True Freedom: Overcoming Sin's Deceptive Pleasures

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Now my suggestion is that there is no need to set up a new research department, there is no need to spend thousands, perhaps millions of pounds in investigations. The whole trouble with men and the whole trouble with the world tonight is clearly set forth in this Bible already. There's no need to try and discover a diagnosis. The diagnosis is here before us. It's the whole message of the Bible. [00:03:47]

The Bible is a book about life. It's a book about men and women like ourselves. It comes to us from God as the explanation of our troubles and problems and difficulties and with the glorious announcement of the only remedy for such a condition that can possibly work. But in particular, I am emphasizing this, that there is no hope whatsoever for this generation or any other generation until we are clear about this diagnosis. [00:04:20]

Sin has turned men into a creature of lust and of craving. Men is a creature as the result of sin who is controlled and governed by desire, passion, lust, craving. I showed you how it is something that comes and takes hold of the people and of the individual as it took hold of these, the mixed multitude that was among them. [00:07:12]

Mind, after all, is one of God's greatest gifts to men, if not the greatest of all. Mind is that which differentiates men from the animal. Man has been given this faculty that enables him to look on at himself and to consider himself and to reason about himself and about life, this power of objectivity and of consideration and of thought and of analysis. [00:10:45]

The vast majority of people are not in places of worship in this country tonight, and if you were to go to them and to ask them why they're not, in some shape or form, the vast majority would tell you that they are not in a place of worship because they've got minds, because they've got reason, because they've got understanding. [00:12:32]

The fundamental proposition of the Bible can be put in this form: that men, as the result of sin, is no longer governed by his mind. The whole trouble with men in sin is that he's become a fool, that he's governed by anything and everything except his mind. He's lost his understanding, he's lost his way, he can't think, he can't reason. [00:14:48]

It is because men's mind is empty that things keep on coming into it. If it were full, there'd be no room for them. You see, here are these children of Israel traveling. They've been brought out of Egypt, and here they are on the journey. Suddenly they began to think. Where did it come from? A thought came. [00:16:16]

Sin not only makes our minds empty, it also makes them uncritical. Sin takes from men the power of criticism. Our criticism is a wonderful thing. Now, when I say criticism, I'm using it in its technical sense. There's nothing more interesting than to have a good and an intelligent criticism of a book or a piece of music or a performance of a piece of music. [00:24:19]

The idea came and they accepted it. It stimulated the lusts and they began to plead for the fish and the food. Now, in the New Testament, you get this self-same thing put like this: we are told of Moses, the very man that was leading these children of Israel, that he chose rather to suffer affliction with the people of God than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season. [00:26:33]

Sin makes our minds prejudiced and dishonest. Now let me prove this to you. We hear a great deal today about free thought. Well, if there is one thing about which we can absolutely be certain, it is this: there is no such thing as free thought. We are every one of us the creatures of prejudice. Our minds are made up before we listen to the evidence. [00:33:22]

They look back at their life in Egypt and what do they emphasize? They emphasize one part of the story and they deliberately suppress the other. You see, looking back, this is what they say: "Oh, you know that life in Egypt, you remember the fish, you remember the leeks, garlic, and the melons and the onions." But what about the floggings? [00:34:56]

Sin debases the mind of men and debases his judgment. What do I mean? I mean this: men, as the result of the effect of sin upon his mind, seems to be incapable of grasping principle. He simply is interested in feelings and sensations and pleasure and joy. Now let me illustrate it in the case of these people. [00:39:22]

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