Saturday, August 27, 2011

A Rubric for Measuring Your Spirituality


"But to me it is a very small thing that I may be examined by you, or by any human court; in fact, I do not even examine myself. For I am conscious of nothing against myself, yet I am not by this acquitted; but the one who examines me is the Lord. Therefore do not go on passing judgment before the time, but wait until the Lord comes who will both bring to light the things hidden in the darkness and disclose the motives of men’s hearts; and then each man’s praise will come to him from God" (I Corinthians 4:3-5).
                                
Category
The categories list indicators of spiritual progress.
Raw Score
Score yourself in each category on a scale of 1 (sinner) to 10 (saint).
Weight
Some indicators of spiritual progress are more important than others. Multiply your raw score by the weight factor given for each category to get your weighted score.
Weighted Score
Add all of the weighted scores together to get the true measure of your spirituality.
Testimony

x 0
=
Church attendance

x 0
=
Tithe and offering

x 0
=
Prayer and worship

x 0
=
Control over external sins

x 0
=
Missions trips

x 0
=
Control over internal sins

x 0
=
How close you feel to God

x 0
=
How much others look up to you as a spiritual person

x 0
=
Any other category by which you might try to measure your own spiritual progress

x 0
=
God’s view of you

x 100
=
Total Spirituality Score:


After being on the spiritual journey for some time, we may feel that we've really made some progress. But then we may slowly or suddenly run into a patch where we feel that that progress was all an illusion. For instance, I get so irritated when my two-year old daughter cries and whines over the slightest things--she's always crying! and whining!--I can't stand it! But then, I think, Where did the fruit of the spirit go? Wasn't I more patient than this a year ago? Shouldn't I be even more patient than ever by now?

The wisdom of St. Paul in the passage quoted above is very useful here. He points to an authentic humility, neither inflating nor deflating one's sense of one's self but rather giving the whole matter over to God. There are no meaningful measures--church attendance, feelings of holiness, amount of giving, time spent in prayer--by which we might rightly judge our own progress. What seems like a slump might be a time of hidden growth. What seems like regression in one area might be a time when one is growing in another area. What seems like great progress may be in fact only a little progress. Only God has an accurate perspective. 

Constant self-assessment is counterproductive, as it takes time, adds worry, and is bound to be inaccurate. Students learning to write often lose control over skills that they had already mastered while they are working on new skills. For instance, their grammar may become sloppy for a time while they are working on critical thinking. In such cases, they may seem to regress while in fact they are making significant progress. The same seems to be the case in the spiritual life. 

What I think the answer is is this. Seek God's perspective the best you can. But don't worry about how far you have come or not come. Instead, gently--though sometimes also fervently--keep on practicing, practicing the spiritual disciplines, practicing the presence of God, practicing the fruit of the spirit. And leave the results or lack of results to God who knows and loves us more than we know or love ourselves.

May we do this.

2 comments:

Rehoboth said...

Good thoughts, Paul. Kind of freaked me out when I first glanced at the chart - looked like the fundamentalist churches in which I grew up. It was a long time before I realized that it's not between me and "them." It's between me and my Abba.

Anna Cotton said...

Paul, great chart! It certainly works to make us smile at the absurdity of measuring ourselves, but it also works to get our attention on what really matters--how God sees us. Because we can't know God's final thoughts on the matter, our job is to persevere. I like how you emphasized that we need to continue "... gently--though sometimes also fervently." Amen! Thanks for sharing this creative, thoughtful insight.
--Blessings, Anna

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