Christians have a knack for speaking and acting as though they are superior for sitting around doing nothing. I may have even made this excuse for my own laziness and disobedience on occasion! We are not called to ‘rest on our laurels’ but to take up the cross of self-denial and service. Kevin DeYoung un-packs and exposes this attitude:
Passivity is a plague among Christians. It’s not just that we don’t do anything; it’s that we feel spiritual for not doing anything. We imagine that our inactivity is patience and sensitivity to God’s leading. At times it may be; but it’s also quite possible we are just lazy. When we hype-spiritualize [sic] our decisions, we can veer off into impulsive and foolish decisions. But more likely as Christians we fall into endless patterns of vacillation, indecision, and regret. No doubt, selfish ambition is a danger for Christians, but so is complacency, listless wandering, and passivity that pawns itself off as spirituality. Perhaps our inactivity is not so much waiting on God as it is an expression of the fear of man, the love of the praise of man, and disbelief in God’s providence.
Filed under: discipleship, worship | Tagged: Kevin DeYoung, lazy Christians, stylites




