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Lance, I’m glad you shared this with
us. This is a good example of what I consider philosophy void of the true
gospel. I love philosophy, but not the void part which skews it into
error. The words below contain much truth. What they lack is the insight
one has on human behavior when viewed through the glasses of sin and it’s
effect on the “human spirit”. We are “formed” in
sin. The gospel is the good news that we can be set free from that bent
in and through Christ. Not just free from the eternal penalty of sin, but
free from sin—today, here
and now! That is the crucial element that I see is missing from Kruger and
other sin-blind philosophers. They mean well, but their “truth”
misses the mark like a rock skipped off the surface of a lake; it bounces
across the top w/o penetrating the depths. For example, let me tell you about a
private conversation between my son and myself. He told me about three
recent problems that had occurred at his squadron recently, a couple of which
caused career problems for the people involved and one involved deaths. I
can’t go into the specifics because of that. But it had left him
sad and disappointed to see what seemed like disastrous consequences for
seemingly minor infractions. I said, “If you look at each one of
those incidences you will see that if the people involved had simply obeyed God
none of them would have happened. One involved excessive consumption of
alcohol, one involved taking a casual attitude about sexual “joking
around” in the office, and one involved disrespect to authority.”
He thought about it and and he agreed that this was very true. If each
person involved had been walking in an attitude of submission to God’s
Word, instead of walking casually in the ways of the world, it would have saved
a lot of grief for a lot of people. If we saw God’s commandments
against sin as real daily helps to protect us from the immediate and eternal
penalties of sin we could never write philosophies about “the human
spirit being formed” etc, without including sin’s effect as the
most important aspect. Do you see my point of view? Or are you
going to cling doggedly to the opinion that I am hopelessly in bondage to old
fashioned ideas? Izzy From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Lance Muir 'Watch over your hearts with all diligence for from it flow
the springs of life.' Proverbs 4:23 We live from our heart. The part of us that drives and organizes our life is not the
physical. This remains true even if we deny it. You have a spirit within you
and it has been formed. This is true of everyone. The human spirit is an inescapable fundamental aspect of
every human being; and it takes on whichever character it has from the
experiences and the choices that we have lived through or made in our past.
That is what it means for it to be 'formed'. Our life and how we find the world now and in the future is,
almost totally, a simple result of what we have become in the depths of our
being--in our spirit, will, or heart. From there we see our world and interpret
reality. From there we make our choices, break forth into action, try to change
our world. We live from our depths--most of which we do not understand. "Do you mean," some will say, "that the
individual and collective disasters that fill the human scene are not imposed
upon us from without? That they do not just happen to us?" Yes. That is what I mean. In today's world, famine, war, and
epidemic are almost totally the outcome of human choices, which are expressions
of the human spirit. Though various qualifications and explanations are
appropriate, that is in general true. Individual disasters, too, very largely follow upon human
choices, our own or those of others. And whether or not they do in a particular
case, the situations in which we find ourselves are never as important as our
responses to them, which come from our 'spiritual' side. A carefully cultivated
heart will, assisted by the Grace of God, foresse, forestall, or transform most
of the painful situations before which others stand like helpless children
saying "Why?" Accordingly, the greatest need you and I have--the greatest
need of collective humanity--is renovation of our heart. That spiritual place
within us from which outlook, choices, and actions come has been formed by a
world away from God. Now it must be transformed. |
- [TruthTalk] Re:The 'Beyond Within' and The Way of Jesus Lance Muir
- Re: [TruthTalk] Re:The 'Beyond Within' and The Way of... ShieldsFamily
- Re: [TruthTalk] Re:The 'Beyond Within' and The Wa... Lance Muir
- RE: [TruthTalk] Re:The 'Beyond Within' and Th... ShieldsFamily
- Re: [TruthTalk] Re:The 'Beyond Within' and The Way of... Knpraise
- Re: [TruthTalk] Re:The 'Beyond Within' and The Way of... Judy Taylor
- RE: [TruthTalk] Re:The 'Beyond Within' and The Way of... Hughes Jonathan
- RE: [TruthTalk] Re:The 'Beyond Within' and The Wa... ShieldsFamily
- RE: [TruthTalk] Re:The 'Beyond Within' and The Way of... Hughes Jonathan
- RE: [TruthTalk] Re:The 'Beyond Within' and The Wa... ShieldsFamily
- Re: [TruthTalk] Re:The 'Beyond Within' and The Wa... David Miller
- RE: [TruthTalk] Re:The 'Beyond Within' and The Way of... Hughes Jonathan

