2.13 Zeal: A Caveat
2-13-1 Zeal: A Caveat
The above studies have spoken of the need to be
generous, to shun materialism, to serve God for nothing, to give
our lives and hearts without reserve, to make His Truth the supreme,
all consuming force in our lives. All this stands true, and follows
logically from the fact that the Lord loved us to the end and gave
Himself for us. But a warning has to be sounded. At judgment day,
the rejected who have nothing will find that even what they have
is taken from them (Lk. 19:26). This surely means that the spirituality
they appeared to have, what they thought they had, actually they
never had, and even the appearance of it will be taken away from
them. We can appear to have spirituality, when in fact we have nothing,
nothing at all. The man who built his house on the sand had the
sensation of spiritual progress; he was building, he was getting
somewhere, apparently. Likewise Israel were an empty [fruitless]
vine, but they brought forth fruit- to themselves. In reality they
had no fruit; but they went through the fruit-bearing process (Hos.
10:1). I write this because I have had all too many good friends
in the Lord who at one time seemed so zealous and committed; but
now they don't walk with us, and on their own admission, all their
devotion and labour was somehow not really true spirituality. The
Greek word zelos means both zeal in a good sense (2 Cor.
7:11,12; 9:2; 11:2)- and also it’s translated jealousy, strife,
envying (Rom. 13:13; 1 Cor. 3:3; 2 Cor. 12:20). Likewise, thumos
is used both about righteous anger, and also fits of anger which
are sinful. It’s clear enough from these linguistic facts,
quite apart from our practical experience, that zeal turns into
strife far too often and far too easily. The problem is, we so easily
defend the strife, the jealousy, the anger… as righteous zeal,
Godly anger. The line seems to us very fine, although it isn’t
in God’s eyes. I observe too often brethren who appear so
full of anger, but never reveal it openly… until it comes
to some matter connected with their religious life. And then, wow,
they let it all rip on some poor person, feeling they are justified.
The very experience of the concept of spirituality
over time can blunt the cutting edge of God’s Truth; we can no longer
see things with the clarity of first conversion. It has been truly
observed: “...we may cite the transfer of food from plate to mouth
with the aid of a fork. When a very young child first assays this
task, it is clumsily and inefficiently performed with the aid of
intense concentration and full personal attention. A little later
in life however, the mere desire that a particular morsel of food
shall pass into the mouth produces a smooth harmonious series of
motions of which we are not even conscious, often enough carrying
on an involved conversation at the same time which is absorbing
all our attention...it is a grave danger that even the deeper matters
of our religion may become a series of stock phrases which have
long since ceased to arouse any cognition in our mind, and which,
like the routine motions of Divine worship, pass us by as unaffected
as we are by the regular morning tasks of shaving or washing” (1).
And so we want to sound a caveat about zeal and devotion. There
is such a thing as zeal not according to the personal knowledge
of Christ. The following examples indicate how we can appear to
be spiritual, we can do all the right things from apparently good
motives, but right down at the bottom line, we aren't very spiritual
people at all.
Notes
(1) R.T. Lovelock, Salvation In Jesus p. 112.
2-13-2 Love Unfeigned
2-13-3 Acceptable Sacrifice
2-13-4 True Repentance
2-13-5 Real Prayer
2-13-6 Unfeigned Faith
2-13-7 Humility And Bible
Reading
2-13-8 Genuine Motives
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