Freedom from Quiet Time
Guilt
The rare beauty of
Weakness Christianity
Greg Johnson, St. Louis
Center for Christian Study
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1. The Diagnosis: Quiet Time Guilt I
recently watched as a congregation I love was spiritually raped. A Christian ministry
came into the church for a three-day program whose purpose was to encourage
believers to pray more. During one of the breakout sessions, a man expressed
his frustration with unanswered prayer. He had faithfully prayed with and for
his daughter for years, and still she was not walking with God. He was broken,
depressed, perhaps more than a little ashamed. How does God in his grace speak
to this man? A bruised reed was crying out for help. “You
need to try harder. You need to pray more.” That was the message he was given.
I was enraged. Having known this church for many years, I was horrified. What I
was hearing was what one seminary professor calls sola bootstrapa.
Self-reliance¾We pull ourselves up by our
own spiritual bootstraps. The teachers who said such things surely meant well.
The problem was not a lack of sincerity on their part. The diagnosis is far
more severe. The problem was heresy. Any heresy wounds the soul. When
I look upon the evangelical world today, I see millions of sincere believers
who are loaded down with false guilt by teachers who fail to grasp the basics
of biblical prayer. To sharpen the point slightly, Christ’s sheep have been
lied to. They have been told that prayer is a work that we must perform in
order to get God to bless us. As heresies go, this one is often subtle. Prayer
has become a work rather than a grace. The result has been a loss of joy in
prayer. And
prayer is not the only grace we’ve turned into a work. Personal Bible study has
become a source of bondage as well. A whole generation of Christians has been
told that God will bless them if they read their Bibles every day, as if the
act of reading the Scriptures were some kind of magic talisman by which we gain
power over God and secure his favor. This is not the religion of the Bible. This
pervasive belief that God gives us grace as a reward for our devotional
consistency is antithetical to the religion of Jesus Christ. Prayer and Bible
study—what evangelicals for the past century have called the “quiet time”¾have become dreaded precisely because they
have been radically misunderstood. It’s ironic, but the Quiet
Time has become the number one cause of defeat among Bible-believing Christians
today. At one time or another, nearly every sincere believer feels a deep sense
of failure and the accompanying feelings of guilt and shame because he or she
has failed to set aside a separate time for Bible study and prayer. This
condition is called Quiet Time Guilt. And it’s a condition with many
repercussions. The shame of Quiet Time Guilt manifests itself in even deeper
inability to fruitfully and joyfully study Scripture. Prayer becomes a dread;
Bible study a burden. The Christian suffering from Quiet Time Guilt then
despairs of seeing God work in his or her life, until finally he or she simply
gives up. He may continue outward and public Christian commitments like church
attendance, but secretly he feels a hypocrite. What is the root of Quiet Time
Guilt? 2.
The Culprit: Legalism The root of Quiet Time Guilt
is legalism. Often when we think of legalism, we think of the petty man-made
rules that have so often strangled the churches—rules against dancing or
drinking or makeup or ‘secular’ music. But these legalistic rules are merely an
outward sign of a deeper legalism of the heart. When prayer and Bible study are
thought of primarily as duties (‘disciplines’) rather than as grace, both
prayer and the study of Scripture become unfruitful in our lives. We put
ourselves on a performance treadmill and cease relying on God’s grace to
sustain us. We trust in ourselves and our consistency, becoming proud if
devotionally successful—or despairing because of our inconsistency. Either way,
our spiritual self-reliance short-circuits the inexpressible joy of life in
Christ. The quiet time becomes a human work whereby we think we gain—or
lose—God’s daily favor. When we’ve started our day with Scripture, we presume
that God’s blessing will rest upon us because of it. When we fail in our quest
for devotional consistency, we feel we’ve short-circuited God’s grace in our
lives. Quiet-Time Guilt. If this describes you or
anyone you know, the situation is far worse than you think. Jesus condemned the
Pharisees for this very attitude about Bible study. “You diligently study the
Scriptures because you think that by them you possess eternal life. These are
the Scriptures that testify about me” (Jn 5:39). Yes, that’s what Jesus said. Bible
study can be a sin. The Pharisees assumed the Bible a book of rules or
principles for living, but failed the grasp it as a story about God’s love for
his people. The quiet time can drive you far from God if you fail to understand
that the Scriptures are a story about grace. The Scriptures are a story about
Jesus Christ, the man of grace. His works—not our works—are the center of the
biblical story. And this Jesus gives grace daily to those who fail him. How you
approach the Bible—as needy sinner or as self-reliant Pharisee¾says a lot about the state of your soul. Just like Bible study,
prayer too can be sinful. Remember what Jesus said about the Pharisee and the
tax collector. The one saw prayer as a work, the other as an expression of
need. The one who merely expressed his neediness to God—the expression of our
neediness being the heart of true prayer—that one went home right with God. To some who were
confident of their own righteousness and looked down on everybody else, Jesus
told this parable: “Two men went up to the temple to pray, one a Pharisee and the
other a tax collector. The Pharisee stood up and prayed about himself: ‘God, I
thank you that I am not like other men—robbers, evildoers, adulterers—or even
like this tax collector. I fast twice a week and give a tenth of all I get.’ “But the tax
collector stood at a distance. He would not even look up to heaven, but beat
his breast and said, ‘God, have mercy on me, a sinner.’ “I tell you that
this man, rather than the other, went home justified before God. For everyone
who exalts himself will be humbled, and he who humbles himself will be exalted”
(Lk 18:9-14). Often
we assume that if we really had it together and could approach God without sin,
without failing, with only pure spiritual successes to offer, then God would
somehow delight in our prayer more. The opposite is true. If you
approach God in that manner, you approach him as his enemy. We are all fallen.
