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It's Not Just How You Say It, It's What You say
by Sarah Flashing, April 2008
There are some things that have
to be done, tasks that are necessary for living. Going to work,
feeding the family, doing the laundry...you see to it that these
things are done...you can't not do these things.
The scriptures provide many 'see to it's,' and one in particular is
found in Colossians 2:8-10:
See to it that no one takes you
captive by philosophy and empty deceit, according to human
tradition, according to elemental spirits of the world, and not
according to Christ. For in him the whole fullness of deity dwells
bodily, and you have been filled in him...
From this command is found many truths: 1) You are responsible to
protect your mind from godless beliefs 2) You have the ability to
know the difference between the godly and the godless 3) That to
walk in him (v. 6-7) involves our intellectual life 4) There is
nothing harmless about human-centered philosophy 5) The deity of
Christ is important in our commitment to him in that if he were not
fully God bodily, our focus would continue to be human-centered.
My point is that it is important to carefully scrutinize the content
of our faith, living out a systematic theology. One doctrine, one
teaching of Scripture, will have a relationship to other doctrines
and teachings in Scripture. Discovering those relationships will
assist you developing a consistent Christian worldview. As a proper
and effective witness for Jesus, we shouldn't be willing to live
with incoherence, and we should willingly analyze new teachings,
comparing them to what we already know to be true. This is the
spirit of being a Berean.
Is it possible to welcome aspects of the occult or the new age
movement into our life without directly contradicting the testimony
of Scripture? Is it possible to believe in Jesus yet deny the
resurrection as taught by liberal theologians and other cults? Take,
as another example, the gospel. Adopting a view of the gospel that
is entirely focused on curing social ills displaces the eternal
value of Christ's death and resurrection. What we believe about the
gospel matters as it pertains to knowing God's truth and
communicating it rightly. Without the Good News with eternal
implications, is there really anything good about the news?
In Paul's letter to the Colossians, he exhorts the readers to
behavior that is grounded in wisdom and speech that is always
gracious (3:5-6). Paul never taught that the content of what we
express should be compromised so as to avoid offense, rather he
taught that godliness should be expressed in love. To put it another
way: It's not just how you say it, it's what you say.
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