What Is Spirituality?

For many, spirituality simply means spending time occasionally in personal reflection. For others it might mean consciously trying to live by certain principles, or attempting to be thoughtful on important issues like the environment or homelessness.

However, the common perception of spirituality is not the biblical one. I hold the perspective that spirituality includes - but transcends - the human spirit, and involves the pursuit of God and the things of God, through Jesus Christ, by the power of the Holy Spirit, in accordance with God's self-revelation (that is, the Bible).

Spirituality and the Gospel

This kind of spirituality is not self-generated. Rather it is one result of the new spiritual life that God creates in the soul as He works through the gospel. In other words, Christian spirituality is part of a life lived in response to the gospel. In theological terms, spirituality is an aspect of the sanctification that necessarily begins at and follows justification.

Think of it this way: We come to God through the gospel and we live for God through the gospel. The Apostle Paul wrote, "Therefore, as you received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk in him" (Colossians 2:6). It is through the gospel by faith that we receive Christ, and it is through the gospel by faith that we walk in Christ.

In a phrase, the gospel is about the person and work of Jesus Christ. That's why we can speak of the Christian life as a gospel-centered life. We come to God initially on the basis of faith in who Jesus is and what He has done for us. And we continue to come to God and to live a life pleasing to Him on the same basis. To paraphrase Paul in Galatians 3:3, having begun by the Spirit through the gospel, we are perfected (sanctified, made like Christ) in the same way - by the Spirit through the gospel.

The Role of Spiritual Disciplines

Because the Holy Spirit gives a believer the desire and the power for a biblical spirituality, a certain reformatting of life and habits must also take place. Thus Paul also wrote, "Train yourself for godliness" (1 Timothy 4:7). This doesn't refer to physical training, for mere bodily activity - despite its health benefits - does not by itself build godliness, as the very next verse makes plain. Rather, the kind of training or exercise that promotes godliness (that is, Christlikeness) is spiritual training.

No Christian coasts into Christlikeness. Godliness, according to this text, requires training. Some Bible translations render "train" as "exercise" (KJV) or "discipline" (NASB). Thus the biblical and practical ways in daily life of living out this command to "train yourself for godliness" have often been termed "spiritual exercises" or "spiritual disciplines." (Note: some false teachers have also used these expressions, but that doesn't invalidate such biblically-derived terms any more than a heretic's use of the word "Trinity" nullifies our orthodox use of that term.) What was true in Paul's day is still true: it is by means of the spiritual disciplines found in Scripture that we are to pursue godliness.

Of course, legalism is always a danger in spirituality. Anything a Christian can count, measure, or record he can also twist into something that falsely assures by this - instead of the sufficiency of the life and death of Jesus - he is more spiritually secure or favored by God. But just because we can misuse the disciplines of godliness doesn't mean we should neglect them. "Train yourself for godliness" is God's command. Therefore, it must be possible to pursue obedience to it without legalism.

How Do We Practice Gospel-Centered Spirituality?

First, practice the right disciplines - those personal and interpersonal spiritual disciplines found in the Bible. A gospel-centered spirituality is a sola scriptura spirituality. For individual practice, the most important personal spiritual disciplines are the intake of Scripture and prayer. All the others relate to these two. The interpersonal spiritual disciplines we're to observe are primarily those biblical practices related to life together in a local church.

Second, practice the right disciplines with the right goal - with Jesus as the focus, pursuing intimacy with Christ and conformity (both inward and outward) to Christ. To put it more succinctly, by means of the biblical spiritual disciplines seek to be with Jesus and like Jesus.

Third, practice the right disciplines the right way. Emphasize the person and work of Jesus in each one. Through them, learn from, gaze upon, and enjoy who Jesus is and what He has done. Let your soul be restored through by the truths of the gospel.

Engage in the spiritual disciplines given by God in Scripture so that you are continually shown your need for Christ and the infinite supply of grace and mercy to be found by faith in Jesus Christ.

Donald S. Whitney is Associate Professor of Biblical Spirituality Senior Associate Dean of the School of Theology at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Louisville, Kentucky.

We aren’t meant to wait for holiness — we’re meant to pursue it. Rather than overwhelming legalism or loose boundaries, Don Whitney encourages us to find a practical middle ground through biblical habits.