Therefore let us go on toward
perfection, leaving behind the basic teaching about Christ, and not
laying again the foundation: repentance from dead works and faith
toward God, instruction about baptisms, laying on of hands,
resurrection of the dead, and eternal judgment. – Hebrews 6:1-2
The Monday night study group is
currently working their way through the Letter to the Hebrews, and
the above two verses were part of the section we looked at this week.
At first this would seem to be
contradictory – how can we move toward perfection in Christ if we
leave behind basic teachings about repentance, faith, baptism, laying
on of hands, resurrection, and judgment? We can move forward and
toward perfection in Christ because of math. No, really.
When we begin to learn about math, we
begin with the basics – addition, subtraction, multiplication, and
division. From there we progress to pre-algebra, algebra, geometry,
trigonometry, quadratics, calculus, differential equations, vector
calculus, and all sorts of other forms that allow us to land humans
on the moon, plot courses that take spaceships out of the solar
system, or tell us when that train from Chicago will finally catch up
with the train from St. Louis. We begin with the basics, but then
move on into more advanced mathematics as we continue to learn.
But what would happen if, for the
entirety of our lives, people only focused on the basics of math?
Newton wouldn't have developed his theory of gravitation, Kepler
wouldn't have figured out planetary motion, Einstein would just be
somebody's relative, and Armstrong & Aldrin would remain
grounded. In order to continue learning, in order to explore, in
order to move forward, we need to move past the basics.
So too with faith. If all we do is
focus on the basics of our faith – repentance, baptism, healing,
resurrection, judgment – and never explore further or never dig
deeper, we will remain immature believers. Our faith will stagnate.
It may even lead to apostasy (technically: a falling away from the
Christian faith) because we find that that basic faith no longer
provides answers, comfort, or challenges for how we experience the
world around us.
Lent begins in two weeks. Part of the
invitation to the observance of a holy Lent is “reading and
meditating on God's holy Word.” If you haven't thought about a
Lenten discipline, I encourage and challenge you to consider going
beyond the basics. Commit to attending Evening Prayer or the Monday
night Bible study. Stay an hour later, or come an hour earlier, to
attend the adult formation class on Sundays. Sit in on the Prayer
Forum being held on March 14. Ask questions at the Rector's Forum
held every first Sunday after the 10:15 service.
We know the basics. Let us not remain
there, but move forward in our faith as we go deeper and grow fuller.
Blessings,
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