All that to say, when it comes to measuring spiritual growth
and progress (an awful word, as I’ll explain), we need to be very, very
careful. And that’s because spiritual
growth is never an individual endeavor. So if a worker’s productivity is
low, we normally conclude that they need to work harder. If a student’s grades are
low, we conclude they need to study more. If the unemployment rate is high, we
try to create more jobs. And so on.
But “How do you measure spiritual growth?” turns out to be
not the same question as “How do you promote it?” because we aren’t the Spirit! That should be obvious, but it bears
repeating: we are not the Spirit. Instead, we try to be the fertile soil in
which the Spirit can grow, but as Paul wrote in the first letter to the
Corinthian church: “I planted the seed, Apollos watered it, but God made it
grow.”
So what if the “work” of spiritual growth is soil
preparation? That way, any credit for the progress goes to God, and we don’t
pump ourselves up on false notions that it was our hard work or effort that
produced growth. As I wrote last week, just because we might engineer the appearance
of the fruits of the Spirit doesn’t mean anything remotely spiritual or
supernatural is going on.
So what’s helpful to measure? What might we look to as
encouraging signs that spiritual growth is likely to happen? Over the next
three weeks, I’ll be breaking down three markers that might be helpful:
identity, network, and allegiance.