Paradigm Shifts: A Change in Method

Are you salt?  Jesus used this metaphor to help us understand the effect that we are to have on the surrounding culture.  We are not to be unnoticed, blended consistency.  We are supposed to make a difference – a difference that is immediately detected.  Christians flavor life with a God-perspective.

You probably agree.  What’s the point of being a Christian if your life is exactly the same as the high valued non-believers of this world?  Why adopt a God-perspective if no one can tell the difference between God’s point of view and the best morality human beings can muster?  After all, Christianity has to be more than just attending the church of your choice and learning a few Bible verses.  The claim of Christianity is that Christians are actively involved in Kingdom endeavors in every aspect of their lives.  Kingdom work doesn’t just occur on the mission field or in the Sunday school.  Kingdom work is supposed to happen everywhere I go – on the job, at home, in school, even in the mall. 

Does that mean that I am to carry my Bible or have a pocket full of tracts?  Does it mean that I hold up a reader board emblazoned with “Repent or go to hell!”?  Am I supposed to preach on the street corner to an audience with deaf ears?  Most of us would say, “No.”  Such actions might be what some feel called to do, but for most of us being a Christian has to mean something more penetrating.  I have to learn how to be salt in every meal circumstances serve.

Let’s consider just one salty paradigm shift.  How does being a Christian change the way that you organize, plan and execute decisions?  How does being a Christian change your Standard Operating Procedure?

Amazingly, most of us never think that being a Christian makes any difference at all to the way that we operate.  We never consider that the process of gathering information, sorting out options, planning strategies, considering risks, determining goals and constructing step-by-step tactics can be a “salt” experience.  We just think that this methodology is the only methodology because it is the one that we have learned in the process of living in the world.  We simply can’t imagine any other way of accomplishing tasks.  Of course, there are lots of ways that don’t work.  We are quick to point out the deficiencies in plans that fail, citing some overlooked step in the process.  But we never consider that correct execution could be radically different.  We never think about the salt perspective.  It’s time that we did.

The methodology of the world is based on process thinking.  Process thinking is the step-by-step rational ordering of actions in the pursuit of a goal.  Nearly every goal oriented endeavor you have ever taken in life probably reflects this kind of thinking.  It is without question the fundamental rational tool taught in school.  But it has some serious implications for God-perspective living.

Process thinking moves me toward independence.  The point of process thinking is this:  I know what to do next without requiring moment-by-moment guidance.  Correct application of process thinking is evaluated by progress toward the goal without further input.

Let’s look at an example.  It is quite common in football to outline a “game plan”.  Coaches often script in advance the first twenty of thirty plays that they will run.  They construct a step-by-step order that they believe will advance them toward a touchdown before the team even steps on to the field.  The coach develops this process thinking by going through the steps we commonly understand.  He gathers information, outlines a strategy, determines tactics, assesses risk and develops a plan.  It all looks great on paper.  Then the whistle blows and suddenly someone intercepts the pass.  There’s a fumble.  A player gets injured.  The game plan disintegrates when it comes into contact with the real world.  Process thinking assumes controlled reality.  Even when the plan is continually altered in the face of unanticipated events, process thinking still assumes reality can be brought back under control.  The biggest problem with process thinking is that it leads me toward the assumption that I can control my world.  This assumption stands behind nearly every business plan.  It is resident in financial planning, retirement planning, educational planning.  It is the Standard Operating assumption of the world’s system.

Unfortunately, reality constantly frustrates our process thinking assumption.  Plans don’t go the way we thought they would.  The stock market doesn’t behave correctly (why should it?).  Enron and Tyco executives steal my retirement (my plans did not anticipate theft).  Terrorism alters the world market demand (my sales plans did not anticipate September 11, as Disney quickly learned).  Even on a personal scale, reality constantly frustrates the control assumption behind process thinking.  A flat tire, a bounced check, a sick child, a missed appointment and suddenly my world isn’t quite so orderly.  The world is determined to remind me that I am not in control in spite of all my efforts to batter it into the shape I desire.

Salt mentality takes a different approach. 

