Learning from Serpents
Today is a guest blog from author Rick Lawrence. He's written a new book entitled Shewd. I'm reading it now and will soon have a review for you to consider.
Learning
From Serpents
A Guest Post About Shrewd:Daring to Obey the Startling Command of Jesus
-By Rick Lawrence
Five-or-so years ago I was locked
in what felt like an all-out war over a dream that was in danger of dying,
because a man who was much shrewder than me was bent on stopping it. One day,
in my grief and fear and anger over what was about to happen, I felt God sort
of “sit me down” and challenge me—it was clear that my “frontal” way of dealing
with this situation was not going to work, and He was asking me if I was going
to have the courage to move more shrewdly. In the nicey-nice Christian culture
that is promoted and perpetuated in most churches, shrewdness is
anathema—worse, it’s entirely off the radar as a spiritual practice.
So, in an uncharacteristic spirit
of desperation, I asked God to teach me what I needed to know about
shrewdness—and He (of course) brought me to Jesus, the source of all good
things. The point of Jesus’ “Parable of the Shrewd Manager”
(Luke 16:1-8) is specifically to highlight the behavior of a lazy, lying,
good-for-nothing servant who has no
qualities we’d want to emulate except for one: his shrewd way of saving
himself from the consequences of his terrible behavior. Jesus highlights this
anti-role-model for one purpose: “The people of this world are more shrewd in
dealing with their own kind than are the people of the light.” Later, in
preparation for sending out His disciples on their first ministry journey
without Him, He tells them to take nothing with them (no clothing, money, or
“insurance” of any kind)—instead, He tells them they need just two things:
1. Be as shrewd
as a serpent, and
2. Be as
innocent as a dove.
The word He uses
here for “serpent” is the same one He uses for Satan. And the word He uses here
for “dove” is the same the Bible uses to describe the Holy Spirit. Jesus is
telling His disciples to be as shrewd as Satan is, but as innocent as the Holy
Spirit is. Shrewdness, then, is a way of living and relating that Jesus first
modeled for us, then commanded us to do likewise.
In Shrewd: Daring to Obey the
Startling Command of Jesus, I describe “shrewd” as a way of thinking and acting that Jesus long ago urged His followers to
use in their uprising against the powers and ‘spiritual forces of wickedness’
of this world. Shrewd people—and Jesus is the Exemplar—first study how things
work, and then
leverage that knowledge to tip the balance in a favored direction. Shrewdness
is the expert application of leverage—“the right force at the right time in the
right place”—as The Way Things Work
author David Macaulay observes. Jesus is perpetually taking what His
enemies intend for evil and morphing it into good—He uses their destructive
momentum against them, like a martial artist. Most Christians
have a negative reaction to the word “shrewd,” but Jesus not only exemplified this
way of relating to others in His redemptive mission on earth, He gave us a
mandate to grow much, much more adept in our practice of it.
Because I’ve had scores of conversations with people, both young and old,
about the mechanics of “innocent shrewdness,” I know people of all ages have
experienced repeated failure in their frontal, conventional approaches to
problems and challenges in their life. They’re frustrated and lost. And when I
simply walk them through a Jesus-centered process of thinking and acting more
shrewdly, it’s like Dorothy in The Wizard
of Oz moving from her flat, black-and-white world into the 3-D colors of
Oz. The process, simply, looks like this:
• Answer the question: “What do I really want?” Jesus habitually
asked an irritating question of people with obvious needs who approached Him
for help: “What do you want?” (e.g., Matt. 20:32; Mark 6:22; Mark 10:36; Mark
10:51; Luke 18:41). We must know what we really want before we can truly ask in
faith.
• Answer the question: “Is my ‘want’ born out of innocence? Would I feel
just fine asking Jesus for this ‘want’ if I was face-to-face with Him?”
• Answer the question: “How does this (person, organization, or process)
work?” Shrewd living always starts with understanding how things work—so spend
five minutes brainstorming (either alone or with someone you trust) an answer
to this question.
• Based on your understanding of how things work, spend five minutes
brainstorming a point of leverage to go after with a “sideways” approach. Sideways means
the leverage comes from an unexpected direction—you find “sideways” by
experimenting with approaches that carry the force to move the situation.
• Now,
try one of your options and debrief the results with someone you trust.
Decide whether to continue with that option or whether to try a new approach.
• Repeat
steps #3, #4, and #5 in a continuous loop—until you’ve landed on “the right
force at the right time in the right place.”
Rick Lawrence
is the author of dozens of books, including Shrewd:
Daring to Obey the Startling Command of Jesus and Sifted: God’s Scandalous Response to Satan’s Outrageous Demand (shrewdbook.com
and siftedbook.com). He’s has been editor of Group Magazine for 25 years and is the co-leader of the Simply
Youth Ministry Conference. Rick is a church leader, consultant to national
research organizations and a frequent conference and workshop speaker. He and
his family live in Colorado.
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