As I led a Bible study on sanctification, I shared three
scriptural narratives of the Christian life. The first: a renewal, death-and-resurrection narrative about
repentance and each new day being filled with God’s forgiveness. The second: a story of God’s people
journeying through the perilous wilderness where they face struggles and
spiritual attacks. And third: an
image of a life of service—becoming living sacrifices pleasing to God, engaging
with neighbors, and sharing joys and burdens in community.
“Which
one of these images describes your life right now?”
I asked. Unsurprisingly, the participants picked
different ones. One woman felt she wasn’t good enough for God because she felt
guilty about past sin. “How can God ever forgive me? I need to return again and
again to the cross.” Another parishioner said, “I feel like life is a struggle
and I’m constantly under attack, tempted to doubt God’s promises of provision.”
This brother had been unemployed for some time, and after being turned down
repeatedly by potential employers, he felt the need to hope in God again. A
third person said, “I just want to know what people need in this community and
do something about it!” This young man was ready to act, eager to serve his
neighbors.
Does every Christian experience the spiritual life in the
same way? Of course not. Yet we often teach sanctification as if they do. We
argue about whether sanctification should be seen as a cycle or a process,
whether holiness is about struggle or perfection, and so on. We make
sanctification into a concept that seeks a unifying solution. We lose the sense
that sanctification is about a story—about the Holy Spirit’s work
in and through (and yes, in cooperation with) broken vessels, best told in the
rich, visual language of biblical narratives. There is no single, homogeneous
way of thinking about sanctification; everyone is in a different place when it
comes to describing the Christian life. I’m grateful for the variety of rich
narratives in Scripture at our disposal to help us as we walk with those
entrusted to our spiritual care.
The experiences and spiritual needs of the participants
in my Bible study that day aligned with narratives of sanctification we find in
Scripture. The renewal narrative spoke to the first woman’s need for
restoration. The second man was facing doubt, and the image of life in the
desert—of standing firm against the attacks of the Evil One by holding hope in
God’s promises—addressed his need for security amid life's struggles. The last
person was really asking about purpose in life; he resonated with the biblical
image of service and the call to community.
Is the Christian life about dying and being raised to new
life, about standing firm in the wilderness, or about making room for others
whose needs shape what it means to serve? The answer is yes! Holiness
has many faces. Scripture gives us not one but many ways to describe and invite
hearers of the Word into life in the Spirit. The Spirit is like a Sculptor who
shapes us in the likeness of Christ in the way we most need it.
What are our people primarily struggling with? Identity?
Security? Purpose? We can shepherd them best as they discern the spiritual life
when we allow many different narratives to shape our understanding of
sanctification.
The Bible’s stories and images provide us with a visual
grammar to articulate what life in the Spirit looks like at various times in
one’s spiritual journey. This grammar for expressing one’s spiritual state,
need, and hope prompts prayer as we ask the Holy Spirit to enter in and provide
what is needed: Come, Holy Spirit!
Along with the renewal, wilderness, and service
narratives, Scripture conveys many other images and stories of the Christian
life. Narratives of hospitality to strangers, of outcasts welcomed into God’s
kingdom through faith in Christ, of the Holy Spirit leading the church out of
Jerusalem into the margins where Samaritans and Gentiles dwell. Or narratives
of life devoted to God in labor and prayer, of tending to the garden but not
without making time for Sabbath rest, of Jesus doing the mission of the Father
without giving up his time with the Father in prayer.
As we shepherd those in our care in their Christ like
growth, we can look to the many narratives of the sanctified life in Scripture
that may align with what our parishioners are dealing with in their spiritual
journeys. Of course, in real life, these stories often intersect. God’s people
may be experiencing guilt, shame, struggle, and the need for service all at
once! Life is complex.
But the Spirit leads us as we enter the complex lives of
our neighbors. As we do so, we acknowledge that we too need the Holy Spirit to
give us the same forgiveness, security, purpose, welcome, and rest others in
our care thirst for. So we too pray, Come, Sculptor Spirit!
Source:
Leopoldo Sánchez is professor of systematic theology at Concordia
Seminary in St. Louis. He’s the author of Sculptor Spirit: Models of
Sanctification from Spirit Christology.
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