Mental
Attitude Dynamics
YOU ARE WHAT YOU THINK
God,
who created the human mind, also holds the key to man’s mind; that key is
omniscience (Heb. 4:13). He reads our minds like an open book! God allows us
freedom of thought, as well as freedom of choice; however, He holds us
responsible for what we think or choose, so our thinking is all-important.
For as he thinketh in his heart, so is he .
. . (Prov. 23:7).
You
may be judged by your overt behavior, but YOU ARE WHAT YOU THINK! You are not
what you do! Your mental attitude deter- mines, motivates and influences your
behavior and actions. The Bible always relates the thought pattern to the right
lobe of the mentality of the soul. The right lobe is the dominant lobe of the
soul, designated in the Greek by the word KARDIA (translated “heart” in the English) and in the
Hebrew by the word LEB, in
contrast to the left or perceptive lobe, NOUS (translated “mind”), which is the staging area
for knowledge. The right lobe has four areas: frame of reference with a memory
center — the final storage place for all knowledge and the basis for learning
new knowledge; conscience — the norms and standards; vocabulary the basis for
forming categories; and the viewpoint — use of vocabulary, conscience and frame
of reference.
Our
objective will be to analyze certain passages of Scripture which teach that our
approach to life, the effectiveness of our soul function, and even our physical
attractiveness and health are dependent upon what we think.
THE CORRELATION BETWEEN THE MIND AND THE
BODY
There
is a great deal of truth in the common expression, “I’m worried sick.” Medical
science is becoming increasingly aware of the connection between physical
health and the thought pattern. Many illnesses are a direct result of the
psychoses of the mind. In order that we might understand the correlation
between what we think and how we feel, a few moments should be spent on the
subject of psychosomatics. The word itself is made up of two Greek words: PSUCHE,
meaning “soul,” with emphasis on mentality, and SOMA, meaning “body.”
The
concept of psychosomatics is very simple. Any mental attitude of fear, worry or
anxiety — any continuous mental tension — will eventually overflow and affect
the body. This frequently results in unusual behavior. For example, it was
discovered during the Korean War that many of our American boys died in prison
camps from what we all “give-up-itis.” After this mental attitude was
perpetuated over a few days, an individual would simply fold up, lie down on
the ground and say, “Leave me alone.” If he were left alone for two or three
days, he would be dead! Our physicians in the prison camps reported a
substantial number of these cases and diagnosed the cause of their deaths as
due to a mental attitude of hopelessness and despair.
It is
also becoming increasingly common for people to suffer from such ailments as
eczema, skin rashes, warts, allergies, asthma, hyper- tension, goiter, ulcers
and many other disorders, simply from the overflow of the pressures from the
mind into the body. Interestingly enough, a change of mental attitude — a
stabilizing of the mentality — results in the removal of the symptoms. I am not
trying to explain the cause of a sudden appearance of some rash on the
epidermis and its equally sudden disappearance as being psychosomatic in YOUR
case. I am saying that at last medical science has discovered what has been known
in Scripture for a long time — that our thought processes are related to our
physiological problems.
This
brings us to an issue we must face as believers in the Lord Jesus Christ. When
the right lobe of the believer receives divine viewpoint through Bible
doctrine, the result is inner peace, a relaxed mental attitude, stability and
inner happiness. But when the right lobe is crammed full of human viewpoint, or
when mental attitude sins, such as pride, jealousy, bitterness, vindictiveness,
implacability, guilt complex, hatred, etc., dominate the mentality of the soul,
the result is inevitably self-induced misery. Mental attitude sins, plus the
absence of Bible doctrine, lead to human viewpoint and can only produce
disorientation to grace and agony of soul.
THE TWO VIEWPOINTS OF LIFE
Let the wicked forsake his way, and the
unrighteous man his thoughts: and let him return unto the LORD, and
he will have mercy upon him; and to our God, for he will abundantly pardon
(Isa. 55:7).
For my thoughts are not your
thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, saith the LORD (Isa. 55:8).
For as the heavens are higher than the
earth, so are my ways higher than your ways, and my thoughts than your thoughts
(Isa. 55:9).
While
there are many different mental attitudes, there are only two basic viewpoints
— the divine viewpoint and the human viewpoint. Not only are these viewpoints
completely antithetical, but God’s viewpoint is said to be infinitely superior
to that of man. The unbeliever is capable only of the human viewpoint, “being
alienated from the life of God” (Eph. 4:18) and the enemy of God in his MIND
(Col. 1:21); but the believer constantly struggles between the divine and the
human viewpoints.
While the believer is “not OF
this world,” he is IN the world (John 15:19), and the norms and principles, as
well as the philosophies of COSMOS DIABOLICUS (Satan’s world system) bombard
him from all sides (Col. 2:8, 20-22). The world expects the believer to conform
to Satanic systems and be like the rest of humanity; God desires for him to “be
transformed” to His way of thinking (Rom. 12:1-3). Therefore, it is of
paramount importance that we as believers learn the divine norms and standards
which should govern our thought pattern.
People
often tell me they cannot come to Bible class for one reason or another, but
you can always justify what you want to do. Your decisions depend on what you
think. If human viewpoint is predominate in your right lobe, it will neutralize
your Christian life. You cannot live God’s way because you do not think God’s
way. That is why so many Christians are trying to be spiritual by means of
“taboos,” ecstatics or asceticism. The human viewpoint is represented by the
fact that you must work for what you get. It is generally true in life that the
harder you work, the more you receive. But this axiom cannot be transferred
into the spiritual life which God designed to be a life of grace. By grace we
simply appropriate all that God provides!
THE
SOURCE OF DIVINE VIEWPOINT
For who hath known the mind of the Lord, that he may instruct him?
But we have the mind of Christ (1 Cor. 2:16).
The
Bible is the only source of divine viewpoint. It is the very mind of Christ,
the living Word (John 1:1), expressed in written form. Therefore, if you, as a
believer, are to have the divine viewpoint of life, you must know Bible
doctrine. If you do not know God’s thoughts on any given matter, how can you
possibly think according to the divine viewpoint?
The Biblical command is to “Let this mind be
in you, which was also in Christ Jesus’ (Phil. 2:5). What mind? The divine
viewpoint! Christ set the pattern; we are to follow it. How can we have the
mind of Christ? It comes only through daily study and absorption of God s Word
through the function of the “grace apparatus for perception.”
THE SOURCE OF HUMAN VIEWPOINT
Many
factors influence our thinking, such as environment or background; training in
the home, through both observation and teaching; education; culture (the
history, traditions, attainments and way of life to which we adhere); and
religion, or any system of faith and worship. However, human viewpoint did not
originate in the human mind. It began with Satan at the time when he revolted
against God (Isa. 14:13, 14).k Since Satan cannot indwell believers, he attacks
God’s people through their minds. He uses his demons’ as well as unbelievers to
expedite his schemes. If he can infiltrate the minds of believers, he can
neutralize them, and they become casualties in the angelic conflict.
Human viewpoint was launched into the human
race when Eve was seduced by the subtle suggestion that she could be as smart
as God if she would eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. So
convincing is the devil’s viewpoint of life that entire nations are deceived by
his philosophies (Rev. 12:9; 13:14). For example, when the unbeliever tries to
solve the world’s problems, he automatically thinks in terms of
internationalism or universal brotherhood. He looks to such international
organizations as the United Nations and the World Council of Churches for help.
Their panaceas sound so beautiful and broadminded that even some believers fall
for them. What has happened? Satanic viewpoint has become human viewpoint and
now pervades human thinking.
From
the human viewpoint of the “brotherhood of man,” it is but a step to the
“brotherhood of nations.” Yet every attempt to unify all nations throughout
history has failed — from the Tower of Babel (Gen. 11:1-9) to the present-day
United Nations. Has the latter been successful in maintaining world peace?
Check the record: there have been at least fifty wars since the United Nations
was formed. No matter how sincere man’s attempts may be to make this a better
world, he will fail. This is Satan’s world, and no created being, not even the
evil genius of Satan, has the omniscience or the omnipotence to bring about a
perfect world. Until Jesus Christ returns to reign over this world, there can
be no successful attempt at internationalism. God has divided the world into
nations (Gen. 10:30, 31) for its own preservation and so that there may be
freedom to evangelize.
The Satan-inspired view that man is basically
good is another part of his strategy to trap the mind of man. How does this
measure up to God’s estimate of man?
For all have sinned, and come short of the
glory of God (Rom. 3:23).
The heart [right lobe controlled by
the old sin nature] is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who
can know it (Jer. 17:9)?
God says
man is a sinner. His old sin nature makes him deceitful and desperately wicked!
If you have always thought that if you were just good enough, you would
eventually make it to heaven, you are wrong! You have borrowed human viewpoint
straight from the mind of Satan! Jesus said, “I am the way, the truth, and the
life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me” (John 14:6). We are saved by
faith in Christ, not by being “good.”
For by grace are ye saved through
faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: Not of works, lest
any man should boast (Eph. 2:8, 9).
THE VICTORY OF DIVINE VIEWPOINT
The
general view today seems to be that when people become Christians, they should
stop using their minds and, instead, operate on their feelings. They think they
are supposed to work themselves up into an ecstatic lather and speak in
gibberish. This is commonly known as “speaking in tongues” and is mistaken for
dynamic Christianity. Such gross misunderstanding and misapplication of
Scripture comes from lack of Bible doctrine and from pastors who, instead of
teaching the Word of God, substitute programs and mental sublimations, such as
the “power of positive thinking,” which is a system of self-hypnosis, for the
Christian way of life! It is WHAT you think that counts — not HOW you
think!
We
often assume that someone who has physical strength and pushes his weight
around is tough. However, the toughest people are not the musclemen but those who
never give up mentally, even when facing defeat. To illustrate: in Bastogne,
Belgium, Christmas, 1944, when the Germans demanded the surrender of the
American army, General Anthony McAuliffe replied, “Nuts!” Although completely
surrounded and faced with annihilation, his answer was typical of the American
fighting spirit at that time.
Toughness
is always a mental attitude — it has little to do with the physical body. Many
people give up, as the old expression says, “when the first shot is fired.”
They give up simply because of what they think. The Russians know this and have
so effectively exploited psychological warfare in the United States that they
have neutralized the mental attitude of the American people. How can we counter
this move? The only answer is found in the Bible. A nucleus of believers with
divine viewpoint can turn the tide.
Just
recently at a political convention, some of the people in a certain party were
ready to give up and surrender principles they knew were right; but the mental
attitude of a few turned the tide. You may be physically exhausted; you may be
completely defeated, as far as the odds are concerned; you may be deprived of
your liberty; but no one can stop you from THINKING those things which
eventually will overcome the pressures and adversity of your situation.
