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I have am familiar with both Wilhoit and Willard's definitions of spiritual formation, but my challenge with defining spiritual formation that is missional is that there are so many complimentary elements. It is both individual and communal, it requires both active and passive stances, etc.
When I try to define spiritual formation that is missional I come up with the following working definition... "Spiritual Formation is the process by which both individuals and communities of believers are:
(1) Called (Jn. 6:44; 1 Pet. 2:9) and Sent (John 20:21) by God the Father
to
(2) Be Conformed to the Image of (Rom. 8:29; Col. 1:15) and Continue to Carry On the Message and Ministry of Jesus (Matt. 28:18-20; Jn. 20:21; Ac. 1:1, 8; 2 Cor. 5:20)
through the
(3) Conviction (Jn. 14:16, 26), Formation (Jn. 14:26; 16:13; 1 Cor. 2:6-16; 2 Thess. 5:13), and Empowerment (Eph. 3:14-19; 2 Tim. 1:7) of the Holy Spirit.
One the contributions to the spiritual formation discussion that comes from Wilhoit is that viewing the Gospel as merely the entry point into "salvation" or the Christian life is a distortion. Guder also deals with this in "The Continuing Conversion of the Church".
When we have a Conversion/Discipleship dichotomy we are more likely to have a self-reliant, works/disciplines oriented (self)spiritual formation. This is not only dangerous but counterproductive to the actual purpose of spiritual formation.
I would propose that a healthy balance would be to see the Gospel as the source and driving force of worship and mission. In other words, the Gospel is the source of all our formation both worship (Communal and in the context of the local community of believers) and mission (Communal and individual in the context of life with believers and unbelievers).
I'm very late to this conversation...you may have all moved on to other things. However, I have a definition of Christian spiritual formation that I've been using for the last several years which I find helpful.
"CSF is the lifelong process together in community of being informed of the One Holy God, transformed by the power of the Holy Spirit and continually conformed to the Image of Christ for the sake of others and for the purpose of godliness."
Its kinda long but its intentional.
The important components for me are:
1) it is process oriented
2) it takes place in community rather than isolation
3) there is a distinctly Trinitarian nature to this process (wholistic, relational and communal)
4) it emphasizes the need to learn and be informed
5) it emphasizes that our transformation is the work of God not ourselves - and also that information is incomplete without transformation
6) it also emphasizes that while we depend on God for our transformation we are called to continually conform ourself to the image of Christ...we are called to carry responsibility
7) we also see that our formation is not a narcissistic endeavor - it sends us out to serve others, to join God in his missionary work of reclaiming all things
8) the transformation that takes place is seen by our increasing "godliness" - like theosis in Eastern Church, we recognize that to be fully formed - to be fully human - is to reflect the image and glory of God.
Bret, I like your definition of spiritual formation. Clearly, you have well thought this through. My question--and I do not know the anwer to this--for spiritual formation is, what is its relation to evangelism/mission? When is it helpful to separate the two, and when is it not?
James,
That's a great question. My initial response would be to say that if it is truly "Christian" spiritual formation it will have everything to do with evangelism/mission. Tomorrow I will be preaching on the core value of mission. Contrary to how it may or may not be presented, mission is not an addendum to the life of faith - it is centered in the revealed nature of God. God, the Eternal Community has continually gone to every length to restore lost relationships and reconcile damaged community. As the Image Bearers, we are to reflect this same priority. However the problem may be how narrowly we have tended to define "evangelism." I contend that evangelism is more than a particular method of convincing someone to become a Christian, a strategic way to initiate or lead a conversation about Jesus or lead a seeker Bible study. In their proper context these are all fine, but they tend to give the impression that mission/evangelism is only for those who are a) outgoing/extroverted enough to enjoy something like that or b) dedicated/guilty enough to do it anyway.
However, the "for the sake of others" part of the definition is pointing to the need for our spiritual formation to benefit more than just ourselves. As we are informed, transformed and progressively conformed we become acutely aware of the pain and suffering all around us - what's more, we realize that this should not be.
We realize that when God looked at his creation he said, "It is very good." We know that this God walked in the garden with the first humans. We know that the whole creation is groaning in anticipation of that kind of relationship being restored. And this is God's mission. Which means that it is OUR mission. Which means that participation in this mission is more than coercive conversations...its more than conversations period.
That will look different for each of us - depending on our cultural context, our spiritual gifts, our personality and any number of other things. We don't have to learn a particular strategy we simply must be willing to bloom where we are planted. That isn't a sufficient answer...this must be worked out in the midst of community.
James Nored said:Bret, I like your definition of spiritual formation. Clearly, you have well thought this through. My question--and I do not know the anwer to this--for spiritual formation is, what is its relation to evangelism/mission? When is it helpful to separate the two, and when is it not?
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