Showing posts with label Christian Life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christian Life. Show all posts

Friday, June 3, 2016

Temptation and Sin - Paris Reidhead

Paris Reidhead, "Temptation and Sin" (Audio Teaching)

Temptation is the proposition presented to the mind or the intellect to gratify a good appetite in a forbidden way. Temptation isn't sin. It is an idea presented to the intellect. Our Lord Jesus was tempted in all points like as we are, yet without sin. Temptation isn't sin. Sin is the decision of the will to gratify a good appetite in a bad way. It's not the gratification of it; it's the decision to do it. The decision to do it before the act is complete gives to the act the character of transgression. The decision constitutes the essence of sin.

When a child of God sins,
1. Fellowship with God is interrupted. “If we walk in the light as He is in the light, we have fellowship one with one another.” If we walk in darkness, that fellowship is broken. If we never had the witness of the Spirit, and joy and peace in believing through the power of the Holy Spirit, we would not ever know whether the fellowship was interrupted or not, because we never ever had any. We know that fellowship is broken, when the Spirit of God is grieved.
2. Prayers are not answered. “If I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord does not hear me.” (Psa.66:18). It hasn’t even gotten into my lips yet, it hasn’t even gotten into my hands yet; if I regard it in my heart. If I decided to do and I’m not through yet, God will not hear me.
3. God won’t use him. He may go on using God, and people may never know the difference; but, God will not use him. God never uses a life that gets Him dirty (F.B. Meyer illustration of a leaking fountain pen that the author would never use because it gets him dirty every time he uses it).
4. He gives place to the devil (Eph.4:27). The fear of the Lord is the basis for the angel of the Lord encamping around us. The fear of the Lord is to hate evil. When we tolerate in our lives that which grieves God, then you can just be sure that the devil’s dogs are going to sneak in and tear up everything that’s precious to you.
5. If we permit unconfessed, unforsaken sin in our lives, we fall into the chastening hands of God. It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God. There’s something marvelous here. God never lays a finger on the devil’s family. But, He chastens every child and scourges every son. Why? Because with His own children, this is all the hell they’re ever gonna know and when they die it’s gonna be heaven forever. But, with the devil’s family, this is all the heaven they’re ever gonna have, and when they die, it’ll be hell forever. And if they traded their soul for a mess of pottage, God doesn’t go around throwing gravel in it to make their teeth grit on.

God’s Prescription for this Problem (John 15:3): You are clean through the word.
Symbol: The Laver in the Tabernacle. It functioned as a mirror that showed where one was dirty and the water was used to clean.

1. Use the Word as Mirror to the Heart. Proverbs 6:16-19. The Spirit of God never wants to depress us; He only wants to cleanse us. He focuses on the thing that is there now in order to deal with it. God hates pride. He hates racial pride, He hates facial pride, He hates financial pride, He hates educational pride, and I think the one He abominates most is religious pride. He hates a proud look. And, He hates a lying tongue; misrepresentation and deception in speech. And, hands that shed innocent blood, an intention to hurt somebody…. Romans 1:29-32. Gal.5:19-21.
2. The Word tells us how to deal with sin. (a) Judge yourself (b) Let the wicked forsake his way (c) If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.

"Victory" Through Identification With Christ on the Cross
At Calvary, we were wired for victory. We need to only put the switch on. And, the switch is to reckon ourselves crucified with Christ.

Sunday, June 14, 2015

The Narrow Gate (Matt.7:13,14)

"Enter by the narrow gate; for wide is the gate and broad is the way that leads to destruction, and there are many who go in by it. Because narrow is the gate and difficult is the way which leads to life, and there are few who find it." (Matt.7:13,14)
narrow road
To enter through the narrow gate means to leave every worldly luggage outside of the gate. One must save his own soul. Therefore, Christ said that he who wished to be His disciple had to deny self and all earthly relations, then take up his own cross, and follow Him. The cross is another symbol of the difficult road. For Peter and John, it meant to leave their business and life of security in order to follow Christ. For the rich young man, it meant to sell off his wealth, distribute it to the poor, and follow Christ. The rich man wasn't willing to leave his baggage behind; therefore, he refused to enter the narrow gate and chose the wide one instead. Jesus said that it would be easier for a camel to enter through a needle's eye than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of heaven. They say that there was a gate called the "Needle's Eye", which was both narrow and low, and so caravan camels would have to unload their baggage and bow low in order to enter through it. The rich man wasn't willing to either unload his earthly baggage nor willing to bow low to a life that Christ chose to live Himself. How miserable is the state of a person who chooses the temporary enjoyment of this world and spurns the treasures of heaven!

To enter through the narrow gate also means to take the difficult path. Remember the gate is narrow and the road is difficult, but it is not crooked. It is still the King's Highway. However, it is not an easy road; firstly, because the road is given to us in a world that is now under the sway of Satan. We are just foreigners and pilgrims here. The devil has wide and broad roads in his kingdom; however, no matter how embellished and pompous they look, they are all going to perish with the world and the devil. The broad roads are roads to destruction. However, though the road of our Lord is very narrow and difficult, it is solid, strong, and secure. It will last forever. It leads to life.

Secondly, the gate is narrow and the road difficult because the gate is opposed to our natural inclination. Our natural inclination, after the Fall, has become sin and sinful pleasures, that is anything other than the enjoyment of God. Therefore, for a sinner, spending a few hours in worship is more difficult than a sports event, prayer is more tiresome than a day's labor, spending time with the Father is more difficult than spending time with friends and family. For the degenerate, even spending time with family is painful because he longs for sinful company. But, as a person becomes spiritual, the lusts of the flesh die and the things of God give more joy than anything else in the world (Rom.8:1; 1Jn.5:3). Yet, this doesn't mean that the flesh will not feel pain. However, the beauty of the narrow road is that one can rejoice even in the midst of pain and suffering (James 1:2; Acts 16:25; Phil.4:4).

Read Also: Heb.13:12-14; 2Cor.4:8-18; 1Pet.4:1; 1Pet.2:21-23

Monday, April 20, 2015

Guarding the Vulnerable Points Against Satanic Advantage

BODY
Hunger (Matt.4:1-4; Phil.3:19; 1Cor.6:19)
Sleep (Matt.26:41)
Incontinence/Sex (1Cor.7:5; 1Tim.5:14,15; 1Cor.6:19; 1Thess.4:7)
Infirmity (2Cor.12:7)
etc...

Solution:
Assert that the physical need is not primary; God's will is (Matt.4:5).
Assert that the Grace of Christ is sufficient (2Cor.12:8)
Be wise about your weakness (1Cor.7:1-5)
Abstain/flee from fleshly lusts (1Pet.2:11; 2Tim.2:22)
Discipline body (1Cor.9:27)


SOUL
Anger (Eph.4:26,27)
Pride (1Tim.3:6)
Sorrow (2Cor.2:7-11)
Fear (Lk.22:31)
Worry (1Pet.5:7,8)
etc...

Solution:
Pray for each other (Lk.22:31,32; Jas.5:16)
Encourage each other (Eph.5:19; Jas 5:13)
Build each other up (Gal.6:1,2)
Be aware of others in same tribulation (1Pet.5:9)
Question the emotions and thoughts that war against soul and submit them to God (Psa.42:5,6,11; 2Cor.2:4,5)


SPIRIT
Love of Power and Money (Matt.4:8-10; Matt.6:24; 1Tim.6:10; Lk.22:3; Act 5:3)
Rebellion (Heb.3:7,8; 1Sam.5:23; 2Pet.2:10; Jude 1:8,11)
etc...

Solution:
Be Sober and Vigilant (1Pet.5:8)
Submit to God in true humility (1Pet.5:6-7; James 4:7)
Be strong in the power of God's might (Eph.6:10)
Put on the full armor of God (Eph.6:11-17)
Hold your ground and do not give a foothold to the devil (Eph.6:13)
Resist the devil (1Pet.5:9; James 4:7; Matt.4:10)
Pray without ceasing in the Spirit (Eph.6:18)

Monday, April 6, 2015

Hindrances to Fruitfulness

1. Lack of Repentance (Luke 3:8-9)
2. Lack of Spiritual Wisdom and Understanding (Col.1:9-10; Psa.19:7)
3. Lack of Right Fellowship--Walking in the Light (Eph.5:11-16)
4. Lack of Godliness with Contentment (Matt.13:22; 1Tim.6:6-10)
5. Lack of Partaking in the Divine Nature (2Pet.1:3-11)

Friday, August 22, 2014

God-Centered Gospel - Zac Poonen (Excerpts)

Christians are generally speaking, categorized into two groups as follows:

(1) "Roman Catholics" and "Protestants" - depending on birth;
(2) "Episcopal" (conformist) and "Free church" (non-conformist) - depending on church-pattern;
(3) "Born again Christians" and "Nominal Christians" - depending on an "experience";
(4) "Evangelicals" and "Liberals" - depending on doctrine;
(5) "Charismatics" and "Non-charismatics" - depending on "speaking in tongues";
(6) "Full-time Christian workers" and "Secular workers" - depending on profession.

