A Spiritual Hopper Deck

What if we developed a constantly varied approach to spiritual training based upon the hopper deck model?

The idea would be to convene a small group of people who wanted to train for Christlikeness and embraced the concept of constantly varied training. The facilitator would identify 20 possible exercises that could be done by the group in an hour or less.

Here are few examples:

  • Memorize a portion of the Sermon on the Mount.
  • Sit in complete silence for 20 minutes.
  • Go out to the surrounding neighborhood and take prayer requests for 45 minutes.
  • Write a letter to God expressing your deepest pain to him.
  • Write a letter to someone you need to forgive.
  • Write 10 encouragement cards to people in your sphere of influence.
  • Read a chapter from the Bible and write as many questions as you can think of in 15 minutes. Then come together as a group and spend another 15 minutes coming up with even more questions.
  • Spend 45 minutes preparing care packets for the homeless. Then take the packets you prepared and give them away during the week.
  • Sit in a circle and ask each person to spend 5 to 10 minutes telling their spiritual story.
  • Compile a list of all the things for which you are thankful.
  • Get with a partner and practice having a difficult conversation with someone you need to challenge or confront.

The facilitator would take all of these ideas and put them in a box. After saying a prayer asking God to guide the experience, someone would draw one of the exercises out of the box and then the group would do it. The group must  be prepared to do whatever comes out of the box. No excuses. If special supplies are needed, then the facilitator has to have them ready. The group will spend the prescribed time doing the exercise and then come back together for the last 15 minutes and process their experience. There should be a mixture of activities and exercises so that no matter what is drawn it will address both the strengths and weaknesses of various members of the group.

If I were in such a group, I would love to spend 30 minutes reading the bible and asking questions. If we drew the card that said we had to walk around the neighborhood and take prayer requests I would not be excited. But I would do whatever came out of the hopper because I need to train my weaknesses as well as my strengths.

The group comes back the next week and does it again. They work through the cards, never repeating an exercise until they’ve gone through them all. Constantly varied. Sometimes hard. Sometimes easy. Never boring. After a couple of months of this kind of training, hopefully every member of the group would be stimulated to grow in areas they would have otherwise never explored or addressed. A few might even find new strengths they didn’t even know they had because their past church experience had consisted of participating in only a handful of the same activities over and over again.

What do you think? Would you want to be a part of a group that trained for spiritual fitness in this way?

Comments

  1. I LOVE EXPERIMENTS IN THE NAME OF CHRIST therefore I like the push to try new “exercises” in spirituality. The focus it would seem to me to have to be heavily on the group not the cards. The cards might be misconstrued as a legalistic gimmick (i.e. we have a box of conversation starters on the kitchen table). What if we sit down and want organic raw daily scoop conversation but one insists that it’s about the cards and that we must use the cards. I know this seems foolish but lest we forget foolish legalistic gimmicks like hardback hymnals (classics only none of this new fangled youth group stuff), daily bible reading (good for the spirit if the message we read abounds more than the daily demand to read). I guess it’s like anything we use as a tool.

  2. Like the idea. It keeps everyone on their toes, but at the same time possibly gives the Spirit a chance to work in mysterious because we would not be do the same ritual of a typically and predictable small group Bible study.

    On another note, I have not left a comment in a while, but I have truly enjoyed all of your recent blog post about CF and how that converges with spirituality.

  3. Matt Soper says:

    Wade,
    This is a TREMENDOUS idea! I think this would be a beautiful curriculum/training for small groups who voluntarily signed up for it. Mine may try it.
    Thanks much,
    Matt

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