“Wait a minute,” you might be saying. I thought I just read this post. Actually, you read that post. My wife, Anna, went on a Women’s Retreat this weekend with our church, and before she left, she asked me to return a half gallon of milk she bought last week. She said that she had purchased the milk before realizing it was set to expire the following day. She called the store to see if she could make an exchange, and they said that would be fine. So I went to the store on Sunday afternoon to make the exchange. I explained the situation to the woman at the Customer Service counter, and she told me to go ahead and pick out a new carton. After asking for directions, I headed back to the dairy section. But when I picked up the replacement carton and checked the expiration date, I noticed it was the same as the one I was returning: 4/4/10. I realized that 4/4/10 was not last week. You might have realized it too. That’s basically a month from now. At that point, I wasn’t sure if I even knew how to read expiration dates correctly, so I turned the carton over and looked for anything else that looked like a date. But 4/4/10 was the only date I could find. I then realized that Anna had made her purchase on 3/3/10, so I suspected she just made an oversight on the date, focusing on the day rather than the month. I can’t blame her—I do this kind of thing all the time. But then I thought: “The woman in Customer Service has already said I can make the exchange. And the milk has been sitting in the car for 3 days, so it’s definitely bad now. Maybe I can just make the swap anyway.” And I almost walked out of the store. But then the Spirit spoke to me once more: “How much did you say your integrity was worth?” I quickly came to my spiritual senses. Of course I couldn’t make this swap. It wasn’t the store’s fault that the milk was bad now—it was mine for leaving in the car for 3 days. And if my integrity was worth more than $2.25, it was certainly worth more than $3.76. All this reminded me of something C.S. Lewis wrote in Mere Christianity:
I was amazed by the fact that my decision last week to pay for the train ticket instead of getting away with not paying had not left a deep enough impression on me to make me a person of integrity. In other words, I wasn’t fixed. Here I was again, facing the same moral dilemma, and my instincts were towards evil. But I did notice on this second occasion that it was easier to make the right choice; I had already practiced last week. I suppose there’s a certain amount of spiritual inertia present in our daily walks with God. The more quickly we submit to the Spirit’s leading in our life, the easier it becomes to continue walking with Him. But every step we take off the path, going deeper and deeper into the mire, the harder it becomes to turn back. God grant us the mercy and favor to continue making small, right choices each day, to become more and more of a heavenly creature, so that when He asks us to make a big, right choice, we find it to be one of the easiest decisions of all. Question: Do you find obedience gets easier each time you obey, and vice-versa? |

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Comments
I love these "gut checks" that God gives us and it's especially sweet when He does so in the small things. When our hearts are bothered by even the sins that most would excuse, we're more assured that in the big moments we will make the right decisions too.
It does seem that we often deal with big sins, then small sins, then small right choices, then big right choices. Perhaps God is intentional about growing us in that way.
Though Chris does associates these little proddings of conscience with "the Spirit's leading," I'd urge some caution here. Two observations are important to bear in mind: (a) such proddings of conscience are a nearly universal human experience (excluding perhaps sociopaths, junior high schoolers, and the like), and (b) such proddings of conscience are sometimes misleading.
CT,
Thanks for your thoughts. What are your thoughts on distinguishing between the Spirit and the conscience?
Chris
To my disappointment, I don't believe that I am personally able to discern the voice of the Spirit of God. I'd be interested to hear the thoughts of others on this matter. I sometimes wonder how Abraham would have known that it was God who was asking him to kill his son.