“Hello, my name is _____ and I am transformed”

be-transformed#1

The Bible does not deny that we were various things—addicts, homosexuals, angry, prideful, pornographic masturbators—but that is what we were (past tense). The emphasis in Scripture is on what we are and what we are called to be. The Christian does not say, “Hello, my name is _____ and I am a X Y or Z.” The Christian says I was dead but now I am alive. The Christian says I am a struggling sinner yet I am a saint. The Christians says I am a new creation; I am transformed. We must remember however that we are “simultaneously saint and sinner.” This is the biblical balance. We are holy in Christ and yet we are progressively becoming holy (see 1 Cor. 1:2; Heb. 10:14).

Paul wrote a letter to a church back in the day. The people had their own struggles. Many of them use to worship various false gods and perhaps were even involved in cult prostitution. But you know what Paul called them when he wrote to them? He called them “God’s beautiful creation” (Eph. 2:10). He didn’t say, “Now church, make sure that you are constantly reminding yourselves that you were part of the occult. In fact, when you meet together say, ‘Hello, my name is _____ and I am an occultist.’”

In a different post we are going to explore whether or not addiction is a disease. Suffice it to say that addiction is “a complex habit;”[1] I would say a complex sinful habit. However, one of the problems in claiming the identity of “addict,” “alcoholic,” or “overeater” is that we deny that addiction is a habit that can be finally overcome. I am not saying it won’t be a struggle. I am not even saying that it will even finally be overcome in this life. Yet, the Bible teaches the freeing and empowering truth that in Christ we are currently a new creation. It says we are adopted children of God. We are even God’s beloved; His treasure.

Labeling may not seem like a big deal but it is. In hospitals it is important for people to be labeled correctly. If someone has a gunshot wound on their leg they should not be taken to a cardiologist; and someone that has the flu should not be lifeflighted. Labels are important for treatment.

The Bible talks about sin. Actually, quite a lot about sin. It talks about the deceitfulness of sin, the sin that sticks so closely, our sin natures, and various specific sins among other things. But it does not talk about us now being identified as sinner; addict, overeater, alcoholic, or otherwise. Instead, our identity is in Christ and Him alone.

Truly,

The scope of recovery is… radically extended within a Christian view of addiction. Indeed ‘recovery’ does not sufficiently name the Christian hope in the face of addiction. Instead the Christian hopes for ‘discovery’ and ‘new creation’—not a return to some maintainable equilibrium between who we are and what we want but rather a transformation of the self that brings who we are and what we want… into perfect coordination and harmony.[2]

The Bible doesn’t primarily keep us from sin by reminding us what we were when we were dead. And for that I am glad. That seems depressing. The Bible instead says things like this:

“Put off your old self, which belongs to your former manner of life and is corrupt through deceitful desires, and to be renewed in the spirit of your minds, and to put on the new self, created after the likeness of God in true righteousness and holiness” (Eph. 4:22-23)

“Be imitators of God” (Eph. 5:1)“

“At one time you were darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Walk as children of light” (Eph. 5:8)

The Bible says that we are progressively being transformed into the image of God. The Bible says that eternal serenity is available to us in Christ.

The Bible has taught me to say, “Hello, my name is Paul and I am transformed.” I was a lot of things. But now I am a new creation in Christ.

___________________________________________________________

[1] Kent Dunnington, Addiction and Virtue: Beyond the Models of Disease and Choice, 88.

[2] Ibid., 183.

Is the Spiritual Realm Real?

The Apostle Paul reminds us that we live in a spiritual sphere, and not merely a quaint and calm one (Eph. 6:10-20). We are at war. Right now. Constantly.

So, there is a spiritual realm and it is not merely there, it is raging. There are sides. Good and bad, right and wrong. This is serious stuff. Not something we should put out of our head and forget about.

Further, Paul exhorts us to know the reality of and invest in the good side of this spiritual war (cf. Gal. 6:8; 1 Cor. 9:25). We live, we die, for something that is not yet tangible or scientifically verifiable. We live for the unseen real (2 Cor. 4:18).

But, do we? Do we really? Do we live for the unseen real? Because a lot of times–in my life at least–we don’t. I think, very often, we are practical naturalists. Yes, we say we’re supernaturalists but we’re pretty caught up with a whole lot of material stuff.

Are you a mainlined and streamlined materialist? Do you believe in the supranatural (supernatural) but mainly in name only?

I guess we could call it semi-supernaturalism or neo-naturalism. In short, this type of person is a naturalist that says they are not a naturalist, when, by all signs, they are, in fact, a full fledged naturalist.