If we presume to approach him as something more than needy, dependent sons and
daughters, God rightly takes offence. There’s nothing more dangerous than the
pride of devotional consistency. 3. The Remedy: Weakness Christianity There
are two religions calling themselves evangelical Christianity today: Strength
Christianity and Weakness Christianity. Strength Christianity is that religion
which places both feet squarely on the Bible and proclaims, “I am strong. I
sought the Lord. I’m a believer. I’ve turned away from sin. I read my Bible and
pray every single day. I’m for God!” Weakness Christianity, by contrast, places
both knees squarely on the Bible and says, “I am weak, but the Lord has sought
me. I believe, but help now my unbelief. I fail and am broken by my continued
sinfulness. Have mercy on me, Lord, and grant me favor, for apart from you I
can do nothing.” Those
who pursue Strength Christianity will never find joy in God, for they will
never find God. Our Father refuses to be approached in that manner. They will
find only increasing religious pride and secret hardness of heart. On the
outside, they will project a picture of righteousness. They’ll have it all
together. They’ll be spiritual. But only on the outside. For
those who stumble across the rare jewel of Weakness Christianity, however,
there is provision beyond what we can possibly imagine. Our suffering, our
failures, our weaknesses and disappointments all gain an incredible spiritual
significance. God never says he’ll be glorified in our religious
accomplishments. But he does promise that his power will be made perfect in our
weakness (2 Cor 12:9). Neediness
is the heart of biblical religion. When we honestly lay our brokenness before
God, we’re surprised to see a radically different message in the Bible. While
we had perhaps expected a to-do list from Holy Writ, a program to make us
righteous, or a divinely sanctioned self-help book, we instead see a shocking
message that centers on our God and his grace to his broken people¾not about us and our performance and expected rewards.
And when we approach God in brokenness—Weakness Christianity—we find a
radically difference vision for prayer. Prayer is not something we do—a
performance designed to get something from God. Instead, it’s merely a free and
honest confession of our neediness to God and our spoken reliance upon him for
each and every blessing. When you stumble upon Weakness Christianity, you
realize that true religion is all about God’s grace, not about our devotional
consistency. 4. The Shocker: Grace for the Christian This
grace is for you right now, now and tonight and tomorrow and next week and
forever. The deadly assumption made too often among those who claim to heed the
Scriptures is that grace is only for non-Christians. Grace is what God offers
to people who don’t know Christ. Grace is what makes us Christians; but once
we’re Christians, we live by our own resources. This is why advocates of
Strength Christianity so often sound like evangelical Christians. They really
do believe that God offers grace to unbelievers who will turn to God
through Jesus Christ. And they’re right on that. What they wrongly assume,
though, is that the Christian life begins by grace, but continues by human
works. I’ve
seen this confusion many times. I found it ironic that the very same prayer
program that so hurt the church I love included within it an absolutely
wonderful children’s program. This at first puzzled me. The children who
attended were pointed to Jesus, reassured of God’s love for them, and
encouraged to rest in God’s mercy and total acceptance in Christ. In the adult
activities, by contrast, people were told to try harder, to persevere, to do
better, to be more consistent and to pray more, so that God could bless them.
