determine life's
course; preference is not God.
Another
man prefers stealing to working — it is easier. What shall he
do? Shall he follow his preference? Not if he wants to please God
(Eph. 4:28) — and stay out of jail. A buddy has a real taste for
beer. It smells good to him. His mouth waters at the thought of a
cold Lone Star. And he really enjoys the way he feels after a few
bottles. He centers his life around drinking — and his bumper
sticker reads, IF IT FEELS GOOD, DO IT. What shall he do? I doubt
he will suddenly detest beer, but he will have to change his
practice to go to heaven. You see, good morals are not the product
of personal preference.
A
"church of your choice" is just another sect of this
religion of preference. The defense of this religion is in
arguments like "the people are so nice and friendly" and
"the preaching makes me feel so good." No matter if it
is God's church or if the doctrines and practices agree with
truth. Another devotee comments, "I like a piano..."
Well, I like an organ better, but what does God want? His
preference prevails, does it not?
Preference
is a significant part of what Paul calls "will worship"
(Col. 2:23). Jeremiah described it by saying people "love to
have it so" (Jer. 5:31). But remember: Christians live
according to God's preference — even when his will is contrary
to our own preference.
Joe Fitch, San Antonio, TX