How
true this is in the spiritual realm! The Christian way of life is so designed
that a believer can THINK AT ALL TIMES! One of the by-products of Christianity
is the ability to discern the real issues. To see life habitually from the
divine viewpoint is one of the greatest stabilizers for the believer in time. I
have discovered that those who attend Bible class regularly learn to
concentrate; they learn to think categorically; and they learn to discern. Those
who do not attend consistently often revert to emotionalism and human
viewpoint. An academic education is not the important factor, or even a
prerequisite to accurate thinking; this comes from the use of the Biblical
techniques of the Word of God by the one who is born again and who is positive
toward Bible doctrine.
THE BIBLE, A CRITIC OF THE THOUGHTS
For the word of God is quick
{alive], and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to
the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a
discerner [critic] of the thoughts and intents {motivations] of the heart
{right lobe] (Heb. 4:12).
The Bible is the only accurate discerner of
what you think, and it is the only source for straightening out your mental
attitude when necessary. Let the Bible “umpire” your thoughts; it is your most
constructive critic.
Search me, 0 God, and know my heart:
try me, and know my thoughts: And see if there be any wicked way in me . . .
(Psa. 139:23, 24).
Ask
yourself: Does what I think jibe with the Word of God? If so, you will have the
impact, the power, the peace, the strength, the stability and the inner
happiness which God has provided for every believer and which cannot be
disturbed by adversity or prosperity. In short, you will have reached the
super-grace life! S However, should your thinking fail to line up with the
divine standard, it needs to be honestly evaluated and straightened out
quickly. Confusion often lies in a misunderstanding of certain areas of mental
attitude.
AREAS OF MENTAL ATTITUDE
Area
Number One : Worldliness.
And be not conformed to this world:
but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is
that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God (Rom.
12:2).
This verse constitutes a command: “Be not
conformed to this world — be transformed!” In other words, do not be worldly!
How? By cutting out the high living and the honky-tonking? Is that what it
says? No! By the RENEWING OF YOUR MIND. Worldliness is not something you do; it
is not an overt act. Worldliness is a mental attitude of human viewpoint! In
order not to be conformed to this world, you must have a new mental attitude.
Contrary
to the often-held view of Fundamental Christianity, worldliness is not the
wearing of makeup, although in some areas of the United States you would be
considered “worldly” for using cosmetics’ You can paint yourself up until you
look like an Apache on the warpath) or you can use no cosmetics and look as if
you had stuck your head in a flour barrel; whether you put on makeup or take it
off is a matter of personal judgment and taste. The Bible teaches “live and let
live.” Worldliness stems from your mental attitude!
You
can sit in a church with the most pious expression and roll your eyes
heavenward as though you were deep in prayer or meditation, or you can give the
impression you are intent upon the message and be thinking something else. Many
of you practice this. It is an excellent way to plan ahead — to think about getting
your wardrobe ready for spring or to think about where you will go on your
summer vacation. Of course, someone would be sure to call you worldly if you
stayed at home for the same reason.
If
you have learned to “play poker,” you can go to church, fold your hands and
think these things but maintain such a saintly facade that no one would ever
call you worldly. Yet God’s Word says that you are! Now there may be a time
when someone will correctly accuse you of being worldly because he discerns
human viewpoint behind your actions. The tragedy is that there are thousands of
Christians who are very worldly, but they are totally unaware of it because
they have no understanding of Romans 12:2. Consequently, they assume their
overt activities are the key, and they never realize they are worldly because
of what they think!
“This
world” refers to every thought and action which is contrary to the absolute
criterion of the Word of God. Worldliness is the operation of the human
viewpoint of COSMOS DIABOLICUS in the right lobe. Worldliness includes slavery
to circumstances, as well as “spirituality” through legalism.” The believer
must learn doctrine in order to distinguish between human good and divine
good.” This is one of the great conflicts in the issue of worldliness.
“Be
ye transformed” (present passive imperative) is a continuous process involving
rebound and Bible study. Doctrine must be in your right lobe as the basis for
“transforming” and “renewing” the thought processes. The mechanics of “renewing
the mind” is the function of the grace apparatus for perception (GAP): after
rebound, doctrine is understood in the left lobe through the filling of the
Spirit and then transferred automatically to the human spirit BY FAITH (John
14:26; 16:12-15; 1 Cor. 2:9-16). As doctrine is cycled into the right lobe — to
the frame of reference and memory center, the conscience, vocabulary and
viewpoint — divine viewpoint is on the “launching pad” for application to
experience. Consequently, divine viewpoint in the right lobe is the defense
against the mental attitude of worldliness.
If ye
then be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ
sitteth on the right hand of God. Set your affection on things above, not on
things on the earth (Col. 3:1,2).
The “above things” (or literally, the “upward
things”) constitute the sum total of the divine viewpoint of life. “Things on
the earth’ ‘ are the sum total of the human viewpoint of life. “Set your
affection on” is literally, “keep thinking about the upward things,” and
indicates the continual struggle in the realm of mental attitude between human
and divine viewpoints.
Area
Number Two: Inner Happiness.
Fulfill ye my joy, that ye be
like-minded, having the same love, being of one accord, of one mind (Phil.
2:2).
“Joy”
(CHARA) in the Greek refers to inner happiness. With the addition of the
possessive pronoun, it is actually PLUS-H, or God’s happiness — the penthouse
of the “Edification Complex” of the soul.
This
Edification Complex is an immaterial “structure” in the soul of a mature
believer, and is composed of five “floors”: grace orientation; a relaxed mental
attitude of AGAPE
love; mastery of the details of life; the capacity to love God, right man or
right woman and friends; and God’s happiness. The Edification Complex is the
backbone of the soul and the bridge to the super-grace life.
Even
though the believer is positionally perfect at the point of salvation, his soul
has a deficiency. God’s Plan of Grace calls for this deficiency to be filled
through Bible doctrine. This is the meaning of “fulfill” (PLEROO). As doctrine
fully possesses and fully influences the believer, God fills his soul with top
quality happiness. However, this condition is potential, depending on whether
or not the believer functions under GAP and erects the Edification Complex in his
soul. A completed Edification Complex in the soul produces the capacity for the
divine viewpoint of life.
Area
Number Three: Peace or Confidence.
Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace, whose
mind is stayed on thee: because he trusteth in thee (Isa. 26:3).
The
mind fixed on Christ — occupation with Him — is the basis for perfect peace.
You can neither know Christ nor love Him apart from doctrine in the right lobe.
Only the constant, daily intake of Bible doctrine can produce the “peace of
God, which passeth all understanding, [and] keep {garrison] your hearts {right
lobes] and minds {left lobes] through Christ Jesus” (Phil. 4:7).
The
word “peace” (EIRENE) has the connotation of prosperity, benefit, welfare and
tranquility. This peace reflects the doctrine stored in the soul of the
super-grace believer. The word for “understanding” is NOUS, a
technical noun for the left lobe — therefore, knowledge which has not been
transferred to the right lobe. Hence, it becomes human viewpoint thinking or
only that knowledge which the natural man (the unbeliever) can understand (1
Cor. 2:14). The blessings God has provided for the super-grace life through
doctrine far surpass human comprehension.
Peace
from God in the super-grace life acts as a stabilizer for all kinds of
circumstances encountered in the Christian life. This stabilizer makes it
possible for the believer to face both catastrophe and great prosperity with
the same grace functions: freedom from worry (1 Pet. 5:7, 8) and confidence for
living as well as for dying (2 Cor. 5:1,6,8).
Have
you ever seen someone in athletics try too hard? I once coached a boy like that
in baseball. He was eager, and there was not a lazy bone in his body; but he
struggled so hard that he was constantly uptight. As a result, he often could
not catch the ball; yet potentially, he was a good baseball player. What was
wrong with him? He had no peace of mind — no confidence. Every time he made a
mistake, he broke down and cried. He would drive himself into such a state of
tension that he was no longer controlled by his mind but by his emotions.
Several other boys, who did not have his drive and eagerness, played a better
game. Why? They were relaxed. You must have peace of mind along with drive and
energy in order to have the by-products of confidence and stability.
I
often think of that boy when I see believers who fall apart at the slightest
provocation or come unglued under every wind of adversity. What happens to you
when the pressure is on? Do you break down and cry? Do you run around and look
for a crutch? If you do not have peace under pressure, there is something wrong
with your mental attitude (Prov. 24:10). The Christian way of life is designed
for believers to have peace in their right lobes, not only in times of
prosperity, but also when the going is rough. Perhaps you do not realize it,
but there are dangers in prosperity as well as in adversity. The peace
resulting from doctrine in the right lobe produces a confidence which will
sustain you through the prosperity without your becoming arrogant and through
adversity without your falling apart!
Area
Number Four: Stability.
For God hath not given us the spirit
of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound {stabilized) mind (2
Tim. 1:7).
The
stabilized mind is a direct result of the tranquil mind — a mind free from
worry or fear. “Fear” is human viewpoint caused by a lack of faith-rest. Paul
demonstrated a maximum stabilized mental attitude under pressure. He exhorted
the Thessalonians to have the same steadfast attitude in the face of adversity:
That ye be not soon shaken in mind,
or be troubled, neither by spirit, nor by word, nor by letter as from us . . . (2
Thess. 2:2).
One
of the most impressive examples of stability in modern history is that of
General Robert E. Lee during the Battle of Gettysburg — the most decisive
battle of the War Between the States. Everything was about to fold up for the
Confederacy. Officer after officer reported in: “General Lee, my division
hasn’t many men left . . . my battalion . . . my regiment . . . my company is
wiped out . . . we are out of ammunition.” After each disastrous report. Lee
would answer, “That is all right. I will take the responsibility for that. Take
the remnants of your force and move down to the south fork and form up with
General . . “ and so on! He remained completely calm and stable as he issued
orders.
Stability
is judged by the overt act, but behind every decision and command given by
General Lee was an attitude of mind which produced the stability for the
situation. It is not what you DO that stabilizes circumstances — it is what you THINK! A
person who can think under pressure is one who has a stabilized mental
attitude.
Area
Number Five: Giving.
For if there be first a willing mind, it is
accepted according to that a man hath, and not according to that he hath not (2
Cor. 8:12). Every man according as he purposeth in his heart [right lobe], so
let him give; not grudgingly, or of necessity: for God loveth a cheerful giver
(2 Cor. 9:7).