The children heard, “God did it,” while the adults were told, “Just do it.” Why
the difference? The difference was simple. These teachers were assuming that
the children of the church were not yet Christians (…an assumption I would
question). God offers non-Christians grace. The adults, however, were committed
Christians. The Christian’s relationship with God rests not upon God’s grace,
but upon his or her performance, particularly the performance of the ultimate
devotional duty, the daily quiet time. This assumption¾that grace isn’t for Christians¾is spiritual venom, which is keeping millions
of Christians in bondage to self-reliance, guilt, shame, and despair. Quiet
Time Guilt is the great epidemic among Bible-believing Christians today. If
you think the purpose behind this little tract is to absolve you from the call
to pray or the need for Scripture, think again. My purpose is to free you
to desire prayer—to desire God. I want you to long for the pure
message of the gospel, spelled out on page after page of the Bible, and to find
the joyous freedom found in Christ. Prayer is a grace, not a work. It is a
confession of our neediness to God, not a proof that our “relationship with
God” is going well. If you think that God will not bless you today because you
missed your quiet time, this has been for you. If subtle legalism has left you
in bondage so that you no longer hunger for God’s word or freely call out to him
in prayer, then hear this: God has already chosen you, pronounced you
righteous, adopted you into his family, and promised to finish his work in you.
Perhaps you have been lied to in the past. Now it is time for the truth to set
you free. Free to be needy. Free to fail. Free to approach God without dread.
Free to delight in him rather than in your performance. But
I have a few more theological reflections to share before you leave. Keep
reading. 5. The Surprise: The Quiet Time is Optional Imagine
for a moment you’re meeting a Christian friend. “How’s your relationship with
God going?” they ask you. “Well, I’m struggling with my attitude about my
job—but God is teaching me to be content and to not gossip when people rub me
the wrong way.” A silent stare greets the words, your inquisitor’s eyes staring
you up and down. After a moment of awkward silence, the question comes again,
“But how is your relationship with God?” Hmm. What wrong with this
picture? Perhaps
this has never happened to you. But I’ve found contemporary Christians are
often more concerned about my ‘relationship with God’ than with my relationship
with God. Whose idea was it to define the sum total of my relationship with God
as my devotional consistency? Your quiet time is not your relationship
with God. Your relationship with God—or, as I prefer to say, God’s relationship
with you—is your whole life: your job, your family, your sleep, your play, your
relationships, your driving, your everything. The real irony here is that we’ve
become accustomed to pigeonholing our entire relationship with God into a brief
devotional exercise that is not even commanded in the Bible. Yes.
That’s what I said. The daily quiet time—that half hour every morning of Scriptural study
and prayer¾is not actually commanded in
the Bible. And as a theologian, I can remind us that to bind the conscience
where Scripture leaves freedom is a very, very serious crime. It’s legalism
rearing its ugly little head again. We’ve become legalistic about a legalistic
command. This is serious. But
no misunderstand what I’m saying. My goal isn’t that we pray and read the Bible
less, but that we do so more—and with a free and needy heart. Does
the Bible instruct Christians to call out to God in prayer? Absolutely. “Be joyful always; pray continually; give thanks in all
circumstances, for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus” (1 Th 5:16-18).
But this isn’t a command to set apart a special half-hour of prayer; it’s
instruction to continually call upon God. Elsewhere the Apostle calls us to
pray: “Do not be anxious about anything, but
in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests
to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard
your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus” (Phil 4:6-7). But notice that the
focus here is not on the performance of a devotional duty, but on approaching
God for grace—for our heats and minds to be guarded by him. Paul’s burden is
that we would rely upon God in every circumstance and therefore have peace,
rather than relying on ourselves and finding ourselves captive to the anxiety
that accompanies self-reliance. Does the Bible command us to read our Bibles every day? No. Not
really. What Scripture actually instructs is that we meditate on God’s
word all the time. Consider the godly man in Psalm 1. “His delight is in the
law of the LORD, and
on his law he meditates day and night” (Ps 1:2). This
is not exactly the same thing as reading the Bible every day. Personal Bible
reading is one—and only one—way we to meditate upon God’s word. At this point
it’s helpful to consider the difference between a good idea and a biblical
mandate. A biblical mandate is something that God explicitly or implicitly
commands in Scripture. Loving your neighbor is a biblical mandate (Mt 5:43).
Moving to Philadelphia to work in a homeless shelter, by contrast, is not a
biblical mandate. Rather, it’s a good idea, a wonderful possible application of
the biblical mandate to love your neighbor. But moving to Philly isn’t the only
way you can love your neighbor. Similarly, meditating on God’s word is a
biblical mandate. The daily quiet time, by contrast, is a good idea, a
wonderful possible application of the mandate of biblical meditation. It may surprise you to know that the concept of the quiet time as
a command is a modern invention. It’s only in recent centuries that Christians
have been able to actually own Bibles—the printing press and cheap paper have
given us more options so far as biblical meditation is concerned. But
remember that most Christians throughout history have not owned Bibles.
