Tag Archives: truth

The Religion of Unreality | The Daily Declaration

Beware of the cultists who seek to wage war on what is real.

With an interactive website that deals with hot-potato issues all the time, there is never a shortage of comments that come in from all sorts of angry, easily offended, and ideologically unhinged folks who really hate most of what I have to say. Unfortunately, most of their comments are not suitable for public consumption, so they simply go straight into the bin.

One fellow – a typical Trump-hating secular leftist – went through his litany of complaints and agenda items. I was assured that climate change is absolutely real, and only stupid people deny this. Usually, such comments are all in capital letters (in other words, they are screaming at me), and they run with so many other loony left nostrums.

Thus, they will insist that men can become women and that men can have babies. And in the same breath, they will insist that babies are not real, living beings! Um, why do I find it difficult to take a word these folks have to say seriously? They are so far lost in la-la land, and in the cult of unreality, that trying to have a rational discussion with them is futile.

And, of course, so many of these folks also insist that science is on their side. Um, when a person actually believes a man can conceive, carry and give birth to a baby, they are so far away from science, biology, and reality, that you best avoid such folks like the plague. Such cultists can’t be reasoned with.

But because all truth is God’s truth, we can have non-Christians declaring truth about reality, at least in particular areas. The obvious example that comes to mind here is J. K. Rowling. Few have stood as bravely and resolutely against the lies and crapolla of the trans cult than her. For this, she has been heavily persecuted and hated on. But she is standing her ground, because she recognises the fundamental truths of human biology, and how sexual reality must trump whacko agendas.

In fact, sometimes non-Christians can even have a better grasp of reality – spiritual and otherwise – than some believers. Consider this immensely profound theological truth uttered by someone who was a pagan prostitute no less (Rahab!): “The Lord your God, He is God in the heavens above and on the earth beneath.” (Joshua 2:11)

That woman was grounded in reality. Indeed, that was no mere trite bumper sticker cliché that she shared, but a deeply rich proclamation of biblical truth. And this from someone raised in a pagan, polytheistic culture.

Reality and Truth

That which is true is basically that which is real. This is known as the correspondence theory of truth. Truth is that which corresponds to reality. A useful illustration of this is a good road map – or more likely today, a properly working GPS. If I live in Melbourne, and I want to drive to Sydney, but my map or GPS says I should head due south, I not only will not get to Sydney, but I will end up being baptised in Port Phillip Bay.

Indeed, reality always wins. To use another illustration, if I am chatting with some sceptic and he tries to tell me that everything is relative, or just a social construct, or some such thing, I can pretty easily challenge him. I can ask him to climb a nearby tall tree, and then take a leap of faith. Within seconds, he will discover that the law of gravity is no mere human construct but is based in reality.

As Canadian essayist David Solway wrote back in 2017:

“Reality is a formidable opponent. It never loses. Sometimes, the victory is immediate; in the political, cultural, and economic domains, it may take a while longer. In any human confrontation with the intractable facts of life, physical or historical, the outcome is never in doubt. Ignorance is a serious liability in any transaction with the real world. Denial is ultimately lethal.”

Going back a few years prior to this, Ayn Rand put it this way: “We can ignore reality, but we cannot ignore the consequences of ignoring reality.” Quite so. And going back a bit further, the always quotable G. K. Chesterton said this: “Men reform a thing by removing the reality from it, and then do not know what to do with the unreality that is left.”

All sorts of non-Christian worldviews and belief systems come crashing down when faced with rock-solid reality. Be it materialistic determinism, or rabid relativism, they cannot stand up in the real world. The one who claims that all truth is relative is not someone worth spending time with. As Roger Scruton once put it, “A writer who says that there are no truths, or that all truth is ‘merely relative’, is asking you not to believe him. So don’t.”

The late Christian apologist Francis Schaeffer was quite effective in pointing out the obvious tensions that exist between the real world (God’s world) and the presuppositions of non-Christians. As but one example, consider when he was speaking to a group of young people about universal truth and moral absolutes.

A fellow from India, steeped in his eastern worldview, of course challenged this. He went on about how this world is maya (an illusion), that good and evil are two sides of the same coin (yinyang), and so on. At this point, Schaeffer grabbed a kettle of boiling water and held it over the young man’s head. He promptly got up and walked out – his worldview was no match for the real world!

So truth and reality always go together. The converse is also true. When radical secular leftists insist on lies, untruths and deception, they increasingly find themselves living, not in the real world, but in unreality. At least they are forced to try to live in a world of illusion – but reality keeps creeping up and biting them in the backsides.

This is where the Christian can unashamedly stand up for the truth of the Gospel, since it is the truth about who we are, the world we live in, and where we are all headed. Several quotes can be shared here on this. In his book Time for Truth, Os Guinness put it this way:

Time for Truth — Os Guinness

Postmodern forms of relativism, skepticism, cynicism, and the like may appear to shatter traditional convictions to smithereens. But fears that such views are beyond argument are groundless. For no human being lives outside the reality common to us all. Whatever people may say the world is or who they are, it is what it is and they are who they are. Again, no argument is unarguable, but there are thoughts that can be thought but not lived. When all is said and done, reality always has the last word. The truth will always out. Standing up to falsehood, lies, and crazy ideas is never an easy task, but … it is far easier than the hardest task of all, becoming people of truth ourselves.

And again: “In the biblical view, truth is that which is ultimately, finally, and absolutely real, or the ‘way it is,’ and therefore is utterly trustworthy and dependable, being grounded in God’s own reality and truthfulness. … Belief in something doesn’t make it true; only truth makes a belief true. But without truth, a belief may be only speculation plus sincerity.”

J. I. Packer, in his now classic Knowing God, put it this way:

Truth in the Bible is a quality of persons primarily, and of propositions only secondarily: it means stability, reliability, firmness, trustworthiness, the quality of a person who is entirely self-consistent, sincere, realistic, undeceived. God is such a person: truth, in this sense, is His nature, and he has not got it in Him to be anything else. That is why he cannot lie (Titus 1:2; cf. Num. 23:19; 1 Sam. 15:29; Heb. 6:18). That is why His words to us are true, and cannot be other than true. They are the index of reality: they show us things as they really are, and as they will be for us in the future according to whether we heed God’s words to us or not.

Or, to put it much more succinctly, we can run with how Dallas Willard expressed it: “Truth is what enables us to deal with reality successfully.” The reason why more and more people today – at least in the West – seem unable to cope with life is because they are believing in and living lies – thus, they keep crashing headlong into reality. And it hurts.

And when the State, the media, education, and even pop culture are all working overtime in the attempt to dismantle truth and peddle falsehoods, then it can only get worse. Incisive thinkers such as George Orwell were well aware of these sad outcomes.

In his prescient and eerily prophetic novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, he discussed how the hero of the book, Winston Smith, is being tortured in the ‘Ministry of Love’. His interrogator is trying to ‘cure’ him of his belief that reality is found in anything other than what the State says it is. As he informs Smith:

You believe that reality is something objective, external, existing in its own right. You also believe that the nature of reality is self-evident. When you delude yourself into thinking that you see something, you assume that everyone else sees the same thing as you. But I tell you, Winston, that reality is not external. Reality exists in the human mind, and nowhere else. Not in the individual mind, which can make mistakes, and in any case soon perishes; only in the mind of the Party, which is collective and immortal.

