Navigating Spiritual Tension Requires This Christ-Centered Wisdom

God has woven into creation seemingly opposite spiritual principles that, when separated, can appear contradictory.

By Dan Reiland

For example, law and grace. They are in reality, perfectly paired and balanced so we can comprehend the full picture of who God is and the life He offers us.

In fact, they embody much of how we are to understand our relationship with God, as well as how we engage our spiritual leadership.

As leaders, it’s important that we understand these complex biblical ideas and are able to use them in our daily leadership of the people God has entrusted to us.

For leaders who like things black and white, these can be frustrating. In fact, I’ve seen leaders get stuck and unable to make a key decision because life is often unclear and messy and refuses to be contained in a neat package.

How about you? Do these powerful biblical concepts sometimes make decisions with people difficult? How are you learning and improving? How might your leadership be more effective?

The place growth begins in this matter is by identifying the key themes and thinking through a few practical illustrations. Think them through, and form your biblical leadership philosophy so you aren’t tempted to make it up on the fly under pressure.

Here are a few examples, perhaps you can add one to the list, or an illustration that is helpful to all of us:

Law and Grace
Romans 8:17

Law without grace is a prison of legalism. Grace without law is irresponsible freedom.

This is probably the most common and the most controversial. Let’s consider one example. We don’t have to travel far into the practical issues of marriage, divorce and remarriage before law and grace can become incredibly divisive rather than providing the basis for biblical wisdom. When in fact, we could never really provide the needed truth without the balance of both law and grace.

Spirit and Truth
John 4:21-24

Truth without spirit is lifeless orthodoxy. Spirit without truth is meaningless elation.

I love this passage in John 4. When Jesus is talking with the Samaritan woman the conversation is so profound. The obvious practical example that comes to mind is the design of a worship service. For one leader, the worship service is too structured and lifeless, for another leader, the same service is irreverent and secular. Even the phrase “true worshippers” can set off an argument, and we miss the point of being united in the worship of one true God!

Faith and Works
James 2:14-24

Faith without works is religion without substance. Works without faith is merely humanistic endeavor.

OK, I’ll admit I’ve been in some tough conversations about this one myself over the years. I’m not a “works” guy; I believe we are saved by faith, but I also believe that there will be evidence of our faith.

How about you? What do you think? The people you love and lead have similar questions, so it’s important to have at least a foundation of biblical thinking for your leadership.

These are tough questions we face as spiritual leaders, and it’s important we are grounded in our answers.

Sometimes our honest answer must be “I don’t know.” That’s better than creating division or getting defensive about something we are not sure about. If your answer is “I don’t know,” then your responsibility is to take the time to study and pray.

That in combination with wise counsel can help you lead your congregation with the wisdom God has provided, even in the most complicated of situations.

Dan Reiland is the executive pastor at 12Stone Church in Lawrenceville, Georgia.

(Source: ministrytodaymag.com)

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