Science and Spiritual Growth
Science and Spiritual Growth
By: tomvermillion.com, Categories: Uncategorized, Comments Off on Science and Spiritual Growth

I’m continuing to review some of the ideas that were presented at a recent conference I attended in Raleigh-Durham, N.C, on the subject of healing the human soul. Much of the conference related to the science behind the directives that God has given his people for thousands of years. One of the big ideas that is coming out of recent brain research is neuroplasticity. The research now suggests that our brain can grow and be reconfigured throughout life. Up until a few decades ago, the “science” was that our brains and, thus, we ourselves, were fairly fixed by the time we reached elementary school and that we would essentially be that person for the rest of our lives. That notion has now been discarded.

 

This is a reality that believers always have always known. Scripture has made the possibility of personal transformation a hallmark of our relationship with God. The New Testament tells us that anyone in Christ is a new creation (2 Cor. 5:17). Paul calls on every believer to no longer conform to the patterns of this world but to be transformed by the renewing of his or her mind (Rom.12:2). Even the Old Testament records God’s declarations that he would replace our hardened hearts of stone and replace them with new hearts containing the capacity to grow toward God’s will. “I will give them an undivided heart and put a new spirit in them. I will remove from them their heart of stone and give them a heart of flesh” (Ezek. 11:19).

 

The basis of all sin is a mind or heart that stands in opposition to the will of God and that has over time conformed to the thinking patterns and attitudes of the world. Let me quote Jim Laffoon on this issue. “The power of sin cannot be broken without the flow of God’s resurrection power and life. If we are to experience the change God desires for us in the face of such opposition we must activate both our conscience and the release of God’s power through our new nature. In Ephesians 4:17-19, Paul describes the internal darkness, ignorance, hardness, and lack of spiritual sensitivity that make the process of transformation so challenging. ‘So I tell you, and insist on it in the Lord, that you must no longer lives as the Gentiles do, in the futility of their thinking. They are darkened in their understanding are separated from the life of God because of the ignorance that is in them due to the hardening of their hearts. Having lost all sensitivity they have given themselves over to sensuality….’

 

As I mentioned in my last blog, thoughts or experienced that are repeated begin to form neural pathways that become stronger and more resistant to change as they are repeated. We have a phrase that we repeat often in our Free Indeed ministry: Whatever we agree with, we empower. Whatever belief we repeat, act on, speak, imagine, etc. deepens the rut of these neural pathways. At some point, these pathways will be so strong that we will become inflexible in our beliefs and attitudes which scripture calls hardness of heart. These deeply embedded belief systems are called strongholds in 2 Corinthians 10 and they may be such a part of us that we cannot even entertain other perspectives or values. At that point we may cease to be truth seekers because we believe we already have all the truth. That can be true for the religious as well. Our best arguments will not sway that person. At that point, it will take a supernatural intervention by God to blast them out of their mindset. Saul of Tarsus had that kind of mindset as he arrested and organized the stoning of Christ- followers. It took a powerful encounter with Jesus on the road to Damascus to generate some plasticity in his thinking that eventually generated a transformed mind and a new identity as the apostle Paul.

 

As we come to Christ, unless we have been raised and spiritually nurtured in the home of believers, we must weaken, prune, or erase our worldly ways of thinking and develop new neural pathways that will contain the truths of God and the perspectives, values, and even emotions of Christ. The Holy Spirit will empower what we do but will hold us responsible for doing the things through which his power can be applied to our minds as we work to bring every thought captive to Jesus Christ.

 

Here are some helpful principles.

 

  1. In order for a neural pathway to be pruned or erased, it is not enough to simply stop doing, thinking, or speaking something. We must do and speak something else consistently that establishes a new pathway. The more we reinforce that pathway, the more it becomes our default setting for life. That is where repentance, confession, and becoming doers of the Word come in. We must begin to speak the word of God over our circumstances. Our confession of God’s truth on a regular basis begins to develop the new neural pathway and diminish the old ones.

 

Meditation, memorization, reading the Word, writing the Word, hearing the Word, and speaking            out loud all accelerate the process and strengthen our new ways of thinking. Unless we do the work of storing up God’s Word in our    hearts, the old pathways will retain their strength and will still be our default  settings under stress. God told Joshua, “Do not let this Book of the Law depart from your mouth; meditate on it day and night, so that you may be careful to do   everything written in it. Then you will be prosperous and successful” (Josh. 1:8).  To mediate means to chew on it, process it, discuss it, memorize it, etc. We must do the work to write God’s word on our hearts and to diminish the power of the old man or the old mind in our lives. Continuing to dabble in our old ways will  keep those worldly pathways alive and we will be live as double-minded  believers. Following Jesus has always been all or nothing.

 

  1. We must monitor our environment to see what things in the environment reinforce our old pathways or reinforce our new neural pathways. One of the really interesting new concepts in brain research is the idea of epigenetics. This concept states that our environment affects our genetic makeup and switches on or switches off genetic predispositions that have come down to us through our family line. Again let me quote from the conference. “Through an understanding of epigenetics, we have discovered that the genetic template we inherit from our parents is radically affected in its expression by our life experiences.” That means that genetic predispositions toward addictions, homosexuality, obesity, etc. can be turned off by elements in our physical, social and spiritual environments including our internal environment where the Holy Spirit lives. Positive predispositions toward righteousness, spiritual gifts, mercy, compassion, music, etc. can also be turned on or suppressed by our environments. That is one reason that God warns us about the people we hang out with and where we hang out.Righteousness or unrighteousness can be genetically encoded and passed on to children which explains much about generational sin, curses, and even  generations of righteousness.

 

  1. Another interesting confirmation that has arisen from new research is that our brain has more plasticity in the presence of God. Every act of worship activates the flow of the Spirit within us which apparently has an extraordinary effect on our physical minds. Practicing spiritual disciplines opens us up to the flow of God in our lives which powerfully facilitates even physical changes in our brains. Being in the presence of God also releases the neurochemicals that create a sense of peace, pleasure and well-being which serve to draw us back to God. Research confirms that even raising our hands above our heads (worship) releases these positive chemicals. I believe that speaking in tongues has the same positive effects.

 

In summary, the God who created us body, soul and spirit has accurately instructed us in the process of spiritual, emotional, and physical transformation by the power of his Spirit. Science is simply confirming the power that God has invested in our choices and in his Word and Spirit. We cannot take shortcuts. Consistent worship, mediation, confession, fasting, and the other spiritual disciplines over time are essential to our growth and change. We must also understand that once a week is not enough. God empowers the process but we must participate. Those who neglect these transformative disciplines will not experience all that God has for them.

 

Certainly there are moments when God changes us in a second – like the apostle Paul. I know people who have been sovereignly delivered by God from addictions and emotional brokenness but the continuing transformation of their souls and character has been a process. If we partner with God, he will change us even in the deepest recesses of our heart and mind. Science once again is finally catching up with the Bible.