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Tuesday January 9, 2007

A Call To Discernment (Part 2)

This is the second article in a three-part series examining the Bible’s call for spiritual discernment. You can access the first article here. Today we will see three marks of a lack of discernment.

Lack of discernment shows spiritual immaturity

In the closing verses of Hebrews 5, the author of this great letter warns his readers against apostasy, against straying from the faith.

About this we have much to say, and it is hard to explain, since you have become dull of hearing. For though by this time you ought to be teachers, you need someone to teach you again the basic principles of the oracles of God. You need milk, not solid food, for everyone who lives on milk is unskilled in the word of righteousness, since he is a child. But solid food is for the mature, for those who have their powers of discernment trained by constant practice to distinguish good from evil” (Hebrews 5:11-14).

The author of Hebrews has much he would like to tell the recipients of this letter. There is much knowledge he would like to impart to them, so many important things they need to learn. Unfortunately, what he wishes to communicate to them is “hard to explain,” not because it is obscure or difficult to understand, but because the people have become “dull of hearing.” They are not stupid people and are not intellectually inferior, unable to grasp such truths. The reason he cannot relay these important truths is not because of what these people are by nature, but of what they have become. There is much the author would like to say but he cannot and will not because of the spiritual immaturity of the people to whom he writes. They lack understanding, and lack discernment.

The recipients of the letter to the Hebrews are not new Christians or recent converts, for the author says that by this time they ought to be teachers. This is not to say that they all ought to be ministers or preachers, but that they should all be sufficiently mature that they are able to understand and to teach others the basics of the faith. Sadly, though, they still have not understood the basics themselves. They do not have the childlike faith Jesus so values, but a childish, immature faith. In this way they are like so many Christians since them. Richard Phillips writes:

The recipients of this letter were like many Christians today who think that theology is a waste of time. What difference does it make, people ask, whether God is a Trinity or not, whether Christ’s righteousness comes by imputation or infusion, and whether regeneration comes before faith or after? What is important, they say, is that we get along with each other. Then they cite passages commending a childlike faith, as if that were the same thing as a childish faith, that is, one that is indifferent to or ignorant of the Word of God .

We live in an age where too many who profess to be Christians rarely consider their spiritual maturity; an age when many consider spiritual immaturity a mark of authenticity. Far too many people consider sound theology the mark of a person who is argumentative and proud. Far too many people are just like the audience to whom Hebrews is addressed. This letter draws a clear line connecting a lack of discernment with spiritual immaturity so that those who lack discernment are those who are spiritually immature. Scripture makes it plain: if you are not a person who exhibits and exercises discernment you are not a mature Christian.

My wife and I have been blessed with three children and often marvel that they have survived through infancy for we have seen them put the most horrible and nauseating things in their mouths (things that are far too horrible to print!). Children have no understanding of what is good for them and will sample anything. Their mouths are constantly wide open, eager to taste and to eat anything that looks good to their untrained eyes. It is only with maturity that children learn what is truly good for them and what is not. Only with maturity will children learn that what looks good may not truly be good. Children need to learn to differentiate between what will hurt them and what will make them healthy. Eventually they learn to discriminate; they learn to discern. In the same way, mature Christians have learned to differentiate between what is pleasing to God and what is not, between what is consistent with Scripture and what is not. The Bible places great emphasis on spiritual maturity because, like children, immature believers are prone to sample anything. They are attracted to what looks good to their untrained eyes. Only as they grow in maturity are they able to differentiate between what pleases God and what does not. Because of this there can be no growth without discernment.

My wife and I have learned something else about children: children hate to be called children. Babies hate to be called babies. Nobody likes to be known as immature or childish, even those who clearly are. Every little boy wants to be a big boy. Every little girl wants to be a woman. God has somehow built into us a desire to mature. Every person wants to feel mature and grown up. When the author of Hebrews describes his readers as children he is not paying them a compliment and he knows that they will be insulted. He hopes to show them their desperate condition and to impress upon them how serious a state they are in. God demands and expects maturity for maturity is inseparable from discernment. A Christian cannot have one without the other.

