What Forms You?
Every day you are being formed. It isn't a matter of being formed. You allow things and ideas to form you! The question to answer is do you know what is forming your life?
Chris is Ascended!
Early on in my journey into Orthodoxy, I read a book by an American philosopher named Dallas Willard. The book was “The Spirit of the Disciplines.” This was really my first exposure to the wisdom that how you are formed inside, how you are shaped, and what you allow to shape you has a profound effect on how you act. Willard says, “Spiritual formation for the Christian basically refers to the Spirit-driven process of forming the inner world of the human self in such a way that it becomes like the inner being of Christ himself.”
This is WHY normal Orthodox practice has always insisted on the spiritual disciplines AND the power of both habit and community to shape a follower of Jesus MUST be consistent and faithful. This is eventually the wisdom that made me hungry for a Way of living and not merely a religious philosophy.
Memorize the word “ascesis.” It is the foundation of a Normal Orthodox life!
Look at our lesson today in Acts 19:1-8:
In those days, while Apollos was at Corinth, Paul passed through the upper country and came to Ephesus. There he found some disciples. And he said to them, “Did you receive the Holy Spirit when you believed?” And they said, “No, we have never even heard that there is a Holy Spirit.” And he said, “Into what then were you baptized?” They said, “Into John’s baptism.” And Paul said, “John baptized with the baptism of repentance, telling the people to believe in the one who was to come after him, that is, Jesus.” On hearing this, they were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus. And when Paul had laid his hands upon them, the Holy Spirit came on them; and they spoke with tongues and prophesied. There were about twelve of them in all. And he entered the synagogue and for three months spoke boldly, arguing and pleading about the kingdom of God.
St. Luke is traveling with St. Paul and recording the events of Paul’s missionary efforts and practice, and Paul comes across some followers of St. John the Baptist. These men were doing the best they could with what they knew. They weren’t doing wrong. They didn’t have a complete Orthodox formation. What they didn’t know was costing them and Paul wanted to fix their formation!
So, what does Paul do? He fills these precious people in on “the rest of the story!” Everything St. John had taught them was meant to bring them and prepare them for Jesus, but these men didn’t know that what St. John prepared them for had come. And the sign that someone had been formed and brought to the Fullness of the faith was the intimate Presence of the Holy Spirit in their lives.
That’s what let Paul know these men needed better formation. They hadn’t heard that God had fulfilled the deepest desire and need all humanity craved—an intimate and dynamic relationship and connection to God through Christ! Paul had this, and he wanted these men to have it, too. So, he finished their formation and baptized them into the Church!
Your own formation in the Faith is so very important. Is your formation “full?” Do you have the whole story? If not, uncertainty can feed unfaithfulness or, worse yet, slavery to error and a deficient connection to the healing wisdom of the Faith. Of course, if you truly hunger for God, He won’t disappoint you. God loves you and wants to make His home in your life so that you will be alive and human, just like Jesus Christ. He is Fully Human and Fully Divine, and you are made to be “like” Him!
There is no secret to the fullness of the formation of a follower of Jesus. It’s been going on for over 20 centuries and has been happening in countless cultures, languages, and situations. And this full formation has been making saints out of people for that whole time. These saints exude the Presence of the Holy Spirit and show us, by their lives, what a human looks like when God lives inside them and forms them into imitations of Jesus Christ! Of course, this is the purpose of this Orthodox Christian formation for you and me as well.
But, just like anything in our lives that is truly meaningful, it won’t happen by accident. You have to be in active pursuit of this relationship with God, and you have to ask God to keep on forming you and leading you to the fullness of formation so that you are free from any inner delusions that might con you into believing you’re finished when you aren’t!
It isn’t a mistake or without meaning that the Church calls us to remember the Prophet Elisha today, the day after the Feats of the Ascension. Elisha was the disciple of the great Prophet Elijah. You can read how Elijah was taken up into heaven in a chariot in 2 Kings 2. Elisha asks that Elijah give him the same prophetic power and anointing that Elijah had and God granted his request. Elisha had been formed in life and ministry by the years he spent with the holy Prophet Elijah, and that formation made Elisha ready to continue on the prophetic ministry of his teacher! You, too, can continue the works of Jesus after His ascension by being willing to be formed by the Holy Spirit to be “like” Christ.
So, today, how was the Faith formed inside you? To be sure, we all struggle to embrace the fullness of Christian wisdom for our whole lives. But there is a time-tested and proven path to spiritual formation that enables a Normal Orthodox life, and that’s what this life is all about!
P.S. The incarnate Angel, the Cornerstone of the Prophets, the second Forerunner of the Coming of Christ, the glorious Elias (Elijah), who from above, sent down to Elisha the grace to dispel sickness and cleanse lepers, abounds therefore in healing for those who honor him.
Dallas Willard, may his memory be eternal, has had a HUGE positive influence in my journey! His book, The Divine Conspiracy, ESPECIALLY his writing on the Beatitudes, was so influential in helping me. And now, Father Barnabas, you are influential in helping shape my formation each day. I am so grateful that God provides good bread for the journey. May God bless you and your ministry!