| |
WHEN NOT TOO BAD IS NOT GOOD
ENOUGH
Poor
English notwithstanding, whenever someone asks us how the meal was or how we did
on an exam or how we are feeling, we inevitably reply (or at least I do), “Not
too bad.” It should be “badly,” adverbs grammatically modifying verbs.
“Not too bad” (or “badly”) has come to be a synonym for “good
enough.” That is fine, perhaps, when it comes to meals (when some anonymous
person has prepared it, of course) or exams (if our passing the course is not in
jeopardy) or our own well-being (because the questioner can’t do anything
about it anyway).
But “not too bad” is not good enough when it comes to our spiritual
life and how we live out that life. If asked about that life, most of us would
reply that it could be better, but, all in all, it’s not too bad. We could
pray more, read the Bible more, do more in the way of sharing our time and
talent and treasure. We know that. Granted, we are not perfect, but, when we
think about it, we’re not doing too badly.
Then we run up against Jesus’ command that we be perfect as He is and
are forced to face the truth that not too bad is not good enough. When
perfection is demanded, anything less is not good enough even if the life we are
living is truly not too bad. Not too bad never, ever, leads to perfection
because it settles for something less. It never leads to a transformed life
because life as it is seems not too bad.
Granted, we will never be perfect, not in this life anyway. We will never
come close to being perfect. Sin gets too much in the way every single day of
our lives. Perhaps that is why we can so easily accept a spiritual life that is
not too bad. It certainly could be worse, much, much worse and it will never be
perfect. In this life, it seems, a spiritual life that is not too bad certainly
seems to be good enough.
In order to transform our lives from not too bad toward perfection, we
have to work on them and work on them daily. We have to remove practices that
hinder growth and replace them with practices and disciplines that enable
spiritual growth. A transformed life is the result of a spiritually disciplined
life and is only the result of such a life. Transformation does not happen
accidentally or by osmosis. It happens because we do what has to be done to make
it happen.
Lent is upon us and is an opportune time to begin to do what needs to be
done to transform our lives into the lives Jesus calls us to live. Even if what
we are doing is good, it is not good enough, perfection being a ways off, a long
way off. Lent is a time to practice disciples of prayer, fasting, self-denial,
reading and reflecting on God’s word, giving of our time to serve others. It
is a time to learn more about different ways to become more disciplined and
transformed – through our Lenten programs on Thursday evenings. Lent is the
time to begin to make a spiritual life that is not too bad but is truly not good
enough into something even better.
WJP
|