Greg Johnson writes about the fallacy of boot-strap faith and the plague of
quiet time guilt:
It’s ironic, but the Quiet Time has become the number one cause of defeat among Bible-believing Christians today. At one time or another, nearly every sincere believer feels a deep sense of failure and the accompanying feelings of guilt and shame because he or she has failed to set aside a separate time for Bible study and prayer. This condition is called Quiet Time Guilt. And it’s a condition with many repercussions. The shame of Quiet Time Guilt manifests itself in even deeper inability to fruitfully and joyfully study Scripture. Prayer becomes a dread; Bible study a burden. The Christian suffering from Quiet Time Guilt then despairs of seeing God work in his or her life, until finally he or she simply gives up. He may continue outward and public Christian commitments like church attendance, but secretly he feels a hypocrite.
The author goes on to talk about the causes of quiet time guilt and makes this assessment:
Your quiet time is not your relationship with God. Your relationship with God—or, as I prefer to say, God’s relationship with you—is your whole life: your job, your family, your sleep, your play, your relationships, your driving, your everything. The real irony here is that we’ve become accustomed to pigeonholing our entire relationship with God into a brief devotional exercise that is not even commanded in the Bible.
The article is about grace-centered faith. It's good stuff and worth reading
(HT: thebluefish).
4 Comments:
When my daughter was about 11 years old, she heard a sermon by our associate pastor. He told the story of a woman who was not regular in her quiet time, and one evening, she arrived home to see her home in flames. She lost her entire family. He didn't come right out and say so, but it was implicit in his words that someohow the failure of the quiet time was related to the loss of her family.
Ever since then, my daughter has been plagued with fears that God is going to "take something away" from her because she is not as diligent in her quiet time as she feels is necessary. It causes her to fail to enjoy what God has given her because she's regularly afraid of it being taken away. I've had many conversations with her about this, but the feeling still lingers.
Sorry to hear your daughter is having a hard time with that issue. Thanks for sharing the story. Peace.
Thanks for sharing this. It really helps on the days when I don't set aside any time. Life is worship!
Glad you found something helpful, Doug. Thanks for stopping by. Peace.
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