There could be other such categorizations too. But none of these categorizations deal with the root of the problem that our Lord came to solve.

Many know that "Christ died for our sins" (1 Cor.15:3). But many do not know that the Bible says that Christ also died "that we should no longer live for ourselves but for Him" (2 Cor.5:15).

A more Scriptural way of categorizing Christians, therefore, would be as follows: "Those who live for themselves" and "Those who live for Christ"; or "Those who seek their own" and "Those who seek the things of Christ"; or "Those who seek earthly things first" and "Those who seek the kingdom of God first"; or "Those who love money" and "Those who love God" (Jesus said it was impossible to love both -Lk.16:13).

But I have never heard of such a categorization being used. This categorization deals with the Christian's inner life and private walk with God, whereas the methods mentioned earlier deal with the external details of his life. Yet, it is in this latter way that heaven categorizes Christians. And if that be the case, then this is the only categorization that matters! In this method, others cannot categorize us. We have to categorize ourselves - for no one but we ourselves know our inner motivations and desires. Even our wives may not be aware what we are living for.

Our Lord did not come primarily to give people a doctrine or a church-pattern or to make them speak in tongues or even to give them an experience!

He came to "save us from sin". He came to lay the axe to the root of the tree. And the root of sin is: Being centered in ourselves, seeking our own and doing our own will. If we do not permit the Lord to axe and uproot this "root" from our lives, we will be Christians only superficially. Satan may, however, deceive us into imagining that we belong to a higher class than other Christians, because of our doctrine or our experience or our church-pattern!

Satan doesn't care even if we have the right doctrine, experience and church-pattern, so long as we continue to "live for ourselves" (This, by the way, is just another phrase for "living in sin"!!).
....
The man-centered gospel promises man that God will give him everything he needs to make his life on earth comfortable and will also give him a seat in heaven at the end of his life. Man is told that Jesus will forgive all his sins, heal all his diseases, bless and prosper him materially, solve all his earthly problems, etc., etc.

Self still remains at the center of such a man's life, and God revolves around him - as his servant - to answer his every prayer and to give him whatever he wants!! All that he has to do is "believe" and "claim every material blessing in Jesus' Name"!!

This is a false gospel, because no mention is made of "repentance". Repentance is what John the Baptist, Jesus, Paul, Peter and all the apostles preached first of all. And repentance, unfortunately, is what is not preached today, even last of all!!

The God-centered gospel, on the other hand, calls upon man to repent. It explains that "repentance" means:

Turning FROM Self as the center of one's life, from doing one's own will, from walking along one's self-chosen way, from loving money, and from loving the world and the things in the world (the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes and the pride of life), etc., and

Turning TO God, loving Him with one's whole heart, making Him the Centre of one's life and doing His will henceforth, etc.

Faith in Christ's death on the cross can forgive a man his sins only when he has repented. Then he can receive the power of the Holy Spirit which will empower him to deny himself daily so that he can live a God-centered life. This is the gospel that Jesus and the apostles preached.

The false gospel, makes the gate wide and the way broad (easy to walk along, because one does not have to deny one's Self or stop living for one's own interests or stop seeking one's own gain). Millions attend meetings where such a false "gospel" is preached. And many enter through this gate and walk along this way, imagining that it leads to life. But it actually leads to destruction. The evangelists of this gospel, however, gloat in, and report about the large numbers of people who "raised their hands and made decisions for Christ" in their meetings!! But it is all a deception. Although some are indeed genuinely converted in such meetings, because of their sincerity, many such "converts" end up becoming "twofold children of hell" (Matt.23:15) - deceived about their true state.

The true gospel however, makes the gate small and the way narrow - not smaller or narrower than Jesus Himself made it, as some "super-spiritual" cultists do, but just the same size as Jesus made it. Few there be that find this way to life. There is not much for the evangelists of this gospel to report about, and the statistics are not impressive. But this gospel leads people to the Lord Jesus and to heaven.

"Be careful how you listen. Whoever obeys what he has heard, to him more light and understanding will be given. But whoever does not obey what he has heard, even what light and understanding he thinks he has will be taken away from him." (Paraphrase of Luke 8:18)

He who has ears to hear, let him hear.

Sunday, July 20, 2014

Christ-Likeness

The Bible calls us to Christ-likeness (Gal. 4:19)

1. Being Christ-like in Attitude (Phil.2:5-8)
2. Being Christ-like in Serving Each Other (Jn.13:3-5, 13-15)
3. Being Christ-like in Forgiving Each Other (Eph.4: 31,32; 5:1,2)
4. Being Christ-like in Suffering Injustice (1Pet.2:19-23)
5. Being Christ-like in Prayer (Heb.5:7)
6. Being Christ-like in Pressing Forward (Heb.12:1-4)
7. Being Christ-like in Death (Phil.3:10)
8. Becoming Christ-like at His Coming (1Jn.3:2,3)

Thursday, July 10, 2014

The Law of Balance in Daily Living

Owe no one anything except to love one another, for he who loves another has fulfilled the law. (Rom. 13:8 NKJ)

In other words, Love is an infinite debt that we owe to everyone in Jesus. It is the essential, infinite moral obligation. You cannot say to someone, "See, I have loved you proportionately; now, I'm not obligated to love you anymore." The obligation has no limit.

However, in other matters, the Bible tells us not to owe anyone anything.
Render therefore to all their due: taxes to whom taxes are due, customs to whom customs, fear to whom fear, honor to whom honor. (Rom 13:7 NKJ)

This applies to all aspects of life. When we owe someone anything, we become like the flat tire of car. It's difficult for the other wheels to move along with one flat tire. They get too much stressed. That's why we change a flat tire immediately and try to get it mended.
You shall not cheat your neighbor, nor rob him. The wages of him who is hired shall not remain with you all night until morning. (Lev 19:13 NKJ)

"Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar's, and to God the things that are God's." (Mar 12:17 NKJ)

But if any widow has children or grandchildren, let them first learn to show piety at home and to repay their parents; for this is good and acceptable before God. (1Ti 5:4 NKJ)

Words like "Thank you!" "Sorry!" and "Please!", when genuinely spoken, also greatly assist in putting things into balance and helping on a smooth ride.

In some cases, it's laughter that sets the balance; in other cases, it is sorrow that sets the balance. There are times when one must laugh and there are times one must weep.

A company that extracts more labor and pays little is actually trying to climb a hill with as little expense of fuel as possible. It neither understands the scientific laws of thermodynamics (that the universe is not a free lunch) nor the psychological law of rewards. One can't reinforce any action without proper reward. In fact, a company that exploits its workers is damaging the balance of nature; it is cutting the branch it's sitting on.
"Give, and it will be given to you: good measure, pressed down, shaken together, and running over will be put into your bosom. For with the same measure that you use, it will be measured back to you." (Luk 6:38 NKJ)

It doesn't matter if the person working for you is a close relative, or your own child; if you don't pay proportionately, you have become the flattened tire.

Even God, who owns everything, pays back to His children in return for what they give to Him out of what He has given unto them.
For God is not unjust to forget your work and labor of love which you have shown toward His name, in that you have ministered to the saints, and do minister. (Heb 6:10 NKJ)

God rewards generously.
"His lord said to him,`Well done, good and faithful servant; you were faithful over a few things, I will make you ruler over many things. Enter into the joy of your lord.' (Mat 25:21 NKJ)

He who has pity on the poor lends to the LORD, And He will pay back what he has given. (Pro 19:17 NKJ)

"And whoever gives one of these little ones only a cup of cold water in the name of a disciple, assuredly, I say to you, he shall by no means lose his reward." (Mat 10:42 NKJ)

One thing is sure: God is a debtor to no man; whatever we bring to Him is never lost. He justly rewards our faith in Him.

Later Entries

Woe to him who builds his house by unrighteousness And his chambers by injustice, Who uses his neighbor's service without wages And gives him nothing for his work, (Jer 22:13 NKJ)

Tuesday, July 1, 2014

This Treasure in Earthen Vessels (2Cor.4:7)

But we have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellence of the power may be of God and not of us. (2Cor. 4:7)

Commentators have often been reminded by this verse of the story of Gideon, his pitchers, and torches. In that particular story, Gideon had his 300 men hide torches within pitchers. They surrounded the enemy camp and when the trumpets blew, the men broke the earthen pitchers to let off the light shine.

The Bible tells us that the excellence of God's power is the treasure hidden within us in earthen vessels. He chose these weak, vulnerable, and fragile bodies to carry around His great power by which He holds the entire universe with its dazzling stars, planets, and all life together. He didn't choose objects of gold and silver to hold this treasure. He chose us, men and women who are made of clay. But, unless these clay pots are broken that power cannot shine forth. In our humility and meekness, His excellency shines forth.

When I think of the vulnerability and fragility that we are composed of, I wonder at the grace of God that chose us to be His vessels of infinite power, despite our weaknesses. But, now He is our strength and not we ourselves. So much grace upon grace!!