Are you a supernaturalist? I mean, are you really? Do you believe in the spiritual realm? Does it show? Does it make a difference in your life?

For instance, do you pray? Because I can say a lot of things. I can say that I am tall, dark, and handsome. However, we both know that that is not true (I am not “dark,” I have a red beard and pale skin). So then, it has to be more then a vocal consent or even a cognitive assent. If we believe something, we’ll do something.

If we, as Christians, believe in the spiritual realm how should that change our every day lives?

The Cosmic Comedy

Ironically, though the Bible covers every type of literature, in its final form the Bible is a cosmic comedy. And all throughout the biblical story there is one main character, even if not always on the scene. The story of Scripture is a story about God’s only Son, Jesus the Christ. I was reading the other day in the book of Ezekiel. I read the words “there shall be no more a brier to prick or a thorn to hurt them,” in Ezekiel 28:24. I began thinking about all the edenic language in Scripture and began to sketch a few lines to the poem below that recalled some of that biblical language. I have tried to show through this poem that Jesus is the hero of the story because He fixes what is the cosmic problem by restoring a way to Eden and fellowship with God.

Just a word and all wonders wrought
God announced, and behold, it was all good

Creation had communion with the Creator
God walked in the Garden

Yet with Adam the serpent did conspire
And brought the world into mire

Beckoned to the grave
Everything disarranged

The curse burst upon the scene
But in the midst a seed of hope was seen

Many men came and went
Was the hope of promise spent?

Many lambs, prophets, priests and kings
Yet none with true salvation in their wings

Darkness for a time
No prophet’s voice was heard

Yet in the darkness I Light it shone
And it would overcome the darkness

Behold, O’ world, your Prophet, Priest, and King
Jesus the Promised Seed and Lamb

The curse brought in shall be expunged
Yes, replunged upon the Son

Christ was crushed as promised
But in His crushing, crushed Satan, sin, and death

He was cursed to reverse the curse
He felt our plight to set all things right

The lion to lay down with the lamb,
Because, the Great I AM, was slain

No more brier prick or thorn to stick
All shall be made new

When our King all subdue
All shall be made new

All foes to be forgotten
Forever banished now

That serpent of old will receive its last scald
And be the god of the pit

We shall walk in the Garden again,
Because God walked Gethsemane to Golgotha

The true Temple, Tabernacle, Eden restored
Communion with the creator in the New Jerusalem

The ground will be paved with gold,
For gold will have no glory,
The only glory will be the story of God’s unfailing love

All shall be made new
Victory through the Son!

All shall be made new
Victory through the Son!

Come, Lord Jesus, come!

Your Guides Mislead You

“O my people, your guides mislead you”

 

The blind tell you where to go

And the deaf, they teach you

 

Because they tell you to dig holes, and promise buried treasure,

But you’re just stuck in a hole

They’ve buried you, there was no treasure                                              

 

“Your guides mislead you”

 

Because they tell you to climb the mountain, own it all,

You get there, you made it,

You freeze and die, alone, at the top

 

“O my people, your guides mislead you” (Isaiah 3:12b),

Turn to Me

The End (is finished for some)

 

All shall quake; the earth shall shake for fear.
Cacophonous[1] cries and weeps of fear.
Who can persevere?! Who can persevere?!

Darkness, plague, and plight are nothing now, an inch of rain to the ocean.
Death and hail welcomed dear, compared to holy wrath.
O’ for the mountains to fall, to crawl into the grave, pleasures unbequeathed.

Sepulcher and tombs pining for their grave; prefer sleep to full rage!
Dies Irae,[2] a real blood bath; lo’ all doom is sure!
All is exposed, no grove of darkness now.

The path is fast, God’s wrath is sure, how do you ever hope to endure?
Every wrong ended, every right resplendent.
Never hastening, onward chasing, the end, it is sure.

An end of all pity and patience,[3]
No time to run, all is done,
Destruction of all pernicious powers.

The cup of wrath,
Shall be poured fast,
And drank down to the dregs.

All your deeds will be recounted, all your riches to be spilled, be spoiled.
No chance reprisal, no pro se,[4] all shall end that day.
Eternal hades never waning, who is there to do explaining?!

All laid bare, compare perfection, and dash the hope of resurrection.
Day of wrath, of retribution, where is my hope of cons’lation?
Saving solace, be not found on any man laid in the ground.

