John, Perhaps the speaker I heard (on the radio) was Ravi Zaccharias. Izzy

 


From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of ShieldsFamily
Sent: Monday, March 22, 2004 10:54 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [TruthTalk] the conscience

 

John,  What do you mean by “reestablished”? Do you mean that someone initially had a conscience, and then it went away, and now you want it reestablish it? Seems like I heard of a Christian speaker who addressed a room full of college students who were in favor of abortion.  Nothing he said could dissuade them. Finally he explained to them that they all had a God-given conscience, explained what it was, and then he had them all get quiet and consult their conscience.  Then when he asked them again if they believed it was right to commit abortion, every one of them said their conscience told them it was wrong.  Did anyone on TT hear that?  Izzy

 


From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, March 22, 2004 10:42 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [TruthTalk] the conscience

 



Some thoughts on the conscience?   

I am beginning a process that will allow a research paper on the conscience.  As an avocation, I am still involved in pastoring --  as a pastoral counselor.  The biblical message has high regard for the conscience of man while modern psychology does not.  As a consequence, there is little or no secular research regarding the conscience.   

I am thinking that if we could understand just how the conscience is reestablished, we might have a tool of divine proportions that will assist in youth-at-risk interventions.    

I need ideas about the conscience and how those ideas relate to the biblical message.    If any of you are aware of research, especially Christian based research, relating to matters of the conscience, point me in that direction.    I, of course, will have little problem coming up with biblical references  --- so I do not scripture; rather, I will need interpretation or applications that are related to specific scripture.   

The conscience works with guilt and an internal moral code and only 'convicts" or is triggered when we violate that code . it works to keep us true to ourselves.   It never convicts, i.e.,  when we forget or fail  to do something that wrong or evil.   

In my life, it is interesting to observe my battle against cussing.    I am quite accomplished in this area of endeavor.   When I made  the decision to stop that practice (I am journeyman finish carpenter) I   (a)   told no one of my decision and (b) within three or four days of abstinence, felt the pangs of guilt on the first occasion of failure.   That guilt trigger was not because of social pressure because no one knew I had quit.   My conscience had been revived in this regard within hours of my decision and practice.   I just mention this to get some juices flowing out there in TT land.   


In Grace


John Smithson

  

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