Are you zealous for Christ? Do you have a genuine zeal to life for him and to
advance his cause in the world? Or have you lost the zeal that once marked you?
Here, courtesy of Joel Beeke and James La
Belle are 9 ways you may lose your zeal.
Major in speculative religion. Speculative religion is religion
whose primary concern is that which is theoretical or conjectural. Look to the
pastoral epistles and you will often find Paul warning Timothy and Titus that
they must avoid anything like this—anything vain and unprofitable, anything
obsessed with fables and genealogies (see 1 Timothy 4:2, 2 Timothy 2:14, Titus
3:9, etc). Christianity is meant to be an experiential religion, one that is
meant to reach the heart and the will and to work itself out in action.
“Christian faith begins with an experiential renovation of the heart and
progresses by an experiential relationship that impacts all of life.”
Love the world. “How can we be zealous for heaven when our hearts
are wrapped up in earthly things? How can we lift our spirits heavenward when
our minds are weighed down with the cares of this life? How can we be zealous
for God when our love is divided between Him and this world? Worldly mindedness
will starve our zeal.” Jesus promised us that we can serve only one master; our
zeal will diminish when our loyalties are torn between God and mammon, God and
this world.
Be spiritually presumptuous. Some people start out in the Christian
faith, but then assume that they have nothing more to do. They presume upon the
riches and grace of Christ, but invest little effort in battling sin and putting
sin to death. Some take an opposite view and claim that they are no longer
sinful, that they have attained perfection. In either case, these people are
dangerously presumptuous and will necessarily see their zeal decline
and disappear.
Neglect the means of grace. “When we presume that we no longer need
to gird up our loins (1 Peter. 1:13), lay aside every weight and every besetting
sin, and run the race set before us (Heb. 12:1-2), we will naturally neglect
those means that God has appointed to keep our zeal burning. Zeal will grow so
cold that it will inevitably die out. To neglect the means of grace is to
neglect the fuel that feeds this spiritual fire. We must be aware of neglecting
anything that God has given us to help us grow in Christ-likeness.”
Remain impenitent. We know that we ought to confess and repent of
the most significant sins, but can grow lax in confessing and repenting of the
smaller sins. But be warned: “Impenitence with regard to any known sin will
surely quench all zeal for God.”
Indulge in any known sin. “When we indulge ourselves in any known
sin, or absolve ourselves of any known duty, how can we avoid the charge of
hypocrisy in condemning the sins and failings of others? Do we think God is
pleased with our crying down the sins of others while we commit the same sins?
Do we imagine that God is pleased when we accuse others of failure, while we
excuse ourselves from the very same duties? Sacred zeal reaches to all
of God’s commandments and all of Christian duty. If we would keep a
fire in our heart for God, we must take caution not to indulge in any known sin,
or neglect any known duty.”
Be indifferent or unbelieving. “It is not enough to have an interest
in religious questions, an understanding of basic religious doctrine, or even a
small stock of memorized Scripture verses, if all this fails to touch the heart,
because out of the heart, as Solomon says, flow the issues of life (Prov. 4:23).
An unmoved, indifferent heart will not give rise to zeal. Light in the head must
be matched by warmth in the heart.”
Remain ignorant. “How can we be zealous for the things of God if we
dwell in the darkness of ignorance about divine truth? If we persist in
ignorance of ‘the knowledge of God, and of Jesus our Lord’ (2 Pet. 1:2), our
comfort must speedily diminish, and our zeal will soon give way to indifference
of heart and langour of spirit.”
Be a coward. We cannot advance God’s cause in the world if we fail
to be bold for Him. Sin will comfortably abide in our churches unless it is put
out by great boldness. Hypocritical professors will continue to bring shame to
the name of Christ unless exposed by great boldness.”
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