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8/3/2019 The Roadmap for Transformation
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Experiencing Gods Best through His Transformation Process
Will You Seek to Experience Maximum Faith in Your Life
or Settle for Comfortable Mediocrity?
We love to read statistics from surveys that show we are succeeding in life or that the
future is bright and hopeful. When we encounter statistics that suggest we are not fulfilling our
potential, much less failing at something important, a common tendency is to challenge the
accuracy or the methodology of the survey. Believe me, I know this routine first-hand, having
conducted national surveys and reported on the spiritual faith and practices of Americans for the
past thirty years. Sharing survey data is sometimes a satisfying experience; others times, well, it
gets ugly.
When research is conducted to provide practical prescriptions and applications that
produce positive growth, it can be an invaluable resource. My latest research, conducted as the
basis of the bookMaximum Faith, was designed to give you new insights into how to become
the holy, fulfilled, and loving person that God created you to be. If you take what youre about to
read seriously, it could spark a significant and incredibly positive change in your life.
Religion in America
More than a quarter-century ago I began exploring various aspects of religious life in
America. To summarize some of the critical trends from that research, the following outcomes
are evident:
1. Americans have generally positive feelings about religion and the Judeo-Christianfaith. Most adults consider themselves to be spiritual people and say that religion and
faith play an important role in their life. More than four out of five adults say they are
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Christians; only one out of ten adults say they have no religious faith or consider
themselves to be atheist/agnostic.
2. While most Americans have consciously adopted a body of religious beliefs andpractices, they are becoming less likely to engage in corporate religious activity and
are becoming less interested in attaining theological and doctrinal education.
3. As religion has become an object of increased public debate and decreased publicconsensus, Christian adults have become less certain about the content and the
accuracy of their own beliefs and less willing to defend their beliefs in public. At the
same time, belief in absolute moral and spiritual truths has plummeted while
acceptance of the existence of multiple deities and of multiple paths to eternal
salvation has escalated.
4. Americans love a good deal; the idea promoted by thousands of Christian churchesand parachurch ministries that they can receive the free gift of salvation has
appealed to tens of millions of Americans over the past three decades. The outcome,
as reported through our surveys, has been a larger proportion of adults who have
accepted that free gift, but without much understanding of the nature, implications
and responsibilities associated with that gift.
Thats a very brief overview of some of our recent religious history. So, while social
commentators frequently note that Americans are religious, what they fail to note is that most
Americans have embraced general religiosity but have not really pursued maximum faith in the
God of Israel. If you were to objectively evaluate all the data, as I have tried to do, I believe you
would reach the same conclusion that I have: astoundingly few Americans who identify
themselves as Christians and even a minority of those who might be deemed to be born again
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by traditional measures appear to be serious about letting God transform them into the person
He desires them to be.
I implore you to consider this with an open mind. Perhaps you are among the millions of
us who have been religious and have viewed God and the Bible with the best of intentions, but
you have not really fully invested yourself in living for God. Not co-existing with Him; living
forHim. Theres a big difference. It took me a long time to understand that distinction. Maybe
you have not yet wrestled with the implications of this distinction. Its not mere semantics.
My most recent research, described inMaximum Faith, shows how the vast majority of
American Christians have denied God His rightful place on the throne of their lives. Our default
response, driven by cultural expectations and personal preferences, is to withhold control of our
lives so that we, not God, can reign supreme all under the cover of being good and responsible
Christians. More often than not, we treat God as our religion consultant and turn to the Bible as
an emergency reference book.
Most Americans point to their typical faith practices e.g., church attendance, Christian
education involvement, personal Bible study, daily prayer, freely donating money to ministries,
participation in a small group, etc. as evidence of personal piety. We somehow overlook the
fact that our religious profile is more similar to that of the Pharisees and Sadducees- the very
people whom Jesus castigated for living by the letter of the law without embracing its spirit
than to that of the early disciples, whom Jesus said would be known by their love and by the fruit
produced by their transformed lives.
Even if we narrow the scope of our focus to born-again Christians, the picture is not
flattering. In essence, the born-again community has invited God to reside in our hearts,
accepting the special gift of love and forgiveness that He offered, along with His promise of
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eternal salvation. Sadly, once we felt certain that we had His gift securely in hand, we abandoned
Him and have continued to operate by the standards and values of the world, searching for
earthly treasures and pleasures. That is why the research has consistently shown over the past
two decades that the lives of born-again Christians are essentially indistinguishable from those of
people who do not claim Jesus Christ as their savior. We may be religious but we are not truly
transformed by our faith in and relationship with God. Only a tiny proportion of born again
adults get beyond their profession of faith to experience the more robust and significant life that
is available through Christ to His followers.
