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An Active God It's not that simple. If it were, everyone would be on the same sheet of music. The Kingdom is filled with good servants of God who don't see through your eyes, nor mine. It would take only minutes to find one with more intelligence, more education, and more commitment and faith than you or I -- and would agree completely with neither you nor I. If you are able to write off everyone's dispute with you as bad faith, don't read this; it will only infuriate you. For those able to laugh at the face in the mirror, read on. I can learn some things. I can learn that computers have never risen above the basic 8-bit byte in many ways. I can learn algebra and physics, though I tend to forget any formulae I don't use. My natural intellectual endowment puts these things within my reach. However, they don't grip my fascination at the deepest level. Thus, I never pursued a degree in either field. I can learn psychology, too. Not the theoretical kind, but the clinical kind. I've read the theories, of course. Most of it comes off as out of touch with reality, and seems to be asking the wrong questions. Clinical psychology really grabbed me. Knowing and understanding what is common in the human experience remains a fascination for me. I find it very gratifying that I can articulate in detail what most folks subconsciously regard as common sense. It's fascinating, if for no other reason, to understand myself. It's nice to be able to explain that's my interest because I am thoroughly introspective. Without introspection, human behavior would not be a study, but just one more annoyance, or a source for comedy. That interest is a powerful component of my general interest in biblical faith. My degree of interest in faith and Word are indicated by my commitment to vocational Christian ministry. You would rightly find it disconcerting if my ordination did not stand on such a powerful sense of calling. Too often have I known those regarding Christian vocation as yet another profession. I am willing to admit they may have their place in this world, but that place is not working alongside me. The radical difference should be obvious. They have material prosperity, job security, etc. I've spent precious few of my days employed in ministry jobs, but have never once thought of myself as anything else. That I am called is a conviction, not a decision. As I've said before in other places: *Opinions and beliefs you hold; convictions hold you.* My interest in clinical psychology only goes so far. It is subservient to my calling. It's only purpose is to inform my calling, my faith, my understanding of Scripture. My earliest exposure to clinical psychology made me a devotee of the Rosemead School (Bruce Narramore and company), which makes all things, especially psychology, the servant of Scripture. The Bible speaks of faith as a certainty not subject to the limits of human knowledge (Hebrews 11). In the same context it describes how Abraham got to know Jehovah. Not because Jehovah sat down and described the nature of His personality to Abraham, but Abraham came to certain unshakable conclusions about Him because of how God worked in his life. By the time he was called upon to sacrifice Isaac on the altar (11:17-19) he is said to have suffered none of the inner turmoil popularly portrayed, but went in faith that God would simply raise Isaac from the dead. From a clinical psychology point of view, this makes perfect sense. We know the human psyche is partly inherited and partly formed by circumstances. Nature sets boundaries; nurture builds character within them. Trauma can radically change what nurture has done, but only God can change nature. In spiritual re-birth, we note it is clearly the hand of God working the miracle all mankind theoretically could have. It is an inexplicable change of nature, though it brings also a host of predictable changes which are but the other side of one's inherited character framework. A critical element of faith is we learn to accept certain things in our lives as the hand of God at work. A process of character formation that is natural to all human life takes on wholly different connotations when Christ is on the throne. This is as it should be. We look to Our Lord for all things, but especially for the things we cannot control. A very basic valid assumption is that life now has a purpose. Each of us walks our own path with Christ. It is not possible for any two of us to experience Him exactly the same, though it is possible to arrive at the same convictions. Without that, no church could exist. We could probably make ourselves work with just about anybody for a limited time, but sharing hearts with a complete alien is not possible. Something has to bridge the distance, first, making them less alien. It is well known that under the best circumstances, with the best intentions, that distance cannot be closed for some. Fellow Christians do not sin for declining to work with my quirky personality. The nature of church is that we share our lives in Christ so that our cumulative knowledge improves our understanding of Him. It matters not that we all read the same Bible, in the same language, even if we could approximate our respective levels and types of education. I will seize upon one passage as particularly meaningful, and you another. That is how the Word comes to life for us. By my talents and calling I may be able to bring to life for you my experience, and you can absorb a certain amount of it. You may do the same for me. Just as the Word did not arise from a cultural-historical vacuum, nor can it live in a spiritual vacuum. That is, ink on paper does nothing; meaning in the heart bursts aflame with the power of the God who left it for us. Satan quoting the Word, even in context, is mere noise. A nobody living the Word can change anything God desires. That one's life is a quotation of the Word. It would be easy to make a false faith of mere experience. Including the whole of Christian history serves only to make that false faith ponderous. It's also easy to make a false faith by legalism, making the Book a weapon of oppression. The Sword of the Spirit cuts first the heart of him who would wield it. Swords do not swing themselves; they must be handled, and no two handles them precisely the same. As faith cannot be separated from works, so the Bible cannot be separated from experience. The Word of God -- Christ -- lives on earth only in those who follow Him, as is His plan. That the experience of so many varies, making things rather muddy, has no bearing on that. Indeed, it is surely intentional. Were it simply a matter of reading the Good Book, we would all be clones. There would also be no need of faith. If there is nothing in the whole to make the human mind harbor some vestige of doubt, then salvation would not be from the miracle hand of God. Nor would the working of His people in loving fellowship be the miracle it now is. With no barriers to cross, what need is there of love? Only human religion demands uniformity of expression, or expects none at all. The Word must become flesh to be knowable. That knowledge cannot be absolute so long as we live in this fallen world. Fortunate we are that so very much of it is easily agreed upon. When a common understanding of something in the Word is defied by a very real experience of God's power, we must each decide for ourselves whether to give weight to either side of the conflict, or even to let it remain conflicted. Peter struggled with the vision of non-kosher food from Heaven. We cannot decide the answer for others. God is sovereign, and none of is Him. Ed Hurst ----------- A Bible Site -- http://webs.tconline.net/softedges/ Linux & Unix Help -- http://ed.asisaid.com/ Blog -- http://ed.asisaid.com/blog/
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