Out of Spiritual Balance

I’ve been thinking a lot about the word “sin”. Is it an “old-fashioned” word that lacks power to communicate these days? It’s a judgmental word–but has it moved from meaning God’s judgment to other people’s judgment? Is it too much pointing fingers at each other?

The minor prophets whom I have been studying were great at pointing out all the sins of their people and telling them what would happen if they continued. But the people didn’t listen.

There is an ancient spiritual discipline of balance. You know, there have been commercials touting products to help you if your digestive system is out of balance. What if your whole life is out of balance?

Life well lived has God as the fulcrum–the center point around which your life is balanced. You are supposed to have a work life, a family life, a God life, a play life. You also have an emotional life, a rational life, a spiritual life. These all need to be out of balance.

We pull out that old word “sin” to describe when we’ve become captured by the worst of one of those lives. When it’s too much me, not enough God and others.

Instead of feeling judged for your sins and then getting defensive and not doing anything about them, try this. Look at your life as getting back into the balance that God created. This is a good time of the Church year to reflect on the parts of you that are out of balance.

Jesus wanted you to have a whole life, with God at the center, free from worry about “going to Hell,” free to serve others and God. He died to make it happen.

Except that you have to participate, too.

How do you put God back at the balance point? It’s both simple and hard. You stop every morning, first thing, and focus your attention on God. Maybe you talk to God. Maybe you read from the Bible or other spiritual books (I’m currently reading the words of the 12th Century mystic Richard of St. Victor, maybe you read Henri Nouwen or Dallas Willard). This starts your day with the right attitude.

Then take brief pauses during your day where you take a few deep breaths and remember your morning starting place. Go back to the center. Try it every day from now until Easter and it will become a lifelong habit. Might just keep you from “sinning.”

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