But, this treasure is not here just for ourselves. It belongs to Him and is here for His purposes alone. The purpose of our life is only fulfilled when the purpose of Heaven is fulfilled. Our destinies are tied in to the Lamb and His Throne.

Prayer: Lord, it is important that You increase and I decrease. Help me live a life that brings You glory and let my life be an exhibition of Your Kingdom and Your Power. Amen!

Friday, June 20, 2014

Two Essentials of Watchfulness

There are at least two essentials of watchfulness:
1. To be aware that there can be an attack, an attempt to steal, an attempt to destroy anytime. The very fact that watchfulness is called for is because there is a possibility of attack. As long as we are in the world, we must watch. Even a second of slumbering or slight can prove fatal.
2. To not consider oneself as immune to attack. Anybody who thinks that he is immune and above any such attack has become presumptuous and stands in danger of a fall. Paul warned anybody who was thinking he stands to beware lest he fall (1Cor.10:12). We need to keep pressing on forward relentlessly until we have run the race and our time of departure from earth has come. There are no moments of casual vacationing for the Christian as far as spiritual watchfulness and warfare is concerned.

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Elasticity and Stress in Trials

Texts to Read:
2Cor.1:8; 1Cor.10:13; James 1:2-4; Rom.5:3-5; 1Jn.4:4; Rom.8:28-39

"God is faithful, who will not allow you to be tempted beyond what you are able..." (1Co 10:13 NKJ)

Physics defines elasticity as the ability of a body to regain its original shape and size after deforming force is withdrawn; in other words, it is "resistance to change". Stress is nothing but the resisting or restoring force acting proportionately against the deforming force. When the deforming force is overwhelming over the elasticity limit, the body will either break under strain or be crushed under pressure. The good news is that the Bible promises us that God will not allow the test to exceed our resistance limit; secondly, God also assures us that He that is within us (to give us the resisting power) is greater than he that is in the world (the deforming force). No doubt, stress is the condition of being disturbed (it is a state of resistance); therefore, we must be careful how we relate to someone who is in stress (not to be like Job's foolish friends). At the same time, we must remember that the deforming force will have to stop at a point in time because it will be spent away; and, we will have rest for a while. But, then physics also teaches us that there is nothing perfectly elastic or plastic. Trials don't leave us the same; but, God who is our potter uses everything for our good to conform us to His image. One final thought: Remember, steel is more elastic than rubber. We don't need to be rubber Christians.

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Dealing with Denial

“Denial” may be defined as the act of asserting that something alleged is not true. Such assertion may either be verbal or behavioral, or both.  The denial may be of the reality of a fact or of the seriousness of it, or of both. In many cases, it also appears as a mechanism to avoid responsibility in a given situation. Though, lying is a direct form of denial, there are still others like false justification, caricaturizing, and minimizing that also fall into the category of denial. In this article, we’ll look at denial with regard to leadership situations.

Few examples of denial are as follows:

  • Adam denied his responsibility in the crime at Eden. He projected the blame on Eve, instead, to somehow escape divine censure.
  • Pharaoh denied the greatness of Jehovah despite being struck by the plagues. His political obsession with keeping Israelites as slaves made him minimize the seriousness of God’s command.
  • Saul refused to recognize the choice of David by God for the throne. He imagined that, somehow, what had been prophesied against him wouldn’t happen and that he would retain the throne.
  • The worshippers of Baal kept on hurting themselves in hope that their god would respond.
  • Gehazi denied being elsewhere when he had really gone after Naaman. His memory somehow denied the prophetic ability of Elisha as he succumbed to greed.
  • The Israelites kept doing things against the Law, despite the warnings of the prophets, saying “the Temple is here, the Temple is here”. They were denying God’s definition of holiness and used the Temple as a shield behind which they could do their works of darkness.
  • The people in the days of Haggai refused to build the Temple since they didn’t consider it to be very important.
  • The Pharisees and the Sadducees rejected the claims of Christ despite Scriptural and providential (miraculous) proofs.
  • Peter denied any relationship with Christ in face of persecution.
  • Felix refused to listen to Paul anymore when he began to speak about things pertaining to God’s Kingdom.

Often times, the act of denial leads to a kind of self-deception in which memory itself begins to get conformed to the false tendencies of the will. In such cases, a return is almost impossible since the imagination has already overshadowed reasonability. While denial may be looked at as a defense mechanism of the organism; yet, one must be careful to not deny the role of will in deciding for or against any ideas arising from a situation. One must remember that falsehood is never beneficial at the end.

Voluntary and Involuntary Denial
Voluntary denial refers to that denial which is willful and persistent. It persists in falsehood despite evidences contrary to it. Involuntary denial refers to that in which the decision of the will is absent or delayed. It is mechanical in nature and often is an initial response through a defense mechanism of the organism that seeks to avoid the unpleasant. For instance, when someone hears of the death of a beloved one, the initial response might be disbelief or denial. Such initial response of the organism prevents against hasty shock and might be preparative and directive in the ascertaining of truth.  Such denial doesn’t fall under the purview of morality since the will has not yet been brought into rational accountability in it.

Hamartiological Analysis
Spiritual Roots
In John 8: 44, Jesus declares the Pharisees to be the offspring of the devil. He says, “You are of your father the devil, and your will is to do your father’s desires. He was a murderer from the beginning, and has nothing to do with the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he lies, he speaks according to his own nature, for he is a liar and the father of lies” (RSV).

Obviously, the devil was not their genetic father but a father in the sense of their being part of the rebellion of falsehood began by him. Falsehood and lying are natural to the devil since, by rejection of the truth of God, he has turned his back on all truth-values. The demonic kingdom operates basically on falsehood and influences the kingdoms of the world to do so. Worldly politics, religions, and businesses use falsehood as an instrument to gain and retain power over human minds. Jesus categorizes all such leadership practices as demonic in origin. Tendencies towards falsehood are sharp in any intellect that refuses the rule of the Spirit of God.

The Pharisees were incapable of acknowledging Jesus as the Christ of God because their inclinations were in favor of the devil’s desires – “Your will is to do your father’s desires,” He said.  All rejection of God-given leadership is an instance of demonic rebellion (1Jn. 3:12; Jude 1:11; 1Sam. 19:9ff).  Even within Christian leadership, Paul asks Timothy to not include a novice as a candidate for leadership; for it is possible that he become lifted up in pride and fall into the condemnation of the devil (1Tim. 3:6). Similarly, Christians who haven’t matured and are still carnal can’t properly accept or acknowledge the value of the other in the family of God since they are ruled by worldly standards of acceptance and egotistic desires for self-aggrandizement (cf. 1 Cor. 3:1ff) after the manner of the devil (Isa. 14:12-14).

Spirits of Deception
The tendency to reject demonic influence in hamartiological analysis (or analysis of sinful instances) is a mark left by secular theologies. Of course, there is the danger of extremism in both cases and one need to draw a line of balance. In the preface of his The Screwtape Letters, C.S. Lewis writes:

There are two equal and opposite errors into which our race can fall about the devils. One is to disbelieve in their existence. The other is to believe, and to feel an excessive and unhealthy interest in them. They themselves are equally pleased by both errors and hail a materialist or a magician with the same delight.[1]

The Bible clearly states that “in the latter times some shall depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils; speaking lies in hypocrisy; having their conscience seared with a hot iron” (1Tim. 4:1,2). The warning is against those who renounce the truth by embracing falsehood. This is one way in which cults arise claiming hold over some particularly distinct truth unsupported by the Scriptures. The elements of deception in the world that keep people blinded from the truth of God also fall into the purview of the kingdom of darkness.

The Bible, therefore, exhorts one to be watchful (1Pt. 5:8), never give an occasion to the devil through prideful or resentful anger (Eph. 4:26), and to beware of the wiles and deception of the devil (Eph. 6:11; 2 Cor. 11:13-15) who attempts to destroy the Body of Christ.

Selfish Carnal Passions
Jude talks about mockers in the last days (those who deride the things and offices of God) as those “who separate themselves, sensual, having not the Spirit” (Jude 19). The psalmist draws a picture of their departure from truth in Psalm 1:1:

Step 1: Walking after counsel of the ungodly: Placing worldly wisdom and views above the Scripture.
Step 2: Standing in the way of sinners: Expressing one’s approval of or neutral opinion regarding things that the Bible expressly calls “sin”.
Step 3: Sitting in the seat of the scornful: Assuming the position and the role of the rebel, the derider and opposer of all God’s truth.

Jesus taught His disciples to pray “Lead us not into temptation but deliver us from the evil one” because it’s evident that the enemy of our souls can easily use situations in life to distort reality and confuse decisions. Such followers of sinful flesh easily rebel against all truth. The temptation to give in slowly to the current of worldly opinion is strong and leaders must beware of that.

Dealing with Denial in the Self
Jesus gave the first code of examination when He stipulated,  “Judge not, that ye be not judged” (Matt. 7:1). He told the hypocrite to first remove the beam in his eye before he could remove the mote out of his brother’s eye (v. 5). Self-examination is crucial for a leader’s spiritual health.

