9 Signs We Are Asleep in the Light
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By Brad
Powell
Q: It seems to me there’s a real problem with the
church these days. There’s a ton of talk about reaching the world, but so
little seems to be happening. Jesus said his church, his people, would be light
in a world of darkness. Yet the darkness seems to be growing. From your view,
what’s going on?
A: It’s definitely not a problem with
Jesus’ promise about his church. And it’s not a problem with how dark our world
is. The early church brought light to a world far darker than ours. From my
perspective, we have a problem with spiritual narcolepsy. It’s time for
believers to wake up.
I believe the biggest obstacle to the church fulfilling its
mission is on the inside. Too many believers are asleep in the light. And the
real problem is they don’t know it.
It’s not the first time. The church at Sardis experienced the
same problem.
“I know your deeds,” Jesus tells them. “You have a reputation of
being alive, but you are dead. Wake up! Remember, therefore, what you have
received and heard; obey it and repent. But if you do not wake up, I will come
like a thief, and you will not know at what time I will come to you” (Rev.
3:1-3).
Jesus makes it clear. Believers can look awake. They can be
highly respected for their lives of faith. They can do and say all the right
things. And yet they’re dead, asleep in the light.
Could this be the problem in your church, in your own life?
I’ve been personally wrestling with that question for a while now. In order to
get to the answer, I’ve worked through some ways to detect signs of spiritual
narcolepsy in my life and the life of our church family.
Nine Signs of Spiritual Narcolepsy
1. We talk about Jesus but aren’t genuinely
experiencing him. He’s distant and unreal in our everyday
life. He’s someone we talk about more than we talk with.
2. Our relationship with Jesus, our spiritual
life, is more of a weekend thing than an every day of the week thing. Church
defines our experience with Christ more than Christ defines our life
experience.
3. Our spiritual life is more form than
substance. It’s more an outside than inside reality. We may do and
say all the right things, avoid all the wrong things, but it’s not real or
alive in us. It’s something we do but not necessarily something we are.
4. We haven’t experienced much authentic change
in our life in a long while, though we’ve been faithfully doing all the right
things. Since it’s impossible to genuinely experience Jesus and
remain unchanged, this is a clear sign we’re asleep in the light.
5. We are more concerned about the role God is
playing in our plans than the role we should be playing in his plans.
6. We seldom really consider the eternal
condition of people in our world. We are able to rub
shoulders with them daily without ever addressing their spiritual condition.
7. We’re living spiritually unnoticed. The
people around us don’t know we’re Christ-followers. They don’t notice anything
different about us because there’s nothing to notice. They don’t pursue our
advice when things aren’t going well in their lives.
8. We tend to live for the moment more than the
eternal. Today defines our choices more than eternity.
9. We don’t feel like we have a problem with
being “asleep in the light.” This is a big one for me.
When I’m not consciously aware of the danger of becoming less passionate
spiritually, it’s a clear sign I’m already there.
Five Causes for Spiritual Narcolepsy
The first steps toward resolution are honest
self-appraisal—Am I “asleep in the light?”—and addressing the causes. So where
does spiritual narcolepsy come from? Here are five common causes I’ve observed.
1. We gradually allow our relationship with God
to become more defined by habit and ritual than desire and intimacy.
2. We begin focusing more on doing than being. We
get so busy working for God that we start failing to spend time with God.
3. We become satisfied with coasting through
today based upon the movement we experienced yesterday. We
run out of spiritual fuel long before our lives come to a complete stop.
4. We fail to recognize and remember our
desperate need to abide in Christ every moment of our lives. When
there’s no crisis, we often fail to abide, which ultimately leads us to the
next crisis.
5. We get impatient. Rather
than waiting on him, we go to work for him. It always leads to the same place,
a spiritual nightmare.
God has called us to wake the world to Jesus. It’s our
mission. A mission that’s impossible if we’re asleep in the light. So it’s time
for believers to wake up. It’s time for us to wake up.
“The hour has come for you to wake up from your slumber,”
Romans 13:11 says, “because our salvation is nearer now than when we first
believed.”
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