As a pastor in the Reformed stream, I often have conversations with Christians about their walk with the Lord. A common refrain in such conversations is, “Why so much focus on the mind and not on the heart?” Notably, this question is most often raised by those under the age of forty. Ironically, these same people will say things like, “I feel like it’s going to rain today,” without realizing that such observations and conclusions are products of the mind, not the emotions.
The point is this: for those who grew up in the wake of the Young, Restless, and Reformed movement, new cultural currents are now unmooring spiritual formation from the Word of God and redirecting it toward other practices. Popularly, the works of Jon Mark Comer have had a considerable impact on the under forty crowd. Academically, James K.A. Smith has garnered many admirers and adherents. Anecdotally, we all have a friend who is entertaining leaving Protestantism for Roman Catholicism or Eastern Orthodoxy because it “feels” better.
This is why Matthew Bingham’s work A Heart Aflame for God: A Reformed Approach to Spiritual Formation is such an important work at this moment in time. Bingham does not say anything novel. Rather, he says that which is very old: Spiritual formation begins with the Word and is centered on the Word of God.
Bingham suggests that a Reformed approach to spiritual formation consists of three pillars. First, it is word-centered. God has revealed himself in his Word by the power of His Spirit. Thus, it follows that God’s people are most profoundly shaped by and formed by God’s word. Second, it is marked by biblical simplicity. Spiritual formation that is centered on the word is simple in the avoidance of extrabiblical additions. The Word is sufficient in and of itself. Third, a Reformed approach is committed to engaging the heart via the mind. In a world that is increasingly centered on the feelings as the center of truth, the reminder that God’s ordained means of grace for keeping the heart and cultivating God-honoring affections involve setting one’s mind on truth.
With the pillars of Reformed spirituality in place, the practical implications are obvious. Christians should commit themselves to Bible reading, meditation, and prayer. These are not innovative techniques or newly discovered disciplines, but the ordinary means God has always used to form his people. There is nothing glamorous about opening the Scriptures day after day, laboring to understand them, and responding to them in prayer. Yet it is precisely through these ordinary practices that God ordinarily produces extraordinary fruit.
Bingham’s great contribution is not the introduction of new methods, but the reorientation of modern Christians back to old ones. The Puritans served Bingham's purpose of showing such methods in action. He draws from the deep well of Puritan writings throughout, showing the reader that such actions produced minds and hearts enthralled by the God of the Bible. In an age that prizes personal experience and novelty over the biblical means of grace and growth, A Heart Aflame for God serves as a timely reminder that spiritual depth is not achieved by chasing feelings but by dwelling in truth. The heart is not bypassed in this process. Rather, it is properly engaged, shaped, and inflamed as the mind is steadily saturated with the Word of God.
In this sense, Bingham offers a much needed corrective to contemporary spiritual formation, successfully pushing back on Comer and Smith. He calls the church back to confidence in Scripture, to patience in the ordinary means of grace, and to the conviction that lasting transformation is not engineered through techniques, but cultivated over time through saturation of truth. For pastors and lay Christians alike (particularly those under 40), this book is a serious summons to return to the simple and sufficient path God has always provided