Following are some questions that can help ascertain if one is a denier:
1. Do I try to justify some action of mine that my conscience accuses me of (1Jn. 1:8-10)?
2. Am I angry with someone for some fault of mine (Gen. 4:5-8)?
3. Do I feel threatened by someone’s progress (1Sam. 18:7-9)?
4. Do I have doubts regarding the Bible, God, and ministry (Ex. 32:1ff; Pro.30:9; 1Tim. 4:13-16)?
5. Am I doing or saying things to make people think of me what is not really true of me (2Cor. 12:6)?
6. Do I regard the Biblical warnings as not very serious, particularly in connection with my situation (Jer. 7:10)?
7. Do I consider someone as inferior to or less important than me (Phil. 2:3)?
8. Do I try to defame or slander someone (behind his back or openly) without regard to any proof in favor of him/her (Prov. 19:5,9)?
9. Do I wish to be safe, regardless of what happens to others (2Sam. 23:16)?

Following are some ways to deal with denial in one’s self:
1. Examine oneself in the light of Scriptures (1 Cor. 9:27; Ps.1:2).
2. Confess and renounce all sin and false justifications (1Jn.1:9).
3. Be committed to the truth in every situation (2Cor.13:8).
4. Deny self and seek to please Christ alone in every situation (Matt. 16:24; Gal. 1:10).
5. Encourage others and invest in them for the glory of God (1Thess.5:11).
6. Confront sin in others; this guards against compromise (Eph. 5:11; 1Cor. 5:2; 1Tim.5:20).
7. Make prayer, hearing from God, and fellowship a priority (1Thess. 5:17; Prov. 28:5; Heb.10:25).

Dealing with Denial in Others
One must beware of the following things when confronting denial in others:
1. Do not be hasty in confrontation (Pro. 14:29; 29:20).
2. Do not let hearsay cloud your opinion about the other. In fact, do not even let appearance influence your view of the other person for in doing that you can be partner in evil (Jn. 7:24; Pro. 17:4).
3. Before confronting someone, make sure that you’re first of all in the right (Matt. 7:1-5).
4. Do not confront unless you’re certain that you need to (Acts 24:25).
5. Do not confront unless you’re confident that you’re equipped for it (1Tim. 3:16; Tit.1:9).
6. Listen to the Holy Spirit before you’re going to confront and speak (Jn. 16:7, 8).

The steps of confrontation may be as follows:
1. Recognize the individuality, dignity, and freedom of the other as given by God (Gen. 1:26).
2. Be updated about the denier’s latest position. This is important since it’s possible that the denier might already have been feeling remorseful and has repented of his falsehood. One way to do that is to ask questions in that direction. Jesus provides a classic approach to this when He confronts Peter without talking about the three denials he made. On the contrary, He just asks him if he loved Him more than the other things; and when he replied in the affirmative, Christ asked him to work for Him (Jn.21:15-17).
3. Be confident of your authority from God, not to destroy but to construct (2Cor. 13:10).
4. Be gentle and caring (Matt.11:29;  2Tim. 2:24; Jas. 3:17)
5. Only proceed if you’re sure that the person is open to reason, to a fair discussion (Isa. 1:18; Jas.3:17; Prov. 1:5; 10:8).
6. Remember that God is the one in total control of the situation (Acts 5:34).
7. Gently show the person the facts of his/her situation and give space for his/her approval or denial of them (Jn. 4:9-19).
8. Remember that the person reserves the final decision to accept or reject the truth and God oversees it all (Prov. 16:1,2).
9. Provide answers as long as you’re sure that the denier is honest about his/her questions (1Pt. 3:15).
10.  If you’re unable to answer sufficiently, do not fail to express your disapproval of falsehood in any case (Jn. 9:24-33).
11.  Seek the help of other leaders if necessary (Matt. 18:17).
12.  Aim at restoration (2Cor. 2:4-11).




[1] C.S. Lewis, The Screwtape Letters (New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc., 1961), p. 3

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Between the Axle and the Rim

Published in BASILEIA, Itarsi, October 2010

In modern times, the world has experienced what has been melancholically termed “the crisis of faith”. In his book, The Recovery of Faith (1956),[1] former President of India S. Radhakrishnan (1888-1975), lists seven reasons behind this faith-crisis: scientific discoveries that disprove popular religious views, studies in comparative religions that discourage any claim to uniqueness by a particular religion, advancement of technology and depersonalization of the human, popularity of logical empiricism and resultant depreciation of philosophy and metaphysics, disappointment with religion that fails in true life despite the many external rituals, religious schisms that hamper world-unity, and growth of irreligiosity. Sadly, in the post-modern era, as the grip of faith loosened, it kicked back against any faith in reason as well. Truth was relativized and pluralized as the absolutes vanished into thin air. The confusion of plurality and the engagement with impersonal materialism has birthed a religious lukewarmness that sends the believer into fits of faith-amnesia, during which time the real world stands by to make room for the faithless moment. Faith lingers somewhere in the mind as a set of propositions and dictums, while the person is detached. Doubt hovers horrifically to disengage the soul from true spirituality. The passion of faith is lost to the passion of the flesh – to the luster, savor, odor, and touch of the world-at-hand, as uncertainty plays its sinister role. This spiritual schizophrenia of faith is blatant where the process of secularization is vibrant and religion is privatized, without any logical bridge between the personal and the public. Faith having been dethroned from the public sphere, both truth and values are now gone berserk. The only hope lies in the reconsolidating of the heart with faith that is operative through love (Gal.5:6).

Connecting the Core to the Circumference
In the original sense of usage, “faith” and “belief” meant “to set one’s heart on”.[2] In Faith and Belief (1979), Wilfred Cantwell Smith exposed the classic understanding of the Latin term credo. Usually translated in Christian creedal statements as “I believe” Credo, according to him,

…is a compound from cor, cordial, “heart” (as in English “cordial,” “accord,” “concord,” and the like; compare also, from the closely parallel Greek cognate kardia, the English derivatives “cardiac,” “electrocardiogram,” etc.), plus do, “put, place, set,” also “give.” The first meaning of the compound in classical Latin had been and its primary meaning continued to be “to entrust, to commit, to trust something to someone,” and of money, “to lend.” … A secondary meaning in secular usage was “to trust in,” “to rely upon,” “to place confidence in.” …

There would seem little question but that as a crucial term used at a crucial moment in a crucial liturgical act of personal engagement – namely Christian baptism – credo came close to its root meaning of “I set my heart on,” “I give my heart to” (“I hereby give my heart to Christ”; “I herein give my heart to God the Father” …); or more generally: “I hereby commit myself (“to…”), “I pledge allegiance.”[3]

According to the Bible, faith is the acknowledgement and committed surrender of heart to the proclamation of the Word of faith (Rom.10:8-10). From the very beginning of its convicting manifestation to the heart through the Spirit, the Word of faith holds a gripping and commanding effect – to obey or disobey remains the question. Credibility is convincingly woven into faith. The Word claims the central position of one’s life, the very core of being. Take for instance Jude 1:3 where Christians are called to contend for “the faith which was once delivered unto the saints”; this faith is nothing but the revelation of the Gospel of the grace of Jesus Christ. Here, faith is both personal and propositional. Faith in God and faith in His Word are one and at the same time. There can be no separation of God from His Word. It is “faith” because of the nature of the divine revelation, which is supernatural truth, not attainable or graspable by either human reason or human experience.[4] The objective revelation is a given that becomes personal when subjectively absorbed through faith.[5] The revelation is never like the truths of nature that are amoral (i.e., morally neutral); the revealed Word is moral in nature. It is morally binding on moral creatures. The revelation of the Word obliges faith. For, while the Word spoken to amoral creation is physically binding; the Word spoken to moral creatures is morally binding, and commanding obedience to faith. Now, the central personality of this revelation is Christ; therefore, rejection of faith is rejection of Christ.[6] Also, since the revelation of faith is clear and convincing to the intellect, the rejection of faith is inexcusable. Faith is substance; it is never a vague idea in which some confidence is placed, as some modern dictionaries define “belief” to be. It is solid and divinely grounded truth that demands not a blind risk-involved, wager kind of response; but, absolute trust and surrender. In other words, faith is rational, faith is knowledge. When the Word is preached as it is, it allows no excuse; it needs no evidence, for it itself is the evidence; to deny it would be self-defeating.[7]

The opposite of faith, in the Bible, is imagination, which is a fanciful construct of the sinful human heart as, for example, in Genesis 8:21, “the imagination [Hb. yetser] of man’s heart is evil from his youth,” and in Luke 1:51, “He hath scattered the proud in the imagination [Gk. dianoia] of their heart.” Self-presumptuous and doubtful imagination [Gk. dialogismos (Rom.1:21), logismos (2Cor.10:5)] is idolatrous and anti-divine. It can never be the substitute for genuine faith because it is founded on lie and delusion. Therefore, anti-faith leads to an inauthentic and morally reprobate lifestyle. Anti-faith results in epistemic confusion and ethical corruption.

