Heart, Soul, Strength, and Mind Together
Posted by Chris on May 30, 2010 under Sermons
Revisit Deuteronomy 6 … [read vs. 1-9]
Strength/Mind is typical of the 19th and 20th century. It is the emphasis of the Modern Age, the Age of Reason and Enlightenment. Slogans: Better living through chemistry. The Age of Reason. Scientific Progress. Church: We are a people of the book. Bible names for Bible things. Common Sense. The Ancient Order of Things. Reasonable Faith. Study to show thyself approved. Bible Facts. Memorizing Scripture.
But what did we do with the Holy Spirit? Not much. What did we do with the mysteries of God? We de-mystified some of them. What did we do with imaginative texts like Revelation? We ignored it or said don’t take it literally. What did we do with miracles? We left them in the first century.
Heart/Soul is typical of the 21st century. It is the emphasis of the younger generations. Experience is equal to fact – or maybe even more important than objective fact in some cases. This is the postmodern age. Reason is good, but it has failed us. We live in a world of pure imagination.
But feelings are flexible. They change. Faith without work is dead and useless.
Imbalance:Heart-Soul w/o Mind-Strength: Non-reflective. Sloppy Agape. There’s no compass, no center. No memory of what God has done. No future. Focus is on the moment. Experience without the connection to something larger, without the mentoring and testing of community is narcissistic.
Mind-Strength w/o Heart-Soul: Rules without compassion. Sacrifice without Mercy. Action without Joy. Mechanical, legalistic. Outward. Believe the right thing, do the right thing, but feelings and heart are not surrendered to God. It is too rigid. Being rigid without mercy and humility becomes self-righteous and judgmental.
Do Justice, Love Mercy, Walk Humbly with God
- Can you imagine what would happen if we combined all of these?
- Can you imagine what it would be like for us to be fearless in exploring the infinite combinations of putting all of this into practice –
- in our worship,
- in our fellowship,
- in our service?
I believe the enemy wants us to be imbalanced. To focus only on our strengths. That makes us self-reliant and we never have to rely on others. And we hardly depend on God.
- Is our slogan, “I’ll just do it myself.”
How about, “To Him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we can ask or imagine.”
When we are imbalanced, we become divided because we treat one another with suspicion rather that respect …
- Our family of faith is one.
- But we are not all the same when it comes to gifts and experience.
Some of us are more comfortable in one quadrant, but the community has to give place to them all. When the community or group preferences one side or one quadrant, then people are excluded.
Of course the community has to be creative in connecting h/s and s/m.
- See Acts 15.
- Experience and scripture connected and the result was that God’s church increased and got stronger and healthier.
- New solutions to problems were possible.
As an individual we want you to use your gifts (head, heart, hands). We pledge that there’s a place for you in our congregation.
- If you lift your hands in worship during prayer because you really know how to worship God with all your heart – then do it.
- If you can dig into the word in worship, class, or fellowship because you know how to reflect on the word with all of your mind – then do it.
- If you clap during a song or say Amen because you know how to worship God with all your soul – then do it.
- If you greet your brothers and sisters and are eager to help serve a tray or hold a door open because you know how to love God with all your strength – then do it.
Of course the application of this involves much more than just our Sunday morning assembly. It is much larger that because it involves all aspects of our lives and our life together.
Like the disciples in Acts 15, we will seek inspired wisdom and the guidance of the spirit to connect all of us for God’s purposes.
But doesn’t this mean we could seem different. Yes. But we can all worship God.
But doesn’t this mean we might not understand one another. Yes. But we can all submit to God.
But doesn’t this mean we might have some disagreements? Yes. But we will persevere through love and respect.
What we cannot do is just give up …
Does our whole self belong to God?
- Then give him all in worship?
- Then give him all in service?
- Then give him all in fellowship?
- Do justice, love mercy, and walk humbly as you love the Lord your God with all of your heart soul strength and mind.
I want you to think about your baptism. Was there any part of you that wasn’t buried with Christ? (I don’t mean was a toe or elbow sticking out of the water). I mean did you give your whole self to Christ?
Perhaps you’ve learned that the word “baptize” means immerse. Well that’s true enough, but baptism means so much more than that. When we are baptized, we are buried with Christ because we die to self. We offer our entire body, our entire self to Him. There’s no part of self, not heart soul strength or mind, that we can hold onto for ourselves – and if we do hold on to any of it we will lose it.