Only One from thence did raise, be any hope to thee contr’ve.
Slain in flesh yet rose in power, this one hope of dark hour.
Day of wrath, of retribution, You good Lord my one cons’lation.

Boldly come now I, no wrath to fear, no pro se, for You have been my proxy.[5]
I, in You, which is perfection, now sweet resurrection!
This my sure hope, my solid ground, when all ‘bout me veh’mence.

Look on me, my innocence flee, look to Christ my innocence and life!
This my one hope and solace be, that You did die for me.
Peace by Your punishment, blessed because You bruised.

Day of wrath, endured.
Punishment paid; from the cross You finished it.
The end is done, for some.

Solemnity[6] in the wake of such thoughts bestow.
Awake, and break, yes, stir my heart again.
O’ Lord, I believe, help thou my unbelief, amen.

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[1] It has a discordant or jarring sound.
[2] Latin for “day of wrath.”
[3] See II Esdra 7:32-33.
[4] This refers to a person representing himself or herself without a lawyer in a court proceeding.
[5] This refers to someone who acts on someone else’s behalf, speaks for them, or is their substitute.
[6] That is, a gravity and earnestness to all of life.

The World she Whispers softly

She whispers her lies, to my demise

O’ how the plague fills my ears

But O’ how I listen, O’ how I listen

Stop up my ears

 

The world she speaks softly, sweetly

And bitterly she pulls her blade

 

O’ how the strong have fallen

Collapsed onto the ground

She whispers sweetly, softly

 

Venomous snake recoiled in bread

Yes, a wolf in sheep’s clothing

 

But tell me the lies, tell me the lies, I want to hear.

I want to be blinded. I want to embrace the sheep. I’ll disregard the noose around my neck.

 

Apparently I’m the epitome of insanity,

In search of life (sehnsucht), embracing death

 

O’ God! Stop up my ears. And make me hear…

Your truth.

I don’t have to read in the Bible every day

I don’t think we should have a legalistic drive to read Scripture (Yet, remember, a train is most free when it is where it should be; on the tracks). But Scripture is very very very important. Jesus said sanctify them in truth. Then He said, “Your Word is truth” (Jn. 17:17 cf. Ps. 119: 9, 11, 165 and beginning of Prov. 7 in context). God has also, significantly, chosen to reveal Himself through Scripture. God does do all sorts of stuff for us outside of Scripture (common grace, restraining grace, outside of countless other graces). He give us friends. He gives us beautiful “blood moons” to enjoy. And that should make us weep in appreciation. But that does not mean that we act like the man stranded on top of the roof in a flood who prayed for God to rescue him. In heaven he asked, “God why didn’t you rescue me?” God said, “I sent the Marines, I sent a helicopter, I sent…” God has revealed Himself! He has revealed Himself most pointedly in His Word. We should not neglect it.

I do think it is interesting to think that the majority of the writers of Scripture could not have had ready access to Scripture. Of course, the OT writers would not have known of the NT and likely had very little of the OT ready at their fingertips. Psalm 119 was composed about the OT, that’s kind of an obvious but wild thought.

Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, who wrote Scripture, didn’t themselves read Scripture every day; or, not likely. Paul also would not have likely read the Word every day (cf. 2 Tim. 4:13). Though, through his vast quotations of it, he clearly had hidden God’s Word in his heart.

So, no matter how we cut it, I don’t think we have to read Scripture every day. And, yes, I do believe in the Holy Spirit (though, sadly, not as I should). The Holy Spirit can and does speak to us. But, the Holy Spirit did already give us a book. And that book is supposed to be used to interpret what He says. So, it is very vital. Paul reminds us that Satan is tricky and parades himself around like an angel of light (2 Cor. 11:13-15; cf. 2 Thess. 2:9-12; Acts 17:11). We need God’s Word to interpret reality for us. We need God’s Word to interpret our emotions to us. His Word cuts deep (Heb. 4:12).

We don’t have to read the Word every day. But it is a huge privilege to be able to (Matt. 13:17)!

For me, recently, less has been more. I spent one day really just thinking hard on God’s restraining grace and it was powerful. I spent another day just thinking about the fact that we live coram deo, before the face of God. I think I would do well to feel less strained in my pursuit of God.

God does not love me more if I consume more of His Word. However. I do want to know Him more. Yet, that may mean less intake and more savoring.

“Give me understanding that I may live”

“Give me understanding that I may live” (Ps. 119:144) grabbed me as I was reading through Psalm 119 today. It’s pleading. It’s serious. It’s a matter of life and death. But is it? I mean, is it for me?

