our earthly lives encountering as little disruption as possible.

But the gospel is not about that.

Jesus didn’t become a human, live 33 years on this depraved earth, suffer the ultimate punishment for doing absolutely nothing wrong, and then rise from the dead just so we wouldn’t have to go to hell. Yes, that’s certainly part of it, but it’s so much more than that! He came to right the wrongs caused by the Fall, to restore man’s relationship to God, to creation, to other humans, and to himself. Jesus did what He did so that we could live a new life now, so that we could share His good news and bring Him glory here. On this earth. In 2015. And 2016. “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come” (2 Corinthians 5:17, ESV).

Now that’s some major change right there.

And, “All this is from God, who through Christ reconciled us to himself and gave us the ministry of reconciliation; that is, in Christ God was reconciling the world to himself, not counting their trespasses against them, and entrusting to us the message of reconciliation. Therefore, we are ambassadors for Christ, God making his appeal through us” (2 Corinthians 5:18-20a, ESV, emphasis added). So basically, we have a job to do. It won’t always be easy, but it’s why we’ve been saved.  

As David Platt writes, “Grace brings about change” (Platt and Merida 2014, 11).

In other words, change is fundamental to the gospel itself. In being brought from death to life, we have experienced the greatest change of all, and that initial change produces continual change as we are daily sanctified, made more like Christ.

So when we encounter change in this life, let’s try to look at it through the lens of sanctification instead of the lens of selfishness. Before getting uptight and upset over minor adjustments or even major alterations, let’s ask the Holy Spirit to examine our hearts and reveal to us when we are being more in love with comfort than with Christ. And meanwhile, may we direct our attention to the broken parts of our own lives and allow Him to bring about the change in us that His death and resurrection has made possible.




Citation: Platt, David and Tony Merida. Christ-Centered Exposition: Exalting Jesus in Galatians. Nashville: Holman Reference, 2014.

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