Lack of discernment leads to backsliding

A lack of discernment points to spiritual immaturity, but this is not all. Those who are not discerning may also be those who are backsliding, whose faith is diminishing rather than increasing. “For though by this time you ought to be teachers, you need someone to teach you again the basic principles of the oracles of God. You need milk, not solid food, for everyone who lives on milk is unskilled in the word of righteousness, since he is a child” (Hebrews 5:12-13). While the subjects of this letter should have been growing in their faith, progressing from milk to solid food, they were instead moving backwards, returning to baby food.

As they grow and mature, children begin to be able to eat and digest solid food. Most children are weaned quickly and encouraged to enjoy food more substantial than mere milk. Even while they are still tiny, children long for substantial food. It is good and natural that they desire that which will sustain them more than milk. We would not consider a child healthy who, at six years of age, still drinks only milk for that child would be weak and sickly. The same is true in the spiritual realm. A person should pass quickly from spiritual milk to solid foods, from the basics to what is more advanced. A person should hunger to quickly learn and understand what is elementary and should soon long after what is more advanced. This is a sign of maturity and the mark of one who has truly been saved. On the other hand, a person who regresses from solid food to milk is a person who is desperately unhealthy and who will soon wither away and perish.

The recipients of the letter to the Hebrews were regressing rather than progressing in their faith. There was a time when they would have been able to hear what the author would so badly like to share with them. Sadly, they are no longer at such a place. Their lack of discernment has caused them to lose ground. They are moving backwards rather than forwards. They are backslidden.

Solid food is a long way off from these people for “solid food is for the mature, for those who have their powers of discernment trained by constant practice to distinguish good from evil.” Until these people learn to practice discernment and to do so constantly, they will not be able to handle solid food. Until they practice discernment and learn to distinguish between what is good and what is evil they will continue backsliding. Thus a lack of discernment is not only a mark of spiritual immaturity, but also a mark of those who are backsliding.

Lack of discernment leads to spiritual death

Those who have professed faith in Christ cannot backslide indefinitely. Sooner or later it will become clear that they are not believers at all and surely never were. The Bible does not tell us if the recipients of the letter to the Hebrews continued to fall away or if God graciously used this letter to draw them back to Him. But Scripture tells us elsewhere what happens to those who harden their hearts again God, rejecting His good gifts. Romans 1:28-32 is a damning indictment of the unregenerate human heart. It shows with terrifying clarity the evil of which humans are capable. These verses make plain the extent of the sinfulness of those who have rejected the true God in favor of false gods of their own making.

And since they did not see fit to acknowledge God, God gave them up to a debased mind to do what ought not to be done. They were filled with all manner of unrighteousness, evil, covetousness, malice. They are full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, maliciousness. They are gossips, slanderers, haters of God, insolent, haughty, boastful, inventors of evil, disobedient to parents, foolish, faithless, heartless, ruthless. Though they know God’s decree that those who practice such things deserve to die, they not only do them but give approval to those who practice them.

These verses ought to strike terror in the heart of all who forsake God and ought to cause us all to pause and acknowledge the depth of the evil that inhabits the hearts of men. As men turn from God, He gives them up to do those things their hearts, filled with evil, cry out to do: envy, murder, hatred, gossip, boasting and all manner of evil. And in the midst of this list is one word that seems almost unexpected. God gives people up to foolishness. Most Bible translations translate this word as “without understanding.” One, the New King James Version, translates it as “undiscerning.” Regardless of how it is rendered in English, this word points to a type of moral foolishness that should not be present in the life of one who considers himself a Christian. It points not only to the sinfulness of a lack of discernment, but to the inevitable conclusion that a lack of discernment, utter foolishness, is a mark of one who is spiritually dead and bankrupt. A complete lack of discernment or lack of concern for the discipline of discernment is a mark of spiritual death. It is categorized with sins that somehow seem far more serious. That a lack of discernment appears in this list seems shocking, but shows just how much God values discernment. An absolute lack of discernment and a lack of concern for discernment is sure proof of spiritual death.

