Thinking as Worship: Honoring God with Our Minds

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Reflecting on a decade of God's faithfulness, we gather to celebrate and anticipate the future with gratitude and hope. As we look back, we are reminded of the incredible journey that began ten years ago, and we are filled with awe at what God has accomplished. Yet, our focus is not only on the past but also on the future, as we eagerly anticipate what God will do in the years to come. [00:00:28]

Thinking is our business and I would say it's the use of the mind or the use of the reason in order to grasp or understand truth and put it to proper use. Now to expand that, I really do think that the six habits of the mind that we developed ten years ago in that message are still exactly what you're supposed to do with your mind. [00:03:48]

We think that the right use of the mind or the right point of this school is to help students inculcate to instill in them habits of mind and heart, they really overlap, which will carry them forward for the rest of their lives. Six of them: observation, understanding, evaluating, feeling, applying, and expressing. [00:04:41]

Understanding is the outcome, the successful outcome of thinking, and it's the arrival at truth. And the reason that verse is so precious is because it endorses a school or a life of the mind in which you're going to devote significant energies to think because he tells him, he's talking to a pastor, think over what I said. [00:10:07]

Mental effort is essential and not sufficient. He makes those distinctions, get those words in your head. It's essential, necessary because Paul said do it, and then he said and if God doesn't give you this understanding, you won't get it that way. And so many people say well if you get it from God then you do anything. [00:11:38]

The journey is a means to the goal and God is the goal and a right knowing of God and right loving of God is the goal. The journey can be wonderfully stimulating and that's why it can be so deceptive. It can make you think oh I remember still astray ssin what two three years ago those one or two of you might be here. [00:14:27]

The role of the Holy Spirit in thinking is crucial. While mental effort is essential, it is not sufficient without the Spirit's guidance. We must pray for the Spirit to illuminate our minds and remove barriers that hinder our understanding. The Spirit helps us align our preferences with God's truth, enabling us to read and interpret Scripture accurately. [00:27:36]

If you shut your mind off you cannot know God and if you don't know him you can't love him. You love a figment of your imagination. Jesus said the first and Great Commandment is and they give you Luke's version you shall love the Lord your God from all your heart by all your soul and all your strength and all your mind. [00:29:49]

Love God with your mind means the very functioning of the mind is a loving of God. I think that's deadly wrong to cause think to call thinking loving obscures the fact that loving is an affectional delighting in, treasuring, cherishing, valuing of God. The fruits of right thinking, right obeying come from it. [00:31:01]

Natural revelation makes it possible for unbelievers to see millions of true things and write books about them that can be helpful. Give it just maybe another comment here my clarify we were trying to come up a hook working with a group at a conference we were trying to come up with a statement about the sufficiency of Scripture. [00:37:19]

There is plenty to learn from unbelievers as they look at the world and write down what they see. Some of them are very shrewd observers, they're just not making any ultimate sense out of it and we can do that. We can take their raw material and make ultimate sense out of it. [00:39:24]

The most extreme relativism that I'm concerned about is the kind that denies that there is truth, there is absolute truth, and thus relative eise's everything by saying relative to me this is good, this is true, this is beautiful. That's the ultimate and worst kind of relativism, no truth therefore no standard. [00:42:39]

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