Scholar and author Dallas
Willard wrote books on the spiritual disciplines (The Spirit of the Disciplines) and on experiencing God (The Divine Conspiracy: Rediscovering Our Hidden Life in God)
so posing the question, “How am I supposed to experience God” was a natural for
him. The question came during a session of Catalyst 2010.
Experiencing God comes by way
of reading the Bible, prayer, and meditation to name just a few avenues.
Or some might argue, we experience God by way of spiritual
disciplines.
For many, that’s where the
pursuit of God ends. They associate disciplines with punishment. Who wants
discipline?
But Willard says that’s a
narrow view. Those who eschew the spiritual disciplines miss benefits that
enable us to do things that are good, strengthening and rewarding.
Some also argue that striving
to fulfill spiritual disciplines is the opposite of grace.
Willard disagrees. He claims grace doesn’t make us passive: “Grace is not
opposed to effort, it’s opposed to earning. Effort is action, earning is
attitude.” He maintains those who believe they are earning grace through
their efforts have the wrong basis for a relationship with God.
Instead, Willard describes
discipline as practice. It is the difference between training to do
something and trying to do something. It is not worldly wisdom. The
world tells us, “If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again. Willard
argues, “That’s not it. Find out what went wrong and then fix it.” That’s
discipline.
In answer to the question, “How
am I supposed to experience God?” Willard suggests intelligent effort,
exercised through the spiritual disciplines. And includes this advice,
“If you want to grow spiritually start by doing the next right thing that you
know you ought to do.”
Willard says that’s what God
wants you to do adding, “Nothing will drag you into the kingdom of God like
doing the next right thing.”
Experiencing God has been a
pursuit of believers for centuries. One of the most adored books on
living in God’s presence comes from a lay brother in a Paris monastery by the
name of Brother
Lawrence.
After his death in 1691 a few
of his letters were collected and published under the title, ‘The Practice of
the Presence of God.’
In it, Brother Lawrence simply
and beautifully stated that to experience God one must continually commune with
God:
“Sometimes I considered myself
before Him as a poor criminal at the feet of his judge. At other times I beheld
Him in my heart as my Father, as my God. I worshipped Him the oftenest I could,
keeping my mind in His holy presence and recalling it as often as I found it
wandered from Him. I made this my business, not only at the appointed times of
prayer but all the time; every hour, every minute, even in the height of my
work, I drove from my mind everything that interrupted my thoughts of God.”
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