Perspective: What makes Renovation of
the Heart different from The Divine Conspiracy and your other books
on spiritual formation?
Dallas: There is a great deal of
difference. In none of the other books do I go into the details of how the
essential parts of the human personality must change in the process of spiritual
formation in Christ. That’s what is distinctive about Renovation of the
Heart. There are a number of other concerns, but the heart of the matter is
saying we know we can’t be spiritually transformed by just focusing on the
will.
In one way or another, it is a common mistake to think transformation is all
in the will. And it isn’t! It’s in the mind– how we think, what occupies
our minds, and so forth. It’s in our feelings. It’s in our body. What is
distinctive about Renovation of the Heart is the idea that we renovate
the heart by, of course, changing it, but we can’t do that, really, without
changing the other essential parts of the human personality.
Now, there are two other really big concerns that go along with this. One
concern is the many alternative forms of spiritual formation that are now coming
forward. In the first chapter I set the project in the field of general human
concerns that have been here forever and, therefore, concern any culture and any
person. I recognize that there are alternative answers to the same question, and
that these are very big now and growing, everything from Oprah to Deepak Chopra
to the really inadequate ideas of education that dominate the secular world.
In the last two chapters the other concern says to the Church, “You really
can’t justify anything else but giving your whole attention to spiritual
formation in Christ.” If that is done, most of the rest of the stuff that
churches are generally about will not matter or will come along. But if we do
not make formation in Christ the priority, then we’re just going to keep on
producing Christians that are indistinguishable in their character from many
non-Christians.
Like Renovaré, all of my books focus on specific kinds of questions. The
Divine Conspiracy is really about the gospel: What is the Good News? What
does it mean for human life? The Spirit of the Disciplines is the
biblical and theoretical framework of the disciplines starting out with the
idea, “What are we trying to do? What is salvation?” with the answer: “It
is a life, and this life is not something that is imposed upon us; we receive it
and work with it.” One chapter focuses on the means, the specific disciplines.
Hearing God is about the very specific issue of what it means to live
with guidance in our life.
P: It seems in one way or another all of
your books have tried to interact with contemporary culture, but Renovation
of the Heart may be the most intentional in its very structure in doing so.
Is that a fair statement?
D: Oh, yes, I think that’s true. It’s
so important to urge this point, you know. If we reject the Christian answer, we
still have the problem. We’re going to adopt some alternative, because the questions will not go away, the questions of, “What kind of
person am I becoming?” and “What is my role in that?” and so on. We have a
whole range of extremely inadequate answers to these questions, and what we need
to push as Christians is to say, “Look, we’re not here to prove we’re
right; we’re here to help people.” If they can do as well going anywhere
else, then God bless them. That’s the issue.
P: What do you feel a person misses if
they do not read Renovation of the Heart?
D: What they’re going to miss is a
picture of the dimensions of their own life and how they fit together and how
they can be made to work toward the end of glory to God and human fulfillment.
All of the spiritualities that are now clamoring for attention, from explicit
Satanism to what we hear on Oprah, are concerned with the two issues of identity
and empowerment. Who am I? How can I have the power to live? Those are the
questions everyone has to deal with. If we don’t come to terms with these, we
lapse into some form of human decadence and failure. Renovation of the Heart
is simply an attempt to say, “Here’s the Christian picture. It’s all true.
It works. It’s accessible to everybody. And there’s nothing that compares
with it on earth.”
Also I emphasize at the beginning and end of the book that it doesn’t take
a budget, we don’t have to be brilliant, it’s very simple. Anyone–any
church or any individual–can do this because God is in favor of it and he will
meet us and help us.
From a practical point of view, Renovation centers around chapter five, which is the VIM formula. We have to have the Vision. And we have to form the Intention. And we have to adopt the Means. Vision. Intention.
Means. And if we do that, then it works! Every individual, every church, every
organization . . . that’s all we need to do. We don’t need to do fancy stuff
and create mega programs. This, that, and the other. Just simple,
straight-forward practice.
P: Why did you write Renovation of the
Heart? Was there an experience in your life or some similar motivation that
created the need in you to write it?
D: The motivation was seeing all of these
other forms of spirituality and formation blundering down the road, and the
Church sitting there with really nothing to say on the subject, and the members
of the Church getting more out of Oprah than they get out of their church. For
example, there are large evangelical churches that have large contingents of the
people who come on Sunday that are really big into A Course in Miracles
and Conversations with God.
