It is safe to say that there
is not a person living who has not had doubts in the realm of religion.
Conviction or faith is described in the Bible as "evidence of things not
seen." Obviously, if one is unfamiliar with available evidence on a
subject, he will be doubtful concerning it. Thus we see one of the
causes of doubt: Ignorance.
Doubts and their antecedent
ignorance are not wrong in themselves. On the contrary, if dealt with
properly, they can be the occasion of leading to greater growth and
knowledge. As is too often the case, however, the doubter mishandles his
doubts which then lead to his own harm as well as that of others. It
would appear, then, that it is of the greatest importance for us to know
how to deal with doubts when they arise. When some doubt is raised in
our mind concerning a doctrine or religious practice, there are three
courses of action usually open to us.
1. We can harbor that doubt
and constantly look for things with which to nourish it until it makes
complete ruin of our faith.
2. We can express such doubts
publicly and thus run the risk of creating further doubts in the minds
of others.
3. Or, we can engage in
diligent investigation of the subject and resolve or confirm the doubt.
Unfortunately, too many
doubters want to expose their doubts before anybody and everybody. Some
do this in writing, from the pulpit, and in Bible classes. It is one
thing to have strong convictions on something and stating such
convictions publicly. It is quite another thing to entertain doubts and
express such before babes in Christ, the unconverted, or outright
enemies of truth. When we have doubts, don't spill them all over
everybody else and thus run the risk of hindering the free course of
truth in other people.
Obviously, one should never
leave a doubt alone. Doubts are like a leaven that, left unattended,
will eventually permeate and corrupt all of one's convictions. Doubts
indicate insufficient evidence to bring real conviction, either because
such evidence does not exist or because the doubter is unfamiliar with
it. So, let's not harbor a doubt and foster it with continued ignorance.
Get after it! Face it squarely and do something about it! Dig the
information out of the Bible for ourselves. Or study the matter with
ones who have more knowledge of and no doubts about the subject. Find
out wherein their confidence lies. Don't just take their word for it.
Require them to point out the evidence from God's word.
One cannot live happily in
doubt. Eminently more important, one cannot serve God acceptably with a
doubtful mind (Romans 14:23). So, when doubts arise (and
they will), face them for what they really are: signals indicating that
our knowledge is deficient, then get busy and investigate. By so facing
our doubts we will not only resolve them, but will find ourselves
growing more and more in the knowledge of Jesus Christ.
Other Articles by Bob West
Why Don't We Tithe?
Harboring Grudges
The Power of a Pawn
Paper Bait -- Paper Mouse