And this: “The party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.” We are now living in just such an era, where we are being told we must no longer believe what we see and hear, but simply go along with whatever the State, or the ‘experts,’ or the activists and militants tell us to believe.

They are demanding that we join the cult of unreality – or else. Well, I, for one, refuse to go along with this game. I know that ultimate truth and reality lie outside of the State or the latest ideology.

As C. S. Lewis put it in The Magician’s Nephew: “For what you see and what you hear depends a good deal on where you are standing. It also depends on what sort of person you are.” The person standing on the rock of God’s truth, and committing himself to it, will be the one not easily swept away by lies, and joining the religion of unreality.

That is the sort of person we need to be.

___

Republished with thanks to CultureWatchImage courtesy of Adobe.

The post The Religion of Unreality appeared first on The Daily Declaration.

What Is Truth? | Ligonier Ministries

“What is truth?” So asked Pontius Pilate to the man who had just declared that He came into the world “to bear witness to the truth” (John 18:37–38). Far from a serious philosophical inquiry, Pilate’s rhetorical question reflected cynicism toward the very idea of truth. Nevertheless, the question itself is an important one that deserves careful reflection.

One thing is clear: the Bible places a high premium on truth. In both the Old and New Testaments, God’s people are enjoined to speak the truth (Ps. 15:2; Prov. 12:17; Zech. 8:16; Eph. 4:15, 25). The ninth commandment (Ex. 20:16) is expressly concerned with truthfulness, primarily in the context of a law court (Deut. 19:15–21) but also by extension in every sphere of life. As the rest of Scripture testifies, truth-telling is a moral duty, and honesty is a moral virtue. The pursuit of justice depends crucially on truthfulness, and thus the righteous are those who “love truth” (Zech. 8:16–19; see Amos 5:10). A sincere concern for truth should permeate our very thoughts (Phil. 4:8).

The primary words for “truth” in the Bible are emeth (Hebrew) and alētheia (Greek). Both can connote the accurate representation of facts (as in “tell the truth”) as well as the broader concepts of veracity, trustworthiness, sincerity, and authenticity. In more general terms, it can be helpful to distinguish between propositional and non-propositional senses of what it means for something to be “true.” The former applies to things such as beliefs and statements: a belief or statement is “true” if and only if it depicts things accurately or authentically. This propositional sense is particularly in view when it comes to testimony, whether human or divine (John 5:31–32; 21:24; Acts 10:42; 18:5; 20:23, 26; 26:25; 1 John 4:14; 5:6–12). In the non-propositional sense, things are “true” if they are genuine, trustworthy, or substantial (see Luke 16:11; 2 Cor. 12:12; Heb. 9:24). The Apostle John is particularly fond of this usage, regularly using terms such as “true light,” “true worshipers,” “true bread,” “true food,” “true drink,” “true vine,” and “true God” in his writings. In this latter sense, “true” is often used to point beyond the transient physical realm to deeper spiritual realities (John 6:32, 55; Heb. 8:2).

For the Christian, truth is far more than a philosophical concept. It is deeply theological because it is intimately tied to the nature of God and His self-revelation. The Lord is both “the true God” (Jer. 10:10; John 17:3; 1 Thess. 1:9; 1 John 5:20) and “the God of truth” (Ps. 31:5; Isa. 65:16) who cannot speak falsely (Num. 23:19; Titus 1:2). Jesus Christ is “the only Son from the Father,” and thus He is “full of grace and truth” (John 1:14)—indeed, He declares Himself to be the truth (John 14:6). The Holy Spirit, whom the Son sends as He returns to the Father, is “the Spirit of truth” (John 14:17; 15:26; 16:13; 1 John 5:6). Satan, in sharp contrast, is “a liar and the father of lies” (John 8:44–45).

Since God’s self-revelation necessarily reflects His character, the Word of God is entirely true. Indeed, it is not merely true (adjective) but truth (noun)—the implication being that God’s Word bears the very nature of truth (John 17:17; cf. Ps. 119:160; 2 Tim. 2:15; James 1:18). The essential truthfulness of God’s Word is bound up with its perfection and trustworthiness (2 Sam. 22:31; Ps. 12:6; 18:30; Prov. 30:5; Rev. 21:5; 22:6).

But what exactly is truth? Philosophers have debated whether truth should be understood as some kind of relationship to reality. According to realism, the commonsense view, a belief or statement is true if it accurately depicts or represents the world as it really is. Realism predominated until the turn of the twentieth century, when varieties of anti-realism arose, often in pursuit of a more consistent outworking of atheism. Anti-realism is closely associated with postmodernist movements, according to which “truth” is a human social construction to be created rather than discovered. It is safe to say that the Bible assumes a realist view of truth, and the great creeds and confessions of the church were forged by Christians who would have been baffled by any other stance.

Besides the debate over realism, various theories of truth have been proposed. Correspondence theories maintain that truth is a relationship between beliefs and facts: a belief is true if it “matches up” with the way things actually are. Coherence theories hold that truth is more like an internal feature of a belief system: a belief is true if it meshes consistently with one’s other beliefs or ideas. Pragmatic theories propose that truth is a function of the consequences of beliefs: a belief is true if holding that belief “makes a difference” in some useful or desirable way.

Christians understandably gravitate toward a correspondence theory of truth, yet the other two approaches contain some important insights. Following the lead of Augustine, some Christian thinkers have suggested that truths are ultimately divine thoughts. It is not merely that whatever God believes is true; rather, truth simply is whatever God believes. If this is correct, then we can understand how truth will manifest not only correspondence with reality, but also internal coherence (because of the orderliness of God’s mind) and pragmatic usefulness (because God’s thoughts are always wise and effective). On this view, when we apprehend truth, we are “thinking God’s thoughts after him” in the deepest sense—a truly awe-inspiring thought.

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FEBRUARY 13 | The Universal Standard

SCRIPTURE READING: 1 Timothy 2:4–6
KEY VERSE: 2 Timothy 2:25

In humility correcting those who are in opposition, if God perhaps will grant them repentance, so that they may know the truth.

Each age has no end of philosophies, reasoning, and belief systems that are presented as truth. To be substantiated, truth must meet three unyielding criteria:
First, truth must be universal in that it must apply to everyone: African, European, American, and Asian. There can be no cultural distinctions if it is unalterable truth.
Second, it must be uniform in that it must apply to everyone in the same manner. The criteria for applying ultimate truth cannot be differentiated to any degree. Truth must work equally for children and adults, for the well-educated and the unschooled.
Third, truth must be unending in that it must be eternally valid. What was truth for the fifth-century man must also be truth for the twentieth–first-century man.
Using those guidelines, only one body of truth can suffice—the Word of truth, the Bible. It applies to everyone, in the same manner, for every age.
Whether one is a conquistador or a computer operator, rich or poor, black or white, the Bible is the truth upon which everyone can build a lasting life. It is the wisdom for salvation, liberated living, and eternal security.
Are you building your life on the unalterable, all-sufficient truth of the Bible, or are you following the vain reasoning of man?

