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Our Daily Bread
PGA Practice and the Basics
Posted by Mart De Haan
August 9th, 2008
Filed in Life in Christ, Social Issues
Went with my son and daughter-in-law to a practice round of the PGA Championship that finishes up this weekend in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. I think what impressed me the most was seeing how far these players hit the ball. While watching them on television give a sense of the amazing touch they show from sand traps and around the greens, I was amazed to see how far they hit their tee shots with a driver.
Grew up playing quite a bit of golf with my dad, and more recently have picked up the game again to be with my son and friends on the course. In the process I went to the book store looking for some instructional books to brush up on the basics. One book titled, “The 7 Laws of the Golf Swing” caught my attention. I’ve played enough to know that there are fundamentals of grip, stance, backswing, plane of swing, and follow-through that are necessary to develop some control and consistency of the ball.
Have been reminded in the process that when it comes to our spiritual life there are also some principles that are far more significant than the 7 laws of the golf swing. They too work together to provide Christ-like action. Let’s see if we can brush up on them together.
The Apostle Peter came up with the same number as the golf book I brought home. He wrote about 7 fundamentals of faith that are essential for a productive and purposeful relationship with Christ.
In the first chapter of his second letter, he begins with an inspiring preface emphasizing that God has given us all of the power and promises we need to escape the decadence around us and to instead actually get a taste of the Divine nature of God (1:1-4).
By the way Peter reminds me a little of the Woody Austin of the PGA tour. For an interesting article on a colorful player known not only for his skill, but his candor and unexpected antics on the golf circuit check out a recent story on Woody that describes some of what makes him a crowd favorite. (Didn’t get a pic of Woody. This is Jim Furyk in a sand trap).
Peters Seven Laws of the Walk (or seven links of faith)
In Verse 5, Peter says that because of all God has done for us through Christ…
“For this very reason, giving all diligence, add to your faith virtue, to virtue knowledge, to knowledge self-control, to self-control perseverance, to perseverance godliness, to godliness brotherly kindness, and to brotherly kindness love (5-7).”
The New Living Translation puts it like this: “So make every effort to apply the benefits of these promises to your life. Then your faith will produce a life of moral excellence. A life of moral excellence leads to knowing God better. Knowing God leads to self-control. Self-control leads to patient endurance, and patient endurance leads to godliness. Godliness leads to love for other Christians, and finally you will grow to have genuine love for everyone. The more you grow like this, the more you will become productive and useful in your knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. But those who fail to develop these virtues are blind or, at least, very shortsighted. They have already forgotten that God has cleansed them from their old life of sin.”
What impresses me so much is the way Peter adds and links these seven dimensions of faith to one another. As he describes them, each is a necessary and logical basis for the next. Each is a way of expressing a faith relationship to Christ. Together they move forward to produce a symphony of the spirit that ends up with love (apart from which, the Apostle Paul says we are useless (1Cor 13).
Look a little closer: and see if this makes sense:
For our faith in Jesus to be real we need to diligently let the Spirit of God produce in us:
Virtue– (at this point in the text, virtue seems to mean a desire and heart attitude that wants to reflect the character and goodness of Christ). All honorable actions begin with a good motive. But by themselves good intentions to follow Christ can be like a desire to play golf. It’s necessary to begin, but without a knowledge of the basics you can’t go very far– and least not very far in a graceful way. So Peter says, to virtue add,
Knowledge– Here Peter is obviously talking about knowledge of how to relate to Christ. It would include the basics of Jesus’ teaching, attitudes, and values (and eventually the whole counsel of the Bible). But this information must not remain as head-knowledge. It must be a basis for “practice” and “action.” So Peter says, to your knowledge, add (or supply) self-control. Here the relationship between the two is interdependent. Mind leads body. Body follows mind, which is why I believe Peter writes that, in our knowledge (i.e. of Christ) we are to focus on,
Self-control– Here Peter lines up with the Apostle Paul who also wrote about being transformed by the renewing of our mind (Rom 12:1-2). Just as faith and good intentions can look foolish without knowledge, so knowledge can unravel into pride and hypocrisy if it lacks self control. But if they team up together, then each provides what the other needs as good motives, and knowledge, move with self control to build a basis for endurance.