We see also in 1 Corinthians 2:14 the dire consequences of ignoring discernment. “The natural person does not accept the things of the Spirit of God, for they are folly to him, and he is not able to understand them because they are spiritually discerned.” Those who are unsaved, who do not have the Spirit of God within them, are unable to be discerning. The ways of God and the truths of God are utter foolishness to such people.

To lack discernment is to sin against God. It is an inevitable result of turning from Him. It is easy to look at those who have turned from God and look at their lustful and angry hearts and affirm that this is the result of their sin. When a Christian falls into moral sin he may well examine his life to determine how he has turned his back on God, but is the same true when he exhibits a lack of discernment? A wise pastor writes, “to willingly neglect the truth and to live with our eyes closed shut while good and evil stare us in the face is to sin against God, ourselves, our families, and our church. … Again, this is worth stating over and over again. It is the responsibility of every Christian to learn, to be discipled in the Word, so that we can know how to be discerning. To fail to discern is to walk in darkness. “

This is the bad news. Scripture portrays those who lack spiritual discernment in three ways: They are spiritually immature, they are backslidden, and they are dead. Those who lack discernment will fit into one of these three categories. These are the dangers of ignoring discernment.

But there is good news, too. The Bible declares that there are many benefits stored up for those who desire discernment, who seek after it and who practice it.

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Comments (17) »


1. Colin Adams
January 9, 2007
9:35 AM

Thanks for these posts Tim - what a vital issue (discernment) to be grappled with in the church today. By the way, do you have any idea when your book is likely to come out?


2. Tim Challies
January 9, 2007
9:43 AM

“By the way, do you have any idea when your book is likely to come out?”

About a year from now.


3. donsands
January 9, 2007
11:34 AM

Excellent study of the Word. Richard Phillips is so right.
There are more than not, people who could care less about understanding the deep things of God’s Word.
It’s a tragedy. I pray God would grant the Church, and especially the shepherds, a aching hunger to know His Holy Scriptures. This is the greatest need for the Church in our day in my humble opinion, because the Church truly has become “dull of hearing”.


4. donsands
January 9, 2007
11:37 AM

Or is it, ‘couldn’t care less’? I always get this wrong.


5. Tim Challies
January 9, 2007
12:23 PM

“Or is it, ‘couldn’t care less’?”

It is “couldn’t care less.” The other option sounds better but doesn’t make sense!


6. John K
January 9, 2007
1:10 PM

Unfortunately, those who most need to hear this message may be those least likely to take a rebuke from Scripture seriously.

Take Care


7. Jabbok
January 9, 2007
1:32 PM

Tim,

Thank you for this good study. I’m looking forward to part 3.


8. James
January 9, 2007
3:29 PM

Wow.

Definitely appreciate this series Tim!


9. Tim Challies
January 9, 2007
4:54 PM

“Unfortunately, those who most need to hear this message may be those least likely to take a rebuke from Scripture seriously.”

True. But at least I’m exonerated myself from blame in trying to get it to them! :)


10. Jeri
January 9, 2007
5:27 PM

Tim, these articles encourage my optimism about your book! I think you’ve said some things here in a way that will “make sense” to the average layperson. The illustration of young children putting anything and everything into their mouths is very helpful.


11. david
January 9, 2007
5:30 PM

“Unfortunately, those who most need to hear this message may be those least likely to take a rebuke from Scripture seriously.”

That is sadly true. However, we need to trust God to bring the message home where he will. Also, it is far too easy for those of us who think we get it to think too much about those others who don’t and miss the application to ourselves. I didn’t fall for PDL, but I’m too embarrassed to list the foolish things that have caught me. I need to beware of my own lack of discernment, as well as admonishing others to be discerning. This is good for all of us.


12. brian
January 9, 2007
5:44 PM

Great topic. It made me think about what causes lack of discernment.

One is denial. We do not want to think of ourselves as needing instruction. We do not want to think of ourselves as immature or dependent. ‘Don’t confuse me with facts, my mind’s made up’. I can handle this on my own. I don’t need any further discernment. A heart that does not listen, is not patient, cannot delay gratification. A lot of comparisons between the wise and the fool in Proverbs follows this principle.