Lord, I reject the philosophy, reasoning, and belief systems of this world. Please apply the universal standard of Your Word of truth to my life.

Stanley, C. F. (2000). Into His presence (p. 46). Thomas Nelson Publishers.

FEBRUARY 11 | The Ultimate Escape Artist

SCRIPTURE READING: John 8:31–36
KEY VERSE: John 8:36

If the Son makes you free, you shall be free indeed.

Have you ever felt uncomfortable during church? Even in an age in which quaint hand fans have been replaced by powerful air-conditioning systems and wooden pews have been exchanged for upholstered ones, people can still feel terribly uncomfortable during a worship service. This discomfort has nothing to do with a church building’s amenities. Often, it has everything to do with the Holy Spirit’s conviction.
Sometimes God will use a statement by your pastor or a reading of Scripture to burn a truth into your heart. Often, the message can be uplifting. At other times, it can be a sobering reminder that you still have an issue with which you must obey and trust God.
If God has pricked your heart, deep down you will know the truth. And the longer you delay in dealing with the issue on God’s terms, the more difficult it will be to finally submit to God’s will.
There is an escape to the trap that the enemy has laid for you. Jesus said, “If you abide in My word, you are My disciples indeed. And you shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free” (John 8:31–32).
When you accepted Christ as your Savior, His Holy Spirit fully equipped you for freedom. Chains of bondage are a needless hazard for the believer. The truth can make you the ultimate escape artist.

Equip me for freedom through Your Word, O Lord. Break the chains that bind me so I can escape from captivity to sin.

Stanley, C. F. (2000). Into His presence (p. 44). Thomas Nelson Publishers.

55 More Key Quotes on Truth | CultureWatch

We must always affirm truth and its importance:

Truth matters. But we live in an age where objective truth is no longer seen as paramount. Instead, many people today speak in terms of ‘my truth’ as opposed to Truth with a capital T which is something everyone must submit to. The relativising of truth will always lead to trouble.

Several years ago I brought together 70 short but powerful quotes about the importance of truth: https://billmuehlenberg.com/2023/01/05/70-top-quotes-on-truth/

Here are 55 more quotes that can be added to that list, mainly penned by Christians:

?“I’d rather starve and rot and keep the privilege of speaking the truth than of holding all the offices that politics offers.” Henry Adams

“People prefer to believe what they prefer to be true.” Sir Francis Bacon

“Too often what passes for unity is really compromise. It is better to be divided by truth than united in error.” Bruce Bickel

“In his first letter the apostle John establishes three tests of genuine Christian profession: a truth test (believers must believe certain things to be true), a love test (believers must genuinely love one another), and an obedience test (believers must do what Jesus says).” D. A. Carson

“Truth can understand error, but error cannot understand truth.” G. K. Chesterton

“The whole truth is generally the ally of virtue; a half-truth is always the ally of some vice.” G. K. Chesterton

“If the standard changes, how can there be improvement, which implies a standard?” G. K. Chesterton

“Truth is sacred; and if you tell the truth too often nobody will believe it.” G. K. Chesterton

“A man was meant to be doubting himself but undoubting about the Truth. This has been exactly reversed. Nowadays the part of a man that a man does assert is exactly the part he ought not to assert – himself. The part he doubts is exactly the part he ought not to doubt – the Divine Reason.” G. K. Chesterton

“Truth is incontrovertible. Panic may resent it. Ignorance may deride it. Malice may distort it. But there it is.” Winston Churchill

“Without truth, grace can be deceptive and, without grace, truth can be debilitating.” Charles Colson

“The most scandalous thing that one can do today is make a truth claim.” Charles Colson

“All truth is given by revelation, either general or special, and it must be received by reason. Reason is the God-given means for discovering the truth that God discloses, whether in his world or his Word. While God wants to reach the heart with truth, he does not bypass the mind.” Jonathan Edwards

“We must have faith that truth is luminously powerful, so that if we bear witness to the truth about, say, marriage and the sanctity of human life—lovingly, civilly, but also passionately and with determination—and if we honor the truth in advancing our positions, then even many of our fellow citizens who now find themselves on the other side of these issues will come around.” Robert George

“Since the truth may not be what we would prefer. It is revealing that so many people today express approval by saying, ‘I’m comfortable with that,’ and disapproval by saying, ‘I’m not comfortable with that.’ Comfort is important when it comes to furniture and headphones, but it is irrelevant when it comes to truth.” Douglas Groothuis

“In the biblical view, truth is that which is ultimately, finally, and absolutely real, or the ‘way it is,’ and therefore is utterly trustworthy and dependable, being grounded in God’s own reality and truthfulness. . . . Belief in something doesn’t make it true; only truth makes a belief true. But without truth, a belief may be only speculation plus sincerity.” Os Guinness

“Contemporary evangelicals are no longer people of truth. Only rarely are they serious about theology. . . . With magnificent exceptions, evangelicals reflect this truth-decay and reinforce it for their own variety of reasons for discounting theology.” Os Guinness

“Like an eternal jack-in-the-box, the Christian truth will always spring back. No power on earth can finally keep it down, not even the power of Babylonian confusion and captivity. ‘At least five times,’ noted GK Chesterton, ‘the faith has to all appearances gone to the dogs. In each of these five cases, it was the dog that died’.” Os Guinness

“Nothing sharpens us better for resistance thinking and guards us from slipping into lazy, cowardly thinking than wrestling with truths that are unpopular.” Os Guinness

“It is error alone which needs the support of government. Truth can stand by itself.” President Thomas Jefferson

“You never know how much you really believe anything until its truth or falsehood becomes a matter of life and death to you.” C. S. Lewis

“There are a dozen views about everything until you know the answer. Then there’s never more than one.” C. S. Lewis

“Christianity is truth, and truth comes to the mind, and truth is intellectual. This is not sob stuff; this is not emotionalism. The very first thing that happens to people who become Christians is that they begin to think straighter; the highway of the mind is laid open, and they begin to see life as they have never seen it before. The Spirit comes and gives them a new understanding, and for the first time they have a whole view of life.” Martyn Lloyd-Jones

“Truth is truth, whether from the lips of Jesus or Balaam.” George MacDonald

“When truth is denied, therapy remains. The critical question shifts from ‘What is true?’ to ‘What makes me feel good?’” Al Mohler

“You may be entitled to your own opinion, but you are not entitled to your own facts.” Senator Patrick Moynihan

“The further a society drifts from the truth, the more it will hate those that speak it.” George Orwell

“The very concept of objective truth is fading out of the world. Lies will pass into history.” George Orwell

“The party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.” George Orwell

“When everything is moving at once, nothing appears to be moving, as on board ship. When everyone is moving towards depravity, no one seems to be moving, but if someone stops, he shows up the others who are rushing on, by acting as a fixed point.” Blaise Pascal