Patience– The Bible repeatedly tells us that endurance in the face of disappointment and unexpected trouble is essential for us to develop strength, the character of Christ-like attitudes, and the time God himself needs to show himself faithful and able to provide for us. What we discover in the process is another relationship moving forward. To the extent that we endure long enough to experience God’s ability to provide for us, we grow deeper in what Peter calls,
Godliness–This is the awareness, the awe, and the reverence that grows in us as we learn that we were not alone in the dark and troubled moments of our lives. Seeing, as we look back, that our God was there all along, testing our faith to see what was in our hearts, so that he could show himself to be all that we ever needed– that’s the pay off of the patience, and endurance of faith that give God time. But that’s not all. In revealing himself, our Father in heaven helps us to see how he works through his family to provide relationships that are even more important than flesh and blood. Peter sees in the outcome an essential element of our faith walk that he calls,
Brotherly Kindness– This is the kind of family love that can be found in a healthy shared relationship with our Father in heaven. Through shared relationships to Christ, we discover (although imperfectly) dimensions of reality that go so much deeper and farther than normal (sports-based, and business-based) friendships. But Peter reminds, as Jesus first did, that the basics of faith cannot stop here. Although we must first learn to care about those who care about us, that is what gives us a taste of what it means to care for someone other than ourselves. So it is to “brotherly kindness” that Peter adds the crowning basic of,
Love– Our Lord reminds us that if we only care for those who care for us, we are no different than anyone else (John 6:27-36). Then he challenges us to give even our enemies (through his spirit and grace) the kind of deference, and good will that we naturally give to our friends and family.
That’s the kind of love that made Jesus so wonderful. He loved his friends like they had never been loved before. But even more importantly he loved his enemies to the point of dying for them to bring us to his father in heaven– forever.
Yes, according to Peter, these are the basics of a faith relationship with Christ. They are as essential as the fundamentals of golf– but infinitely and eternally more important.
So the Apostle of Jesus writes, “The more you grow like this, the more you will become productive and useful in your knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. But those who fail to develop these virtues are blind or, at least, very shortsighted. They have already forgotten that God has cleansed them from their old life of sin. So, dear brothers and sisters, work hard to prove that you really are among those God has called and chosen. Doing this, you will never stumble or fall away (2Pet 1:8-10).
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8 Responses to “PGA Practice and the Basics”
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August 9th, 2008 at 2:11 pm
I seems that with golf there are those who practice since childhood and there are those who just have a gift that comes out in adulthood to become masters. No matter when they start to play practice makes improvement. I remember when my dad took my mom golfing and told her to keep her chin down and she tucked her chin so far into her chest she had no way of following through on her swing, that was such a hoot. (Thanks for the memory)!!
With our walk with our Master he gives us our faith and it is He who develops in us His character through our continued focus being on Him. Realization being that it is He that gives us every thing we need to share in His goodness and love. It makes it easy when you have only one Master to follow.
August 9th, 2008 at 2:51 pm
No disagreement. Nothing to add. Likely one of the best posts I’ve read. The Lord truly spoke to me through this and I will print it out for future reference. Thank Mart for being open to God’s direction.
August 10th, 2008 at 5:45 am
I am surprised that no one cited 2 Pet. 1:3 “His divine power has given us everything we need for life and godliness through our knowledge of him who called us by his own glory and goodness.” during the sufficiency postings. It is so explicit here. He does not say that God does not use means, just that He has given us everything we need for LIFE and GODLINESS. When these seem insufficent for our lives it means we have not availed ourselves of His promises. It also means the church is not being the body of Christ and the individual members of it are not faithfully using the gifts He gave us to minister to each other.
Verses 8 and 9 of this passage are so amazingly descriptive of so many Christians today and I was one of them for many years. I was ineffective and unproductive in my knowledge of God because I was not developing the character qualities God put into me through the indwelling Holy Spirit when I was born again. Instead, I was paralized through focusing on my sin and unworthiness, not remembering that I had been set free from my past sins and that I had been delivered from the power of sin.
Thanks for this excellent synopsis of one of my favorites.
August 10th, 2008 at 10:41 am
Absolutely ignorant about golf…sat and stared hard at the pics as they blankly stared back at me…but thanks for another lesson on the 7 “basic foundations” of Faith…‘If the foundations be destroyed, what can the righteous do?” Love being the greatest of all…was able to relate to “…the kind of love that made Jesus so wonderful”.
