Mark Scandrette in his book Soul Graffiti makes a good point along these lines. He contends that if the average Christian stopped reading the Bible for the rest of their life and just started acting on what they already know of Jesus' teaching, they would mature far more than they ever would by looking for the next best book or Bible study. He says, "In Western society we are also culturally conditioned to assume that intellectual assent to a set of propositions is an adequate substitute for obedience." And so we feel that reading the Bible more, or understanding Greek and Hebrew, or more teaching will help us grow.
I find myself having to admit more and more, that I don't need a new book, or more knowledge. What I need is to find more time to put into practice the things I already know. I find myself making a mental list of the things in Jesus teaching that especially challenge me, and struggle as I ask how can I implement this?
If you really want to know Jesus, start doing the things Jesus did, and you will. You might say that this is the difference between believing in Jesus, and believing what Jesus believed. I dare say that merely believing a set of propositions about Jesus never put food on the plate of a hungry person or a roof over their head.
The question is, will we make the leap from consumer in the religious services aisle to an employee for the Kingdom of God?
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