True
Biblical giving is first of all a mental attitude. You may not always have the
money; but you can always have the basis for giving — a willing mind, which is
literally positive volition based on doctrine. This switches giving from what
you give as an offering to what goes on in your right lobe. Some preachers or
church boards may not like this, but the amount of money you give is not
important. The Bible .never states the quantity to be given but the quality of
your mental attitude. Old Testament tithing was tantamount to an income tax for
believers and unbelievers alike; it had nothing to do with giving or
“offerings.”
The
New Testament principle is to give “as God has prospered” (1 Cor. 16:1, 2). In
some cases that could be ninety percent, while in others, it could mean one
percent. Nowhere does the Bible say that anyone is to deprive his family of the
necessities of life in order to give ten percent or any percent! The next time
you are led by the Lord to make an offering, remember, that the basic principle
of giving is what you are thinking before you give and while you are giving.
Suppose you think something like this: “I saw Smith put twenty-five dollars in
the plate; I know that if I don’t come through with the same amount my name
will be ‘Mud’ around the church. It makes me mad because I had other plans for
that money — but here goes!” So twenty-five dollars goes into the plate. People
may say, “That’s great!” But God says, “That’s terrible!” It is giving
“grudgingly or of necessity.” It is giving for the praise of men and under
pressure, and it is an abomination to the Lord! If you give with thanksgiving
and out of love for the Lord, even one tenth of a cent is acceptable to Him;
whereas, hundreds of thousands of dollars given with the wrong mental attitude
has no merit with the Lord.
Area
Number Six: Love.
And thou shalt love the LORD thy
God with all thine heart {right lobe], and with all thy soul, and with all thy
might (Deut 6:5).
[Love]
Doth not behave itself unseemly, seeketh not her own, is not easily provoked,
thinketh no evil (1 Cor. 13:5). Two Greek words confirm the principle that the
true concept of love in the Bible is a mental attitude: AGAPE and
PHILOS.
AGAPE- type love is found only in the mentality of the soul. It is the capacity
to love which comes from the filling of the Holy Spirit and knowledge of doctrine.
It is the relaxed mental attitude of the Edification Complex and reflects
freedom from mental attitude sins toward God and toward people. It is
impossible to sustain a relationship with the Lord or with any human being and
be filled with mental attitude sins. The command to love other believers is not
an order to demonstrate your love in an overt manner, nor even to love everyone
with the same intensity of love. It is strictly an order to maintain a relaxed
MENTAL ATTITUDE, although mental attitude love often prompts overt
manifestations or expressions toward the object loved (John 3:16).
Capacity
for love begins with mental attitude AGAPE. Through the function of GAP, it
spreads throughout the soul and becomes PHILOS, a total soul love. PHILOS-type
love directed toward God can exist only through the Edification Complex and the
super-grace life.
THE CRITICAL MENTAL ATTITUDE OF THE
CORINTHIANS
Second
Corinthians 10 is one of the great mental attitude passages in the Word of God
and relates our spiritual conflict to the thought pattern.
Now I Paul myself beseech you by the
meekness and gentleness of Christ, who in presence am base among you, but being
absent am bold toward you (2 Cor. 10:1).
The
word “meekness” means “gentleness of mind” and is a word for a mental attitude
of grace. “Gentleness” is literally “graciousness” or grace-application. At the
very outset of this passage, the Apostle Paul cites the tremendous mental
attitude of our Lord Jesus Christ: grace orientation and grace-application.
Why? The critical mental attitude of the Corinthian believers toward Paul was a
Satanic attempt to destroy Paul’s own mental attitude of grace.
Paul
answers his critics in this passage as a man with the authority to settle the
account. It is not the time to “turn the other cheek.” The last phrase of verse
I is generally misunderstood. Paul not only fights back, but he quotes his
critics with sarcasm. He caustically remarks that these legalists claim he is
obsequious and timid in their presence but bold and courageous in his epistle.
This is a reference to First Corinthians in which Paul blistered the
Corinthians with an exhortation concerning their carnality.
But I beseech you, that I may not be
bold when I am present with that confidence, wherewith I think to be bold
against some, which think of us as if we walked according to the flesh (2
Cor. 10:2).
Paul
is requesting a change of mental attitude on the part of his critics, and he
appeals to their grace orientation. Paul remained ab- sent from Corinth because
he preferred to return under relaxed conditions, which are ideal for teaching,
rather than with a get-tough policy. The nit-picking and bullying gave Paul no
freedom to communicate doctrine. However, Paul was not afraid. He could handle
the legalists, if necessary. Through doctrine he had great moral courage, and
whether present or absent from them, he would be faithful to Bible doctrine.
The greatest expression of love by a pastor- teacher for his sheep is the
communication of doctrine!
The
thoughts of the legalists express emotional revolt of the soul and
reversionism. In deeming Paul carnal, they are actually ascribing to him their
own condition of soul.
For though we walk in the flesh [human
body], we do not war {in the angelic conflict] after [according to] the flesh
[old sin nature] (2 Cor. 10:3).
With
his characteristic humor and sarcasm, Paul makes a play on words and uses the
word “flesh” in both its literal and spiritual connotations. It is true that
Paul’s soul is walking IN the sphere of the flesh (the human body), but it is
not true that he is teaching ACCORDING TO the standards of the flesh (the old
sin nature). Just because Paul “braces” the Corinthians does not mean he is out
of fellowship. He possesses legitimate authority; thus, his hard-nosed teaching
is not carnality. The criticism of Paul by the Corinthians is not valid. It
represents the self-righteousness of human viewpoint and legalism.
Our
warfare in the Christian life is neither physical nor fleshly; it is spiritual.
Though we live in this world, we do not engage in the spiritual conflict
according to the standard of this world. We do not use our human energy or
talents, our human personalities or ingenuity. We use our God-given assets. The
Lord has provided in- formation whereby we can begin at “home base” — our
thinking — and advance victoriously toward overt production compatible with
divine viewpoint. This is a very important principle, for it will explain Paul’s
mental attitude dissertation.
OUR SPIRITUAL WEAPONS
(For the weapons of our warfare are
not carnal, but mighty through God to [against] the pulling down of strong
holds) (2 Cor. 10:4).
In
our spiritual warfare, we do not pick up an M-1, load it and shoot down the
devil, nor do we toss a few grenades and blow up the world! Since we do not
fight according to the flesh, we must have spiritual armament for combat in the
angelic conflict. “Carnal” in this ‘verse refers to the system of earthly standards.
Our weapons in the angelic conflict do not belong to the physical realm.
Rather, our weapons are “powerful through the instrumentality of God.”
The
devil’s fortification system can resist all attacks of human viewpoint, human
ability, human power; but God has provided in grace divine equipment and
weapons to demolish the cosmic defenses of Satan. What are these weapons which
enable us to launch an attack against the world, the old sin nature and the
devil? They are our THOUGHTS! The greatest weapon we have in both spiritual
warfare and in life is what we think. No matter how you slice it, the factor
that motivates, empowers and strengthens a believer is his thought pattern. If
the believer is thinking human viewpoint, he is open to Satanic infiltration.
Furthermore, he is useless, miserable, and in- distinguishable from the
unbeliever.
On
the other hand, the believer with doctrine in the right lobe has divine
viewpoint on the launching pad ready for application in order to assault the
defense system of Satan in this intensified stage of the angelic conflict. Such
a believer has moved into the super-grace life and therefore has the capacity
to understand that “all things work together for good”; he casts all his cares
on the Lord; he knows and applies the Doctrine of Divine Essence and the
principles of Christology. This believer cannot be defeated! Like a truly
courageous person in the human realm, he cannot be conquered. You can beat him
up; you can tear him to shreds; but as long as he has the divine viewpoint in
the right lobe which says, “I will fight to the end,” you cannot overcome him!
THE MENTAL ATTITUDE IN THE CONFLICT
Casting down imaginations, and every
high thing that exalteth itself against {in opposition to] the knowledge of
God, and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ (2
Cor. 10:5).
The
concept of bringing every thought into captivity for Christ has been
interpreted in as many ways as there are confused or reversionistic believers.
The “meditators,” the “agonizers,” the “positive thinkers,” all think they are
bringing their thoughts into captivity for Christ. Yet, when the interpretation
is analyzed in the Greek, it clearly reveals that every phrase in this verse
relates to military function.
“Casting
down” (KATHAIRO) indicates the power of a thought to attack and demolish the
cosmic fortifications of Satan. The strategic victory of the Cross, followed by
the resurrection, ascension and session of Christ at the right hand of the
Father, has placed Satan during the Church Age in a defensive rather than an
offensive position. Before the Cross became an historic fact, Satan had
operated on the more advantageous principle of offense; but now that his doom
is sealed, he can only employ delaying tactics.
Believers
are the assault troops designed by the Lord to demolish his defense system.
When they fail, it is because of negative volition toward doctrine, resulting
in the malfunction of GAP, and because of the opening up of the MATAIOTES,
causing scar tissue of the soul,” and finally, reversionism. Under these
conditions, the mind becomes the prisoner of Satan. To attack and smash the
unseen Satanic fortifications requires a heavy concentration of doctrine!
What
are Satan’s fortifications? “Imaginations” ?Not at all! Satan is far too clever
to function on the basis of imagination. The word, incorrectly translated
“imaginations,” is LOGISMOS —
systems of thought or reasonings — and refers to the reasoning powers of cosmic
doctrine and human viewpoint (1 Tim. 4:1). Satan has two perimeters of defense.
Infiltrating the minds of men, both believers and unbelievers, is the devil’s
outer perimeter of defense. The inner perimeter, which indicates his desperate
situation because of his initial defeat at the Cross, is the intensification of
the angelic conflict.
This
inner perimeter is described as “every high thing” (PAS HUPSOMA), or
“every obstacle of pride.” Satan’s forts are defended with obstacles of pride.
The very sin that caused his fall (Isa. 14:12- 17) is the tactical artillery
barrage with which he softens up those who would oppose him. Pride is both a
mental attitude sin and a human viewpoint system of thought, which binders
objectivity. The devil, by human viewpoint and Satanic doctrines, keeps you
off-balance and unable to assault his perimeters.
Of
course, the great danger to the believer in the devil’s defensive position is
the possibility of counterattack, as the next phrase demonstrates. “That
exalteth itself” (EPAIRO) means “to elevate, to assault, to attack.” Satan,
with his human viewpoint and cosmic doctrines, always stands on the inner
perimeter ready to counterattack. What does he attack? “The knowledge (GNOSIS)
of God.” Satan attacks the objective understanding of doctrine (GNOSIS) in the
left lobe of the believer. At this point, doctrine is learned objectively in
the left lobe by means of the filling of the Holy Spirit; but to be applicable,
GNOSIS
must be cycled into the human spirit by faith, where it becomes EPIGNOSIS
(full knowledge). In other words, once doctrinal principles are understood
objectively (GNOSIS), they must be believed in order to become EPIGNOSIS.
