Do you feel
good about yourself? Your relationship with God? Do you feel good about
those with whom you have spiritual fellowship? Do you have joy without
measure? A peace which passes understanding? Does a smile invariably
crease your face when you contemplate your eternal welfare? It does?
Good!...Now for the most important question. Upon what do you base all
of these positive emotions?
Hopefully,
you have a ready answer to this last question. The proper answer would
be, "From a study of God's word, I recognize that I have been obedient
to His will, and am a partaker of the blessings that are reserved for
His children." Now, you might not word it in exactly the same way, but
the point is that your good feelings, your emotions, are based upon an
intellectual recognition. You know you have been obedient to God. You
know that God has promised blessings to those who are obedient. You know
that God keeps His promises. Therefore you are happy. However, many
experience that same happiness without that intellectual foundation.
Emotions
are peculiar in that respect. You can be happy, sad, peaceful, worried,
etc., without a proper foundation. A mother can be worried about the
safety of her child, when in reality the child is perfectly safe. A city
can sleep peacefully in the supposed safety of its beds, not knowing an
earthquake is imminent. A follower of Mohammed can glory in his
certainty of an eternal reward, not knowing that salvation is to be
found only through Jesus
(cf. John 14:6).
An emotion is valid only if it is based on fact. Worry is appropriate
only if there is the potential of harm; a feeling of peacefulness only
if there is actual safety; spiritual joy only if a relationship with God
actually exists.
Herein
resides the problem with the emotionalism prevalent among religious
people today. Too many believe themselves saved, not because they have
the facts, but rather because they feel good about themselves. We see
that it would be unreasonable for a mother to fret about the safety of
her child when she sees and knows her child is safe. Why is it so many
can not see how unreasonable it is to base their salvation upon a
"feeling in my heart." There is a popular notion that the facts don't
matter. That we should stop emphasizing the scripture, and just love one
another. That we should emphasize the Man instead of the plan. That it
does not matter what you believe, so long as you are sincere. This is
simply not so.
Other
Articles by Stan Cox
Living Godly
Lives
Intellectual Arrogance
Microwave Religion
The Foundation of Spirituality -- Honesty
Hermeneutics and Silence
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