It was interesting to observe the actions of our youngest grandson recently. We were gathered with family at a restaurant when someone let him see their phone. The toddler proceeded to type letters on the keyboard when it appeared. He would also periodically swipe his finger along the screen as if scrolling. He wasn’t accomplishing anything through all his activity, but you wouldn’t know it from the serious look on his face. It looked like he knew exactly what he was doing, but the letters he typed were gibberish and his other actions were meaningless. He was simply imitating what he had witnessed his parents and older brothers doing with that gadget. And there were those watching him closely to make sure he didn’t accidentally do something he shouldn’t.

Imitation can be a good means of learning, including in connection with our efforts to follow Jesus. We have many examples in the Bible from which we can draw lessons on how to live and please God. In Hebrews 11, we are provided with a long list of people who exhibited faith in God in the various situations they faced. The Bible goes on to suggest that we should imitate them so that we can faithfully run our race on this journey through life. Additionally, the Apostle Paul encouraged fellow-believers to imitate certain aspects of his behavior. Of course, the greatest example we could seek to imitate is Jesus Himself. Many of us remember when that idea was popularized by asking the question, “What would Jesus do?”

Imitation is good, but it can also leave us lacking. As was the case with my grandson, we can do what we have seen others do, yet not be experiencing the reality of what they did. We can go through the same motions, use the same words, do what they did, but it all be without meaning. That especially holds true when it comes to living for the Lord. We can attend church, pray, and read scripture without having any real relationship with Jesus. We can even show love and kindness to people, help the needy, and seek for justice and still be lacking any connection to the God who encourages us to do those things.

Imitation is good, but it is not the basis of our relationship with the Lord. We get connected to Him through faith in who He is and what He has done for us through dying on the cross for our sins. It is through receiving God’s gift of eternal life in Christ and being born again that we come to know the reality of what it means to know Jesus and to follow Him. Without that basis of repentance, faith, and a new birth, all our other spiritual activity is simply like a toddler punching letters on a phone. It can make us look good. We can appear to be Christians. We can even fool ourselves into thinking we are involved in something meaningful. However, it gets us no closer to true knowledge of and fellowship with the Lord.

Don’t get me wrong. We can still seek to imitate those godly people in the Bible, the Apostle Paul, and Jesus Himself. But being like Jesus doesn’t result as much from our seeking to imitate Him as it does from letting His Spirit live in us and transform us from the inside out. “It is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me (Galatians 2:20). It is not so much about us trying to be like Jesus. It is more about letting Him live through us.

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