Well, very often it’s not for me. I don’t care. Or not like I should.

Very often I don’t even really seek understanding. I seek a checked box. However, let me tell you, that is not life giving. Yet, I am not sure I am willing to say it’s legalism either.

I know God’s word is important as a lamp to my feet (Ps. 119:105), I know it is important to keep me from sin (v. 9, 11, 165), yet it is often not “the joy of my heart” (v. 111) as it should be. Sadly, I don’t aways concur with the statement “give me understanding that I may live” (v. 144). I don’t normally rise before dawn to meditate on Scripture (cf. v.147, 148).

LORD, help me to seek You with my whole heart (v. 2). I am, or was, willing to wake up at 4am to study for tests in college so why does Your word not hold that kind of sway? Apparently that test had more gold (v. 72) and life in it than Your word. God, I admit I am fickle. I need Your help.

LORD, open my eyes that I would see the awesome truths contained in Your word (v. 18). Please make me understand Your law (v. 27) and help me not to waste my time on worthless things (v. 37) like excessive TV and the endless social media feed. 

Scripture is Sufficient to Address our Problems

The Bible gives us more than mere commands. It gives us the proper lens whereby to understand life.[1] The psalmist says that God’s Word is a light to our path (Ps. 119:105; cf. Ps. 1; 119:44-45; Prov. 6:23; 2 Tim. 3:15-17; 1 Peter 1:23; 2 Peter 1:3-4).

What does it mean that God’s Word is a light to our path? Here’s a friend’s story. It was dark and pine trees overhung and blocked any light from wandering onto the path.  The moon and stars may have been bright but you couldn’t tell.

My friend was camping with some guys. It was late. Everyone was in for the night. But he had to go to the bathroom. Luckily he had a flashlight. He made it to the potter-pot, over a football field length away, with no problems. On the way back, however, the light flickered and went out.

My friend was in trouble. But he thought if he just walked slowly he would be ok. He would softly pat the ground in front of him and once he was convinced it was the road he would continue. Well, after walking like this for a while he became pretty comfortable and confident. He began to walk faster.

He was making good time walking. When he walked right off the road. He tripped on something, maybe a skunk for all he knew, and fell down a hill. Luckily he didn’t fall all the way down the hill. He was stopped by a tree. Actually, he was stopped pretty abruptly. Eventually, he regained his composure and crawled back up the hill.

After about an hour his friends were wondering where he was. So they sent out a “search party.” They found my friend crawling in the wrong direction. He was a little bruised and battered. But his pride was worse off.

My friend now knows the vital importance of having a light to light the path!

Having a “light” is no less important in life. It is actually more important, a lot more. There is more to fear than a tree or being found by your friends crawling in the wrong direction.

It is wrong to approach the Bible like a magic encyclopedia. It does not address every issue. Or, at least, not in the same way. However, it is fundamental to every issue. It gives the foundation on which to build. It is the ever-present and needed North Star. It is the compass pointing the way.

However, as John Piper works out in his article “Thoughts on the Sufficiency of Scripture”: 

The sufficiency of Scripture does not mean that the Scripture is all we need to live obediently. To be obedient in the sciences we need to read science and study nature. To be obedient in economics we need to read economics and observe the world of business. To be obedient in sports we need to know the rules of the game. To be obedient in marriage we need to know the personality of our spouse. To be obedient as a pilot we need to know how to fly a plane. In other words, the Bible does not tell us all we need to know in order to be obedient stewards of this world.[2]

Scripture is not all we need. But we surely need it! And we especially need it to address moral and spiritual issues.

SRG2

Eric Johnson points out that Paul “does not say that the Scripture contains all the soul-care information there is—all the knowledge that God has regarding the care of souls—or that all extrabiblical information that bears on human nature and counseling is irrelevant or useless or sin.”[3] Instead, he says, “The Bible contains what might be called the first principles of soul care—the most important truths for the maturation of the soul—and so it provides the God-breathed foundation for a radically Christian model of soul-healing.”[4]

So, how then is Scripture sufficient to address our problems?

First, Scripture gets to the most fundamental and important questions in all of the universe. It answers the questions: Does God exist, How did we get here, What is wrong with the world, what should we do with our life, what happens after this life, and other massive and important questions.

