A believer has been given wisdom by God so that they may
know the things of God and apply it to their lives (1 Cor. 2:10, 13). But even
though they (believers who have been given God’s wisdom) are called to
maturity, at times they act worldly, under the control of the world and the
flesh (cf. the Corinthian believers whose actions were antithetical to those
given God’s wisdom; 1 Cor. 3:3-4). Keep in mind, “while all believers are alive
in the spirit, not all believers’ actions and attitudes conform to the status
of being alive in the Spirit (Samra, p. 66). Seeing that believers are no
longer slaves to sin and are now “sons’” because “God sent his Spirit within
our hearts” (Gal. 4:6), it is expected that they should live in freedom, to
walk in their new status, not enslavement to the law, the world, nor the enemy.
With Christ as the standard for maturity, the apostle Paul
defines maturity as “displaying attitudes and actions befitting the kingdom of
God” (Samra, p.59). The range of meaning for Paul’s use of the word τελείοις/ teleiois/ mature include “complete, blameless, righteous, fully
developed, fully devoted to God, holy, and without defect” (Samra, p. 61).
Essentially, to be mature means to be conformed to Christ’s image(Rom. 12:2. My
personal favorite is the use of teleiois in
1 Cor. 14:20 – “Stop being children in your thinking. Be teleiois!”
(paraphrased). Believers in community become teleiois when they gain proper perspective of their standing and
identity in the kingdom of God.
Through the mutual exchanges
of being in community, believers can experience character development as they
walk in the Spirit (Gal. 5:25). An example provided by Paul is that of the
community urging spirit-conformity to the one that is fallen (Gal. 6:1 –
restore him/her). Left alone, the fallen may continue to live worldly/in the
flesh; “not behaving in accordance with
his status as one who has crucified the sinful nature and lives by the Spirit”
(Gal. 5:24-5)[Samra, p. 65].
While there is the individual responsibility to “work
out your own salvation” (Phil. 2:12), community comes alongside the fallen/weak
individual to provide the nutrients necessary to “bring a person’s character
aligned with their status as having the Spirit” (Samra, p.65). Therefore,
within community, individually and corporately, the mature believer “is someone
who does not conform to the world, but offers himself to God,” moving towards
purity, perfection and blamelessness, the hallmark of sanctification (Rom.
12:1-2; Samra, p. 67). Also, note that there is the responsibility of the
individual within community to participate in the maturity process. The
“working out of your own salvation” is “work.” It is a process, not achieved in
isolation or disconnected from community. The apostle Paul said he pursues in
order to attain. This is effort. There is a prize to win. There is action and
progress (Phil. 3:12-15). Reciprocal exchanges within community is a source of
encouragement. Community is therefore an ecology in which Christ is displayed -
a place of “living demonstration” of Christ followers in the process of
conformity to Christ/transformation. Under the New Covenant, both individuals
and whole community can visibly demonstrate the righteousness of Christ because ‘the transforming power of God’s
presence is made available to all believers through the Spirit and in-Christ”
(Samra, p. 101). And it is within community, that participation in Christ is
possible, and “participation” is what makes transformation possible (Samra, p.
109).
Reference:
Samra, J. (2006). Being conformed to Christ in community.
New York: T&T Clark.
Written by Kevin Hall (06.2019)
GoogleImage
No comments:
Post a Comment