A major reason why few Americans experience the richness of the Christian life is that
we do not know what to do beyond reading and memorizing more Bible verses, attending church
services more consistently, donating money to worthy causes, volunteering a few hours at
church, and discussing our faith in Jesus with family and friends. And unfortunately, my research
reveals that a majority of believers who figure out where the journey goes, and what it takes to
maximize the opportunity God grants us by completing the journey to wholeness, instead choose
to settle for a less complete and fulfilling life.
In other words, most Christians have a relationship with God that could be described as
active but stalled a connection that has plateaued in its passion and influence, despite the
continued commitment of time and energy to religious activity. To use an automotive metaphor,
the engine is running but the gears are not engaged; were burning lots of fuel but not getting
anywhere.
Unfortunately, after surveying the spiritual journey of several thousand people, it seems
that we are pretty random about our efforts to experience genuine God-driven transformation.
Think of it as a mindless mutiny: we refuse to give God control of our lives, yet were not really
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guiding the ship toward a particular destination that reflects our ultimate best interests; we just
keep meandering in the ocean of life hoping to find an appealing place to dock. Forgive the
impertinence, but sometimes it seems as if the American Church the aggregate collection of
Christ believers in the U.S. is indeed a ship of fools. We are not so much Christ followers as
we are Christ admirers who happily listen to amazing stories about His life and His teachings,
then go about our business without the principles imparted making an impact on who we are.
So What Is Transformation?
Lets assume that genuine, God-driven transformation is what we need. What does that
mean?
In a nutshell, we might define it as the process that enables us to gradually die to sin, self,
and society in order to fully and profoundly love God and people. Jesus Himself indicated as
much by saying the most important commandments challenge us to do this (Mark 12:30-31).
Paul, one of the classic examples of a transformed person, underscored the necessity of this quest
when he said that the only thing that matters is being transformed by God into a new creation
(Galatians 6:15).
Another way of describing the concept is that transformation means we are driven to
become holy by submitting to God and consistently pursuing His will, being set apart by the
blood of Christ to experience a unique freedom and a new identity through that blood and the
empowerment of the Holy Spirit.
Why Dont Christians Pursue and Experience Transformation?
If this is our highest calling, and if it is such a desirable experience, then why arent
Christians aware of it, much less devoted to it? Why arent Christian churches designed around
processes for facilitating such a metamorphosis?
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Turning again to the research, it points out that there are numerous reasons why few
believers experience genuine transformation. Here are some of the dominant obstacles.
1. Christians do not consider transformation to be a life goal or spiritual calling germaneto them. Americans have bought into the notion of comfort and security. The journey
to wholeness is challenging and includes ample doses of suffering, surrender,
submission, sacrifice, persecution, and perhaps even downward mobility. Without
understanding the complete context of such challenges, transformation is not as
appealing as a safe and cushy lifestyle.
2.
Churches define success according to attendance, budget, and availability of
programs rather than individual and community transformation. Consequently,
maintenance of traditions and systems trumps transformation. New paradigms and
metrics are rejected as inappropriate, unnecessary, or redundant.
3. While Jesus defined successful faith on the basis of fruit, American Christians andtheir churches measure it according to knowledge, activity, and emotion.
4. To become transformed, we have to let God rule our lives while we become servants.The reality of surrendering control to God, submitting to His plans and metrics, and
allowing Him to have His way with us seems like weakness and defeat. Our culture
continually reminds us that we should never give in or give up; we must always look
out for and take care of ourselves.
5. Americans inhabit an imitative society: we mimic the lives of people whom weadmire or find appealing. The problem is that there are so few living models of
transformation for Christians to admire and follow. Those who qualify suffer the
indignity of being marginalized as aberrations unique or odd, certainly not those
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who are living a normal life. (Who could be another Mother Teresa? Who has the
calling of Billy Graham? Wasnt Martin Luther King just a man for the moment?)
6. Our society provides an endless supply of distractions and distortions that keep usfocused on matters other than Gods will. Transformation is counter-cultural; yet,
most Christians want to fit in and achieve mainstream acceptance rather than resist
the currents of society.