Because that, when they knew God, they glorified him not as God, neither were thankful; but became vain in their imaginations, and their foolish heart was darkened. Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools, And changed the glory of the uncorruptible God into an image made like to corruptible man, and to birds, and fourfooted beasts, and creeping things. Wherefore God also gave them up to uncleanness through the lusts of their own hearts, to dishonor their own bodies between themselves: Who changed the truth of God into a lie, and worshipped and served the creature more than the Creator, who is blessed for ever. Amen.[8]

In other words, unless true spirituality in the form of personal-propositional-practical faith holds central position in the core of the heart, the whole lifestyle is delusion and destruction lived out.

Certainty and Significance
Faith acts as the hypostatic ground of three epistemic sources: reason, morality, and revelation. Regarding the first, faith rests at the base of all epistemic convictions. If it is true, as Aristotle observed, that all men by nature desire to know, then it is also true that all men by nature desire to believe; for, to know is to believe. Faith is the ultimate foundation of all knowledge and the condition of all knowability. Faith is not based on reason; for to assume it so, as Blaise Pascal had rightly observed, would beg the question, as one would need to believe in reason in the first place.

Regarding the second, there is in man something called moral belief or conviction; this, regardless of any people or culture. It is not possible to ultimately ground morality on either reason or experience, though attempts have been made towards that. Teleological ethics doesn’t involve a moral obligation – the end result “good” doesn’t necessarily command the ought of any man. In fact, though one may circumferentially live a moral life for teleological reasons, that moral life is devoid of a real moral center. Morality is reduced to mere peripheral stage-show as Adeimantus in Plato’s The Republic argues, “Since then, as philosophers prove, appearance tyrannizes over truth and is lord of happiness, to appearance I must devote myself.”[9] Such morality is relative, situational, utilitarian, and hedonist. However, if morality were ultimately self-centered, the thought of circumferential morality is blank and empty; for, without the obligating principle neither virtue nor vice exist, and no “moral” action is worth any praise. The only obligating principle, therefore, must lie within the inner chambers of the heart. The Bible is clear on the fact that moral conviction is ubiquitous throughout the various people groups of the world, “For when the Gentiles, which have not the law, do by nature the things contained in the law, these, having not the law, are a law unto themselves: which shew the work of the law written in their hearts” (Rom. 2:14-15). The external conduct of the gentiles is the index of the inner conscience.

Apart from that, there is the unquestionable appeal of divine revelation through the Spirit, which commands absolute obedience. Therefore, the Scripture adjoins: “Today, if you will hear His voice, do not harden your hearts” (Heb.4:7). The proclamation of the Word commands obedience of faith; it leaves men no excuse for unbelief. The Word is convicting and convincing. However, as perceived by the individual, certainty of faith and significance of the same are two different things. This belongs not just to the first-time hearer of the Word, but extends also to those who have already known the Word. There is always the possibility that its significance is lost in time, resulting in spiritual lukewarmness.

The Bible emphasizes the importance of both certainty and significance in faith.

Your word is very pure (tried and well refined); therefore Your servant loves it.[10]

However, one would question if the servant was truly loving the word which he knew was pure when he fell into sin with Bathsheba or cold-bloodedly got her husband, Uriah, killed. The act was not in ignorance. Some part of the cognitive faculty was blinded in the will’s choice of what was more important. While the mind was certain of the truth of God, the heart had gone after acts contrary to it. This is not impossible. What may be certain to the mind may hold no significance for the heart that is blinded by faithlessness. In Lecture 55 of his Systematic Theology, Finney writes:

… intellectual light is the condition, both of the heart’s faith and unbelief. By the assertion, that intellectual light is a condition of unbelief is intended, not that the intellect should at all times admit the truth in theory; but that the evidence must be such, that by virtue of its own laws, the mind or intellect could justly admit the truth rejected by the heart. It is a very common case, that the unbeliever denies in words and endeavours to refute in theory, that which he nevertheless assumes as true, in all his practical judgments.

That is where Nathan caught David, when he reacted to his story of a rich man taking away his only sheep (2 Sam.12:1-9). David immediately fell under conviction. Obviously, the moral light, as well as the light of God’s Word, are undeniable. Yet, they look cold and indifferent to a heart frozen to numbness by the anguish of sin and frustration of unbelief. Faith is that rope of intense patience that holds the suspension bridge of communion with God against all false winds of anxiety and unbelief. However, the strength of faith is significance. One only holds on to that which continues to hold significance for him/her. Passion is relative to significance and significance is determined by the object that the will inclines itself towards. When the soul inclines itself towards the tangible and less faith-demanding object, the original faith-vision is distorted for a while. If a realization occurs later on, the soul is torn between the two; if persisted despite of it, the departure is sharpened towards destruction. May be, Judas’ decision to betray Jesus and his later suicide were all an arrangement of his confused heart that couldn’t figure out how to reconcile his frustration for money with the revelation of the long-awaited Messiah. Somewhere, the compromise was broached and his life disarrayed. No wonder that Lucifer had fallen from that same place of certainty in the presence of God. His desire for self-significance distorted his world against the reality of God. He was without excuse. Well said Jesus, “No one can serve two masters; for either he will hate the one and love the other, or else he will be loyal to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and mammon” (Matt.6:24).

Credence and Confession
Confession of faith is as important as the credence to faith; “for with the heart one believes unto righteousness, and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation” (Rom.10:10). Denial of faith is the active rejection of the Word to have any part in one’s life, for whatever reason. Psychiatrists agree that denial is a kind of defense mechanism that rejects facts that bring discomfort or hindrance to personally preferred objectives in life.[11] This means that there is more than the classical epistemic sources (viz. reason, experience, revelation) to knowledge and faith. The new field of epistemics has shown that there are other social and psychological mechanisms involved in the producing of the noetic moment.[12] In his essay “Rational Reliance”,[13] James F. Ross, Professor of Philosophy and Law at the University of Pennsylvania, argues that “willing reliance, motivated, even sometimes caused by feeling and desire aimed at various benefits, is an essential element in our knowing generally and in science, and particularly in our religious knowledge of things unseen.” The noetic mechanism is more complicated than mere plumping for either reason or experience. While one can look at doubt as somewhat justifiably involved in the rational cognitive process – skepticism may not be totally unhelpful, denial is an altogether different mechanism. It denies persuasive facts for personal reasons. From the psychological perspective, it is an avoidance mechanism; from the philosophical perspective, it is a utilitarian choice; from the Biblical perspective, it is sin.

The post-modern believer may not consider the denial of Peter to be so serious. The circumference is not as important as is the core. One may believe in the heart and may for justifiable reasons choose to remain an “anonymous Christian.”[14] Religion is a private issue after all. However, sooner one notices a compromise broached in the absence of pure identity-distinction. The circumference must be integrally connected to the core as the rim is connected to the axle with spokes; or else, the wheel of life will neither rotate nor move forward without this intra-connection, this intra-consistency. This extends also to confession and denial in deeds. For, confession is not just a matter of words; confession is everything that pertains to the external life. Paul writes to Titus about so-called religious people of the day as those who “profess to know God, but in works they deny Him, being abominable, disobedient, and disqualified for every good work” (Tit.1:16). This was what offended Gandhi during his contact with members of the Plymouth Brethren in South Africa. In answer to one’s argument that Jesus brings peace through redemption despite our continuing sins, he replied:

If this be the Christianity acknowledged by all Christians I cannot accept it. I do not seek redemption from the consequences of my sin. I seek to be redeemed from sin itself, or rather from the very thought of sin. Until I have attained that end, I shall be content to be restless.[15]

He continues to write sadly of the Plymouth Brother who argued that we can never be delivered from sins, though we have forgiveness: “He knowingly committed transgressions, and showed me that he was undisturbed by the thought of them.”[16] On the last page of his Autobiography, he confesses about his own life:

…the world’s praise fails to move me, indeed it very often stings me. To conquer the subtle passions seems to me to be harder far than the physical conquest of the world by the force of arms. Ever since my return to India I have had experiences of the dormant passions lying hidden within me. The knowledge of them has made me feel humiliated though not defeated. The experiences and experiments have sustained me and given me great joy. But I know that I have still before me a difficult path to traverse. I must reduce myself to zero. So long as a man does not of his own free will put himself last among his fellow creatures, there is no salvation for him. Ahimsa is the farthest limit of humility.[17]

One general way to approach the amelioration of the soul is through restraint of the passions, as they rise. However, symptomatic treatment can never cure the root problem. Therefore, says Paul regarding circumferential attempts to define the core as such that “have an appearance of wisdom in self-imposed religion, false humility, and neglect of the body, but are of no value against the indulgence of the flesh” (Col.2:23). The core must define the meaningful relationship with the circumference. Or else, the potentiality of sin is heightened when engagement with the rush and busyness of the world is paused. The circumference becomes meaningless when meaningful definitions and compulsions are absent from the core. Logotherapist Viktor E. Frankl observes:

Let us think, for instance, of ‘Sunday neurosis,’ that kind of depression which afflicts people who become aware of the lack of content in their lives when the rush of the busy week is over and the void within themselves becomes manifest. Not a few cases of suicide can be traced back to this existential vacuum. Such widespread phenomena as alcoholism and juvenile delinquency would not be understandable unless we recognise the existential vacuum underlying them. This is also true of the crises of pensioners and aging people.