Only then is doctrine available to apply to every situation in life. EPIGNOSIS is
not subject to counterattack!
A
Satanic counterattack can be launched only from a defensive position or inner
perimeter. When this counterattack is successful, Satan makes a prisoner of
your mind. On the other hand, when you launch a successful attack against
cosmic viewpoint, you “bring into captivity” (AICHMALOTIZO) or make a prisoner
of “every thought” (NOEMA) — literally, “every system of thought.” You have
slaved off the counterattack, and Satan has been repulsed.
LOGISMOS
(“imaginations” or systems of cosmic thoughts) is Satan’s successful attempt to
capture our system of thought; NOEMA (every system of thought) is the believer’s
successful attempt at assault. In other words, LOGISMOS denotes human viewpoint; NOEMA,
divine viewpoint. Every system of thought sponsored by Satan can be captured by
the believer and changed through application of doctrine from LOGISMOS to NOEMA!
Making
a prisoner of every human viewpoint system of thought must be accomplished
under the principle of authority. “Obedience” (HUPAKOE) does not connote
“submissiveness” so much as “authority.” How can you change your thinking?
Assaulting
and demolishing cosmic thought, and every obstacle of pride attacking against
the objective knowledge of the God, and making a prisoner of every human
viewpoint system of thought TO THE AUTHORITY OF CHRIST (literal translation of
2 Cor. 10:15).
The
authority of Christ is Bible doctrine — the mind of Christ (1 Cor. 2:16). Under
this concept, if enough believers in a national entity consistently maintain divine
viewpoint, that nation will recover the norms and standards designed by God for
divine establishment. Obviously, then, the answer is in the function of GAP.
HUMAN ADJUSTMENT TO LIFE
What
are some of these systems of thought used by Satan in the counterattack?
1. RATIONALIZATION.
This is a form of self-justification by a scar-covered or reversionistic soul.
On the basis of scar tissue, warped conscience, human viewpoint, lack of
doctrine in the human spirit or in the frame of reference, such a state of mind
justifies sinful activities or blames God for all adversity. You cannot be
involved in such a negative system of thought and possess God’s happiness —
PLUS-H.
2.
DIRECT ATTACK. In this system, a person adjusts to the problems and frustrations
of life through anger — a fit of temper, a tantrum or physical aggression. This
mental attitude stems from one of the lust patterns: approbation lust (to get
attention); power lust (to control people and the environment around them); or
from emotional revolt of the soul and mental attitude sins of vindictiveness
and implacability (to be spiteful and seek revenge).
3.
DEFENSE MECHANISM. When the soul is confronted with pressures it is too weak to
bear, the person protects himself by reverting to human viewpoint in order to
block out reality. This change of thought pattern leads to a change of behavior
pattern. For example, a believer may become disillusioned with the people in a
local church and revert to licentiousness.
4. DENIAL.
This is a human viewpoint adjustment that ignores or attempts to ignore some
difficulty or danger. The soldier in combat who says, “There is only one bullet
with my name on it,” is denying that all bullets are dangerous. The divine
viewpoint is Job 5:20, 21.
5. SUBLIMATION.
When a person becomes bored, lonely, discouraged or filled with mental attitude
sins, he seeks a new outlet for his frustrations through a frantic search for
happiness in fornication, alcohol, drugs, entertainment, etc. He becomes a
slave to the details of life and loses his capacities for life, love and
happiness; he therefore sublimates.
One
of the most common and subtle sublimations is the escape into dream world. You
visualize in your mind a place to retreat where you can compensate for the frustrations,
adversities and disappointments of life. When someone is promoted over you, in
your bitterness you hop over into dream world. Your dream world is a wonderful,
glorious place, for here in “never-never land” you are supreme. You can see
yourself exalted over this character, as he waits on you hand and foot in
abject slavery to your every whim.
Perhaps
someone jilted you; but in your dream world that person comes crawling back,
begging forgiveness and pledging undying love. Or maybe the little lady says,
after the “monster” leaves, “I’ll show him”; and then goes on a buying spree
that would shake Fort Knox! Or she may get together with “the girls” and
organize a garden club for the preservation of the variegated petunia. Together
they avoid reality through some fanciful form of escapism. There are many novel
ways to compensate, but they all constitute dream world. In this way, we can
often escape the reality of disappointments and heartache.
Yet
there is a divine Plan by which you can advance, out-maneuver Satan all the way
and gain victory in the devil’s world! This Plan is divine viewpoint — Bible
doctrine! Every battle in life can be won if you follow the divine
instructions. Each time you face a bitter situation, you will either retreat
into one of the human adjustments to life or advance into divine viewpoint. If
you retreat from reality to human viewpoint sublimation and back to reality,
you still possess your bitterness and frustration. You are still upset!
Instead, you must advance from your experience to the Word of God and then
apply doctrine to experience. Now you are on the offensive; you have overcome
reality! The more Bible doctrine you know, the more you will find strength,
comfort and power when facing the realities of life.
6. SUBJECTIVITY.
The best illustration of subjective thinking is the present-day sensitivity
programs conducted in every area of life — military, business, academic,
medical, social. However, subjectivity is not confined to organized activities.
Many believers, who wear their feelings on their sleeves and are constantly
upset about something or someone, constitute a large majority of subjective
thinkers. If certain members in a church do not rush up to greet them and give
them the “glad hand,” they write it off as an unfriendly congregation and seek
more favorable pastures. They continually shop around looking for that friendly
“pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.” Actually, they want from a church the
attention they do not receive in the office or at the country club. Having
failed miserably everywhere else, they at- tempt to find the church that will
substitute for a “lonely hearts club.”
Another
form of sensitivity is self-pity. You assume no one loves you; you feel left
out, and it depresses you. Did it ever occur to you there are people who may
just want you to feel ostracized? It is their nasty way of putting pressure on
you; they like to see you miserable. They want you to hear about their party to
which you were not invited. They delight in rubbing it in! But they are the
kind who become upset when they discover that those things do not disturb you.
They grind their teeth! You should never be sensitive to this type of
pettiness.
There
is no excuse for any of this for believers. Our lives were designed by God to
have peace and happiness and blessing. But the solution must be in the right
lobe. All the attempts to snub, to ignore, to belittle, never have any effect
on us when we have — not a “thick hide” — but divine viewpoint from doctrine in
the right lobe. When you arrive at the place of maximum divine viewpoint, you
become occupied with the Person of Jesus Christ, and at that point you have
just moved into a place of perfect happiness. As long as you remain stabilized
in that mental attitude, nothing can move you (Psa. 16:8).
But
that is not all: you become more attractive every second that you look at life
from the divine viewpoint. This is a part of the concept of inner beauty, the
filling of the Spirit and the super-grace life. You will become a different
person. People will gravitate to you because
they see your stability. They may not know what the
source is, but they know you possess qualities they would give anything to
have. Your whole life reflects what you think! You need not go out to the highways
and byways to lead unbelievers to Christ; they will fall all over themselves
getting to you. You will find that leading some of these people to the Lord is
like shooting a duck at two paces with a twelve-gauge shotgun. You just cannot
miss!
The tragedy is that there are not many
believers around with that much stability. Do you
know
why? Few people know enough doctrine to fill a thimble. They are trying to live
up to the “little light” they have, and that little light is about to go out!
Nowhere does the Bible command us to live up to a little light; rather, we are
told to let as much light as possible into our frontal lobes (Psa. 119:130).
YOU CANNOT GET TOO MUCH DOCTRINE! Doctrine maintains your divine viewpoint. It
stabilizes your mental attitude.
THE
GARRISON IN THE SOUL
And
having in a readiness to revenge all disobedience, when your obedience is
fulfilled (2 Cor. 10:6).
Satan has many clever systems for
controlling the mind and soul of believers, but God has provided a security
system to protect the soul. “Having in a readiness” is a military term denoting
security and could be translated, “to garrison troops at a certain point to
prevent revolution.” This verse is a warning against revolution in the soul.
How can the believer have revolution in his soul? When he goes negative toward
Bible doctrine through emotional revolt, reversionism, human viewpoint or
apostasy, causing scar tissue in the soul or hardness of heart, his soul is in
revolution.
At no time in your Christian
experience are you invulnerable to emotional revolt in the soul. It may be
temporary carnality and last only as long as it takes to rebound, or it may be
permanent and lead to reversionism. Emotion is the basis for every response and
reaction in life. When the emotion is dominated by the right lobe and responds
to Bible doctrine, there is capacity for life, love and happiness. On the other
hand, when the emotion takes over the right lobe, it causes irrational behavior
and breeds unhappiness. The person who is led by his emotion is exhilarant when
circumstances are pleasant but depressed when they are adverse.
Since people in emotional revolt
crack up easily, the soul must have a garrison. If it does not, they become
vulnerable to all the emotional activities in Christianity today — the one-shot
dedications, the faggot-on-the-fire nonsense, the “tongues” movement or the
“divine” healing chicanery. “Having” is present active participle, linear
aktionsart of ECHO, meaning “to have and to
hold,” and indicates a certain way of life. Your way of life should maintain a
continual guard mount in the soul.
When any military organization is on
the move, it must be protected by a “point” — a small outfit placed in front of
the main column. There must also be flank and rear protection. When the troops
rest or bivouac, they must set up a perimeter of sentinels with outposts for
security. It is Satan’s objective in the angelic conflict to make your soul a
battlefield. He already has an ally in the body — the old sin nature which,
under carnality or reversionism, controls the soul. However, the sin nature can
produce only carnality, human good or evil. It takes an outside attack force of
Satanic doctrine or the “doctrines of demons” (1 Tim. 4:1) to completely
destroy the effectiveness of the soul.
For the angelic conflict, there are
two types of security provided by God: eternal security (John 10:28) and
temporal security the maintenance of a garrison in your soul (2 Cor. 10:6).
This protection against the takeover of the soul by cosmic doctrines is Bible
doctrine in the soul. “All disobedience” (PARAKOE) connotes “deviation from
obedience or authority.” You must mount guard in your soul to “revenge all
disobedience to authority,” which is the revolt in the soul. “Revenge”
(EKDIKEO) denotes punishment and indicates that all these revolts must be
punished or put down.
As you learn categories of doctrine,
the “troops” move in, and a garrison is set up in your soul. When you know
enough doctrine through the function of GAP, you can quell every revolt
in your soul. This is the point at which “obedience is fulfilled.” Doctrine in
the frame of reference in the right lobe is the primary sentry box Post Number
One — your greatest protection. From there, you move to the outer perimeter —
the vocabulary, the norms and standards, and the viewpoint of doctrine,
resulting in the Edification Complex in the soul and the super-grace life.