7. Life is a spiritual battle. Believers have been effectively blinded to Gods desires forthem. Our leaders have failed to direct us to follow a viable, long-term strategy for
wholeness and holiness, preferring to focus on immediate programmatic and
procedural urgencies. So much of what draws our attention amounts to little more
than diversions by the enemy which produce a strategic disaster for the long-term
well-being of the Church.
8. We develop our core values, beliefs, and behaviors when we are children. But veryfew families, churches, schools and relationships are focused on facilitating godly
transformation among young people. Instead, we end up allowing our children to
embrace the objectives of the society we are called to shape; we wind up being
shaped by it.
Moving Forward
Once again, please forgive my forwardness, but you are likely to be among the 98% of
American adults who have yet the reach the final stops of the journey to Christian maturity. The
journey has little to do with your age, so dont assume that its just a matter of time before you
get there: people in their seventies are no more likely to reach those stages of maturity than are
people in their forties.
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No, what you probably need are the motivation to make a commitment to become who
God has created you to be; a road map that identifies the stops on the journey, describing what
happens at each stop and how that fits into your efforts to mature; and a set of tools that will help
you stay focused and moving forward.
Lets look at those components one at a time.
The motivation to become whom God created you to be must come from you. Youve
probably read more than your fair share of motivational books and listened to numerous
inspirational sermons and speeches. Yet, here you are. You see, you can get a temporary lift from
such resources, but ultimately only you can motivate you. It boils down to a very simple
question: do you want the best that God has to offer for you and are willing to trust Him and
work with Him to get it, or would you prefer to roll the dice and experience the best that you,
personally, can facilitate for your life? Most people give lip service to the former, but physical
weight to the latter.
Once motivated to pursue the best that God has for you, having good intentions and some
motivation wont suffice. Armed with those mental and emotional commitments alone, you are
resigned to a random and unproductive journey. To make progress, you need a road map. Thats
what the research behindMaximum Faith is about: identifying where you are and where you
need to go, and how to get from here to there.
For instance, after surveying the lives and experiences of thousands of people over a six-
year period, it became clear that the journey to wholeness consists of ten stops. Most Americans
never get to Stop Four. Most Christians never get beyond Stop Five. Are you willing to settle for
a life in which God offers you the joy and influence of experiencing the entire journey, but you
instead quit half-way (or less) through the journey?
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My research found that this is not a growth process that is without hardships and pitfalls.
(In fact, one portion of the research found that a large share of the people who figure out whats
coming as they pursue holiness choose to retreat to previously mastered stops on the trail,
preferring the comfort and security of mediocrity to the challenges of godliness.) But thankfully,
our Father in Heaven is an orderly and trustworthy God; He can be trusted to empower us as we
allow Him to determine how we grow, within the boundaries and contours He has designed for
our growth and development. My interviews with those who have reached the upper stops on this
journey cannot contain their gratitude for having been allowed the privilege of experiencing all
that God has had in store them and He has that in store for you, if you are willing to partner
with Him on that journey.
Along the way you will need additional tools to make sense of new experiences and
challenges, or to master the opportunities you encounter. Those tools whether they be
information, relationships, accountability, self-diagnostic exercises, encouragement, or other
elements are the very kinds of resources that the Church exists to provide.
And those are the kind of tools that the maximumfaith.com website also exists to provide.
We are building those tools now and will be sharing them as they become available. I invite you
to return here often to see what is new and available for you as together we take the ultimate
journey. But as you become more aware of the nature of the journey and what it takes to become
the person God intends you to be, you will also find resources and tools available elsewhere, for
our God is a loving and resourceful creator who will never set you up for failure. He loves you
too much for that!
Commit to the Journey
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Thanks for considering these things. Realize that your life is too precious to God for you
to squander it in pursuit of the shiny but superficial baubles and applause the world dangles
before us. The apostle Paul encourages us to fight the good fight of faith. And it definitely is a
battle, one we fight every moment of every day.
But you need not fight it alone. And you need not fight it blindly, without a sense of
where you are headed and what it will take to get there. I pray that you will consider reading
Maximum Faith and then partnering with us and many others here, at maximumfaith.com, to
persevere on our journey to wholeness.
Love, respect and abundant blessings to you,
George Barna and the Maximum Faith team
2011, George Barna.