Login  |  Register  |  Store Account  |  FAQs  |  Links  |  Contact
      Share This Site  Share This Site

Read Newsletter

The Life with God Bible Preview - Reading 11

 

Paul: The Way of Christlikeness

A Character Sketch by Brenda Quinn

Paul's message defies any quick summary, for his words are the very words of God to us on many issues. Yet it is the man who brought the message we're interested in here. Scholars have difficulty pinpointing Paul's focal contribution to the church, and lay people often view him as having a kind of "holy fanaticism" that is beyond our reach. Underneath it all, Paul remains an enigma largely because, while we laud him, we fail to imitate his way of living by practicing the many and varied disciplines he practiced throughout his life.

Paul reminds us that even before his conversion he was "far more zealous [than other Jews] for the traditions of my ancestors," traditions that included fasting, tithing, study, and more (Gal 1:14). He knew a lifetime of committed discipline, and upon coming to Jesus his discipline took on new meaning and purpose.

After meeting Christ on the Damascus road Paul prayed and fasted for three days. Shortly after his conversion he spent a long period of time, thought to be three years, in solitude in the Arabian desert. Throughout his years of ministry and travel Paul spent time in fasting and prayer, both alone and with his ministry partners. He modeled continual self-sacrifice, simplicity, frugality, and service. He worked to support his ministry life and gracefully endured imprisonment and beatings. He often went without food, sleep, or adequate clothes and he dealt in love and perseverance with those who took him for granted.

Paul asked his fellow Christians to imitate him and "train yourself in godliness" as he was doing (1 Tim 4:7), in a way similar to physical training. "Just as with the physical, there is a specific round of activities we must do to establish, maintain, and enhance our spiritual powers. One must train as well as try," writes Dallas Willard in The Spirit of the Disciplines. "The key to understanding Paul is to know that, with all his 'weaknesses' and failures and personality deficiencies, he gave himself solely to being like his Lord. He lived and practiced daily the things his Lord taught and practiced. He lived a life of abandonment; and it was his confidence in this path, and in the power that derived from the rich union with Christ it created, that enabled him to call others to do the same. His actions, his character, his motivations-and the astonishing world-changing power derived from his lowly life-style-can only be understood by keeping this fact in mind: Paul followed Jesus by living as he lived. And how did he do that? Through activities and ways of living that would train his whole personality to depend upon the risen Christ as Christ trained himself to depend upon the Father."

Personal Reflection

· If you have practiced any of the Spiritual Disciplines, how has God met you, changed you, and moved in your life as a result?