“It is better to be divided by Truth, than to be united in error. It is better to speak the Truth that hurts and then heals, than to speak a lie that will comfort and then kill. It is better to be hated for telling the Truth, than to be loved for telling a lie. It is better to stand alone with the Truth, than to be wrong with a multitude. Better to ultimately die with the Truth, than to live with a lie.” Adrian Rogers

“Controversy is an odious thing, but there are days when it is a positive duty. Peace is an excellent thing, but, like gold, it may be bought too dear. Unity is a mighty blessing, but it is worthless if it is purchased at the cost of truth. Once more I say, Open your eyes and be on your guard.” J. C. Ryle

“We should note this curious mark of our own age: the only absolute allowed is the absolute insistence that there is no absolute.” Francis Schaeffer

“Christianity is not a series of truths in the plural but, rather, truth spelled with a capital ‘T.’ Truth about total reality, not just about religious things. Christianity, biblical Christianity, is Truth concerning total reality – and the intellectual holding of that total Truth and then living in the light of that Truth.” Francis Schaeffer

“Those who boast of their open-mindedness are invariably those who love to search for truth but not to find it; they love the chase but not the capture; they admire the footprints of truth, but not catching up with it. They go through life talking about ‘widening the horizons of truth’ without ever seeing the sun. Truth brings with it grave responsibilities; that is why so many keep their hands open to welcome it but never close them to grasp it.” Fulton J Sheen

“It is the calling of great men, not so much to preach new truths, as to rescue from oblivion those old truths which it is our wisdom to remember and our weakness to forget.” English writer Sydney Smith

“Truth eludes us as soon as our concentration begins to flag, all the while leaving the illusion that we are continuing to pursue it.” Alexander Solzhenitsyn

“The simple step of a courageous individual is not to take part in the lie. One word of truth outweighs the world.” Alexander Solzhenitsyn

“When you want to help people, you tell them the truth. When you want to help yourself, you tell them what they want to hear.” Thomas Sowell

“Some things are believed because they are demonstrably true, but many other things are believed simply because they have been asserted repeatedly.” Thomas Sowell

“There can hardly be goodness in a man if he is not angered by sin; he who loves truth must hate every false way.” Charles Spurgeon

“I am quite sure that the best way to promote union is to promote truth. It will not do for us to be all united together by yielding to one another’s mistakes.” Charles Spurgeon

“Controversy for the truth against the errors of the age is, we feel more than ever convinced, the peculiar duty of the preacher.” Charles Spurgeon

“The only ‘sin’ left in America is the presumption that truth can be found, or worse, that you have found it.” Cal Thomas

“Truth is a glorious but hard mistress. She never consults, bargains or compromises.” A. W. Tozer

“The real truth is always subversive.” Dissident Czech novelist Zdenek Urbanek

“Those who claim that truth is a matter of perception and opinion are proclaiming this as more than a matter of perspective and opinion. They would like us to believe that this definition is objectively true, even as they deny the existence of objective truth.” J. Warner Wallace

“Truth will ultimately prevail where there is pains to bring it to light.” President George Washington

“Seize upon truth, where’er ‘tis found,
Among your friends, among your foes,
On Christian or on Heathen ground.
The flower’s divine, where’er it grows.
Neglect the prickles and assume the rose.” Isaac Watts

“When the consumer is allowed to be sovereign in Church, the Church is abdicating from its responsibility because it is allowing truth to become displace by spiritual and psychological desire.” David Wells

“Retailing help for felt needs is what the massive self-help industry is about. What distinguishes the Church from the industry is truth. It is truth about God and about ourselves that displaces the consumer from his or her current perch of sovereignty in the Church and places God in the place where he should be.” David Wells

“The desire that something be true, rather than the desire for truth itself, may well be the root of all evil. It is certainly the origin of all ideology, and ideology was the source of much of the evil in the past century.” Benjamin Wiker

“There is a certain logical exclusiveness built into knowledge as such, and it must be respected. This is due to the fact that knowledge involves truth. Truth by its very nature is exclusive in the following sense. If any belief is true, that by itself excludes the truth of any belief contrary or contradictory to it.” Dallas Willard

“Truth is what enables us to deal with reality successfully.” Dallas Willard

“Truth is the thread that separates true spirituality from false spirituality. Spirituality does not give relevance to life; rather, truth gives relevance to spirituality. You must not dare to get sidetracked with ceremony or legalism! Your spirituality must be born of the truth and lived out in grace!” Ravi Zacharias

[1983 words]

The post 55 More Key Quotes on Truth appeared first on CultureWatch.

What is Truth? | The Daily Declaration

truth

I think we all believe that we have a neural pathway in our brain that can detect truth from lies, a God-given instinct or sensory system like our sight, smell or taste.

However, I am increasingly concerned that this perspective is too simple. It seems to me that there are a series of filters that we consciously or subconsciously apply to the inputs of information that obscure or cancel some or all of the data. The result is that our powers of reason, problem-solving, and understanding are severely stunted or destroyed, and we don’t always know it.

The Filter of Limited Data

Imagine you are in prison, in solitary confinement, with no phone, or internet, but there is a guard, that over time, you learn to trust. You ask him, in hushed tones, could he bring you some news items from the newspaper when he brings you your meals.

The plan is all set. The guard cuts out one article each meal and folds it into a little square and places it under the main dish on his try. Simple and effective!

As time goes by, you begin to feel much more connected to the outside world now that you are reading your guard’s news selection. But the selection is so small, its size is a filter in itself. The guard may have been trying to be balanced but he couldn’t see his own bias, and his judgement about what he thinks would interest you was based merely on guesswork.

Then there is the paper that the guard selects from. Do you know the political leaning of the paper? Surely, you can’t make that call based on the insignificant sample you are being fed.

In regard to how much of the truth we are being told, I have been reading Terrorism in America by Bill Muehlenberg, Daily Declaration 3 January 2025. Muehlenberg references a website tracking all terrorism attacks, The Religion of Peace. A quote from the article states:

From December 21-27, 2024, alone there were 21 attacks in 10 countries killing 115 people and wounding 58 others. That included one suicide blast. This site makes it perfectly clear that political Islam is a threat to the entire world, and the life, teachings and example of the Prophet has paved the way for this murderous way of life.

I knew about the attacks in the USA on New Year’s Day, and in Germany on 21 December 2024, but I had no idea about the other 19 attacks. The selection filter had clearly been in play for me.

The Filter of Trust

Most of us have been brought up to have no reason to suspect the data we receive, even if we acknowledge that it is filtered and limited, we believe it is the whole truth and nothing but the truth.

In the West, we have grown up trusting those around us to always be either neutral or favourable. I think this is ingrained in our DNA, a bias towards trust. To question can be viewed as rude and even evil.

Our society, built as it is on the pillars of our Judeo-Christian heritage, has given us this legacy. But the Left’s agenda has seen a relentless assault on these foundations, to the extent that many parts of society can no longer be trusted to tell the truth. In light of this, I think we need to be extremely intentional about questioning everything we are told. We don’t need to be public with our doubts, but we should hold them close to our hearts until we have corroborating evidence to support or deny the original communication.