The fact that you are a believer
does not mean your soul is automatically garrisoned — this is potential. What
does a new believer do until he develops a garrison in the soul? He fights with
a slingshot, bows and arrows or fists; in other words, he uses the faith- rest
technique as a holding force until he builds a stronger and more permanent
defense. Faith-rest is designed simply to claim promises and principles in the
Word. The full-strength garrison is the full knowledge of the doctrines of the
Word on the launching pad in the right lobe.
Meditate [keep thinking] upon these
things; give thyself wholly to them; that thy profiting {progress] may appear
to all. Take heed unto thyself, and unto the doctrine; continue in them: for in
doing this thou shall both save [deliver] thyself {from Satanic doctrine], and
them that hear thee {those over whom you have influence] (1 Tim. 4:15,16).
Holding in readiness (the garrison
of doctrine) to punish all deviation from obedience (revolt), when your
obedience (deficiency of doctrine) has been fulfilled, so as to fully influence
you (literal translation of 2 Cor. 10:6).
THE
DANGER OF SUPERFICIAL EVALUATION
Do ye look on things after the outward appearance? If any
man trust to himself that he is Christ’s, let him of himself think this again,
that, as he is Christ’s, even so are we Christ’s (2 Cor. 10:7).
The first phrase of this verse is
the biography of the believer without a garrison. In the Greek it is a
statement, not a question. It says literally, “You are in the habit of looking
at things according to the standard of superficial appearance.” “Look” is BLEPO, a superficial glance, in contrast to HORAO,
a close look — a look based on doctrine. BLEPO indicates soulish revolt in
the Corinthians. Although no demon can enter the body of a believer, Satanic
doctrine can infiltrate the soul when the garrison goes to sleep through neglect
of Bible doctrine.
One of the great dangers we face in
the Christian life is to assume that we know something when we know nothing!
People in this category inevitably reveal the nothingness in their souls by
superficial evaluation. Circumstances are viewed completely through human
viewpoint — the outward appearance (1 Sam. 16:7). Such people get their eyes on
other people, things or self and have no discernment relative to spiritual
values. They are souls without a garrison, overrun or neutralized by the devil.
They “plead the blood,” agonize in the closet, dedicate, rededicate, and call
this “the victorious Christian life.” Where does God look? On the EMOTIONS? No! God evaluates what goes on in the heart — the
RIGHT LOBE! That is where the garrison should be.
“If anyone — any of you Corinthians
— has confidence (and you do) regarding himself that he belongs to Christ . . .
.” The Corinthians have not gone so far into reversionism that they think they
have lost their salvation, but that is about all they remember at this point.
How will they recover? Paul knows they cannot think doctrine while in emotional
revolt and reversionism; therefore, he directs their thoughts to his authority.
First, he reminds them that when
they criticize him, they are criticizing a member of the Body of Christ.
Furthermore, he has authority over them by divine appointment. As the
communicator of doctrine, Paul, as well as all pastor-teachers, has special
authority (Heb. 13:7, 17). Too many people in the pew are critical of the
pastor and try to tell him how to do his job. Nit-picking and criticism of
authority are signs of emotional revolt and failure to mount guard in the soul.
Therefore, in 2 Corinthians 10:8, Paul defends his authority and his right to
judge on the basis of his spiritual gift of communication (Eph. 4:11; 1 Thess.
5:12).
THE ISSUE OF AUTHORITY
For though I should boast somewhat
more of our authority, which the Lord {Holy Spirit] hath given us for
edification, and not for your destruction, I should not be ashamed (2
Cor. 10:8).
Paul, including all three communicators who
had ministered to the Corinthians — Timothy, Titus and himself — says
literally, “For if I (maybe I will and maybe I won’t — third class condition)
should boast a little too much concerning our authority . . . .” Paul’s critics
were saying that he was a great braggart and that authority had gone to his
head. They insisted that he was abusing his authority by keeping them under his
thumb.
Yet this
is exactly what the legalists were doing while attributing their own tactics to
Paul. Their strategy was to shame him by using his authority and to make it
appear as bullying so that he would not use it against them or check their
power lust. By usurping his authority through their legalistic teaching, they
were destroying the Corinthian church. But Paul, knowing that his authority was
from God, was neither ashamed nor afraid to use it In fact, he would have to
become a “drill sergeant” and “smash” them with his rank!
The
gift of pastor-teacher has been sovereignly bestowed by God the Holy Spirit for
the purpose of edification of the saints. The PRIMARY objective of the
communication of doctrine is the construction of the Edification Complex in the
soul. The ULTIMATE
objective is that in Phase Two” believers can reach the supergrace life. Even
though the pastor-teacher may find it necessary to severely admonish his flock,
it is not for their “destruction” to the contrary, it is to keep them from
reversionism! No believer ever builds an Edification Complex in the soul or
moves into super-grace without accepting his right pastor-teacher’s authority,
which has graciously been provided by the Holy Spirit and which is exercised
through “ICE”
teachings of the Word of God.
That I may not seem as if I would terrify
you by letters (2 Cor. 10:9).
Paul’s
critics also claimed he was trying to terrorize and intimidate the Corinthian
believers with his letters, so they rejected his epistles as a source of doctrine
and divine viewpoint. Therefore, it became necessary for Paul to defend the
authority issue through the doctrine of inspiration. As in communication, so in
inspiration, the authority of the message is provided by God the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit used the writers of Scripture to record God’s complete and
connected thought toward man. Obviously, First Corinthians was an epistle of
reproof. But this hard-nosed rebuke was conducted in the ministry of the Holy
Spirit under the principle of divine inspiration. Certain portions of the Bible
are designed to be harsh in order to warn believers against reversionism.
Whatever the subject, every portion of Scripture is vital and necessary (2 Tim.
3:16, 17)!
For his letters, say they, are
weighty and powerful; but his bodily presence is weak, and his speech
contemptible (2 Cor. 10:10).
Again
his critics are quoted as saying that his letters are “severe and vehement”
(literally). These words imply that Paul is tyrannical and lacks love and
compassion. They resent his dogmatism and authority in teaching. From the
critical attitude toward his message, they move on to ridicule his personal
appearance and public speaking ability. When anyone rejects the doctrinal
message, he will inevitably find something to reject in the person of the
communicator: “his bodily presence is weak [sickly],
and his speech contemptible.”
Those
of you who understand Greek culture will be amused at this because there were
two things which were highly revered: a beautiful body and a skillful
orator. Since most of the heroes of ancient Greece were either strong, muscular
men or people with eloquent tongues, the Greeks worshipped these two
attainments. The critics were pointing out that Paul did not meet any of the
heroic specifications for Greek culture. They were intimating that he would
have no influence in a Greek city like Corinth because of his sickly body and
his short-comings as a public speaker.
This description is
confirmed by a number of extrabiblical historical sources, one of which
describes Paul as being “short, bald, bowlegged, with meeting eyebrows and a
hooked proboscis.” John of Antioch, in the sixth century, characterized Paul as
“round-shouldered and having greyish eyes, aquiline nose, meeting eyebrows and
ample beard.” A fourth-century manuscript, ascribed to Lucian, portrayed Paul
as the “bald-headed, hook-nosed Galilean.”
The legalists made an
issue of his appearance. There is apparent reason to believe he did not make a
good first impression, and frankly, I am delighted that he did not. Paul is a
good illustration of the secret of power in the Christian life. To serve the
Lord, it is not necessary to work out with barbells and develop muscles. Nor is
the secret in eloquent speech. In fact, there are too many eloquent speakers
right now in the pulpits who know how to say nothing beautifully!
Apparently, Paul had
some type of speech impediment; yet he never seemed to be disturbed or hampered
by his human handicaps for quite an obvious reason: he depended on the POWER OF
GOD! He knew that the power of God not only provided a more than adequate
substitute for any human deficiency, but that it was the only source for a
successful ministry.
Human viewpoint said,
“Paul, you will never make a preacher; you are an unrefined public speaker; you
have no presence, and your appearance detracts. You simply will never be able
to hold an audience; so don’t bother to come to our seminary or apply to our
pulpit committee. You do not fill the bill!” Human viewpoint demands a tall, attractive,
eloquent gentleman — someone who will be a social lion, have the right kind of
a personality and who can raise money, if necessary. What is the divine
viewpoint? Does he teach the Word of God?
Does he use divine power? Paul
illustrates in this passage the difference between divine and human viewpoints.
He is declaring that from the human viewpoint he could not serve anywhere as a
pastor, but God has graciously given him the gift of authority — apostleship.
Further, God has given him the gift of teaching; and regardless of his lack of
eloquence, Paul is unsurpassed as a teacher, as well as one of the greatest
believers who ever lived. From the human viewpoint, he was totally handicapped.
From the divine viewpoint, he tapped grace to the maximum.
In addition to his unattractive
physical appearance and lack of eloquence, Paul was constantly in pain (2 Cor.
12:7 — the “thorn in the flesh”) .This is a significant factor. Some of you may
not realize how difficult it is to teach God’s Word when you ache all over or
when you have some physical ailment. I know ministers who habitually stand
before their congregations with a serious handicap from the standpoint of
health.
Yet, once again, we see that the
important factor is God’s Word. When one uses God’s Word and God’s power — the
filling of the Spirit — all the handicaps of life cannot hinder any man from
fulfilling the responsibility for which the Lord has left him in this world. It
is not how you look — and don’t take this to mean that you should be sloppy in
your appearance; as a representative of the Lord, you should groom yourself to
the best of your ability. It is not how you speak; it is not your personality;
IT IS WHAT YOU THINK! All the physical disorders and handicaps in the world are
inconsequential if you have divine viewpoint in your right lobe!
Although the critics cannot
permanently damage Paul’s ministry, they are permitted by God to continue their
activities to test the discernment and volition of believers who appear to be
positive to doctrine. Are we occupied with Christ or with people? Do we truly
love the Word, or are we concerned only with superficialities?
Let such an one [the critic] think [consider] this, that,
such as [of what sort] we are in word by letters when we are absent, such will
we be also in deed when we are present (2 Cor. 10:11).
Paul comes back at his critics with
a declaration of his consistency. Let the critics and Judaizers consider the
facts. Paul has been consistent whether present or absent: “You think I am
trying to terrify you with letters; you think I am bluffing; you think I am a
lamb when I am in Corinth and a lion when I am out of the city limits. Well,
continue at your present rate, and when I come, we shall see who is the lion
and who is the lamb!”