The Standard Operating Procedure from God’s point of view is not process thinking.  God is not interested in your plans.  God is interested in your attention to His plans.  And God never reveals more of His plan than what is absolutely necessary at this particular moment.  Why?  Because God’s SOP is not process thinking.  It is consultation.

The Standard Operating Procedure of the consultation approach to life is radically different.  It is fostered entirely by dependence.  Consultation depends on externally provided guidance.  It looks like this:  STOP – WAIT – LISTEN – ACT

Consultation requires me to always be connected to another guiding source, not myself.  Consultation requires that I do not move to the next step until I hear the command to do so.  No step automatically follows another.  Consultation demands clarified obedience as a response to guidance, not as a planned execution.  Consultation is based on releasing the truth as God sees it by first encountering the present Lord.  Consultation cannot move forward without direction and it does not move forward without assignment.  Consultation is the posture of the obedient slave. 

If we read the stories of men who understood what it is like to be salt in this world, we discover that they had no preconceived agendas.  If fact, when they did come to the party with an operational agenda, God took great pains to remove their plans from the table.  From Abraham’s attempt to handle the famine to Gideon’s effort to raise an army, from Peter’s proclamation of violent defense to Paul’s plan to go to Bithynia, God rearranges human plans to suit His purposes.  God wants moment-by-moment obedience, not long-term strategy.  Why?  Because obedience means dependence and devotion, two characteristics that God values far more than goal achievement.  Consultation thinking removes me from the subtle temptation to think that God needs me to accomplish His will.  Surprise!  God is perfectly capable of running the world without me.  But He is very anxious to include me in what He is doing.  Consultation begins with “What would you have me do, Lord?” rather then “OK, Lord, I know what to do next.”

Given this change in methodology, it shouldn’t be surprising to discover that Christians are unpredictable.  They listen and respond to God, not to planned human project management.  They operate exclusively under the assumption that God is in charge and the only real job is to hear what He has to say and do what He asks.  Real salt Christians depend on God for their direction.  Even in their methodology, they stick out like sore thumbs.  They just don’t think like the world thinks.

That raises a penetrating question:  How much salt is in your operating diet?

There are some other powerful implications for the consultation methodology.  Contemplation is the doorway to Consultation.  Unless I STOP and LOOK, I will not hear the voice of guidance from God.  STOPPING is critical to the consultation method.  It is, however, antithetical to process thinking. 

Once I STOP, I must LOOK with loving attention and moral responsibility.   Jesus contemplated the wild flowers of the field and he saw something about the hand of God in reality.  Jesus spent hours in prayer listening to the voice of the Father until he was so sensitive to it that the Father’s voice directed everything he did and everything he said.  Jesus was the fully dependent man.  And Jesus says that this is a method that we can learn, if we STOP the propelling frenzy of process thinking.

The Greek word epignosis captures the consultation methodology.  Epignosis is knowing by intimate interpersonal experience.  It demands paying attention, not simply intellectually but also emotionally and morally.  It is the epitome of relationship responding.  From the Biblical point of view, epignosis is the gift of God.

Abraham Herschel once said that something sacred hangs in the balance of every moment.  He knew that consultation and contemplation go hand in hand.  He knew that God is the Lord of all my times and I need only STOP, LOOK and LISTEN if I am to know what God asks of me next. 

The salt question of life is this:  Am I living as though every moment is pregnant with the Spirit?  Have I stopped to listen for God’s next command?  Or is the push of the plan propelling me at a pace that prevents the practice of His presence?

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Rick

Your comment re: “moment by moment obedience” hit me square between my eyes, and in my heart this morning. You see, I’ll be attending the funeral of a friend that I’d shared JESUS with several times over the past few years. When I heard he had cancer, I really felt the prodding of the HOLY SPIRIT to pay him a visit over the past 2 months…I (a long time pastor, and longer child of GOD-61 years!) kept putting it off “until a more convenient time.” How miserable I feel that, last Thursday evening I learned that he had passed…and so had my chance to visit with him! I’ve asked my LORD’s forgiveness, and will make certain that I respond IMMEDIATELY when the SPIRIT directs me! Thankfully I leaned this morning that two godly men (and obedient ones) from another church visited him 12 hours before he passed.

