“For though by this time you ought to be teachers, you need someone to teach you again the basic principles of the oracles of God. You need milk, not solid food, (Hebrews 5:12 ESV).
Hebrews 5:12 addresses a group of Christians who chose to remain in a state of spiritual infancy rather than seek a path of spiritual growth. The use of the word “ought” in this passage is quite revealing, for it tells us that these men and women should have grown spiritually, but didn’t.
This passage is instructive on several levels. For instance, a Christian who fails to advance in his or her spiritual knowledge is someone who is vulnerable to spiritual deception. He or she may become a target for those who peddle cultic beliefs or others who prey upon the resources of those who are spiritually uninformed or misinformed.
However, there is another problem associated with spiritual immaturity that may be difficult to quantify, but is real nonetheless. For example, it seems reasonable to assume that there were younger, inexperienced Christians among the congregation of the Hebrews. These younger individuals should have been learning from those who were older. Unfortunately, those older Christians were much like spiritual infants themselves. Because of this, the only lesson they were capable of teaching others involved what not to do.
This leads us to an important question: “Who is missing out on the help we might offer if we chose to pursue greater spiritual maturity? Remember that spiritual immaturity carries a double penalty- it negatively affects us, but it also affects others who might have benefited from our help if we had grown in our knowledge of Christ.
This has led one Biblical scholar to offer a stinging rebuke that is worthy of our consideration…
“We live in one of the greatest periods of ignorance the church has ever seen. The ‘evangelical, Bible-believing’ church in the United States is characterized by people who pursue happy experiences, but whose knowledge of the Bible is limited to junior high school-level fill-in-the-blank booklets. They don’t study the Mosaic law for its wisdom in social issues. They have no idea what is in the Prophets. They know only a smattering of the Gospels and Epistles. So they are not making progress and having influence in our society.
…Too many Christian publishers shy away from books of theology because there is such a small market. Most prefer baby food ‘how-to’ books, with stories beginning each chapter. If your reading habits have been restricted to books that don’t stretch you, are you ready to become serious about learning and applying the Bible?” (1)
(1) Sproul, R. C. (1994). Before the face of God: Book 4: A daily guide for living from Ephesians, Hebrews, and James (electronic ed.). Grand Rapids: Baker Book House; Ligonier Ministries. [Page 121]