Paul preferred to present God’s Word
in a gracious manner; but when the occasion called for it, he could lower the
boom. We know this from the Second Chapter of Galatians. In Antioch, Paul had
found it necessary to “brace” the leader of the local church. Do you know whom
he braced? Peter! Paul backed Peter up against the wall and said, “You are a
legalist! You are wrong!” (Gal. 2:11-21). He chewed Peter up one side and down
the other! That does not sound like a lamb to me!
What is the divine viewpoint in 2
Corinthians 10:11? “When I come back, I am going to get tough!” Those who had
fallen for the human viewpoint would have a positive demonstration of the
correct viewpoint when Paul returned. Then he goes on to ask, “Who are these
people who are criticizing me? And what is the source of their viewpoint?”
THE
INCONSISTENCY OF HUMAN VIEWPOINT
For we dare not make ourselves of the number, or compare
ourselves with some that commend themselves: but they measuring themselves by
themselves, and comparing themselves among themselves, are not wise (2 Cor. 10:12).
Once or twice a year, usually after
I have injected a little sarcasm into my teaching, I receive an anonymous
letter in which someone rises up in all his ascetic wrath against the use of sarcasm.
He writes that it has no place in the pulpit, that it is anti-biblical. Now, if
you have that viewpoint, please notice the use of Paul’s sanctified sarcasm
under the ministry of the Holy Spirit.
To “make ourselves” means “to judge
ourselves in the same place or rank.” “I do not have the boldness,” Paul says,
oozing sarcasm, “to judge ourselves worthy . . .” (“of the number” is not in
the original). In other words, the legalists are so superior to him (sarcasm),
he isn’t even in the picture! He could never qualify for such a great society;
he is too far beneath them!
Paul now adds humor to sarcasm: “to
compare ourselves” is a paronomasia. However, the play on words is lost in the
English. He says, “We do not have the boldness to either EGKRINO — ‘to judge ourselves worthy’ — or SUGKRINO — ‘to compare ourselves favorably’ with certain ones
who constantly recommend themselves favorably.” The critics always consider
themselves better than everyone else. They have found in Paul and others a
common target for criticism, and they malign and judge them, while flattering
each other and stimulating their own approbation lust. Paul is completely
ostracized from their mutual admiration society; yet from the divine viewpoint,
not one of them was worthy to clean the mud from his sandals!
To use another believer as your
criterion is a very subtle form of carnality. Do you know why? Because it
involves a mental attitude of pride, and pride is one of the most insidious of
mental attitude sins. Paul says these people are not wise: they are not
inculcated with doctrine and are not even applying to experience what little
doctrine they have!
THE STANDARD OF BIBLE DOCTRINE
But we will not boast of things
without our measure, but according to the measure of the rule [authority of the
Canon] which God hath distributed to us, a measure to reach even unto you (2
Cor. 10:13).
“But”
is a conjunction which sets forth a contrast between human viewpoint of the
mutual admiration society of verse 12 and divine viewpoint of believers with
doctrine in the right lobe. The Greek says literally, “But we will not boast
with reference to thing; not measured. . . .” What are these things? We must
remember our context — human versus divine viewpoints. Paul is saying that the
maligning and approbation lust of his critics does not line up with doctrine;
therefore, he will not glory in it or be impressed with it. God ha not left us
in the dark regarding the divine standards for life: they are found in the
Canon of Scripture and nowhere else! Most of these people were believers, but
they were minus doctrine in the right lobe.
The
next conjunction of contrast describes that which Paul will glory in: “but
according to the standard of the measure of the rule {KANON] . . .” KANON, a
ruler or measuring stick, from which we derive the word “Canon,” is often used
for the Word of God. While in their state of emotional revolt and reversionism
Paul’s critics have rejected the Canon or Rule, God has not: “which God
[through the Holy Spirit] has distributed to us [in the Canon]. . . .” It is
shared with us through the human writers of Scripture.
“A
measure” is the divine viewpoint, the absolute criterion for the believer. But
this time, in contrast to being distributed in the Canon, it reaches us through
the COMMUNICATION of
doctrine. “Unto you” (ACHRI), as it is translated in the English, robs it of
its sarcasm. It actually means “as far as you all.” The reversionistic
believers have received the divine standard, but they have rejected it for the
persuasiveness of the Judaizers.
RESULTS OF DIVINE VIEWPOINT
For we stretch not ourselves beyond
our measure, as though we reached not unto you: for we are come as far as to
you also in preaching {proclaiming] the gospel of Christ (2
Cor. 10:14).
In
order to understand the divine viewpoint in this verse, we must pick up a
little background. When Paul first came to Corinth (Acts 18:1), he communicated
pure grace from the absolute criterion of doctrine. The Corinthians responded
positively to his dogmatic presentation of the Gospel of grace and then to his
continued grace teaching of Bible doctrine. After Paul left them, they became
carnal; and he was equally dogmatic about their carnality, as expressed in the
First Corinthian epistle. This is the reason that First Corinthians was so
unpopular. The Corinthians reacted to his rebuke with emotional revolt.
Now,
in 2 Corinthians 10:14, Paul uses the illustration of their salvation to
explain the divine viewpoint. He says, literally, “For not reaching toward you
(with the Gospel), as we did not overextend ourselves; for as far as you also
we have advanced in the Gospel of Christ.” What is Paul saying? “When I first
came to Corinth, none of you were believers. I came in and dogmatically laid
‘grace’ on the line! Did I overextend myself? You have been criticizing me for
being too dogmatic; you claim I am going too far! Why didn’t you say that when
you responded to my dogmatic presentation of the Gospel?”
Why
the sudden complaint about dogmatism? Because he stepped on their toes. He is
now a bully and a dictator! Yet Paul is actually consistent — they are
inconsistent and out of line. If Paul had gone beyond the bounds of the Gospel
and taught salvation by works, none of them would have been saved. But Paul neither
went outside the boundaries of grace in salvation nor beyond the limits of
doctrine in reproving them.
Paul
advanced in his ministry with them by rebuking them in regard to their
carnality. Their advance at this point is to take the reprimand and to accept
the discipline under the authority of the Word of God. We cannot advance
spiritually unless we accept the en- tire communication of doctrine and the
authority of the pastor-teacher. We cannot reject what we do not like without
retreating into emotional revolt, scar tissue or reversionism.
Not boasting of things without our
measure, that is, of other men’s labours; but having hope [confidence], when
your faith {doctrine] is increased, that we shall be enlarged by you according
to our rule abundantly (2 Cor. 10:15).
Boasting
is dependent on human ability and human accomplishment and is therefore related
to human good and human viewpoint. Paul refuses to boast in human viewpoint or
in anything which lacks orientation to the grace of God. Even though he founded
the Corinthian church, he does not boast about it. But he has a right to have
confidence regarding them as the fruits of his labor. He anticipates that they
will recover from emotional revolt or reversionism through a change of attitude
toward doctrine and that they will grow up spiritually as a result. His
ministry will thus be extended in their lives, and doctrine will be enlarged or
magnified (Psa. 138:2).
It is
possible for a child to do certain things as an adult would do them, but we do
not consider that child an adult. He is still a child! Children have changeable
behavior patterns. One moment they may act like a child, and the next, like an
adult; but we hope that eventually their actions will be consistently adult.
What causes a child to mature? Not by occasionally doing something like an
adult but by growing up mentally.
Maturity
is primarily in the realm of thinking, both from the standpoint of human life
and spiritual life. There are periods in the life of a Christian when he will
do something spiritually right, but that does not constitute spiritual
maturity. I am going to make a dogmatic statement — and I hope you will never
forget it: NO CHRISTIAN CAN EVER BE SPIRITUALLY MATURE APART FROM A MAXIMUM
KNOWLEDGE OF GOD’S WORD!
“So then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God” (Rom. 10:17).
Faith can be increased only by the absorption of the Word through the function
of GAP.
The
tragedy of many believers is that they resist Bible doctrine. Though they are
truly born again, their entire emphasis is on experience. They are legalists,
and they can never mature. Maturity is what you habitually thinly not what you
do! You often see someone who, as a result of some mental retardation, develops
physically, but whose mind never catches up. Mentally, he will always be a
child, even though he has an adult body. Just as a person is not an adult on
the basis of the maturity of his human body, so the believer does not become an
adult on the basis of his actions. Spiritual maturity is directly related to
doctrine in the right lobe.
DIVINE VIEWPOINT IN WITNESSING
To preach the gospel in the regions
beyond you, and not to boast in another man’s line {false standard] of things
made ready to our hand (2 Cor. 10:16).
When doctrine
is magnified in a local church through the daily function of GAP,
there is an increase in effective witnessing” and a greater missionary
outreach. The “regions beyond” refer to any place from next door to ten
thousand miles away. Again Paul says he will not boast in or cater to the false
norms and standards of the Judaizers, who have gone far afield with their
legalism and human viewpoint. But he knows that when reversionism is cured by a
change of mental attitude toward doctrine and the daily function of GAP, the
Corinthians will then move out with the Gospel and make the salvation issue
clear. Both personal witnessing and evangelism must be Biblically accurate and
presented on a grace basis.
“Things
made ready to our hand” means “with reference to the things prepared.”
Legalists never start their own work but tear down another’s .Their norms are
prepared through human viewpoint. In other words, they have a public relations
“Madison Avenue” approach which, though appealing, is non-biblical and therefore
human viewpoint. There is no place in witnessing for human viewpoint or
gimmicks which become substitutes for the ministry of the Holy Spirit. Gimmick-
witnessing is a false standard prepared from human
viewpoint by those who are ignorant of, or are in revolt against, Bible
doctrine. Those who criticized Paul were boasting of others who evangelized via
the human viewpoint method.
No
believer in emotional revolt or reversionism can effectively communicate the
Gospel. He always has an ax to grind, such as legalism; he invariably adds
something to the Gospel and confuses the issue for believer and unbeliever
alike. He wants the unbeliever to give up certain sins which he personally
dislikes. Or he thinks you must believe AND be baptized . . . believe AND
confess your sins . . . believe AND join the church. But the issue is grace faith
plus NOTHING: “BELIEVE
ON THE LORD JESUS CHRIST, and thou shalt be saved” (Acts 16:31).
DIVINE COMMENDATION
But he that glorieth, let him glory [keep on
glorying] in the Lord (2 Cor. 10:17).