Moreover, there are various masks and guises under which the existential vacuum appears. Sometimes the frustrated will to meaning is vicariously compensated for by a will to power, including the most primitive form of the will to power, the will to money. In other cases, the place of frustrated will to meaning is taken by the will to pleasure. That is why existential frustration often eventuates in sexual compensation. We can observe in such cases, that the sexual libido becomes rampant in the existential vacuum.[18]

Frankl goes on to explicate in his book an important way in which meaning is discovered: “by experiencing someone, i.e., by love.”[19] The inter-personal inner structure of the human self can only find fulfillment in ultimate love, the spiritual virtue that is the essence all morality. Faith and fidelity are deeply interwoven into the fabric of pure love. Love defines the will to live or die for the object of love. Love is what exists at the core of the Triune Godhead who through eternity are united in the inter-personal relationship of love. God is love, and man is made in God’s image. Therefore, unless the love of God is at the central structure of the heart all consistency of the faith-life is lost.

But you, beloved, building yourselves up on your most holy faith, praying in the Holy Spirit, keep yourselves in the love of God, looking for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal life.[20]

That is the reason why, Jesus commanded “If you love me, keep my commandments” (Jn.14:15), and John announces that “this is the love of God, that we keep His commandments” (1Jn.5:3). The life of the believer must be the mirror of his faith. But, why? The obligation is constrained by the love of Christ (2Cor.5:14). It is not just the faith of the martyr, but also his love for his God that distinguishes him as a true witness of his faith. One cannot hold on to the integrity of faith between the core and the circumference without this spiritual affection (cf. Jude 1:20-21). While love among contingent beings may provide a meaning for life in this world, it is only love for God that can produce the passion and love for righteous life; for the love of God flows out to love for all humanity and is the spring of true benevolence. That may be one sense in which Einstein’s statement on life’s meaning may be understood: “What is the meaning of human life… To know an answer to this question means to be religious.”[21]

References
Bonhoeffer, Dietrich. The Cost of Discipleship, New York: Simon & Schuster, 1995.
Brunner, Emil and Barth, Karl. Natural Theology, London: The Centenary Press, 1946.
Finney, Charles. Finney’s Systematic Theology, Abridged, Minneapolis: Bethany House Publishers, 1976.
Fowler, James W. Stages of Faith, San Francisco: Harper& Row, Publishers, 1981.
Frankl, Viktor E. Man’s Search for Meaning, Trs. Ilse Lasch, Mumbai: Better Yourself Books, 2003.

Notes
[1] Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, Recovery of Faith (Middlesex: Clements, Newling & Co. Ltd., 1956)
[2] James W. Fowler, Stages of Faith (San Francisco: Harper& Row, Publishers, 1981), pp.11,12
[3] Smith, Faith and Belief (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1979), p.76. As cited by Fowler, Stages of Faith, p.12
[4] Cp. “faith…is the gift of God” (Eph.2:7); “the fruit of the Spirit is…faith” (Gal.5:22); “the natural man does not receive the things of the Spirit of God… because they are spiritually discerned” (1Cor.2:14).
[5] Cp. “For unto us was the gospel preached, as well as unto them: but the word preached did not profit them, not being mixed with faith in them that heard it” (Heb.4:2).
[6] This was true of also faith in the Old Testament. The rejection of faith was rejection of Christ. Cp. “For they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them, and that Rock was Christ” and “…nor let us tempt Christ, as some of them also tempted, and were destroyed by serpents” (1Cor.10:4,9).
[7] “Faith is…the evidence of things not seen” (Heb.11:1).
[8] Romans 1:21-25
[9] Plato, The Republic and Other Works (Trs. B. Jowett, New York: Anchor Books, 1989), p. 49
[10] Psalm 119:140 (Amplified Bible)
[11] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denial
[12] Alvin I. Goldman, “Epistemics: The Regulative Theory of Cognition,” The Journal of Philosophy, Vol. 75, No. 10, (Oct., 1978), p.509
[13] http://www.sas.upenn.edu/~jross/Essays1.htm
[14] An important term in Karl Rahner’s inclusivism, the “anonymous Christian” is someone who is Christian at heart though not in confession – in fact, he may not even know Christ as Christians know Him. He is not a confessing Christian.
[15] M.K. Gandhi, An Autobiography (Trs. Mahadev Desai, Ahmedabad: Navajivan Publishing House, 1927), p.115
[16] Ibid, p.115. But, Gandhi confessed that he wasn’t prejudiced against Christianity due to some secluded beliefs of the Plymouth Brethren. He had himself witnessed great Christian examples in his life. His difficulties lay elsewhere, with regard to the Bible and its accepted interpretation. Cf. pp.115-116
[17] Ibid, p.464
[18] Viktor E. Frankl, Man’s Search for Meaning (Trs. Ilse Lasch, Mumbai: Better Yourself Books, 2003), p.98
[19] Ibid, p.101
[20] Jude 1:20-21
[21] Albert Einstein, Mein Weltbild, Amsterdam: Querido Verlag, 1934, Ideas and Opinions (New Delhi: Rupa & Co., 1979), p.11

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Self-Control

Self-control (also called "temperance") is a biblical virtue. It means to have control over our desires, emotions, imaginations, passions, and conduct.

Self-control is something that can be lacked. In other words, it is something that one can lose or build up.

3 Areas of Self-Control
Body - In eating, drinking, sleeping, exercise, speaking, action, indulgence of the senses, and sexual purity. (Prov.23:21; Luke 21:34; 1Thess.4:3,4,5; James 1:26; 3:1-12)
Some rules: Don't overeat, don't oversleep, don't overspeak, don't overreact, observe cleanliness, eat properly, dress properly, etc..
Soul - In thought, imaginations, feelings, emotions, and turning of the mind towards things or ideas. Some rules: Don't allow vain thoughts, don't nurse evil feelings, don't set mind on flesh, don't worry, don't vent all your feelings but control them, meditate on God's word, cultivate pure thoughts, worship and pray with mind and emotions (Phil.4:8; Prov.29:11; 1Cor.14:15)
Spirit - In passion of spirit, maintenance of a healthy conscience, and in committing to seek the Lord always and not damp the spirit in things of the flesh. Some rules: Don't be disheartened, don't be timid, don't be discouraged, be slow to anger, pray in the spirit. (Prov.16:32; 2Tim.1:7; Jude 1:20)

Images of Self-control
1. Walls (Prov.25:28). Self-control is like the walls of a city.  Healthy walls are pictures of a spirit under control.
2. Capturing City (Prov.16:32). A man with self-control is better than the one who captures a city. It emphasizes the need of wisdom and power in order to keep self under control.
3. Fruit of the Spirit (Gal.5:23). Self-control is a moral virtue produced by being grafted into the Spirit, becoming one with Him, and walking in agreement with Him.

Spectra of Self-control (2Pet.1:5,6,7,8)


Exercising Self-control in all things (1Cor.9:25; 2Tim.2:3,4).
1. Remember that self-control is holistic. We must exercise self-control in ALL THINGS. If we lose self-control in one area, we will soon lose control over the other areas. A breach in the wall is a danger to the city.
e.g. The Marshmallow experiment was conducted by psychologists in which kids were tested for self-control and endurance. Each were given a marshmallow and told that if they waited for 15mts and didn't eat it, they'll get another. It is said that the kids who waited also proved to be more successful and prominent in life later on.
2. Self-control has a purpose (1Cor.9:26). It is not a random routine of exercise or engagement in a wild-goose chase. Self-control has value. It prepares someone for the greater challenge to come (Jer.12:5).
3. Self-control involves discipline of the mind. It means to never allow imaginations and thoughts to break the boundaries established by God (Gen.6:5), but bring every thought into captivity to the obedience of Christ (2Cor.10:4,5). It means to gird up the loins of the mind (1Pet.1:13), that is to fasten the belt on our mind to keep it steady and strong. It means to think and meditate on the virtuous and avoid all appearance of evil (Phil.4:8; 1Thess.5:21;Tit.2:12; Gen.39:10,11,12; 1Sam.30:22-24).
4. Self-control involves discipline of the body (1Cor.9:27). A lazy and carefree person who eats as he likes, sleeps as he likes, talks as he likes, and doesn't pay attention to the rigors of a disciplined lifestyle will never understand what self-control is all about. But, discipline must not be observed grudgingly, as if it is a burden. Discipline must be embraced with purpose, determination, and the faith that self-control protects the heart, mind, emotions, and the spirit against destroying elements and helps one focus on the mission and task of God (1Thess.4:4,5,7).
5. Self-control means to rule the spirit (Prov.16:32; 25:28). It means to not lose our bearing, to not swagger, to not slip, and to not fall. It means to keep the spirit meek and humble (Dan.5:20; Matt.5:3; Prov.16:19). It means to have a broken spirit before God always (Psa.51:17; Matt.26:39; Heb.5:8; James 4:10). Note that it should not be brokenness in itself, but brokenness before God (Prov.17:22). Ruling the spirit means to control our anger from explosion (Prov.16:32; Psa.4:4; Eph.4:26; Eccl.7:9). Ruling the spirit means to become strong in the spirit (Luke 1:80; 2:40). Ruling the spirit means to commit the spirit to God (Psa.31:5). It means to not be lax and slack in the spirit (Psa.32:2). It means to have a steadfast and stable spirit (not one swayed by circumstances) (Psa.51:10). It means to be patient in the spirit and not proud in the spirit (Eccl.7:8). It means to have the spirit in its right place, i.e. to seek God diligently (Psa.77:6; Prov.22:27; Isa.26:9; John 4:23).