P: Oh, yes. Kind of stream of
consciousness stuff?
D: Well, guides in these kinds of books
profess to be writing under the guidance of the spirit world. That’s
“automatic writing.” It is stream of consciousness stuff, and you just attribute it to God, and who knows who else is in there pulling the strings and pushing the buttons. But you’re just writing it out. And it seems to me superficial,
and it’s been done over and over and over again before.
There are multitudes of people in the evangelical and mainstream churches who
are living off of this stuff, and they don’t even know what the Bible says
concerning these issues. Their churches don’t tell them or give them practical
guidance. They don’t teach them about spiritual formation and how to do it.
Many people get what they need from church attendance because the Word is
preached, and the rituals are carried on, and God works, but it’s drift more
than anything else. And that’s why the churches keep reaching for some
programmatic formula that will make people come and give money. It’s just
really very sad.
I don’t want to get off the point here. The thing that drove me to write
Renovation was addressing the issue of spiritual formation and the need to do
this in the contemporary context.
P: Can you talk a little bit about the
biblical teaching on the soul?
D: Well, yes, I can talk a little bit
about that. The Bible, of course, is not a theology book. It is certainly not a
philosophy book. So we have to derive the meaning of terms from the context in
use.
And that is what we see in the Scripture. It’s a wonderful thing to do an
inductive study with our concordance. We see that the soul is the deepest and
the most vital part of the person as a whole. It is often treated as the person,
and we actually do this when we talk about “saving our soul.” Well, you
know, we don’t save our soul and leave our emotions and our feelings and our
body and all the rest of it out. That’s just a way of talking that emphasizes
the soul is so fundamental that we can, in some cases, treat it as the whole
person because it actually is the thing that integrates all of these aspects of
the self and makes them work together. Now, I don’t think we can find a
passage in the Bible that says that. We have to read and study how it addresses
the soul, and we then see that it is the deepest, most vital part of the human
self.
It’s important to distinguish the soul from the spirit, or will, because
the will or the heart or the spirit is the executive center of the self. In
other words, the spirit is the part that is supposed to consciously direct
everything in the person, including the soul.
Generally speaking we don’t want to hear from the soul. We want it to just
do its job. Unfortunately, in a broken world, it also is broken, and we’re
going to hear from it because many of the ordinary miseries and extraordinary
glories of human life are expressions of the state of the soul.
There is talk in the Scripture like, “The law of the Lord is perfect,
restoring the soul.” See, the “law of the Lord” draws the soul into the
ways of God at a deep level that heals it. The soul’s order is re-established in God through the law. Or the 23rd Psalm, “He restoreth my soul.” These are extremely crucial passages.
I do emphasize that we cannot just get out of the Bible a definition of the
soul. The Bible defines almost nothing because it isn’t a book for scholars
and philosophers or free thinkers. It’s a book for people who want help.
It’s primarily a book for pastors. They’re the ones that can use it in a way
so that it actually achieves its purpose.
P: Going back to the example you gave of
the spirit being the executive center, if you use the analogy of an automobile,
might the spirit be the steering wheel and the soul be the engine?
D: Well, I would say the soul would be
more than the engine. The soul would be like the computer system that
coordinates everything, from the smog device to the fuel injection system to the
brakes. Now, of course, you have guidance devices and all sorts of things. The
soul would be more like the way this is all hooked together, a system of
coordination.
The engine might be more like the body. In ourselves that is the source of
our strength. As we reach out to God, we get another source of strength. But no
matter how lost a person is, they still draw on their body. So the body would be
more like the motor. Suppose we have a motor and our transmission doesn’t work
or our clutch or whatever. Then our body, our motor, just takes us down the
road. Or our brakes don’t work! We must have a coordination system.
The different parts of the automobile like the ignition switch, the various buttons, the steering wheel—the interfaces between the driver and the machine—are our spirit or heart. The different controls are the spirit.
Then we have the issue of what’s in control of the driver. And the driver
had better be under some control! Hopefully, that will be God. And so the
relation of redemption and sanctification would be the ongoing relationship
between the driver and God who is directing her. Now, if God isn’t directing
him, he may go wild and do all sorts of things criminal and crazy.
Think of the soul as the computer system that runs the whole thing. And then
the spirit is the executive center. It’s the faculty of choice. And then you
want that faculty governed by the truth of God and the Spirit of God. We really
do need analogies for all of this, because the only alternative is to write a
long book of philosophy that no one would understand.