This
is a quotation from Jeremiah 9:23, 24, which warns believers of the danger of
reversionism. The context of the Jeremiah passage describes the national
disintegration of Judah which had reached its peak following an eleven-year
period of rejecting doctrine. These people had all three categories of
prosperity stated in context: success economic prosperity and spiritual
prosperity, in which they had functioned under GAP for a period of time and
falsely assumed they had an Edification Complex in the soul. Instead, through
neglect of doctrine, they were in emotional revolt and reversionism and had
become “wise in their own conceits — they thought they knew it all!
In
prosperity, the believer is more vulnerable to reversionism than under
adversity and pressure, for in prosperity there is a tendency to neglect
doctrine and to seek happiness from another source. Through pride of their
success, the Jews started down the road toward reversionism. They boasted of
their achievements and wealth; but without an Edification Complex and
super-grace, these attainments are meaningless. Although God has a super-grace
prosperity package for every believer, the capacity for super-grace blessings
must come from Bible doctrine in the right lobe. Few people can pass the
prosperity test apart from doctrine.
Paul
now makes the same application for the Jews of his day. “If you feel you must
boast,” he says, “change it to ‘glorying’ in the Lord.” Second Corinthians
10:17 does not mean that you run around saying “Praise God, hallelujah, isn’t
Jesus wonderful?” That can be as phony as a lead nickel. People use these
phrases like an amulet worn around the neck for good luck in the hopes of
staving off failure.
How
do you keep on glorying in the Lord? To keep on doing something, it must be
done every day. To glory in the Lord, doctrine must be taken in daily,
transferred to the human spirit by faith so that you keep on building; then, as
it is transferred to the right lobe through the filling of the Spirit, it goes
into the frame of reference, memory center, vocabulary and categories and
finally to the launching pad for application to experience. You cannot neglect
doctrine even for a day. Glorying in the Lord is THINKING Bible doctrine!
For not he that commendeth himself is
approved, but whom the Lord commendeth (2 Cor. 10:18).
The
Corinthians were commending or recommending themselves for favorable attention
because they thought they had arrived at the epitome of spiritual and economic
prosperity, and they wanted everyone to know it. In reality, they, like their
earlier counterparts in Judea, were in emotional revolt and reversionism. You
will find “Corinthians” wherever you go who are in the business of commending
themselves. At every opportunity they will tell you what a great battle they
are fighting for the Lord. They make it very clear that they are doing “great
things for God” around the church or in some Christian organization. What do
they seek? Approval! In other walks of life they have never been recognized,
and they are starved for approbation. They want some pastor to publicly express
thanks for their accomplishments.
If
your activities are motivated solely for the purpose of securing approval and
recognition, you are out in “center field.” All your efforts should be
discontinued until you can do them as unto the Lord. It is possible to do a
right thing in a wrong way. What trips you up? Mental attitude human viewpoint!
If you do your job as unto the Lord — another phase of the faith-rest technique
— you just leave the commendation in His hands and to His discretion and
wisdom. Forget the “brag sheet,” the “Monday morning” pastors’ conference, the
attendance record, the number who went through the baptismal “tank,” and all
the other “one-upmanship” activities. The believer cannot be blessed under
these conditions.
God
does not approve the believer who promotes himself or takes credit to himself.
If the Lord does not promote you, you are not promoted (Psa. 75:6, 7). Human
gimmicks will never cut it. All evaluation is in the Lord’s hands. Judging is a
divine prerogative only. Criticizing, judging or slandering another believer
is, in effect, an at- tempt to promote yourself and is indicative of emotional
revolt, negative volition toward doctrine and reversionism.
Perhaps
no one in the Bible so perfectly illustrates the principle of 2 Corinthians
10:18 as David, and no treatise on mental attitude would be complete without a
mention of his rise to prominence.
THE ASCENDANCY OF DAVID
David
began his career not only from an obscure position but as a nonentity. If you
want to know what a nonentity — it is
the eighth son in a family! The other seven were being promoted, pushed along
and educated. This took all of the father’s resources, which wen vested in
sheep. Someone had to take care of the sheep to keep the other seven boys in
school and moving along in their careers. David, being the eighth boy, was the
logical one! He was on the bottom rung, the forgotten son of the family. He
lived more with the sheep than he did in his father’s home in Bethlehem.
From
this anonymous place as a shepherd, David went all the way to the highest
position in the land. He was truly a great man in history, from both the divine
and human viewpoints, and was one of the greatest rulers of all time. You are
familiar with his many courageous acts: how he alone challenged and killed the
giant; how he became the highest general in the land; how he became the most
popular man in the court; how, in exile, he forged a band of fugitives into a
crack military outfit; and finally, how he became king. In fact, we often
become so lost in the action of the story, we forget that action is based on
mental attitude. All the time that David was engaged in an overt act, he was
not simply doing — he was thinking! The principle which made David great and
gave such tremendous vitality and power to so many of his actions was what was
going on in his right lobe. This is extremely important. It was the secret of
his success.
THE CONTRAST BETWEEN HUMAN AND DIVINE
VIEWPOINTS
In
contrast to David, two other men, Samuel and Jesse, did some erroneous
thinking. In 1 Samuel 16:1-5, God instructed the great prophet, Samuel, to go
to Bethlehem to anoint the-next king of Israel. Saul was to be superseded by a
son of the family of Jesse. When the seven sons were paraded before Samuel, we
discover that the eldest appealed to Samuel. Tall and handsome and wearing his
new uniform as a second lieutenant in the infantry, he was preparing to go to
war against the Philistines, who had invaded Israel.
And it came to pass, when they were
come, that he looked on Eliab, and said. Surely the LORD’S anointed is before
him (1 Sam. 16:6).
But the Lord said unto Samuel, Look
not on his countenance, or on the height of his stature; because I have refused
him: for the LORD seeth not as man seeth; for man looketh on the
outward appearance, but the LORD looketh on the heart [right lobe] (1
Sam. 16:7).
Notice
the contrast stated: “man looketh on the outward appearance, but the Lord
looketh on the right lobe.” From the human viewpoint, here was a tall,
handsome, personable individual which anyone might have selected to fill a job.
But God said, “No !You can go up and down that line as much as you want, but I
have rejected these seven boys — even though they are all fine looking!”
Immediately
Samuel hit a stone wall. Where was the answer to this dilemma? The “answer” was
out with the sheep! The answer was faithfully on the job: he stayed with the
sheep; he cared for the sheep. When one of the lambs was caught in the cactus,
he retrieved it. When a wild animal took a sheep from the flock, he gave chase
and killed the animal! Why? He had some doctrine; and as a result, he had the
right mental attitude — the divine viewpoint of life. He was occupied with the
Person of Christ (Psa. 23). When he heard that Samuel had come to town, he did
not run into town for the great holiday; he stayed with the sheep. He had a
mental attitude of faithfulness.
Samuel
asked if these were all of Jesse’s sons. Jesse said, “There remaineth yet the
youngest, and, behold, he keepeth the sheep . . .” (1 Sam. 16:11). Jesse said
this in derision, for he was implying that the youngest was of no importance.
Yet this was the son whom God had chosen! Do you see the contrast? Human
viewpoint: pick one of the tall, good-looking boys — any one of them would make
a fine-looking king! Divine viewpoint: there is a boy out with the sheep who is
faithful and who has doctrine in his right lobe. How do we know? Look for a
moment at 1 Samuel 17, where David recounted two incidents which illustrate the
doctrine he had been storing up.
And David said unto Saul, Thy
servant kept his father’s sheep, and there came a lion, and a bear, and took a
lamb out of the flock (1 Sam. 17:34).
“Kept
his father’s sheep” is literally, “kept on keeping his father’s sheep”; and
there is a vast difference: he was not a temporary, one-day shepherd; he was
out there full time. What makes people keep on keeping on, even when they are
tired, worn out, discouraged, hurting or sick? Divine viewpoint in the right
lobe! If you have doctrine in your right lobe, you will be consistent as was
David: in every situation, he kept on faithfully.
What
were the two incidents which occurred out there among the sheep, even before
Samuel came to anoint David? First of all, a lion, which can run the
hundred-yard dash in five seconds, came in among the sheep and picked out a
choice lamb from the flock. As far as human viewpoint is concerned, this crisis
was now over. The lion had come; the lion had departed, and David was still in
one piece. What else mattered? Do we read that David sat down, mopped his brow,
and let his nerves unwind? Not at all! The sheep were HIS
responsibility.
David
could have thought, “That is just one little lamb, and I want to live a little
longer.” It would have been easy for him to throw in human viewpoint at this
time. But divine viewpoint told David that no matter what the cost, there was a
job to be done, and he should be faithful. Undoubtedly, David learned the
principle of 1 Samuel 17:47 while he was still with the sheep: “the battle is
the Lord’s.” And since David believed it, he knew the Lord could whip the lion,
just as he knew he could not do it by himself. Without a second thought, he
moved out, killed the lion and delivered the lamb back to the fold!
Notice
that the emphasis is not on the great feat that he accomplished. God’s Word
very clearly and carefully stresses what he thought. Unlike the modern
sportsman on safari, David did not have a .357 H and H Magnum, nor did he have
a gun-bearer as a backup in case he missed! He went after that lion with
anything but lion-hunting equipment, but he bagged himself a lion! Yet he did
not do it — the LORD DID IT!
Now
David received another test — this time, a bear. A bear is a rough character
also. One whack with his paw, and he can disintegrate your backbone. The bear
picked out a choice lamb and took off for the feast. Before the bear could get
the lamb “on the table,” David was hot on his trail.
Again,
David could have rationalized and said, “I’m the only young boy who has ever
killed a lion, so I think I’ll just stand on my laurels and sit this one out”
Not David! He knew he had a responsibility before the Lord, and he did his job
as unto the Lord. David could not whip the bear, but he knew the Lord could. He
would go after the bear and let the Lord take care of the details. The Lord
did, and David rescued the lamb! The super-grace believer does not quit in the
middle of the testing. Having passed the test of the lion, David did not shirk
the test of the bear. Doctrine is as good for one type of combat as for
another. Later, doctrine would deliver him in hand-to-hand combat with a giant.
The loud-mouthed giant was not as tough as either the lion or the bear!
David said moreover, The LORD
that delivered me out of the paw of the lion, and out of the paw of the bear,
he will deliver me out of the hand of this Philistine. . . (1
Sam. 17:37).
This
is success, especially to one so young; but David did not suggest that it was
in any way due to his power, ingenuity or ability. He did not take one ounce of
the credit to himself, nor did he become arrogant about his victory. He did not
call out the news media of his day to photograph the carcass and ballyhoo
himself. In fact, he did not tell anyone about it at the time. Why? Because he
persisted in habitually looking at life from the divine viewpoint, and divine
viewpoint says, “For not he that commendeth himself is approved, but whom the
Lord commendeth” (2 Cor. 10:18).
