"The Discipline of Spiritual Discernment is a truly important work-one that should be required reading not only for church leaders, but for all sober-minded laypeople as well."

John MacArthur (From the Foreword)

"If you were more discerning you’d probably buy this book. If you do read this book, you will be! This book on discernment is simple, clear, well-written and well-illustrated...

Mark Dever

Welcome to the online home of Tim Challies, blogger, author and web designer. My first book, "The Discipline of Spiritual Discernment," is now available everywhere.

Read about the book, about the blog or about the author.

03/24/07
Comments (6)

Spiritual Posture

Roy Halladay is Toronto Blue Jays’ ace pitcher and is one of the top players in baseball. Halladay has a well-established routine that begins as soon as a game is complete and continues until the next game has begun five or six days later. He has another routine which takes him from the end of one season to the beginning of the next. And, like many players, has a routine which takes him from pitch-to-pitch. His off-season regimen, which prepares him for a long and grueling season of baseball, is legendary and readies more than his arm. To prepare his mind he reads The Mental ABC’s of Pitching seven or eight times every season. To hone his concentration he carries with him a series of laminate grids filled with 100 randomly numbered squares that he crosses off in order, from 00 to 99, with an erasable marker. “Every day that I’m not pitching, I’m doing something that’s going to help me when I’m out there, not just vegging on the bench or in the hotel room,” he says. To prepare his body he works out constantly and so vigorously that he rarely breaks into a sweat during a game. He has the reputation of being the team’s hardest worker. Not surprisingly, he is also the team’s best player. His team members flock to him, eager to learn from his routine so they, in turn, can become better players. While Halladay is clearly a talented athlete, what sets him apart is his preparation. He prepares to pitch by rigorously preparing himself both physically and mentally. He tends to more than his arm, but looks to his entire body and mind. He knows that to be a great player requires skill and preparation in a wide variety of disciplines.

I have been thinking about what is necessary to be a man or woman of discernment (and you’ll have to forgive me for the constant discernment talk these days. For obvious reasons it is much on my mind). It is clear that discernment is not a discipline that can be pursued on its own. A person who wishes to be discerning cannot simply read and study the passages of the Bible dealing with discernment. He cannot concentrate only on making the black-and-white decisions necessitated by discernment. Rather, he must look further and prepare himself in a variety of disciplines. He must be a person who prays, who studies the Bible, who is committed to a local church, and so on. He must maintain a particular posture. This makes me think of a sprinter. Just as a person who wishes to win a sprint will have to begin the race in a certain posture, crouched low with legs ready to spring forward, a person who wishes to be discerning must maintain a particular spiritual posture.

While this idea of spiritual posture arose from my musings on discernment, I have come to see that it has wide application. In any discipline of the Christian life, we need to have a certain kind of posture. There is nothing a Christian does or practices that is isolated from everything else. Too often I get hung up on one thing. I emphasize prayer and let Bible-reading slip. I emphasize reading my Bible and let prayer slip. But these disciplines are necessarily inter-related and together form the posture that allows me to run the race in a way that brings glory to God.

Spiritual Posture

Comments (6) »


1. Mike Reynolds
March 24, 2007
3:17 PM

As I made my way through my regularly visited websites, I just finished stopping by Bluejays.com to check out my team, and then, saving the best for last, I come visit Challies. It looks, Tim, like Brandon League should have been following Halladay’s example! League has lost 10% of his velocity by keeping his physical regimen too narrowly focused — what do we lose when we do the same in our spiritual regimen? A while you back you mentioned you were learning and being stretched to find theology in everything. And now I believe you. Great point, and by the way, go Jays go.


2. Josh Rives
March 24, 2007
3:51 PM

This broad focus on all disciplines seems to be what separates the truly great Christians who are making huge waves from the everyday Christians who get by as good people. Not to be judgmental, but it seems to separate the John Pipers or Al Mohlers from…well me


3. Pete Scholtens
March 25, 2007
7:23 AM

This focus on discerning …

Is it possible to become too discerning and miss the forest for the trees?


4. Martin Pitcher
March 25, 2007
7:24 AM

Thanks for the post Tim. I can relate to the multi-faceted idea of personal discipline in the life of an individual Christian. Its not just prayer or Bible reading, but it is a balance of your walk, talk, eating and sleeping for all are the Lord’s. Its using your down time as a time of upward thinking. It is just plain old-fashion work. Its making up your mind to mind the things of God and not yourself. We must make the decision to do this work before our feet hit the floor every morning and remain determined to keep God as our focus til our head hits the pillow at night. But mostly it is the freedom to give God everything so we don’t have to worry about the small stuff. And believe me. It is all small.


5. David Fisher
March 25, 2007
8:41 AM

Another great post, Tim! Be assured of my prayers as you wrap up your writing project in the next week or so.

Don’t ever apologize for thinking about discernment “too” much. I know the subject is on your mind because it’s the topic of your book but it seems that the body of Christ needs this gift more today than ever before. You must agree or you wouldn’t have written about ut.

Keep up the good work!

David

P.S. And, yes, there is always a parallel between baseball and the Christian life as I discovered in the 29 years that I combined the two…with the Blue Jays.


6. Carla Rolfe
March 25, 2007
6:13 PM

“Is it possible to become too discerning and miss the forest for the trees?”

Now there’s an interesting question. I do think it’s entirely possible to come to a place that you might put so much credence in your own discernment that you may become prideful in it, thereby missing the forest for the trees.

I appreciate Tim’s focus on this topic and hope (like everyone else) the writing project serves to bless many readers.

May we all remain teachable.