The Guide contains how-to-do-it advice on starting, developing and sustaining fresh expressions of church based on shared experiences.
More about The Guide
The Guide contains how-to-do-it advice on starting, developing and sustaining fresh expressions of church based on shared experiences.
More about The Guide
This page develops three
themes:
Discipleship should take account of differences in personality. The God of creation is the God of grace. In gracious creativity God has blessed human beings with an array of personality types. Our different personalities are gifts to one another.
Personality types play a major part in determining how our theology and spirituality are formed. Different personalities warm to different aspects of the Christian story and different ways of expressing spirituality.
A contemplative person may focus on the times Jesus withdrew from the crowds for prayer and reflection, for example, whereas someone with a more activist personality may concentrate on Jesus as a man of action. The contemplative person may love silent retreats, while the activist may see spirituality as doing things for other people.
These different emphases are gifts to the body of Christ. The Christian community is enriched when contemplative and activist people make their contributions alongside each other, complementing one another.
Individuals can also be stretched by the emphasis of someone who is rather different. An activist may be inspired and helped by a contemplative person to spend more time in prayer, while the latter may be encouraged by an activist to develop the more practical side of their faith. We wouldn't want everyone to end up the same; equally, it would be sad if we couldn't learn from each other.
In today's culture, which celebrates diversity, people are more attuned to individual differences than in the past. Support for discipleship will be more effective if it takes variations in temperament into account. In particular, individuals may find it helpful to explore different approaches to spirituality.
Personality types affect your spiritual outlook. In his book Who we are is how we pray, Charles Keating suggests that our understanding of and relationship with Jesus is shaped by our personality.
Using Myers-Briggs personality types, Keating suggests that in Matthew's Gospel Jesus is an introvert, in Mark a sensing personality, in Luke an extrovert thinker, whilst in John Jesus is an intuitive feeler (Charles Keating, Who we are is how we pray, Twenty-third Publications, 1987, p. 3).
Keating suggests that each of the eight Myers-Briggs personality types will approach the way in which disciples are formed differently (pages 7-13).
Introverts
need space for rumination, exploring possibilities and inner
reflection.The application of Myers-Briggs to spirituality and discipleship is more complex than this short summary might suggest. Not least, it is important to remember that thinking about personality types can both affirm what is distinctively you and help to challenge any lopsided discipleship ('I must remember that my personality encourages me to downplay some important aspects of being a Christian').
Yet despite its limits, might this summary suggest some possibilities? In particular, it may help to remind you how different some of your emerging Christians are. Different aspects of being a Christian will resonate with different people.
Maybe someone appears not to be growing in Christian maturity. It's not that they lack interest or motivation. Perhaps it is because your personality type has encouraged you to emphasise certain aspects of the faith which fail to connect with their personality type. You're a 'thinker' possibly, emphasising Christian concepts and ideas, whereas the other person is a 'feeler' and struggles with abstract theology.
Might you ask someone who is qualified to introduce your emerging Christians to Myers-Briggs (if they are not already familiar with this), and oversee a Myers-Briggs test for them so that they can discover their personality types? This, together with Charles Keating's book (or an equivalent), might form the basis of a discussion about how personality affects spirituality.
Might different types of prayer suit different personalities? For instance, some people have suggested these differences:
Franciscan prayer,
which follows the spirituality of St. Francis of Assisi, might involve
going into a garden, feeling the beauty and freshness of nature,
looking carefully at a leaf and admiring the way God has created it,
and praising God in prayer for this gift of nature and all that the
person is experiencing at this moment. It might appeal to someone who
relies heavily on their senses.How might these different approaches affect the way you introduce emerging believers to prayer?
Discipleship starts where people are
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