The
lion and bear victories were dress rehearsals for the Goliath crisis. Unseen by
human beings and without human encouragement, David had defeated both
adversaries. If he had flunked the lion and bear incidents, he would have
failed in the Goliath test. GOD PREPARES HIS MAN IN SECRET FOR VICTORY IN
PUBLIC! The public victory is won in the secret places of the Most High (Psa.
91). Wouldn’t Jesse sit up and take notice if he knew that this young lad who
“keepeth the sheep’ ‘ had already killed a lion and a bear, and that he had in
his right lobe that which would make him the greatest ruler of all time, apart
from Jesus Christ? If you want to know some of David’s thoughts during those
years while he kept the sheep, read the Davidic Psalms. Note how many times the
divine viewpoint is expressed: “The LORD is my light and my salvation; whom shall I
fear? the LORD is
the strength of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?” (Psa. 27:1). Humanly
speaking, everyone has some area of fear; but David had conquered fear (Psa.
56:3). Why? Because he looked at life from the divine viewpoint. And where did
he get the divine viewpoint?
From
doctrine in his right lobe. In every Psalm David wrote, you will find that
beautiful picture of God’s deliverance and power.
Do
you get into “Panic Palace” every time you read the newspaper or hear some
rumor on the radio? Do you come unglued at the slightest provocation? What goes
on in your frontal lobes? Why do you become upset every time you face some
difficulty in life? Why do you fall apart? I’ll tell you why: no Bible doctrine
in the soul or failure to apply what you know!
THE PROSPERITY TEST
Let us
see one or two other instances of divine viewpoint in David’s life. King Saul
was suffering from manic depression (1 Sam. 16:14) and the “psychiatrists”
recommended musical therapy. The problem was that everyone around the court
played the “guitar,” and they needed classical music played skillfully on the
psalter the old ten-string harp. One of Saul’s servants knew of a boy out in
the hills of Judea who was an accomplished harpist, and so it was that David
was brought into Saul’s court to begin the therapy.
David
played day after day, and Saul improved. In appreciation, Saul appointed David
his armorbearer (1 Sam. 16:21). That may not sound like much to you. You may
picture him weighted down with heavy “boiler plate” and assigned to a tough
job. But this was an honorary position. David had servants to carry the
breastplate, helmet and other accouterments. A person who was an armorbearer of
the king would one day be a general or a prime minister or would hold some
other high office in the land. It was a guarantee of future prominence.
From
the human viewpoint, David had reached the heights as armorbearer of the king.
“But David went and returned from Saul to feed, his father’s sheep at
Bethlehem” (1 Sam. 17:15). Now most people would have told David that he was
out of his mind — he had just kicked over the greatest opportunity he would
ever have. I can just see Jesse when David showed up! He probably said, “David,
what are you doing home? You are the armorbearer of the king. I have told
everyone what a great job you were doing. Did the king send you back?”
David
would have replied, “No, the king did not send me. I came back to take care of
the sheep; that is my job!” His father would have “blown his top.” Why? Human
viewpoint! But divine viewpoint said, “God did not release me from those sheep;
God did not say for me to stay at the palace. Therefore, I will stay with the
sheep until God promotes me!” And that is exactly what happened: God promoted
him! David’s head was not turned by prosperity. The super-grace hero always
passes the prosperity test. Most people would have been too proud to go back to
the humdrum of daily routine after success in the king’s court; but David
returned to the sheep to wait for God’s time. Super-grace believers do not get
ahead of the Lord!
THE MAN FOR THE CRISIS
We
now come to the incident for which God had been preparing David — a crisis
designed by God to introduce His candidate for king of Israel. Goliath, the
nine-foot-nine-inch giant of Gath, represented the military crisis which Israel
faced in reversionism. Daily, he had bellowed out his challenge for someone to
fight him, while the soldiers of Israel trembled in their tents for forty days.
On the fortieth day, who should come into camp but David! As the king’s armorbearer?
No! As a boy carrying ten cheeses for the battalion commander, plus a month’s
rations for his three brothers.
David hears the challenge of old “loud-mouth.” Does
David say, “Who is this uncircumcised Philistine that he should dare stand in
front of Saul’s imperial guard and make such remarks?” No! David says, “ .. .
for who is this uncircumcised Philistine, that he should defy the armies OF THE
LIVING GOD?” (1 Sam. 17:26). David regarded the Philistine as an unbeliever
rather than as a powerful giant. He considered it disgraceful and dishonorable
that forty days had elapsed without anyone’s accepting the challenge when they
belonged to the LIVING
God! This was the first expression of divine viewpoint in Israel that day.
Goliath was not defying Saul and his army — he was defying God.
THE ATTACK OF HUMAN VIEWPOINT
As
David went to meet the challenge, he had to fight his own brother before he
could fight the giant. Eliab accused him of arrogance and branded him as a
deserter of his “few sheep” (1 Sam.
17:28). Ignoring the insults of his brother, David won
his first battle against subjectivity, pettiness and reversionism. David was a
super- grace hero known to God but unknown by his family or anyone else in
Israel. Eliab was a reversionist whose right lobe was out of kilter through the
mental attitude sins of pride, jealousy, anger, criticism and sarcasm.
To
win this battle, David retreated; to defeat the giant, David would advance. Not
all battles in the spiritual life are won in the same way. If David had lost
his temper with his brother, he would have lost this battle and not been
qualified to fight Goliath. Your super-grace victory over pettiness today may
result in killing the “giant” tomorrow. Although Eliab’s remarks were
inaccurate, unfair and uncalled for, David did not stop to defend himself. He
recognized that this was a doctrinal issue. Eliab put David down, but God put
David up!
THE ATTACK OF WORLDLINESS
King
Saul had once been a courageous soldier, but reversionism had turned him into a
coward. Now, during a crisis that he could not solve, a subtle plan took shape
in his distorted mind, and Saul offered David his armor (1 Sam. 17:38). Here is
yet another test before David can get to Goliath — an attack of worldliness.
The armor of Saul on David represents worldliness from two standpoints: (1) If
David were “lucky” and won, reasoned Saul, Saul could take credit for the
victory because David was wearing his armor. (2) The armor represents a
principle that ignores the spiritual connotation of the giant’s challenge: good
weapons and armor would not destroy Goliath, but the power and grace of God
could!
No
weapon or armor forged by the world will ever replace the power of God. Grace
excludes human ability, human equipment, human help. Bible doctrine had taught
David to be independent of COSMOS DIABOLICUS in any form. David preserved the
grace of God in his soul by refusing the armor of Saul; therefore, he rejected
the worldly means of facing the crisis. After all, what good had the armor done
Saul? It was not the armor but the attitude of soul. David would face the
crisis with Bible doctrine in his soul not fancy armor on his body!
THE MENTAL ATTITUDE OF A SUPER-GRACE HERO
As
David walked out on the battlefield, Goliath, armed with spear and shield,
could scarcely believe his eyes. Affronted by this measly offering from the
Jewish camp, he began to bully David, shouting, “Am I a dog, that thou comest
to me with staves?’ (1 Sam. 17:43). Goliath viewed the situation this way: they
had sent out a mere boy to do combat with the greatest gladiator of the
Philistines! The Jews must have had a low opinion of him indeed!
What
was David carrying? He held the shepherd’s crook in one hand and a sling in the
other (1 Sam. 17:40). Goliath implied, “You might fight a dog with a stick, but
you will never defeat ME with such a flimsy defense! You had better go back and
get yourself a javelin, boy, because you are going to need it!” Human
viewpoint! Then we read that Goliath cursed David by “his gods” — not by the
Philistines’ gods but by David’s God — ELOHIM. Goliath said to David, “Come to me, and I
will give thy flesh unto the fowls of the air, and to the beasts of the field”
(1 Sam. 17:44). HUMAN VIEWPOINT!
Then said David to the Philistine, Thou
comest to me with a sword, and with a spear, and with a shield: but I come to
thee in the name of the LORD of hosts, the God of the armies of Israel,
whom thou hast defied (1 Sam. 17:45).
David,
as a super-grace believer, is quick to express the true issue and to identify
himself with the Winner — Jesus Christ. DIVINE VIEWPOINT!
This
day will the LORD
deliver thee into mine hand; and I will smite thee, and take thine head from
thee; and I will give the carcases of the host of the Philistines this day unto
the fowls of the air, and to the wild beasts of the earth; that all the earth
may know that there is a God in Israel (1 Sam. 17:46).
By
this time, Goliath was probably standing there with his mouth hanging open. No
one had ever spoken to him like that! He had never heard such words. Did David
say them to demonstrate his muscular prowess in that arena? Oh, no — but to
make known “that there is a God in Israel!” In the telling of the story of
David and Goliath, the emphasis is always on what David DID —
how he hit the giant with a stone, knocked him out and beheaded him. Where does
God’s Word focus our attention? If you understand 1 Samuel 17:45-47, you can
see that God’s Word emphasizes what David was thinking as he stood there, not
on what he accomplished a few minutes later.
And all this assembly shall know
that the LORD saveth not with sword and spear: for the
battle is the LORD’S, and he will give you into our hands (1
Sam. 17:46).
In
this magnificent declaration is one of the greatest principles in the Christian
life: THE BATTLE IS THE LORD’S !Spoken under maximum pressure, we see the total
concept of the super-grace believer. David was the only one there that day who
had enough doctrine in his soul to meet that challenge! Now we will see the
action of a super-grace hero. Having made his decision based on Bible doctrine
in his right lobe, he moved with alacrity to carry it out.
David
ran toward the army of the Philistines to meet Goliath (1 Sam. 17:48). As he
went forward, David “cranked up” his sling and released the stone, which hit
Goliath squarely in the middle of his forehead. Down went the giant! David then
stood on his chest, pulled out Goliath’s own sword and decapitated him. The
action of the story is well known. But before there was any action, there was a
mental attitude based on Bible doctrine. It was his thought pattern that
distinguished David from all the rest of the men in Israel, not just his
ability to fight (many men in Israel were successful warriors).
The
super-grace believer has no hang-ups, no subjectivity, no fear. David had no
qualms about killing the enemy; no guilt complex after the battle was over. He
was a perfect combat soldier because his soul was prepared by doctrine long
before his body advanced into battle. The action of the super-grace believer
jibes with his thinking so that he is perfectly coordinated in soul and body.
David personified the principle of 2 Corinthians 10:5:
Assaulting and demolishing cosmic
thought, and every obstacle of pride attacking against the objective knowledge
of God, and making a prisoner of every human viewpoint system of thought to the
authority of Christ.