As a parent and a teacher, I have made it my habit to always hold back my judgment until I have heard both sides of a story. It is only human nature to paint a picture in the light of our own vantage point, which can’t see the whole picture.

The Filter of Conformity

As part of our herd instinct, very few of us are comfortable standing against the tide of public opinion. I think our natural initial processing of input data is to assess the consensus on the matter. When we have worked that out, we then manipulate our response to the data in the light of the most common perspective. We are naturally conformists.

To be accepted into a community or a family, we naturally put aside any questions we might have. We feel it is much more important for our wellbeing to be accepted by others, because the others in our community or family will be the ones, who in hard times will stand by us and support us. We dare not contradict them.

In recent years, the label “conspiracy theorist” has been bandied about as a pejorative. In the past, this was reserved for flat-earthers, but today, anything that flows against the norm is labelled as a conspiracy. Have we applied this filter, consciously or subconsciously, so that we have accepted a narrative that we are not really comfortable supporting, but for the sake of conformity we go along with anyway?

The Filter of Non-Thinking

Have you noticed that mainstream media no longer presents two or more sides of an issue? The item is always displayed in either a positive or a negative light. This forces us to conform with the presenter’s perspective; we don’t have to think, we don’t have to weigh up the pros and cons — it has already been decided for us. It is assumed we will accept the consensus.

On account of this style of presentation, I would argue that we are no longer being given cold hard facts from the mainstream news media, we are being given opinion dressed up as facts and presented as news.

It seems that the conformity filter aligns us, and then the acceptable narrative can easily be fed to us in one mouthful, which we swallow, unthinking, like babies in their highchairs.

Synonyms for non-thinking include: unthinking, unintelligent, unreasoning, irrational, nonrational and unreasonable. Some synonyms are even more insulting – mindless, dumb, dorky and brainless. We don’t want these labels, surely?

Society seems to have taken delight in taking away our personal responsibility for anything. We are now treated as unthinking subjects, who simply need to be told what to think and what to do.

Take, for example, the 29 July 2024 mass stabbing attack in Southport, UK. The way the authorities and media portrayed this incident seemed to me to indicate clearly that they were at pains to claim that the attack was not a terrorist incident, when all the evidence suggested it was.

Three months later, Nigel Farage gave us an update. The perpetrator was then being changed under the Biological Weapons Act for having dangerous chemicals in his home and under the Terrorism Act for downloading Al-Qaeda material from the internet. But for the horrific murders and injuries, he was still being treated as a non-terrorist!

The authorities and the media are treating us all as babies, incapable of thinking for ourselves. Are we conforming to this filter and allowing others to do all the thinking for us?

The Stockholm Syndrome Filter

The syndrome is derived from a bank robbery in Stockholm, Sweden. In August 1973, four Sveriges Kreditbank employees were held hostage in the bank vault for six days. During the confrontation, a seemingly incongruous link developed between captive and captor… (“Media Bias – Part 3: Sociology“)

Kati Morton has a great piece about this syndrome. In it, she explains that if we are nice to our captors, we believe we will increase our chances of living through it, even to the extent of refusing to testify against them in a court of law when we are set free, and the captors are still firmly behind bars.

It’s as if the situation of being in captivity subconsciously makes us look for ways to deescalate the tension to the extent that, for self-preservation, we even praise our captors and will seek to do anything to support them by being as submissive and obedient as we can.

We may not be in prison, but I believe we are in information captivity. Are we subconsciously so bound by the information we are being fed that we are made to feel bad for specific individuals, groups or ethnicities? As a result, we modify our behaviour to support them by our submission and obedience.

When I see what happens to those who take a stand against the acceptable narrative, I confess I think twice about how I would respond in similar circumstances. Take, for example, Lyle Shelton’s case. In 2020, he was sued for vilification for his comments regarding Drag Queen Story Time in public libraries. Vision Christian Radio gave us an update a year ago. Lyle was vindicated in court for standing up for children, and it was good news for all those who take a stand against the sexualisation of children.

It certainly feels like we are being forced to self-censor our words and actions for fear of offending specific individuals, groups or ethnicities. Is this not the Stockholm Syndrome filter in action?

The Filter of Denial

We have seen how our environment plays with our mind — how we can emerge with a completely opposite perspective from where we started. I believe that a further development from the Stockholm Syndrome is denial, when we refuse to accept the credibility of the facts presented to us.

Consider Pontious Pilate talking with Jesus at His trial.

Pilate therefore said to Him, “Are You a king then?”

Jesus answered, “You say rightly that I am a king. For this cause I was born, and for this cause I have come into the world, that I should bear witness to the truth. Everyone who is of the truth hears My voice.”

Pilate said to Him, “What is truth?” And when he had said this, he went out again to the Jews, and said to them, “I find no fault in Him at all.” (John 18: 37-38)

Pilate found no fault in Jesus, despite hearing Jesus’ confession to being a king. If he believed that to be true, he would surely have had him executed, but he was in denial, so he released him to the Jews.

Also, consider Pilate’s wife in this scenario.

“While he (Pilate) was sitting on the judgment seat, his wife sent him a message, saying, ‘Have nothing to do with that righteous Man; for last night I suffered greatly in a dream because of Him.’” (Matthew 27:19)

Here we see her acknowledging that Jesus was a righteous man. But if Pilot believed this, he would surely have not released him to the Jewish mob. Again, Pilate was in denial, this time of the truth conveyed to him by his wife. He was in double denial.

This is a most dramatic example, but a perfect illustration of how we can deny the truth when it is standing in front of us or when our spouse is speaking to us.

As a school principal, I often had parents in my office to discuss their child’s behaviour. It was common for them to be in complete denial that their own flesh and blood could have ever started a fight. The filter of denial is extremely strong, especially when the truth impacts us personally.

The Filter of Suppression of Truth

The intentional, carefully choreographed manipulation of facts to magnify one perspective and to hide any opposing voices.

The Great Barrington Declaration was one of the voices of concern about the accepted narrative in the response to the COVID-19 pandemic. A great number of eminent medical professionals shared their concerns and came together with this joint declaration. However, the establishment quickly mounted a campaign in the mainstream media to discredit this group as a small, deluded fringe who were not facing the facts.

The truth was suppressed, and the lie was promoted as the truth. As the years have gone by, the Great Barrington Declaration has proven to be correct on all counts. Not only had the establishment failed to pay any attention and change their polices, but the vast majority of the public also dismissed these concerns because they had been swayed by the effective suppression of the truth.

How do we know if the inconvenient truth is being suppressed? It is extremely hard; I would say, in some situations, it is impossible to detect, certainly in a timely manner. Therefore, all we can do is acknowledge that suppression is real, it has been used, and I am sure will be used again in the future. This filter is real.

The Filter of Mis- and Disinformation

The establishment has equipped themselves with two new weapons of mind control, the so-called misinformation and its sister, disinformation.

Consider all the issues that we might hope our government might address. Inflation, national security, antisemitism, to name but three. But late last year, they were seeking to legislate their Misinformation Bill. For a great background on this, read Kym Farnik’s “Fight for Freedom: Resist the ‘Misinformation’ Bill”. Yes, they were trying to control our freedom of thought and speech by legislation! Thankfully, the bill failed, for now.