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

God's Will

God's will is His desire, intent, and purpose.

Five Aspects of God's Will
1. God's Personal Will - The will of God that He accomplishes and which is uneffected by what any volitional beings do (Ps.115:3; Heb.6:17,18).
2. God's Prescriptive Will - The will that God prescribes for us to follow (1Jn.2:17; 1Thess.4:3). This includes both God's mandatory and prohibitory will (things that He commands us to do and things that He prohibits us to do).
3. God's Preferred Will - The will of God that prefers something over another (1Tim.2:1; Rom.12:2)
4. God's Permissive Will - The will of God that permits certain things, though they are not preferred by Him (Acts 14:16).
5. God's Pliable Will - The will of God that can be changed through human responses (Gen.18:23ff; Exo.32:11-13,14; Jonah 3:10)

How we can abide in God's will
1. Seeking God (Prov.28:5)
2. Seeking Discernment (Prov.2:3,4,5; Col.1:9; James 1:5)
3. Repenting from sin (2Cor.3:16; 1Jn.1:6-8)
4. Obeying God's Word - His Written Will (1Jn.2:17)
5. Renewing the mind (Rom.12:2)
6. Being Spiritually minded (1Cor.2:14)
7. Praying in the Spirit (Rom.8:27)

Monday, February 3, 2014

Chastening

Chastening refers to the constructive corrective measures that God takes towards His children for their good. When we err and are hardened towards sin, God chastens us in order to correct us and lead us in the truth.

A. Why Does God Chasten?
-Because He deals with us as His sons. (Heb.12:7)
-Because He loves us. (Rev.3:19; Heb.12:6)
-Because He wants to build us up. (2Cor.13:10)
    B. Ways of Chastening
    Rod and Rebuke (Proverbs 29:15)
    Rebuke
    -Through His servants (Psalm 141:5; 1Tim.5:20; 2Tim.4:2; Titus 1:13; 2:15)
    -Through His Word (2 Tim. 3:16)
    Rod
    External:
    -With the rod of men and with the blows of the sons of men (2 Samuel 7:14; Hosea 10:10)
    -Sword, Famine, Pestilence (national) (2 Samuel 24:13; 2Chr. 20:9; Jer.11:22; 14:12,13; 15:2; 21:9; 24:10; 27:8,13; 29:17,18; 32:36; 34:17; 38:2; 42:17,22; 44:13; Eze. 6:11,12; 12:16)
    -Infirmity, Sickness (1Cor. 11:30, 32; James 5:14-16)
    Internal:
    Inner agony and sensing the displeasure of God and God’s silence towards our prayers (guilt, lack of peace, etc) (Psalm 6:1-3, 6; 38:1ff.; Eph. 4:30; 1Pet. 3:7)

    C. Our Response to Chastening
    -Repent from our sins
    -Humble ourselves
    -Turn completely to God
    -Surrender to His will
    -Obey what He commands

      Sunday, January 19, 2014

      Doesn't matter if it's just a drop; many drops make an ocean

      Doesn’t matter if it’s just a drop…
      We may be a drop..
      But many drops make an ocean.

      Don't be dismayed by your size;
      You are the right size for the spot God wants you in...

      Each life is a chapter in God’s book,
      Written in His book..
      He wrote our biography before the world began.
      (Psalm 139:16)

      Every flame has a name…
      A special name that no one else knows;
      God relates to us personally.
      (Acts 2:3; Rev. 2:17)

      Jesus was not fascinated with the big buildings.
      He said that not a stone would remain upon another;
      He had no home to call His own; but, He has prepared us a place in heaven.
      (Matt.24; John 14)

      Overthrow of the Devil, BIG SHOT, God's Dream, Faith, Anxiety, and Moving On

      On the Cross, the devil was totally deterritorialized, disinherited, deprived, and destroyed. The crucifixion of Christ meant the judgment of the world and the overthrow of the devil. In one shot, our Lord atoned for our sins, pleased the Father, reconciled us to God, justified sinners, condemned the world and abolished the kingdom of darkness. Let's be light, walk in the light, and spread God's light in all the world!!
      ~Now is the time for judgment on this world; now the prince of this world will be driven out. But I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all men to myself. (John 12:31,32)~

      I sincerely believe that the word "BIG SHOT" is very sinful!
      ~Who says that you are any better than other people? What do you have that wasn't given to you? If you were given what you have, why are you bragging as if it weren't a gift? (1Co 4:7 GWN)~

      ~Every mother caressing her baby dreams big dreams for her; but, God's dreams are bigger - He made us.~
      "You saw me before I was born. Every day of my life was recorded in your book. Every moment was laid out before a single day had passed. How precious are your thoughts about me, O God. They cannot be numbered!" (139:16,17)

      When we are born again, God gives us a new heart; but renewing our mind, changing the way we see and think, is our responsibility. A new heart is given by God; but renewing the mind is our obligation (Ezekiel 36:26; Romans 12:2).

      I think when considering boundaries we also understand that it is only through Christ that we relate - He is both the boundary and the bridge between my neighbour and me: whatever passes must pass through Him...
      ~ But the same Mediator who makes us individuals is also the founder of a new fellowship. He stands in the centre between my neighbour and myself. He divides, but He also unites. Thus although the direct way to our neighbour is barred, we now find the new and only real way to him—the way which passes through the Mediator.…` Dietrich Bonhoeffer

      Sometimes all you need to do is to shift gear and push the accelerator..... Life also has it's difficult climbs; it's not always gear 5.

      Search me, O God, and know my heart; test me and know my anxious thoughts. Point out anything in me that offends you, and lead me along the path of everlasting life. (139:23-24)
      ~Many times it is our anxieties that offend God. A worrying Christian is a contradiction in terms - he who has gone through the cross and is carrying his own cross has forgotten what worry is. May the Lord help us to say "no" to anxiety and walk in the path of everlasting life every single moment of our life!~

      Liberality without modesty is shame, frankness without sensitivity is violence; freedom is where love is in love with wisdom....

      ~The heart that says to God, "Give me this and I will be happy" has become idolatrous - it can no longer find satisfaction in God; it frets and becomes downhearted because its desires are not fulfilled; but, the heart that delights in the Lord is always fully satisfied.~
      "Delight yourself also in the LORD, and He shall give you the desires of your heart." (Ps.37:4)

      Friday, December 13, 2013

      Persistence in Christian Life

      Published in REVIVE, Dec. 2013

      Somebody has said it well, “It is not how you start the race, but how you end the race that wins you the prize.” There are many who start the race very well; there are only a few who become winners.  Paul specified, “Do you not know that in a race all the runners compete, but only one receives the prize? So run that you may obtain it” (1Cor.9:24). In other words, God wants us to run with a single, determined focus – to obtain the prize.

      “To persist” means “to continue firmly in spite of difficulty, opposition, or failure.” To persist means to keep moving ahead in spite of wind, fire, and rain. To persist means to continue, to be constant, to keep pressing forward. To persist means to never stop.

      VALUE OF PERSISTENCE

      Persistence Brings Answers to Prayer

      The Bible always connects prayer with persistence. Jesus promised, “Ask and it shall be given unto you, seek and you shall find, knock and it shall be opened unto you.” In the original language, the sense of the verse is “Keep on asking and it shall be given unto you, keep on seeking and you shall find, keep and knocking and it shall be opened unto you.” Jesus Himself persisted in prayer for long hours, even whole nights at times. He taught through parables that one must not give up or lose heart when praying, but must keep on persisting in prayer. In the Parable of the Widow and the Unjust Judge, He demonstrated that how even an unjust judge was moved to action when the widow kept persisting at his door (Luke 18:1-8). He mentioned that a friend would get up in the middle of the night to help his friend with whatever he asks, because he persisted. In fact, He observed that though not because of the friendship, he would rise up and give whatever the friend needed because of his friend’s persistence (Luke 11:8, NKJV). Many saints fail to obtain answers to their prayers because they fail to persist. They persist till a point but give up just before the answer would come. Isn’t it silly to destroy the eggs under incubation just because we aren’t able to see any change on the external? Many abort a dream out of impatience in face of the invisible. But, if one persisted, the invisible would break through the shell in the fullness of time. Persistence brings answers to prayer; therefore, the Bible exhorts us to never stop praying (1Thess.5:17, NLT). When the Church persisted single-mindedly in prayer in the Upper Room, God poured down His Holy Spirit; when they prayed without ceasing for Peter, God broke through the gates of the prison and set him free (Acts 12:5). God answers prayers. God is ready to answer persistent prayers.