Second, Scripture tells us how we can receive salvation in Christ and live in Christ.[5] Thus the Bible tells us how to be transformed. David Powlison says, “The gospel of Jesus Christ is as wide as human diversity and as deep as human complexity. The Scriptures that bear witness to this Christ in the power of His Spirit are sufficient to cure souls.”[6]

Third, and something I have hinted at, the Bible gives us a lens in which to see the world. It is, again, the light to our path. John Calvin used the illustration of spectacles to explain this (Institutes 1.6.1). He said that the Bible is not only what we read, but what we read with. We use its pages as spectacles to view and read the world and the knowledge God has distributed throughout it.

Though Scripture may not be the only helpful text, it is the only necessary text. Further, and not surprisingly, God’s Word must be the authoritative text. God’s Word is the last word. That is not to say, however, that there are no other helpful resources. There certainly are. And it is in wisdom to make use of them. But, let it be clear, they must always be subordinate to the Word of the LORD.

God’s truth, as truth, is invaluable. God’s truth, as truth, is also immensely practical. It is practical for addiction.[7] It is even practical for aviation. Though, as the figure above points out, Scriptures relevance various depending on the topic. Scripture has less relevance in aviation. Yet, even in aviation Scripture is still important. For instance, it is through Scripture that we see that there is a God that rules the cosmos and thus we have laws that govern the realm in which we live. Laws that allow for flight under certain conditions. We see that the pilot must strive to be the best pilot he can be to the glory of God. We see that the pilot must praise the Lord who made the expansive world in which he lives. So we learn a few things that apply to aviation. However, we are not taught how to fly a plane. We are not taught how much fuel a plane will consume under various operating conditions.

Scripture does and does not address every relevant fact in the universe. It does address everything in that through Scripture we know the beginning and telos (goal) of all things. Yet, if obviously does not address every single datum of information. What it does is grander. More useful even.

The Word of God is truth. Guides us in truth. Makes us holy (Jn. 17:17). I realize this is not an apologetic,[8] but I can’t help but say with C. S. Lewis that I believe in Christianity and the Bible as I believe that the sun has risen. Not only because I see it, but because by it I see everything else.[9] “To the man enlightened by the Spirit, Scripture is no longer a bewildering jumble of isolated items… Part chimes in with part, Scripture meshes with Scripture, and the unified bearing of the whole Bible becomes apparent. The accompanying experience of the ‘taste’, or ‘flavour’ of spiritual realities is immediate and ineffable.”[10] Again, this is not something I can prove, it is a work of the Spirit. God the Spirit transforms by means of the Word of God. This is the biggest testimony of the sufficiency of Scripture; whether or not there is irrevocable evidence to prove it.

I will further say, that because God’s Word is truth, it gives us an accurate view of reality and of ourselves in that reality. “A true self-understanding is only possible in response to the word of God.”[11] Without God’s Word we are left to our own devices. We are left relying on a desperately wicked heart (Jer. 17:9). “Understanding Scripture promotes our understanding of God, ourselves and the way of salvation, so it is indispensable for our psychospiritual well-being (and for Christian soul care).”[12]

Look at what a proper, biblical understanding of our identity does: The Christian religion alone expels both the vice of pride and despair through the simplicity of the Gospel.

For it teaches the righteous, whom it exalts, even to participation in divinity itself, that in this sublime state they still bear the source of corruption, which exposes them throughout their lives to error, misery, death and sin; and it cries out to the most ungodly that they are capable of the grace of their redeemer. Thus, making those whom it justifies tremble and consoling those whom it condemns, it so nicely tempers fear with hope through dual capacity, common to all men, for grace and sin, that it causes infinitely more dejection than mere reason, but without despair, and infinitely more exaltation than natural pride, but without puffing us up. This clearly shows that, being alone exempt from error and vice, it is the only religion entitled to reach and correct mankind.[13]

So, as Eric Johnson has rightly pointed out the Bible claims to be and is a soul-care book.[14] “The Old and New Testament Scriptures together… have a virtue-shaping function… With the Holy Spirit’s aid, the Word of God reconfigures the minds of believers, recalibrates their hearts and reshapes their lives, moving them, communally, into an increasingly theocentric way of life.”[15]

God’s Word is truth and we are sanctified by it (Jn. 17:17). God’s Word is relevant. God’s Word is practical. God’s Word is sufficient.

_________________________________

[1] Michael Hortan says that “Theology is the lived, social, and embodied integration of drama (story), doctrine, doxology, and discipleship. I am suggesting that hearing the covenantal Word of our Lord is the source of that dethronement of the supposedly sovereign self and of the integration that subverts the disintegrating logic of Western dualism and individualism” (87). He goes on to say, “The ultimate goal of theology is practical—namely, to reconcile sinners to God in Christ and to restore them to communion with God and each other in true worship” (96).

