To be changed (μεταμορφοω)


By Bill Mounce - Posted on 27 April 2009

I have been thinking a lot lately about my personal mission statement. In past years, I never liked mission statements. They seemed to be unnecessary wastes of time when I could actually be doing something.

But when I went into the pulpit and a thousand different needs and many people presented their pet projects and needs, I realized that if there was not a focus in ministry there would be nothing accomplished. I was opposed to “church programs” as a general rule because so often they detracted from the most important things, but what were those “most important things”?

So I worked hard to try and focus on a Biblical mission statement — what was at the core of Jesus’ expectations for his children? I came up with this: “We exist to worship God; by proclaiming the glory of God, the supremacy of Christ, and the power of the Spirit; in the making of new and fully devoted disciples.” Pretty good, but too long for people to remember and it did not contain the Greatest Commandment, to love God and one another.

As I kept working on the statement, I came to realize two things. As the leader of the church, the mission of the organization had to be wrapped up in my personal mission, since it was my understanding of who I was and what Christ had called me to do that was controlling what I preached about. Secondly, there were two ideas that kept coming to my mind. (a) All things exist for the glory of God. (b) My life is to be changed: transformation.

There are so many things that can cause a church to turn into a spiritual mall, a place that exists for the ungodly trinity of me, myself, and I. Many cloak it in religious language, showing their true fathers to be the Pharisees, but God knows the heart. The highest good is my comfort, my kind of music, my kind of preaching, my kind of programs, my human traditions that so often set aside the will of God. After all, I drop a few dollars into the plate as it comes by every Sunday so certainly I have a right to control of the mall. And everyone knows that American democracy is the highest biblical principle (can you hear my sarcasm?). How hard it is to focus on God, to seek not the things of God (the perks like love, joy, and peace), but to seek God himself, to love him.

But how do you do this? Thankfully, the Bible tells us. “By this my Father is glorified, that you bear much fruit and so prove to be my disciples” (John 15:8). The word I keep coming back to is “transformation,” μεταμορφοω. When I see dead or dying spiritual malls known to the community as churches (which of course does not apply to all “churches”), their lack of spiritual vitality is often due to this one central truth — they have forgotten their mission. They have forgotten that they are to be changed, individually and corporately, from one degree of glory to the next, and this change is seen in their love for God and one another, in the doing of good works as proof of their true conversion.

So where’s the Greek! Check out a Greek word study of μεταμορφοω. The progression of thought through the verses is wonderful. The word occurs four times.

1. We have a picture of what transformation looks like in Jesus “transfiguration” (μεταμορφωθη; Matt 17:2; Mark 9:2). It is to be changed. It is not that Jesus’ true self shined through; that would be docetism. It is that the shades of human sin and frailty were pulled back and the disciples saw who the incarnate Jesus fully was. In a sense, that is the goal of our lives. To so seek the glory of God that our sinful self fades into the distance, to die to ourselves and live as one crucified to all that would detract us from God.

2. Likewise, we who are followers of Jesus are “not [to] be conformed to this world, but be transformed (μεταμορφουσθε) by the renewal of your mind” (Rom 12:2; ESV). After all, we have been born again, made into a new creation. Our heart of stone was replaced with a heart of flesh. How can we who have died to sin still live it? μη γενοιτο.

3. But how does this transformation happen? There are two clues (outside of Rom 12:2). Paul tells the Corinthians, “And we all, with unveiled face, beholding the glory of the Lord, are being transformed (μεταμορφουμεθα) into the same image from one degree of glory to another. For this comes from the Lord who is the Spirit” (2 Cor 3:18). The change happens incrementally. We are changed slowly, periodically, from one degree to the next. Walking on the path of discipleship is not a sprint but a marathon.

But notice what these four uses of μεταμορφοω all have in common: they are all passives. The power to change does not naturally well up from within us but is the gift and the work of God’s Spirit. As we work out the implications of our salvation with fear and trembling, we at the same time acknowledge that the ability and in fact the very desire to change comes from the Spirit.

Why do I exist? What is my personal mission statement? “I exist to glorify God by being transformed.” Why do you exist? Why does your church exist?

Hi Bill

I really like the path that you are on. It seems very healthy. I like that you put mentioned the Loving God and Loving others obove. I wonder if that my existance also includes helping be a catalyst for tranformation in others as well. I'm not saying I take the place of the Holy Spirt but I think that along with other believers that we are also called to make a difference as we walk with the Spirit.

As I write this it seems though that realy transformation in my life would naturally spill over into those around me. Maybe that is all I would add - that as a relsult of this God's transformation in my life that it would spill over to others as well.

This is part of the fact that we are saved into a family and God has always intended that we not walk along but together, and what we do "spills over" onto others.

Your comments have helped me to think through my own sort of "mission" statement. What I have so far is:

To seek, love, and honor God with all that is in me, resting his grace….
To live and learn in light of being possessed by him as his child, depending on him to transform my life….
To serve his people and his creation with his love, mercy, and justice, using the gifts he provides….

I'm trying to avoid typical Christianese.
Thanks!

There is a subtle difference in the two Pauline quotes in the English and I was wondering if it occurred in the Greek. In English the Romans verse is a command, "be transformed." But in Corinthians it is a statement, we "are being transformed." I do not know if that is true of the Greek (This is why you don't drop out of school before verbs in Greek class). Either way its another example of God's sovereignty and man's actions working together. He commands that we transform, but then says that we are not only transforming, but that he is the one doing the transforming. I do often stress God's role in my salvation (process), and maybe too much, but I still constantly stand in awe of what God does for us. As if it were not enough that he died for my sins, that he lived a perfectly righteous life for me and that he chose me, upon no merit of mine own, while I was rejecting his work and plan, God then is still willing to be the source and power of my transformation in this life. While I do try to work with him, it is he who does the work, for I am unable to change a single thing about myself. But I believe I have digressed since my original thought was on if the Greek contained the command and statement.

Also thanks for the reminder about the transformation being bit by bit, from one glory to the next. I have a bad habit of not seeing the trees because of the forest, I forget to take strength in and praise God for the little changes due to how far I am from where God has called us to be. Good post Bill.

Great post Bill. It reminds me some of some stuff from Bill Hull's book "The Complete Book of Discipleship." http://www.amazon.com/Complete-Book-Discipleship-Followers-Navigators/dp...

He talks about transformation coming not through more effort or trying, but through training. I think the idea of transformation would be associated, at least to a degree, with training and discipleship.