JAN CARVER

Thank our precious God/Savior Jesus Christ that when we do not heed the call (for our joy would be full if do) – He does not give up but sends others who are more obedient than us or go more quickly. I have felt the sting of this situation more than once over my 56 years & it breaks my heart & I’m thankful that He allow us to see ourselves & our sloth when it comes to obedience when He calls. Yes, it is a wake up call – God/Jesus/Holy Spirit are very economical in all they do – killing many sins with one stone/lesson.

Cherry Jenson

This post was so right on for me. I keep falling into the same trap…working myself into exhaustion doing things for the Lord, really my own idea of those things which I need and want to do. I do have the head knowledge that I don’t have to “do anything”, but my heart gets tripped up every time. I have just come out of one of those periods, and my hearts desire is that “moment by moment obedience” that you spoke of. This is an especially subtle trap for those of us blessed with boundless energy. I am going to print your post and put it by my calendar and phone. Thank you for this very timely reminder in my life.

Mary

Mercy and Grace…it is His kindness that leads us to repentance. May God help us as we continue to conform to the image of His dear Son..our King. Thank Him for the faith He gives us in order to be able to trust Him enough to change (we have no sufficiency/ablility/competency within ourselves). God help us to UNlearn and NOT conform to the patterns of this world (SELF-sufficiency), but to be transformed by the renewing of our minds…let this mind be in you..Christ Jesus. Thank You, for allowing the flow of the Spirit to move in such a way.

Roderick Logan

I am continually challenged and today’s update article confronts me. Thank you Skip for the accounting; reminding me to remember Yeshua and his ways. When my desire comes last, then his comes first. When his desire comes first, then mine is irrelevant.

Pam Thompson

The hardest lesson for me is to “be still” in the Lord. I tend towards always doing and yes, it is service to my Lord, but it isn’t always directed by Him, still He always blesses me for it. My father went to be with the Lord on 5/19 and I almost missed being with him those last few days because of my busyness. Nevertheless, for once I heeded Yahweh’s call at the last minute and dropped everything to go and be by my dad’s side and I was with him when passed & went to be with the Lord. I can’t even put into words what miracles the Lord wrought by my being there. There was the miracle I got there at all and in one piece. Then, my dad & I had a talk we should have had at least a decade ago. Such spiritual healing I’ve never known. We spoke, we cried together, and we embraced before he peacefully went to be with our Lord. What a privilege the Lord, Jehovah blessed me with. I WILL learn to be still before HIM! Pam

Mary

Pam,
May the God of all comfort be with you as you experience and live through this time of grief. I was touched by your testimony. I went through a similar time with my dad almost 9 years ago and I still praise God today for allowing me to minister the LORD Jesus Christ to him and having the peace of knowing my dad is with Him now. Our Father is using this testimony now and will use it in times to come to bring Him glory.