The second is distraction. We live in an interesting age (interesting because it is unlike any other). We are spoon-fed media and information in such a way that does not require us to discern - someone does it for us! We are never alone! We are entertained and/or can communicate with someone anywhere at any time. If we don’t have time to think or reflect - we won’t learn the discipline of discernment.

Denial and distraction are two traits of immaturity. People need someone to come alongside them and explain the ‘facts of life’ — there are some things that they will have to discern on their own. These are life and death items. If we deny our need and are distracted by whatever our ‘itching’ ears want to hear, we will never mature.

Jesus always challenged. He always wanted to make people think. If they would just stop and think about the differences between their perceptions and truth — they just might get it and acknowledge God.

Thanks for challenging me. I look forward to the book.


13. Trevin Wax
January 9, 2007
7:09 PM

Wow. Great article.

It is sad to see people who are proud of having a “simple” faith - simple in the sense that it is childish and not growing, not the “childlike” faith required by Scripture. It is even more distressing to see pastors who keep immature believers immature by never putting any meat into their sermons. Discernment is a “must” for the Christian!


14. Veritas
January 9, 2007
7:41 PM

There is severe and purposeful undiscernment in our churches. Why is that people can be so gullible and stupid to follow some of the banal and ludicrous ideas that so-called preachers come up with. We tend to think that once becoming Christians people suddenly grow brains but this is not the fact as we all were once like sheep and easily led astray. We all need to listen for and more importantly recognize the Master’s Voice and not foolishly follow imitations or imposters. This is where discernment is vital. Good stuff Tim.


15. DarrenA
January 10, 2007
10:35 AM

Hi Tim,
I recently began reading your posts on discernment and you have a lot of helpful food for thought. I commend you in your study and writing — I too have discovered there is not a lot of good material out there on Biblical discernment.

One comment in this article though struck me as peculiar:
“To lack discernment is to sin against God.”

I think I understand how you arrived at this point, based on the list of other obvious sins in Rom. 1:28-32, but it creates some strange consequences. It seems inconsistent with your first point, that a lack of discernment is a sign of spiritual immaturity for a believer. Does this mean that spiritual immaturity is a sin? Are all new believers sinning by simply beginning their Christian walk? Do they need to repent of their immaturity?

I’m curious what your thoughts are on this. Looking forward to seeing more material from your book.


16. Randy Hurst
January 10, 2007
11:15 AM

Tim,

This is awesome material! I feel like you are writing this just for me. Thanks a lot! I guess I am bit of a spiritual sickness/weakness hypochondriac so I always think that you (and the Word of course) are describing me. Can that be all bad?

This installment brings to mind an analogy.
Within the automotive retail industry (where I have spent the last 17 years) there is something called the green pea system. [Not every dealer – myself included - uses this so this is not a blanket condemnation] Management maintains a revolving door of fresh inexperienced sales people. This keeps the enthusiasm levels up and if you keep just a few too many sales people they have to be very aggressive and competitive to make enough money. Another benefit to the management is that their ignorance makes them easier to manipulate (I mean train) into doing it the way the dealer wants it done. As you might expect, there is a very high turn over with this system, because as a salesman wises up to the way they are being used they look for greener pastures.

I have discerned (at least once) that there are similar wolves in “Shepherds” clothing that have adopted this same strategy in growing their churches. They want to keep their flock in the milk so they can manipulate them in the directions that their secularized models of philosophy and growth promote. The Church should always be growing up into maturity…of course we want every new believer that we can bring into the fold…but many congregations are stuck inside a similar rotating door green pea mentality The church should maintain a better diet that takes the new borns from milk to meat in it’s preaching and teaching ministries. Selah


17. John K
January 10, 2007
3:20 PM

DarrenA:
Hi Darren. You quoted Tim as writing that, “To lack discernment is to sin against God.” and then asked, “Are all new believers sinning by simply beginning their Christian walk?”

I think Tim qualified this by the very next sentence in his post,
“It is an inevitable result of turning from Him.” (emphasis mine)
Perhaps we need to consider a sense of intent here, differentiating between the new Christian who is yet to grow in his faith, and the believer who is deliberately refusing to be discerning, out of rebellion or laziness.

Take Care