If the authorities can label any view that opposes them as misinformation (false or inaccurate information, especially that which is deliberately intended to deceiveor disinformation (false information which is intended to mislead, especially propaganda issued by a government organisation to a rival power or the media), where does that leave us? Certainly not in a democracy.

We end up with no way of knowing the truth. We simply become unquestioning slaves who believe what we are told. We are incapable of thinking for ourselves, as we have no objective frame of reference.

What is Truth?

We might believe that we know the truth. If we do, let’s hang on to it with all our might.

Jesus said: I must work the works of Him who sent Me while it is day; the night is coming when no one can work. (John 9:4)

We can say the same; we must work the works of Him who sent us while we can, as the night is surely coming when no one can work.

While we still know the truth and can recognise the truth, we are walking in the light (1 John 1: 5-7). When we can no longer recognise the truth, that’s because we are in darkness. So, it behoves us to fight for the truth with all our might, as surely those who want to hide the truth from us are the captors who would have us live in darkness under their control.

Let me conclude with a personal story. Since my retirement in 2021 I have reignited my passion for 33.33 rpm vinyl LPs of classical music that I now play on my retro turntable and amplifier.

It thrills me to read the extensive notes on the disc sleaves as I listen to a famous orchestra, imagine their conductor, and listen to a soloist recorded in, say, 1960. The sounds have been imprinted into the tiny groves on the vinyl. I am not dependent on the internet to hear the music, but I do need electricity, I must confess.

I know, without a shadow of a doubt, that the recording can’t be manipulated or digitally altered. It is in my hands as I place it on the turntable. The recording I hear in my ears is the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth of what actually happened on that specific day, in that concert hall in 1960.

While there are many threats to the truth, internally and externally, I can look to my LP collection on the shelf in my office. There, I know for certain that each record will tell the truth when I play it.

___

Image courtesy of Adobe.

The post What is Truth? appeared first on The Daily Declaration.

Morning, November 28 | “For I rejoiced greatly, when the brethren came and testified of the truth that is in thee, even as thou walkest in the truth.”—3 John 3

The truth was in Gaius, and Gaius walked in the truth. If the first had not been the case, the second could never have occurred; and if the second could not be said of him the first would have been a mere pretence. Truth must enter into the soul, penetrate and saturate it, or else it is of no value. Doctrines held as a matter of creed are like bread in the hand, which ministers no nourishment to the frame; but doctrine accepted by the heart, is as food digested, which, by assimilation, sustains and builds up the body. In us truth must be a living force, an active energy, an indwelling reality, a part of the woof and warp of our being. If it be in us, we cannot henceforth part with it. A man may lose his garments or his limbs, but his inward parts are vital, and cannot be torn away without absolute loss of life. A Christian can die, but he cannot deny the truth. Now it is a rule of nature that the inward affects the outward, as light shines from the centre of the lantern through the glass: when, therefore, the truth is kindled within, its brightness soon beams forth in the outward life and conversation. It is said that the food of certain worms colours the cocoons of silk which they spin: and just so the nutriment upon which a man’s inward nature lives gives a tinge to every word and deed proceeding from him. To walk in the truth, imports a life of integrity, holiness, faithfulness, and simplicity—the natural product of those principles of truth which the gospel teaches, and which the Spirit of God enables us to receive. We may judge of the secrets of the soul by their manifestation in the man’s conversation. Be it ours to-day, O gracious Spirit, to be ruled and governed by thy divine authority, so that nothing false or sinful may reign in our hearts, lest it extend its malignant influence to our daily walk among men.1


1  Spurgeon, C. H. (1896). Morning and evening: Daily readings. Passmore & Alabaster.

OCTOBER 30 | WORSHIP IN SPIRIT AND TRUTH

God is a Spirit: and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth.

—John 4:24

Worship must be in spirit and in truth!

It must be the truth of God and the Spirit of God. When a person, yielding to God and believing the truth of God, is filled with the Spirit of God, even his faintest whisper will be worship.

The stark, tragic fact is that the efforts of many people to worship are unacceptable to God. Without an infusion of the Holy Spirit there can be no true worship. This is serious. It is hard for me to rest peacefully at night knowing that millions of cultured, religious people are merely carrying on church traditions and religious customs and they are not actually reaching God at all.

We must humbly worship God in spirit and in truth. Each one of us stands before the truth to be judged. Is it not now plain that the presence and the power of the Holy Spirit of God, far from being an optional luxury in our Christian lives, is a necessity? WHT046

Lord, fill me with Your Spirit as I worship You today. I don’t want just to carry on church traditions and religious customs. Send the Spirit today, that my worship might be more real. Amen. 1


1  Tozer, A. W., & Eggert, R. (2015). Tozer on the almighty god: a 365-day devotional. Moody Publishers.

Using Logic in Engaging the World | Juicy Ecumenism

Frank Turek, President of the apologetics ministry CrossExamine.org delivered two addresses at the Southern Evangelical Seminary National Apologetics Conference on October 11-12 concerning Christians and politics and why they must continue to engage politics, despite the desire of many to withdraw.

A major problem in engaging the contemporary world is that people today are conditioned to be guided by feelings rather than logic. Turek began by reviewing the basic logic we need to reason about anything. Christians, like everyone else is familiar with such statements as “you got your truth, I’ve got my truth,” and even “there is no truth.” But “if there is no truth, then Christianity can’t be true.” In fact, nothing can be said, since all claims are truth claims. Everyday activities like attending school or catching someone in a lie or mistake would be pointless.

In today’s public schools, students are taught what they should feel rather than how to think. “If you just follow your feelings, without any moral restraint … you’re going to end up in a very dark place.” Logic makes life safe enough to be livable. One of the most basic laws of logic is the law of noncontradiction. This simply says that an assertion and its denial cannot both be true “at the same time and in the same sense.” Attempts to violate noncontradiction are self-defeating, if they are true, then they are false. Denials of truth in general are claims to be truth, and thus necessarily false. Attempts to deny absolute truth must be absolutely true – even one exception shows absolute truth, as would the denial of absolute truth itself, which must be absolutely true if there are no exceptions., Thus the denial of absolute truth is disproven. “There’s no such thing as your truth, there’s no such thing as my truth, there’s just the truth,” Turek said.

Some expressions of religious pluralism (that all religions lead to the same deity) are also self-defeating. More than one exclusivist religion cannot be true. If instead all religions lead to the same ultimate truth, then this is true for everyone, rather than the individual religions. Turek rejected fideism, maintaining that “faith is trusting what you have good evidence to believe.”  Opposite of fideism is the claim that only science tells the truth. But this is a philosophical claim, not a claim “of science” but a claim “about science.” Further, he said that really “science doesn’t say anything, scientists do.”

Our psychology must not be allowed to govern reasoning, although it does in much modern thought. Psychology changes with moods, logic does not. For example, evidence shows that the safest means of transit is by airplane, Turek said, yet many people are afraid to fly.

