THE SURE SIGN OF A CHRISTIAN MATURITY
Being a Christian is one thing, experiencing the power of
transformation that will bring you into maturity is another.
I suppose we all know that as Christians we are meant to
grow up, to mature. We begin as infants in the faith and need to develop into
adults. The New Testament writers insist that we must all make this transition
from milk to meat, from the children’s table to the grown-up’s feast. And yet
even though we are aware that we must go through this maturing process, many of
us are prone to measure maturity in the wrong ways. We are easily fooled. This
is especially true, I think, in a tradition like the Reformed one, which
(rightly) places a heavy emphasis on learning and on the facts of the faith.
The Bible is the means God uses to complete us, to finish
us, to bring us to maturity.
When Paul writes to Timothy, he talks to him about the
nature and purpose of the Bible and says, “All Scripture is breathed out by God
and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction and for training in
righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good
work” (2 Timothy 3:16-17). That word complete is related to maturity. Paul says
that Timothy, and by extension me and you and all of us, is incomplete,
unfinished and immature. The Bible is the means God uses to complete us, to
finish us, to bring us to maturity.
But what does it mean to be a mature Christian? I think
we tend to believe that mature Christians are the ones who know a lot of facts
about the Bible. Mature Christians are the ones who have their theology down
cold. But look what Paul says: “That the man of God may be complete, equipped
for every good work.” Paul does not say, “That the man of God may be complete,
knowing the books of the Bible in reverse order,” or “That the man of God may
be complete, able to explain and define supralapsarianism against
infralapsarianism.” He does not say, “That the man of God may be complete, able
to provide a structural outline of each of Paul’s epistles.” Those are all good
things, but they are not Paul’s emphasis. They may be signs of maturity, but
they may also be masks that cover up immaturity.
When Paul talks about completion and maturity, he points
to actions, to deeds, to “every good work.” The Bible has the power to mature
us, and as we commit ourselves to reading, understanding and obeying it, we
necessarily grow up in the faith. That maturity is displayed in the good works
we do more than in the knowledge we recite. And this is exactly what God wants
for us—he wants us to be mature and maturing doers of good who delight to do
good for others. This emphasis on good deeds is a significant theme in the New
Testament (see Ephesians 2:10, Titus 2:14, etc) and the very reason why God
saved us.
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