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While
God's thoughts and ways are not ours, we can still become
partakers of the divine nature (2 Pet. 1:4). In fact, an important
part of our growing-up in Christ (Eph. 4:13) lies in the
development of our ability to see and evaluate things from God's
point of view; to acquire the Divine perspective. That means the
capacity to view things in their true relations and according to
their relative importance. And that, in turn, requires a
recognition of an ultimate and unchanging standard of right beyond
which there is no appeal. The word of God is that standard; it is
the revelation of the Divine viewpoint (2 Tim. 3:16; Rom. 1:16,17)
and the means whereby we acquire it.
Consequently,
as we hear, learn, and accept gospel truth we come to faith (Rom.
10:17) and, thus, to the Saviour (Jn. 6:45) and salvation. To walk
by faith (2 Cor. 5:7) is to live with the Divine perspective; to
allow Truth to flavor every facet of life. It is not the Bible in
the hand or on the shelf that counts, but the Bible in the heart
and mind (Heb. 10:16). That's the only thing that can produce
within us the mind of Christ (Phil. 2:5); it's the only way we can
become spiritually minded (Rom. 8:6). Otherwise, we remain without
faith, carnally minded, making our judgments and evaluations from
the human viewpoint, and, like the Gentiles of old, walk in the
vanity of the mind, darkened in understanding, and alienated from
the life of God (Eph. 4:17, 18). This is the problem afflicting
our world today and if such sinners are changed, it will be a
change that begins from within; in the mind.
Therefore,
in vain do sinners wait for God to favor them with a "Holy
Ghost
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experience"; in vain do they appeal to
their feelings as evidence of salvation; and in vain do we imagine
that a few external changes indicate true conversion. In vain do
we devise ways and means to convert sinners and edify saints by
appealing to their carnal nature. The human viewpoint conceives of
building up the church through bus ministries,
"fellowship" halls, "Family Life Centers," and
social activities. Every such effort is a reflection on the
sufficiency of the gospel of Christ — if not an outright apology
for it. The gospel is still powerful enough to save every
sinner in this world; it is still able to build us up into
what God wants us to be and to give us that eternal inheritance!
The desperate need of our day is for men of conviction; men who
will place their faith in God and His word and quit looking to the
devices and innovations of "Egypt" for their help (2 Kgs.
18:21).
Even
from the beginning, many did not see Jesus' teaching as making
much sense. "Blessed are the poor in spirit"? Blessed
are the meek, the mourners, the persecuted?? How ridiculous! —
from the human point of view. So is going the second mile, loving
your enemies, and turning the other cheek. No wonder they were
"astonished at his teaching" (Matt. 7:28). Some still
are. They are the ones who say, "I don't see why...",
or, "What difference does it make...?" By such reasoning
do men walk in the vanity of their minds. Such minds need
transforming (Rom. 12:2); we all need the divine perspective.
Dan S. Shipley
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