Another contemporary fallacy is to appeal to the Bible to support the admonition “don’t judge.” Jesus indeed said not to judge (Matt. 7:1-2), but explained that what he really meant was that we will judged by the standard we use, and so should be careful to follow the rule we use for others. Elsewhere Jesus tells us to judge with righteous judgment (Jn. 7:24). And so Jesus’ admonition was a warning against hypocrisy, not a command not to judge others. Indeed, we have to make judgments simply to live. But we ought to make judgments according to the truth.

Turek next examined the common self-defeating claim “don’t impose your morals on me.” But this is itself a moral judgment. An “ought not” is being hypocritically imposed against other “ought nots.” Beyond that, there must be a moral system for human beings to live together. The question is “whose?” Without transcendent grounding, there is really no basis for objective morality. Essentially, advocates of non-transcendent morals are doing the same thing (imposing their morality) as they accuse traditional moralists of doing.

With this, Turek said, relativism and postmodernism are disposed of. Although dominant in universities, there can be “no truth that there is no truth.”

Other claims are not self-defeating, but “are still wrong.” The claim that “there are more than two genders” really presupposes that there are only two genders (or more correctly, sexes). A man who thinks he’s a woman must have some idea of what a man and a woman are to think that. To attempt a physical transition to the opposite sex assumes that maleness and femaleness are real and physically based. To show that there are only two sexes, one need only ask the question “what’s a woman?”

Another case of bad reasoning holds that one must approve of others’ desires in order to love them. But behaviors and inclinations cannot be incorporated into an individual’s humanity. If they were, the worst crimes would be legal, since there can be no adverse judgment (discrimination) against a person’s humanity. Loving parents do not necessarily approve of their children’s desires, in fact, the loving thing may be to correct them. Quoting I Cor. 13:6, he said that “love does not rejoice in wrong.” Pointing both to same-sex relationships and opposite-sex divorce, Turek said that we often tell people what they want to hear rather than having them mad at us. But the loving thing is to tell the truth, not doing so is unloving. Against the morality (really anti-morality) of self-determination, he said that families divided over these issues “should be.” Christ came to put family members against one another (Matt. 10:34-39). We should follow Christ, no matter “what your family thinks.” The same is true for other people in society who may disagree with divine precepts.

Sometimes people dismiss Christianity because many Christians are hypocrites. But in fact everyone, and especially Christians, are hypocrites in the sense that they affect a manor of living properly while violating the law written on our hearts. The hypocrisy of others is no excuse for disobeying moral precepts. “Just because I’m not true and beautiful doesn’t mean Jesus isn’t true and beautiful … we’re not the standard, Jesus is the standard.”

Contemporary society incentivizes people to remain silent against sin. Speaking against LGBT indoctrination may result in the loss of one’s job, taking a cell phone away from a 13-year-old may result in “World War III.”  “Sorry, life’s hard,” he said.

Specific issues on which Christians should engage in the political world will be reviewed in a subsequent article.

The post Using Logic in Engaging the World appeared first on Juicy Ecumenism.

Morning, October 12 | “I will meditate in thy precepts.”—Psalm 119:15

There are times when solitude is better than society, and silence is wiser than speech. We should be better Christians if we were more alone, waiting upon God, and gathering through meditation on his Word spiritual strength for labour in his service. We ought to muse upon the things of God, because we thus get the real nutriment out of them. Truth is something like the cluster of the vine: if we would have wine from it, we must bruise it; we must press and squeeze it many times. The bruiser’s feet must come down joyfully upon the bunches, or else the juice will not flow; and they must well tread the grapes, or else much of the precious liquid will be wasted. So we must, by meditation, tread the clusters of truth, if we would get the wine of consolation therefrom. Our bodies are not supported by merely taking food into the mouth, but the process which really supplies the muscle, and the nerve, and the sinew, and the bone, is the process of digestion. It is by digestion that the outward food becomes assimilated with the inner life. Our souls are not nourished merely by listening awhile to this, and then to that, and then to the other part of divine truth. Hearing, reading, marking, and learning, all require inwardly digesting to complete their usefulness, and the inward digesting of the truth lies for the most part in meditating upon it. Why is it that some Christians, although they hear many sermons, make but slow advances in the divine life? Because they neglect their closets, and do not thoughtfully meditate on God’s Word. They love the wheat, but they do not grind it; they would have the corn, but they will not go forth into the fields to gather it; the fruit hangs upon the tree, but they will not pluck it; the water flows at their feet, but they will not stoop to drink it. From such folly deliver us, O Lord, and be this our resolve this morning, “I will meditate in thy precepts.”1


1  Spurgeon, C. H. (1896). Morning and evening: Daily readings. Passmore & Alabaster.

October 10 | Searching for Truth

“Thy law is truth. … And all Thy commandments are truth. … The sum of Thy word is truth” (Ps. 119:142, 151, 160).

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Scripture is the source of divine truth.

It amazes me how people can spend so much time searching for truth but ignore the Bible. In his poem Miriam, John Greenleaf Whittier reflected on the same conundrum:

We search the world for truth. We cull

The good, the pure, the beautiful,

From graven stone and written scroll,

From all old flower-fields of the soul;

And, weary seekers of the best,

We come back laden from the quest,

To find that all the sages said

Is in the Book our mothers read.

God never intended for truth to be mysterious or unattainable. His Word is a repository of truth, containing every principle we need for life and thought.

But knowing truth begins with knowing God, who is its Author. First John 5:20 says, “We know that the Son of God has come, and has given us understanding, in order that we might know Him who is true, and we are in Him who is true, in His Son Jesus Christ. This is the true God and eternal life.”

The psalmist proclaimed, “The works of His hands are truth and justice; all His precepts are sure. They are upheld forever and ever; they are performed in truth and uprightness” (Ps. 111:7–8).

As Christians, we are those who walk in truth. That’s how Jesus described us when He prayed to the Father: “Sanctify them in the truth; Thy word is truth” (John 17:17). Similarly John said, “I have no greater joy than this, to hear of my children walking in the truth” (3 John 4). In contrast, unbelievers “suppress the truth in unrighteousness,” thus making themselves targets for the wrath of God (Rom. 1:18).

To love God is to love truth; to love truth is to love the Word. May you walk in the truth of God’s Word today and every day.

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Suggestions for Prayer: Thank God for the privilege of knowing Him and being able to walk in His truth.

For Further Study: How does Jesus describe the Holy Spirit in John 14:17, 15:26, and 16:13?1


1  MacArthur, J. F., Jr. (1993). Drawing Near—Daily Readings for a Deeper Faith (p. 296). Crossway Books.

A Distinguished Life | Alistair Begg Daily Devotional

“Daniel became distinguished above all the other high officials and satraps, because an excellent spirit was in him. And the king planned to set him over the whole kingdom. Then the high officials and the satraps sought to find a ground for complaint against Daniel with regard to the kingdom, but they could find no ground for complaint or any fault, because he was faithful, and no error or fault was found in him.”