God is love… the selfless, sacrificial and unconditional Love of God as reflected in the compassion of Christ stands out distinguished from the counterfeit forms of love that the world offers.
The love that appeals to us is self-seeking and selfish… that leads to: failed marriages in which “I love you” is for as long as the needs and expectations are met and “I do” really means “I don’t”…corrupt parental love that seeks its own personal pursuits, abused and neglected children not being trained in the fear of the Lord, broken homes that deprive children of their biological parents…who grow up into incapacitated adults, unwanted, uncared for and unloved, who then run out into the world looking for love at all the wrong places and from all the wrong people…
Loveless living has therefore become the hallmark of our super achieving society which has certainly succeeded in gaining the whole world and is precariously positioned to lose its own soul! “Sin will be rampant everywhere, and the love of many will grow cold” Matt 24:12
However, all is not so gloom and doom…love in “practice” and “action” is the very fruit that identifies a follower of Christ. The love of Jesus is not a warm fuzzy feeling of belongingness or getting our passions and emotions turned on rather it is the giving away of self to the point of death (John 15:13) regardless of injustice, betrayal or any other unfavorable situation.
Makes one wonder if it is even possible to love the way Jesus loved …not the mushy-feely love but true love that involved rough living, fishermen friends, hungry weary days, homeless nights, persecution and contempt above all, scourge and crown of thorns, torturous march up to Golgotha, deserted by friends and family, forsaken by God, enduring the agony of the cross, dying for the salvation of sinful, perverse, opposing and ungrateful souls!
“For this reason I kneel before the Father and pray that …I, being rooted and established in love, may have power… to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, and to know this love that surpasses knowledge…” (Eph 3: 14-19)
August 10th, 2008 at 1:03 pm
Mart wrote, “Godliness leads to love for other Christians, and finally you will grow to have genuine love for everyone.” Here is where my ball starts slicing to the left only to end up in the sand trap. “Everyone” means our enemies as well. Here we are in the mist of a political year yet how difficult it is to pray for those who advocate the very opposite what we hold dear. It also means those who are other faiths or athesists and agnostics. It also means those who are hurting us physically, emotionally, mentally and spiritually. Of course, Christianity isnt a game. It aint for wimps either. Praise God that He is still there for us as we try to keep our ways straight though we keep missing the mark.
August 11th, 2008 at 6:43 am
Mart:
Interesting parallels between golf technique and spiritual principles of godly living. I was especially struck by your concluding quote: So the Apostle of Jesus writes, “The more you grow like this, the more you will become productive and useful in your knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. But those who fail to develop these virtues are blind or, at least, very shortsighted. They have already forgotten that God has cleansed them from their old life of sin. So, dear brothers and sisters, work hard to prove that you really are among those God has called and chosen. Doing this, you will never stumble or fall away (2Pet 1:8-10).
A good number of evangelicals today believe in “eternal security.” Although I prefer the Calvinistic principle of “Perseverance of the saints,” I find the passage you cited helps believers to look to life change as a fruit of being truly saved. Thanks for your thoughts.
August 11th, 2008 at 6:05 pm
Thank you,Mart,for this thought. I’ve been on the same road lately,so it comes at the right time. I’m just going to read what eveyone else has to say about it and weigh where I am in this right now. I’m sure it will help.
August 19th, 2008 at 12:47 am
Mart,
Thanks for the idea on the PGA practice and the basics. I used the idea as a spring board for a message on Sunday night of August 17 and the congregation was blessed and still testifying on how it touched their lives a week later.
I indicated that all of us are given a measure of faith and that faith is therefore a given. I referred to the first four basics as inputs and the next three as outputs. If we add the first four we would reach the stage where the next three begin to flow out of our lives.
Like a mustard seed if we take our faith and plant it and nourish it, it will grow and not only produce fruit but also provide shelter for the birds. It would however be sad if it only was a shelter for the birds.
The same way a seed contains all the basics that a plant need to develop into a tree, salvation provides us with all the basics we need to attain a life of Godliness. We just need to add what we are admonished to add in 2 Peter 1.
FUNDAMENTALS OF OUR FAITH
OUTPUTS LOVE
BROTHERLY LOVE
GODLINESS
INPUTS PERSEVERANCE
SELF-CONTROL
KNOWLEDGE
VIRTUE
ALL GIVEN A MEASURE OF FAITH - ROM 13:3
Sammy