Growing in God


Coming into a relationship with God through His Son Jesus Christ is a wonderful beginning - but it is just that: a beginning. While it may be the end of the journey called "coming to faith," it is only the start of another journey that might be called "growing in God." The apostle Paul claimed that "knowing" Jesus Christ was the great goal of his life. He said, "that I may know Him and the power of His resurrection and the fellowship of His sufferings, being conformed to His death; in order that I may attain to the resurrection from the dead" (Philippians 3:10-11). Paul saw growing in God as an undertaking that would consume him until death ushered him into God's very presence!

So how do we come to know our great, saving God, and to grow in Him? There are many ways, but time has shown that a few are key. Our knowledge of Him cannot help but grow as we study his Word, communicate with Him in prayer, share life with other believers, tell others about what God has done for us, and follow Him daily in faith and obedience. We'll examine each of these briefly in turn.

1) Study God's Word

You would never expect a child to grow into a healthy adult without proper nourishment. Children eat to grow. Likewise, the Word of God is the spiritual food that nourishes every growing Christian. The apostle Peter encouraged Jesus' followers to, like newborn babies, "long for the pure milk of the Word, so that by it you may grow in respect to salvation, if you have tasted the kindness of the Lord" (I Peter 2:2-3). Just as there are many styles of eating - there are also many ways to "take in" God's life-giving Word. Consider these to begin:

In every instance, the emphasis on Bible study should not be simply academic, or study for study's sake. You are studying not to gain "head knowledge" but to know more deeply and fully the God whose saving plan has included you. You are a part of His story now!

2) Communicate with God

Prayer is simply communication with God - and it is so important. It may seem at times like one-way communication, but it is not. Prayer involves speaking to God and listening for His voice in return - as He speaks through His Word, through His servants, and through the still, small voice of His Holy Spirit. Through prayer we thank God for His goodness to us, confess our sins, praise Him for who He is, and make requests of Him. It is in regular prayer that we grow in our relationship with God and mature in our faith. The Bible says we should pray about everything, and that we should pray "without ceasing." Truly, nothing is too small to take to God in prayer. He is the Lord of all life.

3) Fellowship with Other Believers

As we have studied, when a person comes to Christ, he or she becomes a part of His Body, the Church. Just like a physical body, every member of this spiritual body has a specific purpose, a special identity. And just as a finger cannot fulfill its function apart from the hand, so an individual Christian will never fully know and experience his or her identity apart from relationship with a local church body. Fellowship is essential to Christian growth, and we are warned against forsaking it (Hebrews 10:24-25). In community or fellowship with other believers we learn things about God and ourselves that may not be learned in any other way.

4) Share Your Faith with Others

When a tree that was created to bear fruit stops bearing fruit, its fruitlessness is a strong indication that the tree is not healthy. Just as a healthy tree bears fruit, so a healthy Christian bears fruit by sharing the life-giving truth of Jesus with others. The life that God has given you will become eventually stagnant if you keep it to yourself, and never speak of it to others. As you pass on what God has given to you, He will fill you afresh. Sharing your faith is vital to the Christian life - not out of guilt - but out of joy and enthusiasm for His saving goodness to you.

5) Learn to Trust and Obey God by Depending on God

It has been said that all true knowledge is the result of obedience; everything else is just information. If you really want to know and experience God, then you must trust and obey Him—depending on the Holy Spirit whom you have received from God. Obedience for Christians is not optional. Although our sins are forgiven, we may not continue to deliberately sin with impunity, presuming upon the grace of God. We can be sure that God will not give us more revelation and understanding until we have been faithful with that which He has already given.

As we trust and obey God, we are changed more and more into His likeness. This is called "sanctification," and it is the intended result of salvation for every man and woman. God's goal is that "Christ would be formed" in His sons and daughters (Galatians 4:19) - and this process is not automatic, but rather the result of what one writer has called "a long obedience in the same direction."

How do we participate in this process of sanctification?