devotional and small group exercise
Improving Your Process for Spiritual Growth
Michael Zigarelli
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Among
the famous business adages is this little gem: “Your process
is designed perfectly to produce your outcome.”
This
is a truism not just in business, of course, but in everyday
life. My golf swing, for example, is “designed perfectly” to
slice every tee shot into the woods and to shank almost
every approach shot into a sand trap. It’s a remarkably
consistent phenomenon.
My
process for grocery shopping is designed perfectly to
require me to backtrack through the store at least three
times. My process for getting the kids to school in the
morning is designed perfectly to have them arrive exactly
two minutes late each day. When I was in school, my process
for test preparation was designed perfectly to earn B
minuses.
You
get the idea. What comes out is a direct result of what we
put in. Sometimes that’s good, sometimes that’s not so good,
but either way, we can’t escape the cause-and-effect
connection.
Consider the state of your physique. Whether you look like
an Olympian or you more closely resemble The Blob, that’s
largely a result of the “process” you’ve followed to
condition your body. This health management process—your
diet, your exercise regimen (or lack thereof), the amount of
rest you get, whether you take vitamins, etc.—has produced
exactly what you see in the mirror when you step out of the
shower. Whether that’s a pretty sight or not, look again in
the mirror to identify the culprit: it’s the process owner.
Or
consider your work system—how things get done (or don’t get
done) in your workplace. The process you follow determines
both the successes and the dysfunctions. If you’re on the
factory floor, you put certain materials into one end of the
assembly line and you’ll get a specific product at the other
end, over and over again. The quality is the same until you
change the process. Upstairs in the front office, things are
no different. Run a meeting the same unfocused way they’ve
always been run and you’ll get the same blank stares and
lack of meaningful action you’ve always gotten.
The
point here is that for every set of inputs there’s a
corresponding, inextricably-linked set of outcomes.
Change in the latter only comes from change in the former.
Guaranteed.
Now,
take a moment and apply this axiom to your spiritual life,
in particular the extent to which you’re becoming more like
Jesus Christ each year. Are things discernibly different
this year than they were last year? Are you noticeably
more patient, more forgiving, or more compassionate? Do you
have more inner peace? Is the quality or quantity of your
prayer life better than it used to be? There are dozens of
possible indicators here, so pick a few that you think are
most relevant. Are they moving in the right direction?
Whatever these indicators say, understand that they’re a
result of the “process” you’re following for spiritual
development. Remember, this process is “designed perfectly
to produce your outcome.”
Let me
suggest an exercise I hope will help. First, think through
your current approach to spiritual development and describe
it to someone close to you, along with the outcomes that
process is producing (or just write down these things if
you’re doing this exercise on your own). Then, discuss (or
think through on your own) how the process could be improved
to produce a better outcome—for example greater love for God
and neighbor (Matthew 22:37-39) or more consistent evidence
of the “fruit of the Spirit” virtues in your daily life
(Galatians 5:22-23).
This
is a surprisingly powerful exercise, but whether we take it
seriously is entirely up to us. We can blow it off and just
keep slicing our spiritual tee shots into the familiar
forest. Another day, another double bogie.
But if
you’re finally ready for a better outcome—to become a more
authentic, more consistent follower of Jesus Christ—take the
time right now to figure out a better way to get there.
Michael Zigarelli
is an Associate Professor at Messiah College and the editor
of Christianity9to5.org.
For
further reading on the topic of spiritual growth, consider:
A
Serious Call to the Devout and Holy Life
by William Law
The
Imitation of Christ
by Thomas à Kempis
Renovation of the Heart
by Dallas Willard
The
Spirit of the Disciplines
by
Dallas Willard
Celebration of Discipline
by Richard Foster
Simplify Your Spiritual Life
by Donald Whitney
Experiencing God
by
Henry Blackaby
The
Purpose Driven Life
by Rick Warren
Cultivating Christian Character
by Michael Zigarelli