They heard the Bible preached during corporate worship. They were taught the
Bible in the churches. They memorized the Bible profusely—a first century
rabbinic saying stated, “If your rabbi teaches and you have no paper, write it
on your sleeve.” But for most Christians through history, biblical meditation
took place when they discussed the Bible with family and friends, when they
memorized it, when they listened very carefully to God’s word preached. The
concept of sitting still before sunrise with a Bible open would have been very
foreign to them. We have so many options today, why do we get hung up on the quiet
time? Listen to Christian teaching tapes. Invest your time in a small group
Bible study. Have friends over for coffee and Bible discussion. Sing and listen
to Scripture songs. Read good theology. Tape memory verses to the dashboard of
your car. And pray throughout your day. I always reserve the drive to church on
Sundays as a time of uninterrupted prayer for my pastors and elders, for those
leading worship, and for the peace and purity of the church. Certain landmarks
around town remind me to pray for certain churches, Christians I know, or
causes God says are important. I suspect I spend more time praying in my car
than on my knees. (Though I love praying on my knees as a concrete display of
my dependence on God, I can’t do this in my car without causing an accident.) If you have a regular quiet time, don’t stop. You’ve found a
wonderful way to meditate on Scripture. You’ve set aside a specific time to
call upon God in prayer. But if the quiet time doesn’t work for you, that’s
okay. You should not feel guilty since you have not broken a commandment.
The quiet time is an option, a good idea—not a biblical mandate. If the quiet
time isn’t working for you, there are other options as well. All of them are
good ones. The key is to rely on God to accomplish his plans, a reliance
expressed in prayer and fed in Scripture. You have all kinds of opportunities
to call upon God in prayer and to meditate upon his word. He loves you and
delights in your expressions of weakness and dependence. He is glorified in
your weakness. 6. The Theology of Prayer: Means of
Grace So what exactly does prayer do? That’s the question I’m
often asked. There are several wrong answers to this question. Some assume that
prayer furnishes God with the information he lacks. God doesn’t view it that
way. He not only knows what’s going on now, he knows what will be going on next
week. Indeed, he even ordained what will be going on next week¾the Bible speaks
of “the plan of him who works out everything in conformity with the purpose of
his will” (Eph 1:11). Neither is prayer an attempt to convince God to do what he
wouldn’t otherwise do. He will grant our requests only insofar as they accord
with his eternal purpose—his will. “This is the confidence we have in
approaching God: that if we ask anything according to his will, he hears
us. And if we know that he hears us—whatever we ask—we know that we have what
we asked of him” (1 Jn 5:14-15). And I hope we’ve dismissed the idea that prayer shows God how much
we love him! It’s not a work, but a grace! But often we think that prayer is
something we do to obligate God to bless us. This is the subtlest of errors,
for it resembles the biblical teaching. Indeed, it is a caricature of
the biblical picture of prayer. Grace-empowered, grace-motivated prayer does
bring blessing, but prayer isn’t a work we do that obligates God to give
blessing. It’s a subtle difference, but an important one. Prayer is a means
of grace, not a work to merit grace. Theologians have classically called prayer and Scripture (along
with the sacraments of baptism and the Lord’s Supper) means of grace—highways
along which the Holy Spirit tends to travel. The means of grace are the normal
instruments God uses to accomplish his saving work in and through us. Does
prayer change things? Yes, because God changes things, and prayer is an
expression of our reliance upon him to accomplish his purposes. I remember about six months ago calling upon God in prayer about
my finances. Starting a not-for-profit teaching ministry is hard work, and
church missions committees would often rather support a missionary doing evangelism
than one who is training believers. One evening I called out to God with great
urgency. After a year of support raising and teaching, I could still only
afford to teach half-time while working another job, and even the funds that
had enabled that year of half-teaching were almost all gone. “Father, this is
your ministry, not mine. If you have raised me up for this, then something must
change. I cannot go without food. I cannot fail to pay my rent. If you wish me
to teach, you must grant the resources to do this. If you do not enable me to
teach, I will not teach. Apart from you I can do nothing.” Was I manipulating God by threatening to stop teaching? No. And
being a sovereign God, he wouldn’t have been impressed. Rather, I was
confessing to God my utter and total dependence on him to fund my work. The next day, after eight months without any new support, a new
friend took me out for coffee and told me he felt compelled to support me at
$100/month. That same day, I received a note from an old friend in another part
of the country pledging monthly financial support. When I checked my email, I
had received a message from a member of my church who had since moved away,
telling me a $1200 check was in the mail. Did my prayer force God’s hand? No. All of this was already in the
works long before I prayed. But when I confessed my neediness to God, he was
pleased to provide for me. Prayer was the means of grace, not a work I offered
for reward. And God was glorified in my weakness. God is faithful to hear our
prayers, and he delights in answering them. Prayer is one of the basic freedoms
Christians have, and freedoms aren’t given to leave us in bondage. There is a
cure for Quiet Time Guilt. That cure is the gospel of Christ, in whom we have
redemption. Gospel—our need and God’s provision—is the heart of biblical
prayer. God will care for us. We belong to him. |