The Big Idea
“Till we all come to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ.”
Ephesians 4:13
Chambers warns that a church—or an individual Christian—can become spiritually self-seeking: focused on its own development, enjoyment, and organizational health rather than on the fuller realization of Christ in and through His whole body. The goal is always Christ Himself, not the condition of our own spiritual life.
The Simple Takeaway
Two people are both evaluating what they want from their church community.
Person A wants a church that meets their needs—excellent teaching they enjoy, programs that fit their family, a community that makes them feel spiritually nourished and comfortable—and they measure their church’s value primarily by what it does for them.
Person B also values all of those things, but their primary question is different: ‘Is this community helping all of us come to a fuller realization of Jesus Christ together, and is it building His body in the world?’
Chambers calls the church—and each individual within it—away from self-focused spiritual consumption and toward the corporate, outward-facing purpose of making Christ fully known in and through His people.
One Question to Sit With
When you evaluate your involvement in your faith community, which question tends to dominate: ‘What am I getting from this?’ or ‘Is Christ being more fully realized among us?’
Commentary
“Reconciliation means the restoring of the relationship between the entire human race and God.”
Reconciliation is cosmic, not merely personal
Chambers opens by placing individual salvation in its much larger context: Christ’s redemptive work was not designed to improve individual spiritual health but to restore the entire relationship between humanity and God. This larger frame should shape how we understand the purpose of the church.
“The church ceases to be spiritual when it becomes self-seeking, only interested in the development of its own organization.”
Organizational self-interest is a spiritual failure
A church can be highly active, well-organized, financially healthy, and numerically growing while simultaneously being spiritually bankrupt—because its fundamental orientation has shifted from Christ and the world to itself. Chambers names this institutional self-seeking as a form of spiritual failure.
“We are not here to develop a spiritual life of our own, or to enjoy a quiet spiritual retreat. We are here to have the full realization of Jesus Christ.”
Individual spiritual development is a means, not the end
This is one of Chambers’ most clarifying statements: personal spiritual development is not the destination—it is in service of a larger goal. We develop spiritually so that Christ can be more fully realized in and through us. When personal development becomes the end in itself, we have lost the plot.
“We are not here to develop a spiritual life of our own… for the purpose of building His body.”
The purpose of personal growth is corporate body-building
Everything about individual spiritual development finds its proper meaning when oriented toward the building of Christ’s body. Growth that serves only the grower is distorted growth; growth that equips the individual to contribute to the whole is in line with the purpose for which God designed it.
“Am I building up the body of Christ, or am I only concerned about my own personal development?”
The right question reorients everything
Chambers frames this as a genuine diagnostic question, not a rhetorical one. The honest answer may be uncomfortable. It is entirely possible to pursue a rich and engaged spiritual life whose fundamental orientation is self-improvement rather than the building of Christ’s body.
“The essential thing is my personal relationship with Jesus Christ—’that I may know Him.’”
Personal relationship with Christ remains the irreplaceable foundation
Chambers does not dissolve the personal into the corporate. The personal relationship with Christ—’that I may know Him’—remains absolutely essential. But this knowing is always meant to overflow: we know Him personally so that His fullness can be expressed collectively through His body.
“To fulfill God’s perfect design for me requires my total surrender—complete abandonment of myself to Him.”
Total surrender is the precondition for fulfilling God’s design
There is no partial version of this: Chambers calls for complete abandonment of the self to God as the necessary precondition for being useful in the larger design. Partial surrender produces partial usefulness—and often the part we hold back is exactly the part God most wants to use.
“My goal is God Himself, not joy nor peace, nor even blessing, but Himself, my God.”
God Himself, not His gifts, is the final goal
Chambers closes with the verse that cuts through all substitution: even joy, peace, and blessing—real gifts of God—can become substitutes for God Himself if we pursue them as ends rather than as overflow of knowing Him. The saint’s goal is not the gifts but the Giver.