      Persistence Inherits the Promises of God

      Hebrews 6:12 instructs us to not be sluggish, but become imitators of those who through faith and patience inherit the promises of God.

      Imagine a man dying in abject poverty while a cheque of one lakh rupees lies rumpled in his pocket. Imagine he had an infinite number of such promissory papers that have not been activated because they were never processed through the bank. Perhaps, he didn’t know anything about their value; perhaps, he was just sluggish to walk down to the bank.

      Sadly, that is the condition of many Christians. They either have false views about God’s will for their lives and so live in abject fruitlessness or have become too sluggish to press on in godly diligence to obtain all that God wants to entrust them with in order to display His power in their lives. One reason is because they aren’t transformed by the renewing of the mind by submitting to the pure Word of God.

      God’s will is revealed in His promises; He has given us His promises because He loves us and wants us to inherit them. However, as somebody put it, He can’t force the blessings down our throat. We are called joint-heirs with Christ, which means that our signature (faith) and receiving (persistence) is required. Some Christians are only a little better off than the monks who lived in caves or sat on poles for years because they believed that was God’s will for their lives. It’s a sad condition to attempt self-mortification through carnal means when the Bible declares that it is only through the Holy Spirit that we can mortify the deeds of the body (Romans 8:13). God’s promises touch the whole man – body, soul, and spirit (3John 1:2; 2Cor.7:1). They are sufficient for us to live a godly life in this earth (2Pet.1:3).

      Persistence brings Productivity – Fruitfulness

      The Bible encourages us to not get tired of doing good; because if we don’t lose heart, we will reap the reward in due time (Gal.6:9). No farmer gives up hope because he doesn’t see the harvest a week after he has sown the seed; he knows that the seed has its time. They say that the Chinese bamboos, when planted, display no sign of growth for many years; however, in the due time, they suddenly shoot up to gigantic height. All through those seemingly unproductive years, they had been taking deep roots under the soil. If we persist, we will see the fruit. The key is: taking root. There are times when God is just sharpening the axe, in order to use it at a specific point of time later.

      If one is continuing in sinful practices, one must immediately repent and turn around. Don’t waste time by allowing sin to waste your time. Replace sinful practices with godly and good actions, and every action sown will bear a reward.

      Persistence is Purpose-Oriented

      Paul asserted that he had reason for persisting in his course; he doesn’t run aimlessly, he doesn’t box as one beating the air (1Cor.9:26, RSV). He tells the Corinthian Christians “Do you not know that in a race all the runners compete, but only one receives the prize? So run that you may obtain it.” (1Cor.9:24). Purpose and goal define the meaningfulness of living. God has a course charted out for each one of us. Even before we were born, all that God has designed for us, to each day, was written in His book even before they came to be (Psalm 139:16). But, it is up to us to discover His will and persist in the calling, the goal that He has called us to. It is up to us to unravel His will in our lives. If we lose hope, our goals are being shattered; our foundations are crumbling; our vision, failing. But, if we know whom we have believed, then we will be persuaded that He is able to keep what we have committed to Him until that Day (2Tim.1:12). He will enlarge the ground beneath our feet to keep our feet from slipping (Psalm 18:36). So, we can run confidently forward towards the goal to obtain the prize. We do not need to fear when our hope is anchored in God. He Himself is keen to unravel His purposes in our life; for it is God who is working in us, giving us the desire and the power to do what pleases Him (Phil.2:13, NLT).

      Persistence Obtains the Prize

      Again, it is not how we start the race but how we finish it that matters. There are many who start out very well; but fall away during the course. There are many who enrol themselves for discipleship; there are only a few who graduate. God has called us to run the race with the determination to obtain the prize. God is only interested in giving the rewards to those who can multiply the five talents into five more and the two talents into two more. God is interested in our success, whether at job, at business, or at school. God wants us to keep winning all along the way. Winning occurs within the circle of discerning what God’s right will is. The crucifixion of Jesus was not defeat, but victory. The martyrdom of the saints was not defeat, but their victory; for they overcame the devil by the word of their testimony and the blood of the Lamb and they were not afraid to die for Christ – they persisted to the end (Rev.12:11). God wants us to run with the certainty of the knowledge of God and His will, and to run in order to ultimately obtain the imperishable crown (1Cor.9:25).

      OVERCOMING HINDRANCES TO PERSISTENCE

      Overcoming Every Besetting Sin by the Power of the Spirit

      Hebrews 12:1 instructs us to tear away every weight and besetting sin from our lives, those sins that easily ensnare us and keep us from moving forward. There are many Christians who have never seen much progress in their Christian life of decades because of some sin that has kept defeating them each time they were about to step forward. We can’t persist any further until we have let the Holy Spirit deal with that besetting sin – it might be a bad addiction, a sinful habit like lying and procrastination, a wrong attitude, or an evil craving; but, whatever it may be, it must go right away, right now. Somebody said that the best way to break a habit is to drop it. Peter J. Daniels, the Australian entrepreneur, tells us that the best way to develop a good habit is to keep it persistent for 100 days and never allow an exception against it – and the habit will lock in. In his psalm celebrating God’s blessing for persistence, David prays, “Examine me, GOD, from head to foot, order your battery of tests. Make sure I'm fit inside and out so I never lose sight of your love, but keep in step with you, never missing a beat.” (Psalm 26:2,3, MSG). Jesus told us to remove the plank in our eye before talking about the speck in someone else’s (Matt.7:2-5). Often, we make remarks about progress without any essential progress in our own lives; because, in our own personal life, we have been living defeated lives. Studying God’s Word pierces through the entrails of our inner world and rips us open before the light of God (Heb.4:12,13). Now, there is the good news for us in the New Testament. God has given us the earnest of the Spirit to help us in this very matter; because the Spirit searches all things and the Spirit knows the mind of God (2Cor.5:5; 1Cor.2:10; Rom.8:26,27). God helps us to grow internally strong in edification through praying and interceding in the Spirit, and the Spirit knows what to pray for when we’ve run out of all that we know or can do (Rom.8:26,27; 1Cor.14:2,4).

      Overcoming Every Negativity with Faith in God’s Word

      The Bible tells us that faith overcomes the world (1John 5:4). Now, let’s define negativity biblically. Anything that seems to be positive is not positive in the same manner that all that glitters is not gold. Any form of confidence is not sane; for self-confidence is also found in great amounts among the insane. Lucifer became the devil because of a false possibility-thinking (he thought it was possible to exalt his throne above God). Biblically speaking, faith is that which walks in the lustrous path of God’s Word; negativity is that which walks in darkness. Anything that is not illuminated by the Word of God is negativity. The children of Israel persisted till the borders of Canaan, but failed to get in because of negativity. Their negativity soon erupted in complaining, grumbling, self-pitying, lusting, frustration, and rebellion: the end result, destruction. The Bible says that God destroyed them because they didn’t have faith (Jude 1:5). He saved them out of Egypt, of course, but destroyed them in the wilderness. They never got into the Promised Land because they didn’t mix God’s good news with personal faith (Heb. 4:2). We must bring every thought and false (fear instilling, vile) imagination captive to the feet of Jesus (2Cor.10:5). We must get out of negative company (friends, movies, books, music, etc) and get into faith company; for God has called us out of darkness into His marvellous light, so that we may walk in the light as He is in the light and we may have fellowship one with another (1John 1:7).

      Persistence finds answers to prayer, brings forth fruit, fulfils God’s plan, and wins every battle. But, there is a price to pay, there is pain involved, there are things to lose; but there are also greater things to gain and a greater joy more satisfying than all. So, let’s persist in order to obtain the crown.

      Tuesday, December 10, 2013

      The Good Samaritan

      The Levite and the priest were so concerned about church service that they left the wounded man unattended. The Good Samaritan gave all he had to save the man in need. Jesus wants us to know that a heartless man is a neighbor of nobody - a stranger to both God and man. But the Good Samaritan who might have never preached a sermon is the one whose story God Himself shares with us to change our hearts.

      Sunday, December 1, 2013

      The Cross

      THE CROSS

      Where
      His body was broken to unite us with God
      He suffered the most extreme deprivation to grant us sufficiency in Himself
      He met a finite end to become the root of our infinite destiny
      He wore the perishable to cloth us with the imperishable
      He experienced the here to lead us into the beyond

      Here
      Plurality was reconciled with Unity
      Contingency found sufficiency in Necessity
      Finitude found completion in Infinity
      Change was absorbed into Immutability
      Immanence was introduced to Transcendence