Daniel 6:3–4

After being seized and taken away into captivity in Babylon, Daniel became part of a select group of outstanding young Israelite men who were chosen to be part of King Nebuchadnezzar’s court. Though he was taken into exile, given a different name, and distanced by many miles from familiarity and family, through it all Daniel purposed in his heart that he would not defile himself with the king’s food and drink (Daniel 1:12-16). He stood out as a man of integrity amid the moral decay of his time.

Daniel distinguished himself within the structure of the governments he served by the quality of his life. Over many years, his loyalty proved to be unquestionable. He was a man of consistency, which he displayed through a succession of kingdoms. He had an extraordinary capacity for facing and overcoming difficulties, as well as God-given wisdom which enabled him to provide counsel that would alter the course of human history.

While the governmental positions that Daniel occupied were susceptible to corruption, he distinguished himself by saying no to all kinds of dishonesty. He was neither negligent nor unethical, nor was there a gap between his public activities and his private life. He was blameless in the eyes of his fellow man. Even colleagues who were jealous and despised him because of his distinctiveness could find no ground for complaint.

Filled with envy, these officials eventually decided to plot against Daniel. They didn’t like his unswerving commitment to his God or the fact that he occupied a position of power. They couldn’t handle the way that he displayed through his life an unshakable conviction regarding the might and purity of God. Holy living often brings that kind of disdain. Daniel was framed not because he was a bad fellow but because he stood for truth. He loved what God loves, and he lived it out.

Is your life marked by a similar conviction? Do your actions declare the truth about your God? Are you prepared to diligently cultivate a passion for integrity? Are you more concerned with obeying God than with what others think of you? Jesus warned His followers that they would be reviled and would experience persecution for His sake (Matthew 5:11) even as they lived in a way that revealed and commended their Father (v 14-16). Live with the kind of devotion that Daniel had; be unequivocal in your commitment to love what God loves, and then live it out.

Going Deeper: 1 Peter 2:9–17

Devotional material is taken from the Truth For Life daily devotionals by Alistair Begg, published by The Good Book Company, thegoodbook.com. Used by Truth For Life with permission. Copyright © 2021, 2022, The Good Book Company.

https://www.truthforlife.org/devotionals/alistair-begg/10/7/2024/

October 5 | True Worship

The woman said to Him, “Sir, I perceive that You are a prophet. Our fathers worshiped in this mountain, and you people say that in Jerusalem is the place where men ought to worship.” Jesus said to her, “Woman, believe Me, an hour is coming when neither in this mountain nor in Jerusalem will you worship the Father. You worship what you do not know; we worship what we know, for salvation is from the Jews. But an hour is coming, and now is, when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth; for such people the Father seeks to be His worshipers.—John 4:19–23

Having been convicted of her sin and need for forgiveness, and having repented and agreed with Jesus’ indictment, the Samaritan woman wondered where she should go to meet God and seek His grace and salvation.

Jesus explains that under the new covenant, the place of worship is not the issue, but rather the nature of worship. “An hour is coming,” Jesus informed the woman, “and now is, when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth. “Spirit” does not refer to the Holy Spirit but the human spirit. Worship must be internal, not external—it must be from the heart. “Truth” calls for this heart worship to be consistent with what Scripture teaches and to be centered on Christ.

True worshipers are those who “worship the Father in spirit and truth.” It is “such people the Father seeks to be His worshipers” by sovereignly drawing them to Himself (6:44, 65). God has called you to worship Him. Make sure your worship is genuine.

ASK YOURSELF  
What is so empty and uninspiring about worship that fails to engage the heart, worship that is mouthed and measured rather than done like you mean it? Then why do we resort to it so often? Why are we duped into believing that the object of our distraction is more worthy then the rightful recipient of our praise?1   1  MacArthur, J. (2008). Daily readings from the life of Christ (p. 287). Moody Publishers.

JB Hixson: Destructive, Depraved Deceptions | Stand Up For The Truth Podcast

Dr. JB Hixson

Mary Danielsen chats with JB Hixson on the dangers of false teaching. It might be difficult to comprehend how those who are supposed to have the Holy Spirit Who guides us into all truth could ever assent to false teaching. Peter warns us in his 2nd epistle that “many will follow their destructive ways” and so that is a reality that must be accepted and learned from. Destructive doctrines by depraved teachers will have eternal consequences. Mankind is prone to being deceived ever since the fall, but how can the average believer guard their hearts with all diligence when there are so many doctrines – some demonic – vying for our attention? Are some just ignoring that still, small voice? Are believers too trusting of anyone who calls themselves a pastor? All this and more with JB to continue to equip the church for dark days. Dr. Hixson’s books can be purchased here.

Shameless plug for swag for our listeners/donors! https://www.redpillprints.com/stand-up-for-the-truth – Thanks for YOUR Support!

The post JB Hixson: Destructive, Depraved Deceptions appeared first on Stand Up For The Truth Podcast.

Speak Life, Not Condemnation | Alistair Begg Daily Devotional

“Judge not, and you will not be judged; condemn not, and you will not be condemned.”

Luke 6:37

The reason we sometimes assume we have the right to condemn another is that it appeals to our sinful nature. If we’re honest, the minute we acquire any position of leadership or authority, big or small, it’s shocking how quickly we are faced with the temptation to condemn rather than to show mercy.

We must remember that we are not qualified to condemn. Why? Because we cannot read another person’s heart. We are unable to assess someone else’s motives accurately. God alone can say, “I am he who searches mind and heart, and I will give to each of you according to your works” (Revelation 2:23). Since you and I are not God, we are not to condemn.

One of the ways we easily and often ignore Jesus’ command here is with our tongues; we pronounce condemnation by saying things that harm someone’s reputation. In Christian circles, we may even have clever ways to make our slander sound like a prayer request or a concern—but in truth, half the time we’re delighted to say it: “Did you hear about her? Do you know about him? Do you know why they did that?” The spirit of the Pharisee—of condemning others in order to show ourselves in a better light by comparison—is alive and well among believers.

Therefore, we must be exceptionally wary of how we use our words. Rather than using our mouths to condemn, we must ask the Holy Spirit to enable us to speak words of life. Before we open our mouths, we ought to heed the advice of the missionary Amy Carmichael and ask: Is what I’m about to say kind? Is it true? Is it necessary? Scripture is absolutely clear on this point. Indeed, the book of Proverbs teaches us that “a fool’s mouth is his ruin, and his lips are a snare to his soul,” but “he who is trustworthy in spirit keeps a thing covered” (Proverbs 18:7; 11:13).

We have in Jesus a Savior whose blood cleanses us from the sin of every careless word and every condemning comment—a Savior who forgives us from the sinful tendency that rises in our hearts to try to play a role which is His alone. In light of that, we need to repent daily of the sins of our lips and ask the Spirit for a renewed desire to make both the words of our mouths and the meditations of our hearts acceptable in our Father’s sight (Psalm 19:14).

Going Deeper: Luke 6:37–45

Devotional material is taken from the Truth For Life daily devotionals by Alistair Begg, published by The Good Book Company, thegoodbook.com. Used by Truth For Life with permission. Copyright © 2021, 2022, The Good Book Company.

https://www.truthforlife.org/devotionals/alistair-begg/9/24/2024/