Is Your Christianity Biblically Balanced?

Balance is very important in life. If the tires on your car are out of balance, you will have a rough ride. If your check book is not balanced, you may find yourself overdrawn on your bank account. If you lose your balance on a ladder, you can fall and hurt yourself. Balance is also very important in Christianity.

Elton Trueblood once wrote: No vital Christianity is possible unless at least three  aspects of it are developed. These three are the inner life of devotion, the outer life of service, and the intellectual life of rationality.

Intellectual Integrity

We must study to find the answers to hard questions that deal with morals and ethics.

Paul exhorts us to “give diligence” in our study (2 Tim. 2:15). Peter implores that we be able to give an answer for our faith, a well-reasoned argument or defense (1 Pet 3:15).

It is not good enough to believe something just because the preacher said it, or “the church teaches it.” Our father’s faith will not meet the requirement of intellectual integrity. It must be my faith. My beliefs. My convictions. They must be objective not subjective. Intellectual integrity is based on truth, not tradition. On facts, not feelings. On Christ, not custom.

Inner Life of Devotion

Public worship is important because of the presence of others. We encourage one another. We spiritually stimulate one another. We spur one another on to love and good works. We stir up greater zeal and a more fervent desire to remain faithful (Heb. 10:24-25).

But private devotion cannot be neglected either. Paul told Timothy to meditate (1 Tim 4:15). In Psalm 119 David spoke of how meditation helped him direct his way toward God (15). It caused him to stay the course in the face of criticism (23). And it helped him to make better decisions (59).

Outer Life of Service

Jesus’ life was characterized by ministry. He “went about doing good” (Ac. 10:38). Those who are Christians have been “created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do” (Eph 2:10).

The Christian life is not only about being, but about doing. It is discovering our gifts, developing our talents, and using our abilities to glorify God.

The Challenge

It is easy to become imbalanced. Some people enjoy intellectual pursuits but forget the people. Others enjoy ministry, yet neglect their own spiritual growth. And still others develop great devotion and spiritual piety, but never translate it into practical ways to serve. Study without service may lead to arrogance. An inner life of devotion apart from service may lead to selfishness. Service separated from inner devotion may result in self-righteousness.

Balance. That’s the key. That’s my goal. May God help me to achieve spiritual balance.

Ken Weliever, The Preacherman

10 Comments

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10 responses to “Is Your Christianity Biblically Balanced?

  1. Larry's avatar Larry

    Excellent post, Ken.

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  2. Erma Lambert's avatar Erma Lambert

    Thank you for this post. I’m working on balancing my christianity often feeling I’m not getting it right or what my purpose is. I’ll keep working though.

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  3. Great post. I agree wholeheartedly with what you’re saying here.

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  4. Ken Green's avatar Ken Green

    Afraid our emphasis has been on knowledge. But “knowledge puffs up. Love builds up” (I Cor. 8:1). Good post.

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  5. Michael Richardson's avatar Michael Richardson

    Enjoy your blog Ken. I spoke with Andrew the other day and he said that you are really enjoying the work. This made me heart to rejoice. I knew wherever you went that the work would be blessed. I sure appreciate all you have done for me personally, but also in sharing these blogs…being a river not a resivor…love you. Think of y’all often. Mike

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