I noted last
week that, when I became a Christian my
senior year in college, I noticed almost immediately that things seemed
different. I couldn’t explain exactly what was different, but I knew deep
within my soul that something profound had happened and something fundamental
had changed.
One of the first
things I do remember was sensitivity to spoken language: the kind of language I
was used to hearing and the kind of language I was used to using myself. It was
more than profanity, as obvious as that could be. It was also the cynicism, the
sneering, the sardonic remarks, the desire to be thought deep and smart.
I became
sensitive, almost overly sensitive, to language – what was coming out of my
mouth and what was coming out of others’ mouths. What began as awareness
gradually became something hurtful to my ears. And while I knew I was forgiven,
and would go on being forgiven, my attitudes were changing.
Once I started
my professional career, this sensitivity to language grew. I was not someone
who wore his faith on his sleeve – I didn’t afflict co-workers with tracts or
mini-sermons. But somehow people knew. For a long time, from the mid-1970s to
the late 1990s, people would apologize for using bad language in my presence,
or a raunchy joke would stop if I walked into a meeting room. (I should say
that the culture has changed enormously since around 2004 – and nothing was
sufficient to stop the common use of profanity in the workplace.)
But this “something
different” inside of me was limited to language. Slowly it began to changes
actions – things I did or didn’t do. It affected choices I made. It changed how
I treated people. And, in the workplace, it made me extraordinarily aware of
injustice, people being treated badly, people being used and disregarded. The
more I heard about the importance of people, the more I saw just the opposite
happening.
In
The Discipline of Grace: God’s Role and Our Role in the
Pursuit of Holiness, Jerry Bridges
says that “…our sin is a burden that afflicts us rather than a pleasure that
delights us.” That is exactly what started after I became a Christian. Things
changed. Things inside me changed. I more and more recognized things about
myself that I had taken for granted or never even considered. And slowly, I
began to change.
You don’t reach an
end-point here. This process never stops.
But I can say
that the sensitivity becomes more acute.
Led by Jason
Stasyszen and Sarah Salter, we’ve been reading The Discipline of Grace by Jerry
Bridges. To see what others had to say on this chapter, “We Died to Sin,”
please visit Sarah at Living Between the Lines.
Photograph by George Hodan via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
2 comments:
This was definitely a sensitivity I felt within myself, too, Glynn, once I came to Christ. He truly changes us from the inside out.
Blessings!
This is so true. I highlighted the same quote. This is why I find it difficult to believe any longer that too much grace leads to wild, unchecked lifestyle. More grace gives us a deeper desire for Him, His love, His holiness. It is a burden to sin because it's hurtful to Him and we know it's hurtful to us as well. Thanks Glynn. Great perspective.
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