[2] John Piper, “Thoughts on the Sufficiency of Scripture: What it Does and Doesn‟t Mean.” 

[3] Foundations of Soul Care, 119.

[4] Ibid.

[5] Here are some relevant statements on Scripture: The Westminster Confession of Faith says, “The whole counsel of God concerning all things necessary for his own glory, man’s salvation, faith and life, is either expressly set down in Scripture, or by good and necessary consequence may be deduced from Scripture: unto which nothing at any time is to be added, whether by new revelations of the Spirit, or traditions of men. Nevertheless, we acknowledge the inward illumination of the Spirit of God to be necessary for the saving understanding of such things as are revealed in the Word: and that there are some circumstances concerning the worship of God, and government of the church, common to human actions and societies, which are to be ordered by the light of nature, and Christian prudence, according to the general rules of the Word, which are always to be observed” (1.6). “The Scriptures of the Old and New Testament were given by inspiration of God, and are the only sufficient, certain and authoritative rule of all saving knowledge, faith and obedience” (Abstract of Principals). “The Holy Scripture is the only sufficient, certain, and infallible rule of all saving knowledge, faith, and obedience” (The Baptist Confession of Faith [1689]). “We affirm that Scripture, having been given by divine inspiration, is infallible, so that, far from misleading us, it is true and reliable in all the matters it addresses” (XI of the Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy). Wayne Grudem says, “The sufficiency of Scripture means that Scripture contained all the words of God he intended his people to have at each stage of redemptive history, and that it now contains all the words of God we need for salvation, for trusting him perfectly, and for obeying him perfectly” (Systematic Theology, 127). John Frame says “Scripture contains all the divine words needed for any aspect of human life” (John Frame, DWG, 220). He goes on, “Theology is the application of Scripture, by persons, to every area of life” (DWG, 276). I think especially helpful here is David Powlison’s article “Affirmations and Denials: A Proposed Definition of Biblical Counseling” in JBC 19 (2000): 18-25. Also see “On The Sufficiency of Scripture in a Therapeutic Culture” adopted by the Southern Baptist Convention.

[6] David Powlison, “The Sufficiency of Scripture to Diagnose and Cure Souls,” 13.

[7] Scripture surely speaks to the problem of addiction. Interestingly you could put a passage of Scripture alongside each step of many of the Twelve Step Programs. In many ways that is exactly what Celebrate Recovery has done.

[8] In defensive of Scripture I have found Frame, DWG helpful.

[9] Is Theology Poetry?”, The Weight of Glory and Other Addresses.

[10] J.I. Packer, A Quest for Godliness: The Puritan Vision of the Christian Life (Wheaton: Crossway, 1990), 92.

[11] Johnson goes on to say, “Scripture teaches that sanctification involves repentance and forgiveness of sins in Christ… and only within that context can genuine soul-healing occur. God’s word radically changes one’s perspective on one’s psychological predicament” (Ibid. 75).

[12] Johnson, Foundations, 38.

[13] Blaise Pascal, Pensees, 68.

[14] Foundations of Soul Care, 28 see also ch. 2. He says “The Bible is the primary soul care text for the Christian community” (Ibid., 18 italics mine). He says “primary” because he understands that other sources, even secular sources, can be helpful.

[15] Johnson, Foundations, 33.

the answer to what ails us

         tozer-1956  “Order in nature depends upon right relationships; to achieve harmony each thing must be in its proper position relative to each other thing. In human life it is not otherwise.
          …The cause of all our human miseries is a moral dislocation, an upset in our relation to God and to each other. For whatever else the Fall may have been, it was most certainly a sharp change in man’s relation to his Creator. He adopted to God and altered attitude, and by so doing destroyed the proper Creator-creature relation in which, unknown to him, his true happiness lay. Essentially salvation is the restoration of a right relation between man and his Creator, a bringing back to normal of the Creator-creature relation.
          A satisfactory spiritual life will begin with a complete change in relation between God and the sinner; not a judicial change merely, but a conscious and experienced change affecting the sinner’s whole nature. The atonement in Jesus’ blood makes such a change judicially possible and the working of the Holy Spirit makes it emotionally satisfying” (A. W. Tozer, The Pursuit of God, 64).
          “God was our original habitat and our hearts cannot but feel at home when they enter that ancient and beautiful abode… While we take to ourselves the place that is His the whole course of our live is out of joint. Nothing will or can restore order till our hearts make the great decision: God shall be exalted above” (A. W. Tozer, The Pursuit of God, 67).