P: What does a church committed to the
spiritual formation of its members look like? What is its priorities? What does
it emphasize? How does it spend its time?
D: The crucial thing would be that it
would have as its aim the formation of all the people in the congregation
internally in such a way that the deeds and words of Christ would just naturally
flow from them wherever they are. That is really the picture of the people of Christ in the Bible and through the ages. That’s
the intent.
Now, what would it look like? Well, everything they do would be, as best as
possible, sensibly directed toward the end of formation. That would mean, among
other things, that we would have teaching and programs of instruction and
practice in doing the things that Jesus said.
I always like to illustrate this with “blessing those who curse you”
because that is obviously difficult. So, for example, we would actually be
teaching people how to bless those who curse them. This would be true of all the
other things that Jesus taught. This is precisely what the Great Commission
tells us to do: the Great Commission is still the mission statement of the
Church.
It’s just stunning to watch churches struggle to get mission statements
when there it is, the Great Commission, and they should simply do what it says.
Make disciples. Surround them in the reality of the Trinity in a fellowship of
disciples. Teach them to do everything Jesus says. We’re not going to improve
on that. That was the church-growth program that conquered the world.
I was in a fascinating meeting where one man had been in China recently. A
Chinese professor has found evidence that Christians reached Western China
before 90 AD. Before 90 AD! The idea isn’t all that astonishing when we think
about it. That’s what the disciples thought they were supposed to do! And,
I’m sure, the disciples just said, “That’s it. Let’s go!” And they all
wound up dead. But everyone else did too!
P: If you wouldn’t mind, please
elaborate a little bit on the chapter in Renovation on the social impact
of spiritual formation. You mention that if people are formed inwardly, then the
outer issues between us become much more manageable.
D: I think I learned more writing that
chapter than any other. When we are formed inwardly, outer issues do become much
more manageable. But we also have to say our relations with others are not
external. They enter into our very identity. And that’s why people struggle
with them so. Relations between parents and children and siblings and mates.
This is not external. We can’t separate them.
I know Richard Foster has undoubtedly met this same thing, the illusion that
spiritual formation or spiritual disciplines is privatization, that it’s
something that doesn’t have anything to do with the social world or the real
world. That’s just a total misunderstanding of what it’s all about. The
transformation of our relationships to others is part of it and, particularly,
the two points that I emphasize inherent in the fallen world of “withdrawal”
and “attack,” getting to where that isn’t how we relate to others no
matter who they are, no matter how worthy we think they are of being attacked.
We just don’t do it.
That’s the secret of Jesus. You watch Jesus and you see he never did “withdraw” and then “attack.” All of the time people wanted him to do it and in many ways, but he would not. Then to the body of believers he said, “This will show everyone that you are my disciples, if you love one another,” but he had already said, “Love one another as I have loved you.” So that’s the model.
In that sense the transformation of the social world is at its heart the
transformation of personal relations. That’s the key to transforming society
in the larger arena. There is no cure for the social battles that we fight in
our culture–and there’s so much grief around race, gender, and so forth–until you eliminate “withdrawal” and “attack” and replace them
with “acceptance” and “help.” Once you do that and not just talk about it, these other issues will fall into place quickly. They will not fall into place at all unless it is done this way.
We may do some things, march and shout and so on, because it’s not happening, but that isn’t the solution. And if we have to do other things from
demonstrating to passing laws and so forth, that will not get us where we want to go. These things may be necessary and good—I’m not questioning that—but they will not get us where we want to go.
P: Those are really temporary fixes.
D: They are, and they’re very important. But we now have a nation that is sick and angry, with battles over justice, and in that respect we have to find a different basis. We cannot handle injustice by finding more ways to impose what is in fact “right” on people. It has to come from the inside. And that’s where the church should be working.
P: When you say “withdrawal” and “attack” being replaced by “acceptance” and “help,” that’s really talking about an inner posture of the self.
D: Oh, yes. But again, you can’t separate that from the action. That’s the illusion—the idea that you can be all right on the inside and not act it out—and it has affected us in many ways. That’s a part of the idea that professing is enough.
We have churches full of people who profess all kinds of stuff that they don’t believe. They think that by professing it they’re doing something good. Really, they’re just deluding themselves. In the area of social righteousness we cannot be right on the inside and not do it. We cannot! Of course we have people who pretend that they can, but it simply isn’t true. If we are right on the inside, we will address these issues straight-forwardly and take a stand on them, and, if necessary, die for them. We will be that committed.