The prayer of a righteous person is powerful and effective. – James 5:16
A.W. Tozer, a popular pastor, author, once wrote: “When I understand that everything happening to me is to make me more Christlike, it resolves a great deal of anxiety.”
Joy and pain. Peace and turmoil. Suffering and ease. People who love me and people who hurt me. Knowing that God is using everything to make me more Christlike does make me less anxious. God is always for me (Romans 8:32). God uses all my circumstances for good (Romans 8:28). Everything in my life can direct me to Christ.
Whenever I feel frustrated, maybe God is inviting me to examine my own heart instead of focusing my attention outward. God may be doing something far more important in me than what is happening to me. I should stop complaining about my situation and discern why God brought this situation into my life.
My difficult circumstances can cultivate a dependence on Christ. Teach me to pray harder. Give me opportunity for ministry. To see my sin of pride and confess it. Everything can be a stepping-stone to knowing God better. To fully live out this perspective, we need to actively seek out and ask God what he is trying to show us.
About Corey Sharpe
Where do we get our beliefs?
Three theological perspectives have significantly shaped my Christian identity: Evangelicalism, the early Methodist tradition and liberation theology.
From my coming to faith in a Baptist church and throughout my education in a Baptist school and college, I was nurtured by convictions that emphasized a spiritual rebirth, a personal relationship with Jesus Christ and the centrality of the Bible. Even when I disagree with certain aspects of evangelicalism, it has deeply influenced my sense of what it means to be a follower of Jesus Christ.
My seminary studies spawned my interest in early Methodism, particularly its approach to spiritual formation. Its leaders were convinced that only a foundation of doctrine and discipline would lead to a meaningful transformation of the heart and mind. In other words, having the mind of Christ enables me to be more like Christ.
Life in a suburban culture obscures the increasing gap between the poor and rich, as well as the Bible’s close identification with the poor. My doctoral work in socio-cultural context exposed me to liberation theology, which helps me see redemptive history as a history of oppressed groups, written from the perspective of the powerless, about a God who is actively involved with the poor in their struggles.
I am now the pastor at Mount Zion United Methodist Church in St Mary’s County, Maryland. Together my wife and I have 4 children.