Linda K. Morales

Here is a little memory I wrote about the last 3 months that I was able to spend with a dear friend of mine who died Tuesday June 2, 2009 shortly after midnight…… During the last 3 months I got to spend more time with her than the 20 some years that we lived beside each other as neighbors. I grew to greatly admire her and to enjoy the times that we were able to spend talking to one another. She had such a realistic focused mind set on what steps she had to do before she died. But, each time we spoke, I sensed that we were being drawn closer together and the friend who I had known, who did not want to know about God, and had made it quite clear in years past that she was not going to teach her children about Him either, was slowly bringing Him up in conversations and talking about prayer. My husband had told me that we didn’t need to prove any thing to her (but just live our lives before her) because she knew; she and her sisters and brother all went to the youth group at the little church we used to go to. At that time my husband was in charge of the youth group but he was no more than a youth himself. Later, he and his best friend were in charge together. I did not know her then, but they participated every Friday evening and on Sundays and for all the camps…..And just a few weeks ago talking with her older sister, we reminisced of the good old days when we all used to go to the same church and study the Bible together. She told me she would be gone starting June 1st so if we could please keep an eye on her sister. Another neighbor was with me and told her, yes, we are like family now. And truly, I told her, this has happened within the last few weeks as we had all been going through serious situations and were helping one another. My last moments with her were the most precious. But leading up to that, the Lord was setting the stage for His working in her heart. The day after we returned from the US, her daughter ran up to me embracing me and thanking God and prayers for all that He had done for her mother in her operation. That she had come through okay and was coming home the next day. Friday morning they went out to bring her home and after they got her upstairs, her daughter rang my bell and told me that her mother was home and had told her that she didn’t want to see anyone but me. So I put my shoes on and went up to see her. She was very tired but that was a very special moment, a beginning of being able to help her, with soups, helping her carry up groceries, or just sit with her and talk. I noticed a more gentler attitude towards God and she even spoke of the days we were in church together. (Although, I was really not there when she was in the youth group that my husband lead… I do remember her brother.) This Saturday morning I met her coming up the stairs as I was going out to get groceries… she was so tired and weak so I helped her bring up the groceries….and we talked the whole way. It was in these few moments that she mentioned God and prayer as being very real and personal to her and helping her. I was holding my 31 Days of Prayer book and showed it to her… ” I am in my second week but only on the 5th day. It has to do with how we relate to people and God helping us.” She smiled and told me it was okay that I was only on Day 5. She thanked me for helping her and I went on my way. I found the most beautiful card for her which mentioned both God and that I was praying for her… I felt in my heart it was okay to be so forward as she had welcomed Him. When I chose my bouquet of flowers, I picked out two, one white and one yellow. The yellow one was much more vibrant and fuller than the white one, so I silently hoped she would choose it over the white. (Every week I buy myself a white one.) When I asked her which one she liked the most, she asked me, which one do you like the most? Her eyes were sparkling and she was so happy. I told her I always buy white and like white better… and she gladly took the yellow one, thanking me. She said “It’s pretty.” And I was off. I didn’t see her Sunday but Monday I was going to bring up the soup that I made for her the night before. I saw her other sister coming up the stairs with her, but she was moving very slowly so I decided not to step out at that moment and would catch her sister in a few minutes. But I missed her. When I called to tell her I had her soup ready she told me she was very tired and had a very bad pain, so please wait until later. A little later her daughter and son in law came up and I handed the soup to him. Told him I had already spoken with her but she was very tired and I didn’t want to interrupt her. Shortly after they were helping her down the stairs. She was carrying her pillow so I believed they were headed to the hospital to get something for the pain. I kept an eye open, but didn’t notice if they came back or not and we went to bed pretty early. The next morning my husband and I went very early to the pool and returned about 9:15 – her son in law met us at our car. I told him he looked very tired, as if he hadn’t slept or had been crying and asked if the doctor’s were able to give her anything for her pain. “Ella fallecio esta madrugada en el hospital” me dijo. (She died early this morning in the hospital). We consoled one another and he asked if we wanted to go up to see his wife. I told him that no matter what they decided, we had known her sister’s and brother since they were kids, and we were available to help in anything that they needed. We also conveyed the same to her daughter, who was beside herself trying to make phone calls to get the death certificate certified to be able to get her brother cleared to be able to begin his trip home from overseas. Her wishes, are to be cremated but they have decided to embalm the body before that to wait for her son and sister to return to PR. Again, her daughter relayed that her mother didn’t want anything done as far as a funeral seeing, or service or anything but she wasn’t too sure that’s what they wanted to do. We let her know that it was up to them to decide what they wanted to do. We then came in to change out of our wet bathing suits, and as we were leaving later this morning, I heard her daughter shout out “Gracias, Linda.” Lord, in your hands we place our lives, nothing depends on us. Permit us to be only vessels for you and let your light shine. Psalms 67 “May God be gracious to us and bless us and make his face shine upon us, that His ways may be known on earth, your salvation among the people.” And even though the family did not have an open service in memory of her, I will always remember those last few moments that I spent with my dear friend as she smiled and spoke of God with such gentle words and I pray that we may continue to be able to minister to her family in any way that the Lord may allow.

JAN CARVER

That’s what its all about…